"I repent my intrusion with all my heart," Rohritz a.s.sures her. "The horses seemed so tired that I thought three people a sufficient burden for them, and so I alighted and came by the path across the fields."
At this moment shrill and clear across the meadow from the forest bordering it come the notes of "G.o.d save our Emperor!" and immediately afterwards is heard the slow rumble of the approaching carriage.
"There, you see!" says Stella, still out of humour. "My uncle promised me to whistle that as soon as the carriage could be heard; but no one expected you on foot, and you came just twenty minutes too soon!"
CHAPTER XII.
DISASTER.
All that the Baroness says when she hears of Stella"s mishap is, "I cannot lose sight of you for an instant that you are not in some mischief!"
Stella only sighs, "Poor mamma!" while Stasy, still livid as to complexion, finds herself strong enough to glance with great significance first at Stella and then at Rohritz. When she hears that it is Rohritz that bandaged Stella"s foot she vibrates between fainting and a fit of laughter. She calls Rohritz nothing but "my dear surgeon,"
accompanying the exquisite jest with a sly glance from time to time.
His enjoyment of this brilliant wit may be imagined.
The general grins; the Baroness looks angry; the captain and Katrine are the only ones who observe nothing of Rohritz"s annoyance or Anastasia"s jest; they are entirely absorbed in reproaching each other for the absence of the corkscrew, which has been forgotten.
Yet, in spite of the double mischance thus attending the beginning of the _dejeuner sur l"herbe_, all turns out pleasantly enough. The general remembers that his pocket-knife is provided with a corkscrew; the married pair recover their serenity; the crabs, in spite of many obstacles, are half cooked at the fire, and--for Freddy"s sake--p.r.o.nounced excellent; the cold capon and the _pate de foie gras_ leave nothing to be desired; the mayonnaise has not been forgotten, and the champagne is capital.
Hilarity is so fully restored that when the carriages, ordered at five o"clock, make their appearance, the company is singing in unison "Prince Eugene, that n.o.ble soldier," to an exhilarating accompaniment played by the general with the back of a knife on a plate.
Baron Rohritz, who is not familiar with "Prince Eugene," and who consequently listens in silence to that inspiring song, glances critically at a small point of purple cloud creeping up from behind the mountains.
"My barometer----" he begins; but Katrine interrupts him irritably: "Ah, do spare us with your barometer!"
A foreign element suddenly mingles with the merry talk. A loud blast of wind howls through the mighty branches of the old oak, tearing away a handful of leaves to toss them as in scorn in the dismayed faces of the party; a tall champagne-bottle falls over, and breaks two gla.s.ses.
"It is late; we have far to go, and the hacks are scarcely trustworthy," the captain remarks. "I think we had better begin to pack up."
Preparations to return are made hurriedly. The general begs for a place in the landau, as his backbone is sorely in need of some support, and Freddy also, who is apt to catch cold, is taken into the carriage from the open conveyance.
No one expresses any anxiety with regard to Stella; she slips into her brown water-proof and is helped up upon the box of the drag, where the captain takes his place beside her, while Rohritz gets into the seat behind them. They set off. Once more the sun breaks forth from among the rapidly-darkening ma.s.ses of clouds, but the air is heavy and in the distance there is a faint mutter of thunder.
Wonderful to relate, the hired steeds follow the sorrels with the most praiseworthy rapidity, due perhaps to the fact that the coachman makes the whip whistle uninterruptedly about their long ears. Katrine, who is sitting with her back to the horses, sees nothing of this, but rejoices to find the pace of the hacks so much improved. Suddenly Stasy in a panic exclaims, "Katrine!"
"What is the matter?"
"The driver--oh, look----"
Frau von Leskjewitsch turns, and sees the fat driver from the village swaying to and fro on his seat like a pendulum. The carriage b.u.mps against a stone, the ladies scream, Freddy, who had fallen asleep between the Baroness and Anastasia, wakens and asks in a piteous voice what is the matter; the general springs up, tries to take the reins from the driver, and roars as loud as his old lungs will permit, "Leskjewitsch!"
The captain does not hear.
"Papa!" "Jack!" "Captain!" echo loud and shrill, until the captain, told by Rohritz to turn and look, gives the reins to his old comrade, jumps down from the drag, and runs to the a.s.sistance of his family. An angry scene ensues between him and the driver, who tries to withhold from him the reins,--is first violent, then maudlin, stammering in his peasant-patois a.s.severations of his entire sobriety, until the captain actually drags him down from the box and with a volley of abuse flings him into a ditch. Katrine is attacked by a cramp in the jaw from excitement. The Baroness ponders upon the etymological derivation of a word in the patois of the country which she has fished out of the captain"s torrent of invective, and repeats it to herself in an undertone. The general folds his hands over his stomach with resignation, and sighs, "Dinner is ordered for seven o"clock." Freddy"s blue eyes sparkle merrily in the general confusion, and Stasy, since there is positively no audience for her affectation, conducts herself in a perfectly sensible manner. In the midst of the excitement, one of the hacks deliberately lies down, and thus diverts the captain"s attention from the driver.
"By Jove, our case is bad,--worse than might be supposed. These screws can scarcely stir," he exclaims: "that drunken scoundrel has beaten them half to death. How we are to get home G.o.d knows: these brutes cannot possibly drag this four-seated Noah"s ark. We had better change horses. Ho! Rohritz?"
"What is the matter?"
"Unharness those horses!"
In a short time the exchange is effected. The sorrels in their gay trappings are harnessed to the heavy landau, the long-legged hacks to the drag.
It is beginning to rain, and to grow dark.
Freddy is nearly smothered in plaids by his anxious mamma. The captain mounts on the box of the four-seated vehicle, and calls to Rohritz,--
"Drive to Wolfsegg, the village across the ferry. We will await you with fresh horses, at the inn there. Adieu."
And the captain gives his steeds the rein, and trots gaily past the drag.
"_Tiens!_ Stella is left _tete-a-tete_ with Rohritz," Stasy whispers.
"And what of that?" Katrine says, rather crossly. "He will not kill her."
"No, no; but people might talk."
"Pshaw! because of an hour"s drive!"
"Wait and see how punctual they are," Stasy giggles maliciously.
"Anastasia, you are outrageous!" Katrine declares.
"Wait and see," Anastasia repeats; "wait and see."
CHAPTER XIII.
IDYLLIC.
"Are you well protected, Fraulein Stella?" Rohritz asks his young companion, after a long silence.
"Oh, yes," says Stella, contentedly wrapping herself in her shabby, thin, twenty-franc water-proof and pulling the hood over her fair head, "I am quite warm. It was a good thing that you gave us warning, or I should certainly have left my water-proof at home."
"You see an "old bore," as Les called my barometer, can be of use under certain circ.u.mstances."
"Indeed it can," Stella nods a.s.sent; "but it would have been a pity to give up the picnic at the bidding of your weather-prophet, for, on the whole, it was a great success."
"Are you serious?" Rohritz asks, surprised.
"Why should you doubt it?"