She bit back a laugh. “I know, I know! Poor Aunt Lizzie is in despair. Tell me, is Ravenscar here? Have you seen him?”
“No, but we shall have the best view of him, and he of us, God help him! For I’ve prowled round the booths, and found his card on the door of that empty box over there. There’s little he will miss, I’m thinking.”
“Good!” said Deborah, moving forward to the front of the booth.
The green stripes, now first seen by Lord Mablethorpe, hit him most forcibly in the eye, and almost caused him to change colour. He was too inexperienced in the niceties of female fashions to think his Deborah’s dress vulgar, but he did wish that she had chosen a more sober combination of colours than grass-green and coquelicot. He did not think, either, that the dusting of powder on her hair became her very well. It made her look old, almost like a stranger; while the over-large patch at the corner of her mouth he did not admire at all. As for the feathers in her headdress, he supposed, vaguely, that they must be quite the thing, but he could not help wishing that she had worn her hair simply dressed, in the way she was accustomed to.
He asked her if she would like to go into the pavilion to dance, but she declined, saying that it was more amusing to watch the crowd passing and repassing the box. So he pulled a chair forward for her, and established himself at her elbow, while Lucius Kennet took Mrs Patch to stroll about the grounds, and to see the waterworks.
There were quite a number of fashionable people parading about the gardens, and Miss Grantham soon recognized most of the habitants of her aunt’s house. The boxes began to fill up, and presently, in the one beside Ravenscar’s, she observed Sir James Filey, gorgeous in a coat of puce brocade, and leaning over a chair in which a scared-looking child with pale golden ringlets and forget-me-not blue eyes sat bolt upright, clutching a fan between her mittened hands.
The child, who was as pretty as a picture, Miss Grantham saw, could not have been more than eighteen or nineteen, and to watch a roué of Filey’s years and experience leering down at her made Miss Grantham long to be able to box his ears, and send him to the right-about. There was a formidable dowager in the booth, who seemed to look upon Filey’s advances with an approving eye; a harassed-looking man with a peevishly pursed mouth, who might be her husband; a young woman, whom Miss Grantham judged to be the pretty child’s sister; and a stout, middle-aged man with a dull face, and an air of consequence.
Miss Grantham directed Lord Mablethorpe’s attention to this party, and asked him if he knew who the child was. He did not, but after glancing at the dowager, he said: “Oh, she must be one of the Laxton girls! That’s Lady Laxton, horrid old wretch! Laxton, too. I suppose the other lady to be the eldest daughter. She was married last year to some nabob or other. My mother says Lady Laxton don’t care whom she married them to as long as there’s money. Poor as church mice, the Laxtons. I know the two sons slightly. I believe there are five daughters.”
“That is certainly a cross for any mother to bear, but I hope she does not mean to marry that poor child to Filey. Do but see how frightened the little thing looks! I wish I sat in her place! She is no match for him!”
He laughed. “No! You would soon send him about his business! I have heard you give some famous set-downs.”