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PAGE 6

Olivia’s Pottage
by [?]

“Why, possibly,” the beau conceded. “Meanwhile you would have drowned. Faith, we had as well make the best of it.”

Little Lady Drogheda touched his sleeve, and her hand (as the man noted) did not shake at all, nor did her delicious piping voice shake either. “You cannot save me. I know it. I am not frightened. I bid you save yourself.”

“Permit me to assist you to that ledge of rock,” Mr. Wycherley answered, “which is a trifle higher than the beach; and I pray you, Olivia, do not mar the dignity of these last passages by talking nonsense.”

For he had spied a ledge, not inaccessible, some four feet higher than the sands, and it offered them at least a respite. And within the moment they had secured this niggardly concession, intent to die, as Wycherley observed, like hurt mice upon a pantry-shelf. The business smacked of disproportion, he considered, although too well-bred to say as much; for here was a big ruthless league betwixt earth and sea, and with no loftier end than to crush a fop and a coquette, whose speedier extinction had been dear at the expense of a shilling’s worth of arsenic!

Then the sun came out, to peep at these trapped, comely people, and doubtless to get appropriate mirth at the spectacle. He hung low against the misty sky, a clearly-rounded orb that did not dazzle, but merely shone with the cold glitter of new snow upon a fair December day; and for the rest, the rocks, and watery heavens, and all these treacherous and lapping waves, were very like a crude draught of the world, dashed off conceivably upon the day before creation.

These arbiters of social London did not speak at all; and the bleak waters crowded toward them as in a fretful dispute of precedence.

Then the woman said: “Last night Lord Remon asked me to marry him, and I declined the honor. For this place is too like Bessington–and, I think, the past month has changed everything—-“

“I thought you had forgotten Bessington,” he said, “long, long ago.”

“I did not ever quite forget–Oh, the garish years,” she wailed, “since then! And how I hated you, William–and yet liked you, too,–because you were never the boy that I remembered, and people would not let you be! And how I hated them–the huzzies! For I had to see you almost every day, and it was never you I saw–Ah, William, come back for just a little, little while, and be an honest boy for just the moment that we are dying, and not an elegant fine gentleman!”

“Nay, my dear,” the dramatist composedly answered, “an hour of naked candor is at hand. Life is a masquerade where Death, it would appear, is master of the ceremonies. Now he sounds his whistle; and we who went about the world so long as harlequins must unmask, and for all time put aside our abhorrence of the disheveled. For in sober verity, this is Death who comes, Olivia,–though I had thought that at his advent one would be afraid.”

Yet apprehension of this gross and unavoidable adventure, so soon to be endured, thrilled him, and none too lightly. It seemed unfair that death should draw near thus sensibly, with never a twinge or ache to herald its arrival. Why, there were fifty years of life in this fine, nimble body but for any contretemps like that of the deplorable present! Thus his meditations stumbled.

“Oh, William,” Lady Drogheda bewailed, “it is all so big–the incurious west, and the sea, and these rocks that were old in Noah’s youth,–and we are so little—-!”

“Yes,” he returned, and took her hand, because their feet were wetted now; “the trap and its small prey are not commensurate. The stage is set for a Homeric death-scene, and we two profane an over-ambitious background. For who are we that Heaven should have rived the world before time was, to trap us, and should make of the old sea a fowling-net?” Their eyes encountered, and he said, with a strange gush of manliness: “Yet Heaven is kind. I am bound even in honor now to marry Mistress Araminta; and you would marry Remon in the end, Olivia,–ah, yes! for we are merely moths, my dear, and luxury is a disastrously brilliant lamp. But here are only you and I and the master of all ceremony. And yet–I would we were a little worthier, Olivia!”