And Ishmael looked into the face of this stranger, whom he had seen but once before, with a singular longing for his approval.
"Yes! I do! my--I do, Mr. Worth!" replied Brudenell with emotion, as they entered the courtroom together.
Late that afternoon Ishmael kept his appointment with the widow Cobham, and their consultation ended in Ishmael"s acceptance of her brief. Other clients also came to him, and soon his hands were full of business.
As the Supreme Court had risen, and Judge Merlin had little or no official business on hand, Ishmael"s position in his office was almost a sinecure, and therefore the young man delicately hinted to his employer the propriety of a separation between them.
"No, Ishmael! I cannot make up my mind to part with you yet. It is true, as you say, that there is little to do now; but recollect that for months past there has been a great deal to do, and you have done about four times as much work for me as I was ent.i.tled to expect of you. So that now you have earned the right to stay on with me to the end of the year, without doing any work at all."
"But, sir--"
"But I won"t hear a word about your leaving us just yet, Ishmael. I will hold you to your engagement, at least until the first of June, when we all return to Tanglewood; then, if you wish it, of course I will release you, as your professional duties will require your presence in the city.
But while we remain in town, I will not consent to your leaving us, nor release you from your engagement," said the judge.
And Ishmael was made happy by this decision. It had been a point of honor with him, as there was so little to do, to offer to leave the judge"s employment; but now that the offer had been refused, and he was held to his engagement, he was very much pleased to find himself obliged to remain under the same roof with Claudia.
Ah! sweet and fatal intoxication of her presence! he would not willingly tear himself away from it.
Meanwhile this pleasure was but occasional and fleeting. He seldom saw Claudia except at the dinner hour.
Miss Merlin never now got up to breakfast with the family. Her life of fashionable dissipation was beginning to tell even on her youthful and vigorous const.i.tution. Every evening she was out until a late hour, at some public ball, private party, concert, theater, lecture room, or some other place of amus.e.m.e.nt. The consequence was that she was always too tired to rise and breakfast with the family, whom she seldom joined until the two o"clock lunch. And at that hour Ishmael was sure to be at court, where the case of Cobham versus Hanley, in which Mr. Worth was counsel for the plaintiff, was going on. At the six o"clock dinner he daily met her, as I said, but that was always in public. And immediately after coffee she would go out, attended by Mrs. Middleton as chaperone and the Viscount Vincent as escort. And she would return long after Ishmael had retired to his room, so that he would not see her again until the next day at dinner. And so the days wore on.
Mr. Brudenell remained the guest of Judge Merlin. A strange affection was growing up between him and Ishmael Worth. Brudenell understood the secret of this affection; Ishmael did not. The father, otherwise childless, naturally loved the one gifted son of his youth, and loved him the more that he durst not acknowledge him. And Ishmael, in his genial nature, loved in return the stranger who showed so much affectionate interest in him. No one perceived the likeness that was said by the viscount to exist between the two except the viscount himself; and since he had seen them together he had ceased to comment upon the subject.
Reuben Gray and his family had returned home, so that Mr. Brudenell got no farther opportunity of talking with Hannah.
The Washington season, prolonged by an extra session of Congress, was at length drawing to a close; and it was finished off with a succession of very brilliant parties. Ishmael Worth was now included in every invitation sent to the family of Judge Merlin, and in compliance with the urgent advice of the judge he accepted many of these invitations, and appeared in some of the most exclusive drawing rooms in Washington, where his handsome person, polished manners, and distinguished talents made him welcome.
But none among these brilliant parties equaled in splendor the ball given early in the season by the Merlins.
"And since no one has been able to eclipse my ball, I will eclipse it myself by a still more splendid one--a final grand display at the end of the season, like a final grand tableau at the close of the pantomime,"
said Claudia.
"My dear, you will ruin yourself," expostulated Mrs. Middleton.
"My aunt, I shall be a viscountess," replied Miss Merlin.
And preparations for the great party were immediately commenced. More than two hundred invitations were sent out. And the aid of the three great ministers of fashion--Vourienne, Devizac, and Dureezie--were called in, and each was furnished with a carte-blanche as to expenses.
And as to squander the money of the prodigal heiress was to ill.u.s.trate their own arts, they availed themselves of the privilege in the freest manner.
For a few days the house was closed to visitors, and given up to suffer the will of the decorator Vourienne and his attendant magicians, who soon contrived to transform the sober mansion of the American judge into something very like the gorgeous palace of an Oriental prince. And as if they would not be prodigal enough if left to themselves, Claudia continually interfered to instigate them to new extravagances.
Meanwhile nothing was talked of in fashionable circles but the approaching ball, and the novelties it was expected to develop.
On the morning of the day, Vourienne and his imps having completed their fancy papering, painting, and gilding, and put the finishing touches by festooning all the walls and ceilings, and wreathing all the gilded pillars with a profusion of artificial flowers, at last evacuated the premises, just it time to allow Devizac and his army to march in for the purpose of laying the feast. These forces held possession of the supper room, kitchen, and pantry for the rest of the evening, and prepared a supper which it would be vain to attempt to describe, since even the eloquent reporter of the "Republican Court Journal" failed to do it justice. A little later in the evening Dureezie and his celebrated troupe arrived, armed with all the celebrated dances--waltzes, polkas, etc.--then known, and one or two others composed expressly for this occasion.
And, when they had taken their places, Claudia and her party came down into the front drawing room to be ready to receive the company.
On this occasion it was Miss Merlin"s whim to dress with exceeding richness. She wore a robe of dazzling splendor--a fabric of the looms of India, a sort of gauze of gold, that seemed to be composed of woven sunbeams, and floated gracefully around her elegant figure and accorded well with her dark beauty. The bodice of this gorgeous dress was literally starred with diamonds. A coronet of diamonds flashed above her black ringlets, a necklace of diamonds rested upon her full bosom, and bracelets of the same encircled her rounded arms. Such a glowing, splendid, refulgent figure as she presented suggested the idea of a Mohammedan sultana rather than that of a Christian maiden. But it was Miss Merlin"s caprice upon this occasion to dazzle, bewilder, and astonish.
Bee, who stood near her like a maid of honor to a queen, was dressed with her usual simplicity and taste, in a fine white crepe, with a single white lily on her bosom.
Mrs. Middleton, standing also with Claudia, wore a robe of silver gray.
And this pure white on one side and pale gray on the other did but heighten the effect of Claudia"s magnificent costume.
The fashionable hour for a.s.sembling at evening parties was then ten o"clock. By a quarter past ten the company began to arrive, and by eleven the rooms were quite full.
The Viscount Vincent arrived early, and devoted himself to Miss Merlin, standing behind her chair like a lord in waiting.
Ishmael was also present with this group ostensibly in attendance upon Beatrice, but really and truly waiting every turn of Claudia"s countenance or conversation.
While they were all standing, grouped in this way, to receive all comers, Judge Merlin approached, smiling, and accompanied by an officer in the uniform of the United States army, whom he presented in these words:
"Claudia, my love, I bring you an old acquaintance--a very old acquaintance--Captain Burghe."
Claudia bowed as haughtily and distantly as it was possible to do; and then, without speaking, glanced inquiringly at her father as if to ask--"How came this person here?"
Judge Merlin replied to that mute question by saying:
"I was so lucky as to meet our young friend on the Avenue to-day; he is but just arrived. I told him what was going on here this evening and begged him to waive ceremony and come to us. And he was so good as to take me at my word! Bee, my dear, don"t you remember your old playmate, Alfred Burghe?" said the judge, appealing for relief to his amiable niece.
Now, Bee was too kind-hearted to hurt anyone"s feelings, and yet too truthful to make professions she did not feel. She could not positively say that she was glad to see Alfred Burghe; but she could give him her hand and say:
"I hope you are well, Mr. Burghe."
"Captain! Captain, my dear! he commands a company now! Lord Vincent permit me--Captain Burghe."
A haughty bow from the viscount and a reverential one from the captain acknowledged this presentation.
Then Mrs. Middleton kindly shook hands with the unwelcome visitor.
And finally Claudia unbent a little from her hauteur and condescended to address a few commonplace remarks to him. But at length her eyes flashed upon Ishmael standing behind Bee.
"You are acquainted with Mr. Worth, I presume, Captain Burghe?" she inquired.
"I have not that honor," said Alfred Burghe arrogantly.
"Then I will confer it upon you!" said Claudia very gravely. "Mr. Worth, I hope you will permit me to present to you Captain Burghe. Captain Burghe, Mr. Worth, of the Washington bar."
Ishmael bowed with courtesy; but Alfred Burghe grew violently red in the face, and with a short nod turned away.
"Captain Burghe has a bad memory, my lord!" said Claudia, turning to the viscount. "The gentleman to whom I have just presented him once saved his life at the imminent risk of his own. It is true the affair happened long ago, when they were both boys; but it seems to me that if anyone had exposed himself to a death by fire to rescue me from a burning building, I should remember it to the latest day of my life."
"Pardon me, Miss Merlin. The circ.u.mstance to which you allude was beyond my control, and Mr.--a--Word"s share in it without my consent; his service was, I believe, well repaid by my father; and the trouble with me is not that my memory is defective, but rather that it is too retentive. I remember the origin of--"
"Our acquaintance with Mr. Worth!" interrupted Claudia, turning deadly pale and speaking in the low tones of suppressed pa.s.sion. "Yes, I know!
there was a stopped carriage, rifled hampers, and detected thieves.