The countess smiled as she surveyed herself in the mirror, a regal, beautiful lady. Surely no person sprung from Leone"s cla.s.s would dare to oppose her.
It was on a beautiful, bright afternoon that my lady reached the pretty house where Madame Vanira lived. A warm afternoon, when the birds sung in the green shade of the trees, when the bees made rich honey from the choice carnations, and the b.u.t.terflies hovered round the budding lilies.
The countess drove straight to the house. She left her carriage at the outer gates, and walked through the pretty lawn; she gave her card to the servant and was shown into the drawing-room.
The Countess of Lanswell would not have owned for the world that she was in the least embarra.s.sed, but the color varied in her face, and her lips trembled ever so little. In a few minutes Leone entered--not the terrified, lowly, loving girl, who braved her presence because she loved her husband so well; this was a proud, beautiful, regal woman, haughty as the countess herself--a woman who, by force of her wondrous beauty and wondrous voice, had placed the world at her feet.
The countess stepped forward with outstretched hands.
"Madame Vanira," she said, "will you spare me a few minutes? I wish to speak most particularly with you."
Leone rang the bell and gave orders that she was not to be disturbed.
Then the two ladies looked at each other. Leone knew that hostilities were at hand, although she could not quite tell why.
The countess opened the battle by saying, boldly:
"I ought, perhaps, to tell you, Madame Vanira, that I recognize you."
Leone looked at her with proud unconcern.
"I recognize you now, although I failed to do so when I first saw you. I congratulate you most heartily on your success."
"On what success?" she asked.
"On your success as an actress and a singer. I consider you owe me some thanks."
"Truly," said Leone, "I owe you some thanks."
The countess did not quite like the tone of voice in which those words were uttered; but it was her policy to be amiable.
"Your genius has taken me by surprise," she said; "yet, when I recall the only interview I ever had with you, I recognize the dramatic talent you displayed."
"I should think the less you say of that interview, the better," said Leone; "it was not much to your ladyship"s credit."
Lady Lanswell smiled.
"We will not speak of it," she said. "But you do not ask me to sit down.
Madame Vanira, what a charming house you have here."
With grave courtesy Leone drew a chair near the window, and the countess sat down. She looked at the beautiful woman with a winning smile.
"Will you not be seated, madame?" she said. "I find it so much easier to talk when one is seated."
"How did you recognize me?" asked Leone, abruptly.
"I cannot say truthfully that I recognized your face," she said; "you will not mind my saying that if I had done so I would not have invited you to my house, neither should I have permitted my daughter-in-law to do so. It has placed us all in a false position. I knew you from something my son said about you. I guessed at once that you must be Leone Noel. I must repeat my congratulations; how hard you must have worked."
Her eyes wandered over the magnificent face and figure, over the faultless lines and graceful curves, over the artistic dress, and the beautiful, picturesque head.
"You have done well," said the countess. "Years ago you thought me hard, unfeeling, prejudiced, cruel, but it was kindness in the end. You have achieved for yourself fame, which no one could have won for you. Better to be as you are, queen of song, and so queen of half the world of fashion, than the wife of a man whose family and friends would never have received you, and who would soon have looked on you as an inc.u.mbrance."
"Pray pardon me, Lady Lanswell, if I say that I have no wish whatever to hear your views on the subject."
My lady"s face flushed.
"I meant no offense," she said, "I merely wished to show you that I have not been so much your enemy as you perhaps have thought me," and by the sudden softening of my lady"s face, and the sudden tremor of her voice, Leone knew that she had some favor to ask.
"I think," she said, after a pause, "that in all truth, Madame Vanira, you ought to be grateful to me. You would never have known the extent of your own genius and power if you had not gone on the stage."
"The happiness of the stage resembles the happiness of real life about as much as the tinsel crown of the mock queen resembles the regalia of the sovereign," replied Leone. "It would be far better if your ladyship would not mention the past."
"I only mention it because I wish you to see that I am not so much your enemy as you have thought me to be."
"Nothing can ever change my opinion on that point," said Leone.
"You think I was your enemy?" said the countess, blandly.
"The most cruel and the most relentless enemy any young girl could have," said Leone.
"I am sorry you think that," said my lady, kindly. "The more so as I find you so happy and so prosperous."
"You cannot answer for my happiness," said Leone, briefly.
"I acted for the best," said the countess, with more meekness than Leone had ever seen in her before.
"It was a miserable best," said Leone, her indignation fast rising, despite her self-control. "A wretched best, and the results have not been in any way so grand that you can boast of them."
"So far as you are concerned, Madame Vanira, I have nothing to repent of," said my lady.
Leone"s dark eyes flashed fire.
"I am but one," she said, "your cruelty made two people miserable. What of your son? Have you made him so happy that you can come here and boast of what you have done?"
My lady"s head fell on her breast. Ah, no, Heaven knew her son was not a happy man.
"Leone," she said, in a low, hurried voice, "it is of my son I wish to speak to you. It is for my son"s sake I am here--it is because I believe you to be his true friend and a n.o.ble woman that I am here, Leone--it is the first time I have called you by your name--I humble myself to you--will you listen to me?"
CHAPTER LVIII.
"BEHOLD MY REVENGE!"
Even as she spoke the words Lady Lanswell"s heart sunk within her. No softening came to the beautiful face, no tenderness, no kindliness; it seemed rather as though her last words had turned Leone to stone. She grew pale even to her lips, she folded her hands with a hard clasp, her beautiful figure grew more erect and dignified--the words dropped slowly, each one seeming to cut the air as it fell.
"You call me n.o.ble, Lady Lanswell! you, who did your best to sully my fair name; you call me your son"s best friend, when you flung me aside from him as though I had been of no more worth than the dust underneath his feet!"