Lady Rose's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 497 pages of information about Lady Rose's Daughter.

Lady Rose's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 497 pages of information about Lady Rose's Daughter.

“She is better,” he said to the Duchess one day, abruptly.  “Her mind is full of activity.  But why, at times, does she still look so miserable—­like a person without hope or future?”

The Duchess looked pensive.  They were sitting in the corner of one of the villa’s terraced walks, amid a scented wilderness of flowers.  Above them was a canopy of purple and yellow—­rose and wistaria; while through the arches of the pergola which ran along the walk gleamed all those various blues which make the spell of Como—­the blue and white of the clouds, the purple of the mountains, the azure of the lake.

“Well, she was in love with him.  I suppose it takes a little time,” said the Duchess, sighing.

“Why was she in love with him?” said Meredith, impatiently.  “As to the Moffatt engagement, naturally, she was kept in the dark?”

“At first,” said the Duchess, hesitating.  “And when she knew, poor dear, it was too late!”

“Too late for what?”

“Well, when one falls in love one doesn’t all at once shake it off because the man deceives you.”

“One should,” said Meredith, with energy.  “Men are not worth all that women spend upon them.”

“Oh, that’s true!” cried the Duchess—­“so dreadfully true!  But what’s the good of preaching?  We shall go on spending it to the end of time.”

“Well, at any rate, don’t choose the dummies and the frauds.”

“Ah, there you talk sense,” said the Duchess.  “And if only we had the French system in England!  If only one could say to Julie:  ’Now look here, there’s your husband!  It’s all settled—­down to plate and linen—­and you’ve got to marry him!’ how happy we should all be.”

Dr. Meredith stared.

“You have the man in your eye,” he said.

The Duchess hesitated.

“Suppose you come a little walk with me in the wood,” she said, at last, gathering up her white skirts.

Meredith obeyed her.  They were away for half an hour, and when they returned the journalist’s face, flushed and furrowed with thought, was not very easy to read.

Nor was his temper in good condition.  It required a climb to the very top of Monte Crocione to send him back, more or less appeased, a consenting player in the Duchess’s game.  For if there are men who are flirts and egotists—­who ought to be, yet never are, divined by the sensible woman at a glance—­so also there are men too well equipped for this wicked world, too good, too well born, too desirable.

It was in this somewhat flinty and carping mood that Meredith prepared himself for the advent of Jacob Delafield.

* * * * *

But when Delafield appeared, Meredith’s secret antagonisms were soon dissipated.  There was certainly no challenging air of prosperity about the young man.

At first sight, indeed, he was his old cheerful self, always ready for a walk or a row, on easy terms at once with the Italian servants or boatmen.  But soon other facts emerged—­stealthily, as it were, from the concealment in which a strong man was trying to keep them.

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Project Gutenberg
Lady Rose's Daughter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.