Читаем The changeling полностью

“I loved it the moment I saw it. But I can understand those people in a way. Remember, the great revolution is not so far back; and the defeat by the Prussians must have unnerved them.” we were walking our horses along a winding path when we heard the sound of hoofs a little way off. Then we were confronted by two riders-a girl of about sixteen and a young man a few years older.

Good morning,” said my grandfather.

Good morning,” they both replied, their French accent discernible in those two short words, so I guessed who they were.

”Rebecca,” said my grandfather, “this is Monsieur Jean Pascal Bourdon and Mademoiselle Celeste Bourdon. My granddaughter Rebecca Mandeville.”

Two pairs of bright, alert, dark eyes studied me intently. The girl was attractive with her dark hair and eyes and olive skin. Her riding habit fitted her womanly figure perfectly and she sat her horse with a grace which was immediately apparent. The same description could also be applied to the young man. He was lithe and handsome with smooth almost black hair and a ready smile.

“Are you settling happily?” asked my grandfather.

“Oh yes ... yes ... we settle very well, do we not, Celeste?”

“We settle very well,” she repeated carefully.

“That’s splendid. My wife wanted you all to come over and have luncheon one day,” went on my grandfather. “Do you think that will be possible?”

“It would be a grand plaisir. “

“Your parents ... and both of you ... how’s that?”

The girl said: “We like very much ...”

Her brother added: “Yes, very much.”

“It must be soon,” added my grandfather. “Rebecca’s home is in London and we don’t know how long she will be staying with us.”

“Very nice,” they said.

The men doffed their hats and we went on our way.

“They seem very pleasant,” said my grandfather; and I agreed. “I think it is time we started back,” he said. “We spent longer than I intended at Dorey. Still, you had to see Marian and Jack and the twins.” On our way home we went past Mrs. Polhenny’s cottage with the prim curtains drawn across all the windows. I thought of Leah working away at her embroidery behind one of them and started once more to wonder about her.

My grandmother was interested to hear of our encounter with the Bourdons. “I’ll think about making a date right away,” she said.

There were no schoolroom meals at Cador. I took them with my grandparents. They said that they did not see me often ugh and did not want to lose a moment of my company. e, ss grown had her meals with us too.

That evening we talked of the Bourdons. My grandmother had already sent a note over to High Tor inviting them.

“I am so sorry for people who find it necessary to leave their countries,” my grandmother was saying.

“We had a great number of them over here at the end of last century,” added my grandfather. Miss Brown remarked that the French Revolution was a dreadful piece of history. “We shall be covering it when you have finished with the English Prime Ministers, Rebecca.” She added, turning to my grandparents: “I thought she should know something of them, as she will soon be living in political circles.”

“An excellent idea,” said my grandfather. “How interesting it must be.”

“These leaders are so important,” said my grandmother.

“The trouble is,” said Miss Brown, “that some of them are not truly fitted for the post. Perhaps all great men have some flaws.”

“As the rest of us do,” said my grandfather.

“Napoleon the Third certainly had his.”

“You know who he is, Rebecca?” My grandfather had turned to me. He never left me out of the conversation.

“Well, he was the French Emperor before the war, wasn’t he?”

“Exactly. It is a great mistake for people to have responsibility simply because they are related to the great. There was only one Napoleon. We did not need a second or a third.”

“I suppose it is their name,” I said. “And they have a right to it.” His father was Louis Bonaparte, King of Holland, brother of the first Napoleon, and his mother Hortense de Beauharnais, Napoleon the First’s stepdaughter,” said Miss Brown, who could never resist turning any conversation into a lesson. From an early age he wanted to follow in his uncle’s footsteps.”

So he succeeded in becoming Emperor,” said my grandmother.

And his early career was one disaster after another,” continued my grandfather who was as interested in history as Miss Brown. “His vainglorious attempts to call attention to himself resulted in a term of imprisonment. First he was shipped to the United States and then he came here to England where he was for a while, but he saw his chance with the outbreak of the revolution in ‘48, returned to France, acquired a seat in the National Assembly, and started to work for the imperial title.”

“Well, he succeeded in getting it, apparently,” said my grandmother.

“Yes, for a time.”

“Quite a long time, I believe,” she replied.

“He wanted a name to compare with that of his uncle. But he hadn’t the same genius.”

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги