“If the proceedings had begun with prayer and ended with a hymn, it wouldn’t have surprised me in the least!” Robinette said to herself, looking silently on. Her silence, luckily for her, was taken for the speechlessness of awe, and did a good deal to make up, in the eyes of her august relative, for her late indiscretions. As a matter of fact, her irreverent thoughts were mostly to the effect that all but the historical pieces of the Stoke Revel corbeille would be the better of re-setting by Tiffany or Cartier.
Mrs. de Tracy opened an old shagreen case and the firelight flickered on the diamonds of a small tiara.
“This is a part of the famous Montmorency set,” she announced proudly, with the tone of a Keeper of Regalia. Then she took out a rope of pearls ending in tassels. “These belonged to Marie Antoinette,” she said.
An emerald set was next produced, and the emeralds, it was explained, had once adorned a crown. Deep green they were, encrusted in their diamond setting; costly, unique; but they left Robinette cold, though like most American women, she loved precious stones as an adornment. One of those emeralds, she was thinking, was worth fifty times more than old Lizzie Prettyman’s cottage: the sale of one of them would have averted that other sale which was to cause so much distress to a poor harmless old woman.
“When do you wear your jewels, Aunt de Tracy?” she asked gravely.
“I have not worn them since the Admiral’s death,” was the virtuous reply, “and I have never called or considered them mine, Robinetta. They are the de Tracy jewels. When Carnaby takes his place as the head of the house, they will be his. He will see that his wife wears them on the proper occasions.”
“Carnaby’s wife!” thought Robinette. “Why! she mayn’t be born! He may never have a wife! And to think of all those precious stones hiding their brightness in these boxes like prisoners in a dungeon for years and years, only to be let out now and then by Bates and Benson, jingling their keys like jailers! And this house is a prison too!” she said to herself; “a prison for souls!” and the thought of its hoarded wealth made her indignant; all this hidden treasure in a house where there was never enough to eat, where guests shivered in fireless bedrooms, where servants would not stay because they were starved! And Carnaby, too, whose youth was being embittered by unnecessary economies: 248 Carnaby, who had so little pocket-money that he was a laughing-stock among his fellows––it was for Carnaby these sacrifices were being made! Strange traditions! Fetiches of family pride almost as grotesque to her thinking as those of any savages under the sun.
“My poor dear Middy!” she thought. “What chance has he, brought up in an atmosphere like this?” But she happened to raise her eyes at the moment, and to see the actual Carnaby of the moment, not the Carnaby her gloomy imagination was evoking from the future with the “petty hoard of maxims preaching down” his heart. He had contrived to get hold of the Marie Antoinette pearls without his grandmother’s knowledge and to hang them around his neck; he had poised the Montmorency tiara on his own sleek head; he had forced a heavy bracelet by way of collar round Rupert’s throat, and now with that choking and goggling unfortunate held partner-wise in his arms, he was waltzing on tiptoe about the farther drawing 249 room behind the unconscious backs of Mrs. de Tracy and Miss Smeardon.