Frozen Heart . Elizabeth Rudnick
to lay the cloth for the viscount's supper.
"What time does the first train for Aberdeen leave?" inquired the viscount.
"The first train, sir, leaves at four o'clock in the morning, sir; an uncomfortable hour, sir; and it is besides the parliamentary, sir."
"That will do. See if my people have come up from the custom house."
"Yes, sir; I beg your pardon, sir, what name?" inquired the perplexed waiter.
"No matter. Go look for a fellow who has in charge a large number of boxes and a party of male and female gorillas."
The man left the room to do his errand and to report below that the person in "Number 13" was a showman with a lot of man-monkeys from the interior of Africa.
But Claudia turned to her husband in astonishment.
"Did I understand you to inquire about the train to Aberdeen?"
"Yes," was the short reply.
"But—I thought we were going to London—to Hurstmonceux House—"
"Belgravia? No, my dear, we are going to Scotland."
"But—why this change of plan? My father and myself certainly understood that I was to be taken to London and introduced to your family and afterwards presented to her majesty."
"My dear, the London season is over ages ago. Nobody that is anybody will be found in town until February. The court is at Balmoral, and the world is in Scotland. We go to Castle Cragg."
"But why could you not have told me that before?"
"My dear, I like to be agreeable. And people who are always setting others right are not so."
"Is Lord Hurstmonceux at Castle Cragg?"
"The earl is at Balmoral, in attendance upon her majesty."
"Then why do we not go to Balmoral?"
"The queen holds no drawing rooms there."
Claudia suspected that he was deceiving her; but she felt that it would do no good to accuse him of deception.
The waiter returned to the room, bringing Lord Vincent's substantial supper, arranged on a tray.
"I have inquired below, sir; and there is no one arrived having in charge your gorillas. But there is a person with a panorama, sir; and there is a person with three negro persons, sir," said the waiter.
"He will do. Send up the 'person with three negro persons,'" said the viscount.
And once more the waiter left the room.
In a few moments Lord Vincent's valet entered.
"Frisbie, we leave for Scotland by the four o'clock train, to-morrow morning. See to it."
"Yes, my lord. I beg your lordship's pardon, but is your lordship aware that it is the parliamentary?"
"Certainly; but it is also the first. See to it that your gorillas are ready. And—Frisbie."
"Yes, my lord."
"Go and engage a first-class carriage for our own exclusive use."
"Yes, my lord," said the man, with his hand still on the door, as if waiting further orders.
"Lord Vincent, I would be obliged if you would tell him to send one of my women to me," said Claudia coldly.
"Women? Oh! Here, Frisbie! send the female gorillas up."
"I said one of my women, the elder one, he may send."
"Frisbie, send the old female gorilla up, then."
The man went out of the room. And Claudia turned upon her husband:
"Lord Vincent, I do not know in what light you consider it; but I think your conduct shows bad wit and worse manners."
"Lady Vincent, I am sorry you should disapprove of it," said his lordship, falling to upon his beefsteak and ale, the fumes of which soon filled the room.
But that was nothing to what was coming. When he had finished his supper he coolly took a pipe from his pocket, filled it with "negro- head," and prepared to light it. Then stopping in the midst of his operations, he looked at Claudia and inquired:
"Do you dislike tobacco smoke?"
"I do not know, my lord. No gentleman ever smoked in my presence," replied Claudia haughtily.
"Oh, then, of course, you don't know, and never will until you try.
There is nothing like experiment."
And Lord Vincent put the pipe between his lips and puffed away vigorously. The room was soon filled with smoke. That, combined with the smell of the beefsteak and the ale, really sickened Claudia. She went to the window, raised it and looked out.
"You will take cold," said his lordship.
"I would rather take cold than breathe this air," was her reply.
"Just as you please; but I hadn't," he said. And he went and shut down the window.
Amazement held Claudia still for a moment; she could scarcely believe in such utter disregard of her feelings. At last, in a voice vibrating with ill-suppressed indignation, she said:
"My lord, the air of this room makes me ill. If you must smoke, can you not do so somewhere else?"
"Where?" questioned his lordship, taking the pipe from his mouth for an instant.
"Is there not a smoking room, reading room, or something of the sort, for gentlemen's accommodation?"
"In this place? Ha, ha, ha! Well, there is the taproom!"
"Then why not go there?" inquired Claudia, who had no very clear idea of what the taproom really was.
Lord Vincent's face flushed at what he seemed to think an intentional affront.
"I can go into the street," he said.
And he arose and put on his greatcoat and his cap, and turned up the collar of his coat and turned down the fall of his cap, so that but little of his face would be seen, and so walked out. Then Claudia raised the window to ventilate the room, and rang the bell to summon the waiter.
"Take this service away and send the chambermaid to me," she said to him when he came.
And a few minutes after he had cleared the table and left the room the chambermaid, accompanied by old Katie, entered.
"Is there a dressing room connected with this chamber?" Lady Vincent inquired.
"Law, no, mum! there isn't sich a place in the house," said the chambermaid.
"This is intolerable! You may go; my own servants will wait on me."
The girl went out.
"Unpack my traveling bag and lay out my things, Katie," said Lady
Vincent, when she was left alone with her nurse.
But the old woman raised her hands, and rolled up her eyes, exclaiming:
"Well, Miss Claudia, child!—I mean my ladyship, ma'am!—if this is Ingland, I never want to see it again the longest day as ever I live!"
"Liverpool is not England, Katie."
"Live-a-pool, is it? More like Die-a-pool!" grumbled old Katie, as she assisted her lady to change her traveling dress for a loose wrapper.
"Now, what have you had to eat, my ladyship?"
"Nothing, Katie. I felt as if I could not eat anything cooked in this ill-looking house."
"Nothing to eat! I'll go right straight downstairs and make you some tea and toast myself," said Katie.
And she made good her words by bringing a delicate