"_You_ might try to influence her," I said. "Not that I think it"s likely you _could_. But there"s no harm in trying."
He didn"t answer, but his face was as grave as if I had just invited him to a funeral, and as even Job couldn"t have kept my features from playing (why shouldn"t features play, if they can work?), I hastily sought the first excuse for laughter I could find lying about loose.
"Oh, how _funny_!" I exclaimed. "Ha, ha, ha, how _funny_!"
"What is funny?" drearily demanded our chauffeur.
"Why, that queer little grey-brown town we"re coming to. It looks for all the world like an exhibition of patent beehives at a country fair."
"That is Tenda," volunteered Mr. Barrymore, still plunged in the depths of gloom. "Your unfortunate namesake, poor Beatrice di Tenda, would have been surprised to hear such a simile applied to her native town."
"Who was she?" I felt bound to inquire.
"I was telling Miss Destrey about her yesterday. She seemed interested.
Miss Destrey is very fond of history, isn"t she?"
"Yes. But I"m tired talking of her now. I want to hear about the other Beatrice. I suppose, if she was Italian, she was Bice too; but I"m sure her friends never made her rhyme with mice."
"Her husband made her rhyme with murder. Did you never hear of the opera of Beatrice di Tenda? Her story is one of the most romantic tragedies in history. Well, there she was born, and there she lived as a beautiful young woman in that old castle whose ruined tower soars so high above your collection of beehives. When she was in her gentle prime of beauty, the ferocious Duke Filippo Maria Visconti came riding here from Milan to court the sweetest lady of her day. She didn"t care for him, of course, but young women of high rank had less choice in those times than they have in these, and that was the way all the mischief began. She did love somebody else, and the wicked Duke starved her to death in the tower of another old castle. When we get to Pavia, which we shall pa.s.s on the way to Milan, I"ll show you and Miss Destrey where your namesake lived when she was a d.u.c.h.ess, and died when her duke would have her for a d.u.c.h.ess no more, but wanted somebody else. Poor Beatrice, I wonder if her spirit has ever been present at the performance of the opera, and whether she approved."
"I hope she came with the man she loved, and sat in a box, and that the duke was down in--in--"
"The pit," said Mr. Barrymore, laughing, and giving a glance back over his shoulder for Maida and Sir Ralph, as he stopped the car in front of a machinist"s place. "Here we are, Joseph," he called to the Prince"s chauffeur, who was steering the broken car. "Now, how soon do you expect to finish your job?"
"With proper tools, it should be no more than an hour"s work," said Joseph, jumping down.
"An hour? Why, I should have thought three would be more like it,"
exclaimed Mr. Barrymore.
"I am confident that I can do it in one all little hour," reiterated Joseph, and for once the Prince regarded him benignly.
"Whatever Joseph"s faults, he is an excellent mechanician," said His Highness. "I did not intend to ask that you would wait, but if my car can be ready so soon, perhaps you will have pity upon me, Countess, and let me escort you to the castle while Joseph is working."
"Castle? I don"t see any castle," returned Mamma, gazing around.
"What"s left of it looks more like a walking-stick than a castle," said I, pointing up to the tall, tapering finger of broken stone that almost touched the clouds.
"Is Mamma"s new property in Dalmatia as well perserved as that, Prince?"
"You have always a joke ready, little Miss Beechy." His lips smiled; but his eyes boxed my ears. Almost I felt them tingle; and suddenly I said to myself, "Good gracious, Beechy Kidder, what if your dolls should take to playing the game their own way, in spite of you, now you"ve set them going! Where would you be _then_, I"d like to know?"
And a horrid creep ran down my spine, at the thought of Prince Dalmar-Kalm as a step-father. Maybe he would shut _me_ up in a tower and starve me to death, as the wicked duke did with the other Beatrice; and it wouldn"t comfort me a bit if some one wrote an opera about my sufferings. But if he thinks he"ll really get Mamma, he little knows Me, that"s all. We shall see what we shall see.
X
A CHAPTER OF THRILLS
The hotel at Tenda is apparently the one new thing in the town, and it is new enough to more than make up for the oldness of everything else.
We went there to grumble because, after we had done the ruined castle (and it had done Mamma), Joseph"s "all little" hour threatened to lengthen itself into at lest two of ordinary size.
Mr. Barrymore"s eyebrows said, "I told you so," but his tongue said nothing, which was nice of it; and the Prince did all the complaining as we sat on perfectly new chairs, in a perfectly new parlour, with a smell of perfectly new plaster in the air, and plu-perfectly old newspapers on the table. According to him, Joseph was an absolutely unique villain, with a combination of deceit, treachery, procrastination, laziness, and stupidity mixed with low cunning, such as could not be paralleled in the history of motor-men; and it was finally Mr. Barrymore who defended the poor absent wretch.
"Really, you know," said he, "I don"t think he"s worse than other chauffeurs. Curiously enough, the whole tribe seems to be alike in several characteristics, and it would be an interesting study in motor lore to discover whether they"ve all--by a singular coincidence--been born with those peculiarities, whether they"ve been thrust upon them, or whether they"ve achieved them!"
"Joseph never achieved anything," broke in the Prince.
"That disposes of one point of view, then," went on Mr. Barrymore.
"Anyhow, he"s cut on an approved pattern. All the professional chauffeurs I ever met have been utterly unable to calculate time or provide for future emergencies. They"re pessimists at the moment of an accident, and optimists afterwards--until they find out their mistakes by gloomy experience, which, however, seldom teaches them anything."
The Prince shrugged his shoulders in a superior way he has, and drawled, "Well, you are better qualified to judge the brotherhood, than the rest of us, at all events, my dear sir."
Mr. Barrymore got rather red, but he only laughed and answered, "Yes, that"s why I spoke in Joseph"s defence. A fellow-feeling makes us wondrous kind," while Maida looked as if she would like to set the new dog at His Highness.
The fact is she has got into her head that our handsome chauffeur is very unfortunate; and when Maida is sorry for anybody or anything she"ll stick by that creature--man, woman, or dog--through thick and thin. And funnier still, _he_ is sorry for _her_. Well, it all comes into my game of dolls. But I"m not sure that I shan"t fall in love with him myself, and want to keep him up my sleeve against the time when I"m seventeen again.
The hotel clock was so new that it hadn"t learned to go yet; and I never saw people glance at their watches so much, even in the midst of a long sermon, as we did, sitting on those new chairs in that new parlour. At last Sir Ralph Moray proposed that we should have lunch; and we had it, with delicious trout as new as the dish on which they came frizzling to the table. While we were eating them Joseph was announced, and was ordered to report himself in the dining-room. He seemed quite cheerful--for him.
"I came to tell Your Highness that I shall be able to finish in time to start by four o"clock this afternoon," said he complacently.
Up sprang the Prince in a rage and began to shout French things which must have been shocking, for Sir Ralph and Mr. Barrymore both scowled at him till he superficially calmed down.
Joseph had either forgotten that he"d promised to be ready hours ago, or else he didn"t see why we should attach the least importance to a tiny discrepancy like that.
In the midst of the argument, while the Prince"s language got hot and his fish cold, Mr. Barrymore turned to Mamma and proposed that we should start directly after lunch, as most probably the Prince wouldn"t get off till next morning.
The prospect of staying all night at Tenda, with nothing to do but sit on the new chairs till bed time, was too much even for Mamma"s wish to please t.i.tled Opportunity Number One. She nervously elected to go on with t.i.tled Opportunity Number Two and his friend.
I thought that the Prince would be plunged in gloom by this decision, even if he didn"t try to break it. To my surprise, however, he not only made no objection, but encouraged the idea. He wouldn"t wish to sacrifice us on the altar of his misfortune, he said. We must go on, dine at Cuneo, and he would meet us at the hotel there, which he could easily do, as, when once his automobile was itself again, it would travel at more than twice the speed of ours. "Especially up hill," he added. "The landlord has told Joseph that beyond Tenda the ascent is stupendous, nothing less than Alpine. You will be obliged to travel at a snail"s pace, even if you reach the top without every pa.s.senger walking up the hill, which mounts, curve after curve, for miles."
Poor Mamma"s face fell several inches. She had had enough walking up hill for one day, as the Prince knew well, and no doubt he enjoyed the chance of disgusting her with motoring in other people"s automobiles.
But Mr. Barrymore"s expression would have put spirit into a mock turtle.
"I know what the gradients are," he said, "and what we can do. To show that I"m an exception which proves the rule I laid down for chauffeurs, I"m not making any experiments without counting the cost. I hope we shall get to Cuneo by tea-time, not dinner-time, and push on to Alessandria as a better stopping-place for the night."
"Very well. In any case I shall expect to catch you up at Cuneo," said the Prince, "and so, if you please, we will make a rendezvous at a certain hotel."
Baedeker was produced, a hotel was selected, and half an hour later His Highness was bidding us _au revoir_, as we settled ourselves in our luggage-wreathed car, to leave the town of Beatrice and the dominating, file-on-end shaped ruin.
We had all been up so early that it seemed as if the day were growing old, but really it was only one o"clock, for we"d lunched at twelve, and all the afternoon was before us in which to do, or not to do, our great climbing act.
Just to see how our gorgeous chauffeur would look, I asked if I mightn"t sit on the front seat for a change, because my feet had gone to sleep in the tonneau yesterday. I half-expected that he would shuffle round for an excuse to keep Maida; but with an immovable face he said that was for the three ladies to arrange. Of course, Maida must have wanted to be in front, but she is so horribly unselfish that she glories in sacrificing herself, so she gave up as meekly as if she had been a lady"s-maid, or a dormouse, and naturally I felt a little brute; but I usually do feel a brute with Maida; she"s so much better than any one I ever saw that I can"t help imposing on her, and neither can Mamma. It"s a waste of good material being so awfully pretty as Maida, if you"re never going to do anything for people to forgive.
Yesterday we had been too hot in our motor-coats till night came on.
To-day, when we had left Tenda a little way below, we opened our shawl-straps and got out our fur stoles.
At first I thought that the Prince had only been trying to frighten us, and make us wish we were in a big car like his, for the road went curving up as gracefully and easily as a swan makes tracks in the water, and our automobile hummed cheerfully to itself, forging steadily up. It was so nice having nothing to drag that, by comparison with yesterday afternoon, we moved like a ship under full sail; but suddenly the road reared up on its hind feet and stood almost erect, as though it had been frightened by the huge snow-capped mountains that all at once crowded round us. An icy wind rushed down from the tops of the great white towers, as if with the swooping wings of a giant bird, and it took our car"s breath away.