Now came a new revulsion. Again she felt herself saved. She sang her other songs straight at him, and exaggerated them equally, half to tempt Providence, half as a bold way of keeping Eileen still concealed. She heard his companion chuckling, "By Jove, Willie, she"s mashed on you,"
as she threw a farewell kiss towards him. Then she hurried to her dressing-room and took out his letter. She had transferred it to the pocket of her theatrical gown, but had not as yet found time to finish it. Even before she re-perused it, another emotion had begun to possess her, a rush of resentment. So this was how he amused himself while waiting to clasp her in his arms! How would he ever live through the hours till Sunday afternoon, forsooth! She was jealous of the applause he lavished on Nelly O"Neill, incensed at his levity, at his immaculate evening-dress, at his white orchid. How dare he be so gay and debonair?
Her anger rose as she read his protestations, his romantic professions.
"O my darling, I shall sit up all night, thinking of you, re-reading all your dear letters, recalling our past, picturing our future. In short, as old Landor puts it:--
""A night of memories and of sighs I consecrate to thee.""
She crumpled the paper in her hand. There was a knock at the door; Fossy poked his head in. He had risen in the world of Halls, even as Nelly O"Neill.
"Might I present two friends of mine? They want so much to know you."
"You know I never see anybody, and that I have to hurry off."
"Then, I was to give you this bouquet."
He handed in a costly floral ma.s.s. Amid it lay a card, "Colonel Doherty."
She crumpled his letter more viciously.
"Tell them I can give them ten minutes only. Oh, Fossy, it"s an amusing Show, isn"t it?"
"It was a rattling good show," said Fossy, half puzzled. "Come in, boys."
Entered the Anglo-Indian twain with shining faces and shirt-fronts, cheroots politely lowered.
"Oh, smoke away, gentlemen," cried Nelly O"Neill, facing them in all the dazzle of her flesh and the crudity of her stage-paint, and her over-l.u.s.trous eyes, "don"t mind me. Which of you is the Colonel?"
The stout, sallow gentleman jocosely pushed his tall flaxen-haired companion forward. "Oh, I knew the Major was out of it," he grinned.
"Not at all, Major," said Nelly. "I only wanted to know which I had to thank for these lovely flowers."
"You have yourself to thank," said the Colonel, smartly. "By Jove! You gave us a treat. London was worth coming back to."
"Ah, you"ve been away from London?"
"Just back this very day from India--"
"And of course the first thing after a good dinner is the good old Friv--" put in the Major.
"Thank you, Major," said Fossy. "That"s handsome of you. And now I"ll leave you to Miss O"Neill."
"That"s handsomer still," said the Colonel. And the three men guffawed.
Eileen felt sick.
The Major began to talk of the music-halls of India; the Colonel chimed in. They treated her as a comrade, told her anecdotes of the _coulisses_ of Calcutta. The Colonel retailed a jest of the bazaars.
"I permit smoke, not smoking-room stories," she said severely. At which the twain poked each other shriekingly in the ribs. After that Eileen let the Colonel have rope enough to hang himself with, though she felt it cutting cruelly into her own flesh. It was an orgie of the eternal masculine, spiced with the aroma of costly cigars.
"I"m so sorry," she said, when she had let them have a quarter of an hour"s run. "I really must fly." And she seized the bouquet, and carefully adjusted his card in the glowing ma.s.s. "Won"t you come and have tea with me to-morrow? About four."
The Colonel winced. "I fear I have another appointment."
"Oh, rot! I"ll bring him," said the Major. "Where do you hang out?"
"22 Oxbridge,"--her hesitation was barely perceptible--"Crescent."
The Colonel started. "Do you know it, Colonel?" She looked at him ingenuously.
"No, but how odd! My other appointment is at 22 Oxbridge Terrace."
"How funny!" laughed Eileen. "Just round the corner. Then you"ll be able to kill two ladies with one cab." And she fled from the Major"s cachinnation.
XVIII
She had missed her turn at the third Hall, but she did not care. She went on and gave a spiritless performance. It fell dead, but she cared less.
Her head throbbed with a dozen possibilities. She was still undiscovered.
As she sat resting on her couch ere resuming her work-a-day gown, her nerves stretched to snapping point, and old Irish songs crooning themselves irrelevantly in her brain, a telegram was handed her.
"He has found out," she thought, going hot and cold. She tore open the pink envelope... and burst into a shriek of laughter. The dresser rushed in, wondering. Nelly O"Neill merely held her sides, jollity embodied.
"Oh, the Show, the Show!" she gasped, the tears streaking her painted cheeks.
The telegram that hung between her fingers in two sheets ran: "Reply prepaid. I don"t know the ways of the stage so I send you this as a sure way of reaching you to ask when and where I may have the pleasure of calling upon your friend, Miss O"Keeffe, and renewing the study of Plato.--Robert Maper, Hotel Belgravia."
"Any answer, miss?" said the imperturbable doorkeeper.
The answer flashed irresistibly into her mind as he spoke. Oh, she would play up to Bob Maper. Doubtless he imagined her fallen to the level of her _metier_, though he wasn"t insulting. She scribbled hastily: "Robert Maper, Hotel Belgravia. I am waiting at the Hall for you. Come and take me to supper.--EILEEN O"NEILL." She gave instructions he was to be admitted. Then she relapsed into her hysteric amus.e.m.e.nt. "Oh, the merry master of marionettes, the night my love comes from beyond the seas, you send me to supper with Robert Maper." She waited with impatience. Now that the long-dreaded discovery had come, she was consumed with curiosity as to its effect upon the discoverer. At last she remembered to wash off the rouge and the messes necessary for stage-perspective. Her winsome face came back to her in the mirror, angelic by contrast, and while she was looking wonderingly at this mystic flashing mask of hers, there was a knock, and in another instant she was looking into the eyes burning unchanged under the white marble mantel-piece.
"Ah, there you are!" she said gaily, and shook his hand as though they had met the evening before. "Where shall we go?"
He accepted the situation. "I don"t know--I thought you would know."
"I don"t--I never supped with a man in my life."
He flushed with complex pleasure and surprise. "Really! Oh, Eileen!"
"Hush! Call me Nelly, if you must be Christian. I suppose you think you may, now."
"I--I beg your pardon," he stammered, disconcerted.
"Don"t look so gaspy--poor little thing! It shall be thrown back into the water. Will you carry my bouquet?"
"With pleasure." He grasped it eagerly, and carried it towards the stage door and a hansom.
"It wanted only that," she said. "Oh, the Show, the Show!"
"I don"t understand you."