The public took little interest in him, to be sure; but among fashionable people he was a great favorite. The coupes of the rich trundled over the pavements to his retreat at the St. James Hotel. The Court of St. James, it was called, with an obvious but happy pertinency.
The King pa.s.sed his day at the whist-table in the swell West End Club.
He dined out frequently, and was a familiar figure at large entertainments. The Honorable Waitstill C. Hanc.o.c.k always treated him at his receptions (which were among the most elegant of their kind) with marked deference. It must have been very gratifying to the exiled monarch to note the courtly tone in which his host remarked, "Your Majesty, will you take Mrs. Hanc.o.c.k in to supper?"
Time pa.s.sed, and one day the city awoke to hear that the King had gone off on a fishing trip to Florida. A splendidly furnished steam yacht, large enough, if needs were, for ocean travel, had come into the harbor in the evening, and sailed away the following morning with the royal exile on board. The Princess Henrietta had remained behind. There were rumors in circulation which tended to discredit the truth of the alleged destination of the yacht. Mariners from the docks declared her to be equipped for fighting. People remembered, too, that the King during the past few weeks had been seen to handle larger sums of money than was his wont. He had made purchases of army apparel and several silver-mounted revolvers.
A few weeks later the news of the insurrection at Aldershot and its suppression were flashed over the cable. The King, so the subsequent despatches said, was supposed to be concealed in London, and a large reward had been offered for his apprehension. The good people of Boston were somewhat surprised, therefore, one morning to hear that the incoming steamer from England had a royal freight. When the King was asked what luck he had had in fishing, he blinked his watery eyes and answered, mysteriously, "You will know presently." This was his reply to the friends who met him as he walked down the plank of the vessel. A moment after all eyes were directed to the beautiful woman who emerged from the cabin and entered the carriage with the ex-sovereign. All doubt of her ident.i.ty was removed when the Court Circular of the following morning announced the arrival of Mrs. Oswald Carey. Apartments had been engaged for her contiguous to those occupied by his Majesty.
One evening, about four weeks subsequent to the return of the royal party, the King was disturbed by the entrance of the Princess Henrietta into his _cabinet de travail_. He was engaged in footing up his gains and losses at whist during the week, and the interruption caused him to glower slightly at his daughter. But she was far too excited to observe his manner.
"Father," she said abruptly, "I can endure it no longer."
"Endure what, your Royal Highness?"
"The presence of that woman. Either she must leave the court or I will."
The eyes of the Princess flashed angrily.
"I am at a loss as to your meaning, Henrietta. Do you refer to the Lady Muriel Howard?"
"You know that I do not. There can be only one to whom such language is applicable. Mrs. Carey is not a proper person to remain at court."
The King scratched his chin thoughtfully. "What has she done?"
"Done, father? Is not her reputation in the past evil enough to disqualify her for the society of your daughter?"
"You have been misinformed, Princess. Mrs. Carey is a long-suffering and much-abused woman. I do not speak at random. I know her intimately."
"So I am given to understand," replied the daughter, with bitterness.
"Lady Constance Percy inquired this morning if her Majesty was well."
"You do not choose your ladies in waiting with discretion. Mrs. Oswald Carey has a husband whose existence shows at once the absurdity of your disagreeable and unfilial suspicion. I have no purpose, Henrietta, to take another consort." The King wiped his eyes with a gentle melancholy.
"And you will send her away, will you not, father? I do not wish to be disrespectful, but I cannot endure her presence."
"Send who away?"
"Mrs. Oswald Carey."
"She amuses me, child. Her great beauty is delightful to gaze at." King George put a lozenge into his mouth and sighed reflectively. He was a victim to asthma. The east winds of Boston cut him to the bone.
"Do not compel me, your Majesty, to be more explicit. I repeat, either this woman or I must leave your court."
The late ruler of England wrung his hands. "I see you are resolved to drive me to distraction. This is the final stroke. My daughter wishes to desert me. Lear," he added, piteously, "was only a touch to me. You are Goneril and Regan combined in one."
He scowled angrily at her. Just then the door was opened, and a gentleman of the bedchamber announced that dinner was served.
"Is the court in waiting?"
"Yes, your Majesty."
"This is my birthday," observed the King, moodily.
"So it is," cried Henrietta; "how remiss of me not to have spoken of it."
But her father paid no attention to her words. He was fumbling in his pocket. "How many will there be at table?" he inquired of the equerry.
"Fourteen, Sire."
"Humph! Lady Constance Percy and Lady Rosamond Temple do not drink champagne. Neither does Paran Paget. Lord Gladstone Churchill swore off yesterday." He spoke as if soliloquizing, and went through a process of calculation on the fingers of one hand. He handed a key to his retainer.
"Tell the Lord Chamberlain to have two quarts and one pint," he said.
"And Lady Muriel Howard is on no consideration to have more than a single gla.s.s. Come, Henrietta."
Dinner was always served for the royal party in the main dining-hall of the hotel. The large table in the middle of the room was reserved for them. First appeared the master of the household bearing the wand of office. The King came next, followed by the Princess and her three Maids of Honor, Lady Constance Percy, Lady Rosamond Temple, and Lady Muriel Howard, all alike duennas of a certain age. The first named were sober, prim-looking persons, but Lady Muriel Howard, who wore low-neck, corkscrew curls, and carried an enormous fan, ogled the various occupants of the dining-room through her eyegla.s.s as she advanced. The remainder of the retinue included the Duke of Wellington, an old n.o.bleman of threescore and ten, and a half-dozen lesser peers, nearly all of whom were on the shady side of sixty. Lord Gladstone Churchill, Paran Paget, and Sir Humphry Davy, who were always in attendance on the person of the sovereign, were the only youthful spirits. It was the former of these who had furnished the romantic story of Mrs. Carey"s early life to the society lady. As the royal party walked to their table a few guests of the hotel rose and remained standing until the King had signified by a glance that all should be seated.
The royal bill of fare was distinct from the _table d"hote._ The proprietor of the house allowed under his contract with the King a certain sum daily for the cuisine. The King was ent.i.tled to save anything he could on that amount. To-day there was a boiled dinner.
Boiled chickens at one end of the table and boiled corned beef at the other followed the soup.
"How good an _entree_ would taste," whispered Lord Cecil Manners to the Earl of Kildare, casting a glance at a neighboring table, where a _vol-au-vent_ of sweetbreads was being pa.s.sed by the servant.
"What was that you said, Lord Cecil?" asked the King, sharply.
"I was calling his lordship"s attention to the champagne gla.s.ses,"
answered the peer, with a silly giggle.
"It is my birthday," explained the King. "You shall drink my health later on in the repast."
There was a flutter of congratulation around the table.
"How indecorous of me not to have remembered," said the Duke of Wellington, with old-fashioned courtesy.
"Many happy returns of the day," said Lady Muriel Howard, and she whisked her handkerchief coquettishly at her sovereign.
King George presided at one end of the table, and the Princess Henrietta at the other. The n.o.bility were seated according to their rank. Lady Muriel Howard being the eldest daughter of the Duke of Norfolk, the first peer of the realm, sat on the King"s right, and the Duke of Wellington in the seat of honor by the Princess. Midway down the table was a vacant chair, and it was noticed that the King glanced frequently with an air of impatience toward the door in the intervals of the carving. He preferred to carve the dinner himself. Two servants waited upon the company.
"His Majesty is out of sorts to day. He has given me only drumsticks,"
murmured Lady Muriel to the companion on her other side.
"Where is Mrs. Oswald Carey?" asked the monarch at last.
"Here she comes, your Majesty," said Lady Constance Percy, nodding toward the entrance.
Mrs. Carey, in a superb black velvet costume, cut square in front, with a Maltese cross of brilliants resting upon her bosom, swept grandly across the dining hall. She held a small bunch of flowers in her hand.
The head waiter of the hotel, bowing almost to the ground, waved her toward the royal table. Everybody in the room paused to gaze at the superb beauty. The master of the household drew back her chair, but she did not stop until she reached the King.
"Sire," she said, with a profound courtesy, "pardon my tardiness, and accept, if you will, these roses in commemoration of your birthday."
The King looked delighted. "Yes, it is my birthday," he answered. "I was afraid you would come too late for the champagne."
Mrs. Carey was about to retire to her seat when the King exclaimed, "Lady Muriel, if it"s all the same, I"ll get you to change seats with Mrs. Carey. Am I not your sovereign?" he inquired, noticing the glum looks of the outraged maid of honor.