The Graefin's two elder sons had made deplorable
marriages. It was, observed Clovis, a family habit. The
youngest boy, Wratislav, who was the black sheep of a rather
greyish family, had as yet made no marriage at all.
“There is certainly this much to be said for
viciousness,” said the Graefin, “it keeps boys out of
mischief.”
“Does it?” asked the Baroness Sophie, not by way of
questioning the statement, but with a painstaking effort to
talk intelligently. It was the one matter in which she
attempted to override the decrees of Providence, which had
obviously never intended that she should talk otherwise than
inanely.
“I don't know why I shouldn't talk cleverly,” she would
complain; “my mother was considered a brilliant
conversationalist.”
“These things have a way of skipping one generation,”
said the Graefin.
“That seems so unjust,” said Sophie; “one doesn't
object to one's mother having outshone one as a clever
talker, but I must admit that I should be rather annoyed if
my daughters talked brilliantly.”
“Well, none of them do,” said the Graefin consolingly.
“I don't know about that,” said the Baroness, promptly
veering round in defence of her offspring. “Elsa said
something quite clever on Thursday about the Triple
Alliance. Something about it being like a paper umbrella,
that was all right as long as you didn't take it out in the
rain. It's not every one who could say that.”
“Every one has said it; at least every one that I know.
But then I know very few people.”
“I don't think you're particularly agreeable today.”
“I never am. Haven't you noticed that women with a
really perfect profile like mine are seldom even moderately
agreeable?”
“I don't think your profile is so perfect as all that,”
said the Baroness.
“It would be surprising if it wasn't. My mother was one
of the most noted classical beauties of her day.”
“These things sometimes skip a generation, you know,”
put in the Baroness, with the breathless haste of one to
whom repartee comes as rarely as the finding of a
gold-handled umbrella.
“My dear Sophie,” said the Graefin sweetly, “that
isn't in the least bit clever; but you do try so hard that I
suppose I oughtn't to discourage you. Tell me something:
has it ever occurred to you that Elsa would do very well for
Wratislav? It's time he married somebody, and why not
Elsa?”
“Elsa marry that dreadful boy!” gasped the Baroness.
“Beggars can't be choosers,” observed the Graefin.
“Elsa isn't a beggar!”
“Not financially, or I shouldn't have suggested the
match. But she's getting on, you know, and has no
pretensions to brains or looks or anything of that sort.”
“You seem to forget that she's my daughter.”
“That shows my generosity. But, seriously, I don't see
what there is against Wratislav. He has no debts---at
least, nothing worth speaking about.”
“But think of his reputation! If half the things they say
about him are true---”
“Probably three-quarters of them are. But what of it?
You don't want an archangel for a son-in-law.”
“I don't want Wratislav. My poor Elsa would be miserable
with him.”
“A little misery wouldn't matter very much with her; it
would go so well with the way she does her hair, and if she
couldn't get on with Wratislav she could always go and do
good among the poor.”
The Baroness picked up a framed photograph from the table.
“He certainly is very handsome,” she said doubtfully;
adding even more doubtfully, “I dare say dear Elsa might
reform him.”
The Graefin had the presence of mind to laugh in the
right key.
*
Three weeks later the Graefin bore down upon the
Baroness Sophie in a foreign bookseller's shop in the
Graben, where she was, possibly, buying books of devotion,
though it was the wrong counter for them.
“I've just left the dear children at the Rodenstahls',”
was the Graefin's greeting.
“Were they looking very happy?” asked the Baroness.
“Wratislav was wearing some new English clothes, so, of
course, he was quite happy. I overheard him telling Toni a
rather amusing story about a nun and a mousetrap, which
won't bear repetition. Elsa was telling every one else a
witticism about the Triple Alliance being like a paper
umbrella---which seems to bear repetition with Christian
fortitude.”
“Did they seem much wrapped up in each other?”
“To be candid, Elsa looked as if she were wrapped up in a
horse-rug. And why let her wear saffron colour?”
“I always think it goes with her complexion.”
“Unfortunately it doesn't. It stays with it. Ugh.
Don't forget, you're lunching with me on Thursday.”
The Baroness was late for her luncheon engagement the
following Thursday.
“Imagine what has happened!” she screamed as she burst
into the room.
“Something remarkable, to make you late for a meal,”
said the Graefin.
“Elsa has run away with the Rodenstahls' chauffeur!”
“Kolossal!”
“Such a thing as that no one in our family has ever
done,” gasped the Baroness.
“Perhaps he didn't appeal to them in the same way”
suggested the Graefin judicially.
The Baroness began to feel that she was not getting the
astonishment and sympathy to which her catastrophe entitled
her.
“At any rate,” she snapped, “now she can't marry
Wratislav.”
“She couldn't in any case,” said the Griffin; “he left
suddenly for abroad last night.”
“For abroad! Where?”
“For Mexico, I believe.”
“Mexico! But what for? Why Mexico?”
“The English have a proverb, `Conscience makes cowboys of
us all.' “
“I didn't know Wratislav had a conscience.”
“My dear Sophie, he hasn't. It's other people's
consciences that send one abroad in a hurry. Let's go and
eat.”