Portia

Chapter 7

"I _am_ trying," he says, shortly.

"Well, you needn"t tear the book in pieces," says Dulce, severely.

"I"m not tearing anything," retorts Mr. Dare, indignantly.

"You look as if you wanted to," says Dulce.

"I don"t want anything except to be let alone," says Mr. Dare.

The windows are all wide open. They were flung wide an hour ago, in the fond hope that some pa.s.sing breeze might enter through them. But no breeze cometh--is not, indeed, born--and the windows yawn for it in vain. Outside, all Nature seems asleep; inside, the very curtains are motionless.

In a low rocking-chair, clad in the very lightest of garments permitted by civilization, sits Sir Mark Gore. He arrived at the Court only yesterday, in a perfect torrent of pa.s.sionate rain, and was accused on all sides of having brought ill weather in his train. But to-day having a.s.serted itself, and dawned fairly, and later on having burst into matchless beauty, and heat of the most intense, he is enabled to turn the tables upon his accusers, who look small and rather crushed.

"Have they had such a day this season?"

"Never! Oh, never!"

"Have they ever seen so lovely a one?"

"Never--at least, _hardly_ ever!"

They are vanquished. Whereupon he tells them they were distinctly ungrateful yesterday, and that he will never put in a good word for them with the clerk of the weather again. _Never!_

Just now he is nodding drowsily over his _Times_, and is vainly trying to remember whether the last pa.s.sage read was about Midhat Pasha, or that horrid railway murder, or the Irish Land League.

In the next window sits Portia, clad in a snowy gown that suits her to perfection. She has been here now for a fortnight, and feels as if she had been here forever, and almost wonders if in reality she ever knew another home. She is lounging in the very easiest of cushioned chairs, and is making a base attempt at reading, which attempt is held up to public scorn every other minute by d.i.c.ky Browne, who is sitting at her feet.

He is half in and half out of the room. His feet being on the verandah, his head and shoulders in the room. He is talking a little, and fidgeting a little, and laughing a little, and, in fact, doing everything in the world except thinking a little. Thought and d.i.c.ky Browne are two.

The room in which they are all sitting is long and very handsome, with three windows and two fire-places. It is always called the blue room at the Court, for no earthly reason that any one can see, except that it is painted green--the very most impossible green, calculated to create rapture in the b.r.e.a.s.t.s of Oscar and his fellows; a charming color, too, soothing, and calm, and fashionable, which, of course, is everything.

There are tiny cabinets everywhere, gay with majolica ware and many a Palissy dish; while Wedgewood, and Derby, and priceless Worcester shine out from every corner. There are Eastern rugs, and j.a.panese screens, and, indeed, everything that isn"t j.a.panese is old English, and everything that isn"t old English is j.a.panese--except, perhaps, a few lounging-chairs of modern growth brought in to suit the requirements of such unaesthetic beings as prefer the comfortable satin-and-down lounge to the more correct, if more trying oak.

"Perhaps it was the Duke of Edinburgh," says Roger, breaking the silence that has lasted now for a full minute. "I see he is very handsome, of robust habit and const.i.tution, and of enormous size and length. Is that what you want?"

"No; I am sure it was not the Duke of Edinburgh. It doesn"t sound like him. I wonder why you can"t think of it. I am sure if I once eat anything I should remember all about it."

"Good gracious!" says d.i.c.ky Browne, from his lowly seat, glancing solemnly at Portia, "have they eaten the Duke of Edinburgh? It sounds like it, doesn"t it? They must have done it on the sly. And _what_ a meal! Considering they acknowledge him to be of enormous size and length!"

"Perhaps it was Sir Garnet Wolseley," says Roger, moodily, in the discontented tone of one who is following out a task utterly repugnant to his feelings. "He has an excellent flavor, but is entirely dest.i.tute of shank or shoulder."

Sir Mark Gore, at this dreadful speech, lowers his paper and lifts his head. Portia looks faintly startled. What can Roger be talking about?

"Ain"t it awful," says Mr. Browne, "who"d have thought it of them. They look quite mild--and--er--like other people. Positively they are cannibals! And (did you remark?) it is _roast shoulder_ they prefer, because they are grumbling at the want of it in the unfortunate General who has evidently been enticed from his home and coldly murdered by them. I wonder it wasn"t in the papers--but doubtless the family hushed it up. And how heartlessly they speak! But, by the way, what on earth is a _shank_?--"

"The neck is splendid, and, indeed, there is no waste whatever," goes on Roger, in a wooden tone.

"No waist whatever! Did you hear that? I always thought poor Sir Garnet was a lean man," says d.i.c.ky, _sotto voce_. "Poor, poor fellow, can nothing satisfy them but rank and talent?"

"Not a bit like it," breaks in Dulce, petulantly tapping her foot upon the floor. She is never petulant with any one but Roger, being indeed, by nature, the very incarnation of sweetness and light.

"Give it up," says Roger, rising hope in his tone--hope that, alas, is never verified.

"And meet McIlray with such a lame story as that! Certainly not," says Dulce, warmly. "It must be found out. Do try again."

"Well, this must be it," says Roger, in despair, "The Marquis of Lorne, exquisite short neck, smooth skin, very straight, nice white spine."

At this Sir Mark rises to his feet.

"Really, my _dear_ Roger!" he says, impulsively--but for the excessive laziness of his disposition it would have been severely.

"Ah," says Roger, glad of anything in the shape of a reprieve, even though it be unpleasant argument.

"How _can_ Dulcinea find any interest in the color of the Marquis"s spine?" says Sir Mark, reprovingly. "Forgive me if I say I think you are going a little too far."

"I shall have to go farther," says Roger, desperately, "There is no knowing where I shall end. She can"t find it out, and neither can I, and I see no hope of our arriving at anything except a lunatic asylum."

"I can look it up by myself," says Miss Blount, grandly, "I don"t want your help--much. I daresay I can manage by myself, after all. And even if I can"t, I daresay Mark will come to my a.s.sistance if you forsake me."

"I won"t," says Gore, decidedly; "I won"t indeed. I would do anything in the world for you, Dulcinea, as you know, but for this work unfortunately I am too modest. I _couldn"t_ go about making inquiries about the color of people"s spines. I couldn"t, indeed. As a matter of science I daresay it would be interesting to know the exact number of shades, but--I feel I am unequal to the task."

"The Duke of Connaught," goes on Roger, wearily, hope being stifled in his breast, "bright green skin, well covered with bloom; small neck and--"

"Oh! hang it all, you know," says d.i.c.ky Browne, forgetting himself in the excitement of the moment, "I don"t believe his Royal Highness _has_ a green skin, do you, Portia?--saw him only a fortnight ago, and he looked all right then, just as white as the rest of us."

"It"s cuc.u.mbers," says Miss Blount, with dignity.

"Yes, cuc.u.mbers," responds Mr. Dare, with a sigh; he is evidently in the last stage of exhaustion. "McIlray has forgotten the name of some particular seed he planted in the Spring that we all liked immensely (how I wish we _hadn"t_), and he has compelled Dulce to try and discover it. So we are looking for it in these infer--I mean these very prettily-ill.u.s.trated books that the seedsman has kindly sent us (how I wish he hadn"t), and hope to find it before the millenium. I daresay any time next month you will still find us here poring over these identical books, but we shall be _dead_ then--there is at least comfort in that thought."

"One wouldn"t think so, to look at you," said Gore, pleasantly.

"You can go away, Roger, you really can," says Dulce, irritably. "You are not the least use to me, and I hate grumblers."

"Perhaps it is the Empress of India," says d.i.c.ky Browne, who has come over to the table, driven by sheer curiosity, and is now leaning on Roger"s shoulder. "She "is of enormous length, and the handsomest this year. She is beautifully shaped throughout, with scarcely any handle."

Oh, I say, hasn"t the Queen a handle to her name? What an aspersion upon her royal dignity."

"Ah! here is Fabian! Now, you may go away, all of you," said Dulce, with fine contempt. "He will really be of some use to me. Fabian, what is the name of the cuc.u.mber that tiresome McIlray wants? I am worn out, almost in hysterics, trying to remember it."

"What a pity you didn"t ask me sooner," says Fabian. "It is all right. I made it out this morning, and told McIlray. He says now he remembers all about it perfectly."

"Fabian, may I shake hands with you. You are a man and a brother," says Roger, effusively, with a sudden return of animation. "I should, indeed, like to kiss you, but it might betray undue exhilaration. You have saved me from worse than death. Bless me, isn"t it warm?"

"Just a little sultry," says Mr. Browne. "Show me that book you were looking at? Carter"s, eh? How I love a work of that sort! I think I love Carter himself. I daresay it is he designs those improbable vegetables and fruits that would make their fortunes as giants at a penny show. You see there _are_ giants in these days."

"Are there?" says Dulce. "I think there aren"t."

"Well, it"s just as simple," says d.i.c.ky, amiably. "Not a bit more trouble. It is quite as easy to suppose there aren"t, as to suppose there are. _I_ don"t mind. But to return to our muttons. I really do esteem our Carter--in antic.i.p.ation. It occurs to me he yet may grow peaches as big as my head, and then what a time we"ll "ave, eh?--Eating fruit is my forte," says Mr. Browne, with unction.

"So it is," says Dulce. "n.o.body will dispute that point with you. You never leave us any worth speaking about. McIlray says you have eaten all the cherries, and that he can"t even give us a decent dish for dinner."

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