A Fair Mystery: The Story of a Coquette. Charlotte M. Brame
dark eyes are riveted on the golden hair and exquisite face of the girl.
It is some minutes before she becomes aware of his presence, and then something causes her to look up, and she sees those same dark eyes, full of admiration, glancing at her.
She does not blush, but the dainty rose-bloom deepens on her face, and the violet eyes flash back a look of archest coquetry into his own.
That look decided him. If she had blushed or looked at all embarrassed, he, being what is called a gentleman, would have turned away; that glance, so full of fire, of coquetry – so subtle, so sweet – seemed to start something like delicious poison through his veins.
He comes nearer to her, making a most profound and respectful bow. Then he sees her dress, so plain and homely, although coquettishly worn, and he is at a loss to imagine who she can be. The loveliness, the perfect aristocratic grace of face and figure, are what he would have expected from a visitor at Downsbury Castle. The impress of high birth is on both of them, but the dress is not even equal to that of a lady's-maid, yet she is sitting there so perfectly at her ease, she must be a visitor.
Lord Charles Vivianne, with his eyes still riveted upon her, speculates in vain.
"I beg pardon," he says at last. "I hope you will accept my apologies; but I was told that Lady Estelle was here, and I wish to see her."
"She will return very soon," replies Doris. The words are brief and simple, but the eyes seem to say, "stay with me till she comes."
"Have I the pleasure of speaking to a visitor at the Castle?" he asks, with a bow.
Then she blushes, feeling more ashamed than ever of Brackenside and its belongings.
"I came to see the Castle," she replies; "and Lady Estelle is kind enough to show me the flowers."
He understood at once. Then, saying to himself that in all probability she was a protegee of my lady's, the daughter of some tenant-farmer, who had, as a great treat, been promised a sight of the wonders of the Castle – he was perfectly at his ease then.
There was no such admirer of fair women in all the world as Lord Vivianne, and this was the fairest he had ever seen. A farmer's daughter, without the prestige of rank and wealth to save her – fair prey for him. Had she been the daughter of a duke, an earl, a baron, he would simply have laid his plans for flirting with her; as it was, he sat down and deliberately said to himself that heart and soul should be his.
Some little faults lay at her door. Her eyes invited him; they said things that the lips would not have dared to utter; they were full of the sweetest and most subtle invitation, gracefully veiled by the long, dark lashes. Lord Charles had done as he would all his life, and now that his eyes rested on this fairest of all faces, it was not likely that he would let anything baffle him.
"You have a beautiful resting-place," he said. "I have never seen anything to equal the beauty of this plant."
"It is very beautiful," she replied; "to me it seems like fairyland."
"I have been staying here for a week," he continued, "and I have not seen half the beauty of the Castle yet."
"You have been staying here!" she said, with unconscious stress on the word "here."
"Yes; I admire the scenery hereabouts. I think it is almost about the finest we have."
"I have never been out of this county," she replied, "so I cannot tell."
He raised his dark brows in surprise.
"You have never been away from home?" he said; "what a pity, and what a shame!"
"Why is it a shame?" she asked, with another of those sweet glances that invited him to woo her.
"Providence does not send such a face as yours in the world once in a century," he replied, "and then all the world should see it." Doris looked pleased, not shy or timid; she was perfectly at home with him, and he saw it. "I must introduce myself," he said, "as Lady Estelle does not return – I am Lord Charles Vivianne – if I dare, I should ask to whom I have the honor of speaking."
She did blush then with gratified vanity and delight. It was something that she should have a handsome lord by her side, and that he should admire her. He did admire her, she knew; she could read it in his eyes and the flattering homage of his smile.
Lord Charles Vivianne! – she wondered whether he was very rich, great, and celebrated. A lord! – oh, if she could only make a conquest of him!
"I wish I dare ask to whom I have the honor of speaking."
And then she raised her eyes with something of defiance, and said:
"My name is Doris – Doris Brace."
He said the name softly.
"Doris! What a pretty name! Now that you have been kind enough to answer me one question, I should like to ask another – do you live near here?"
"I live at Brackenside," she replied. "My father is a tenant of the duke's – he is a farmer."
"Then I was right in my first surmise," he said.
"Pray, what was that?" asked Doris.
"I was watching you for some minutes before you saw me, and I guessed that you were a daughter of one of the duke's tenants."
She raised her head with a magnificent pride and lofty disdain that almost annihilated him.
"That is to say you thought I looked like a farmer's daughter. I thank you so much for the compliment."
"Nay," he replied; "I thought that you looked like a queen."
The dark eyes seemed to flash light and love into her own. It must be admitted that Lord Charles Vivianne thoroughly understood the art of winning women.
"Doris!" he said; "I am struck with the name, because I do not remember that I ever met with any one who bore it before. How beautiful these flowers are! Will you give me one to keep in memory of this, our first meeting?"
She tightened her hold on the scarlet and amber blossoms. He could not help noticing the beauty of the white hand that held them.
"I think not," she replied. "In all the poems that I ever read something is done to win a flower before it is given."
"I have done something to win it," he replied.
She raised her beautiful eyes to his.
"Have you? I did not know it. Will you tell me what it is?"
"If you will promise me not to be angry," he whispered.
She drew back from him and laughed.
"How can I be angry?" she asked. "I beg of you to tell me what you have done to win a flower."
His eyes seemed to light his face with love and passion.
"I will tell you what I have done," he said. "In one minute I have laid at your feet, in silence, the homage that another could not have won in a whole year. Now will you give me a flower?"
He took one of the scarlet blossoms, and in doing so his fingers touched hers.
"I shall never part with it," he said. Then he heard the sound of the opening of the conservatory door, and he knew that Lady Estelle was coming. "Shall you be very angry with me," he asked, in a quiet whisper, "if you see me near your home."
"No," she replied.
Then he arose and went over to the other end of the conservatory, so that when Lady Estelle entered, she could not have any idea that they had exchanged one word.
Still she looked surprised, and not very well pleased at finding him there. He came forward quickly, never even looking at Doris.
"I had hoped to find you here, Lady Estelle," he said. "I have waited your return. I am going over to Hyndlow this morning, and you said that you wished me to take something to Lady Eleanor."
"Yes," she replied; "I will attend to it. I shall see you before you go."
She dismissed him with a queenly bow, and he went, never once looking at Doris, but her eyes lingered