Love in a Cold Climate

Love in a Cold Climate by Nancy Mitford Page A

Book: Love in a Cold Climate by Nancy Mitford Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nancy Mitford
Ads: Link
have lasted me a week, seemed to have made me hungrier than usual. I waited a few minutes after the stable clock struck nine, so as not to be the first, and then ventured downstairs, but was greatly disconcerted in the dining room to findthe table still in its green baize, the door into the pantry wide open and the menservants, in striped waistcoats and shirt sleeves, engaged upon jobs which had nothing to do with an approaching meal, such as sorting out letters and folding up the morning papers. They looked at me, or so I imagined, with surprise and hostility. I found them even more frightening than my fellow guests and was about to go back to my bedroom as quickly as I could when a voice behind me said, “But it’s terrible, looking at this empty table.”
    It was the Duc de Sauveterre. My protective colouring was off, it seemed, by morning light. In fact he spoke as if we were old friends. I was very much surprised, more so when he shook my hand, and most of all when he said, “I also long for my porridge, but we can’t stay here. It’s too sad. Shall we go for a walk while it comes?”
    The next thing I knew I was walking beside him, very fast, running almost to keep up, in one of the great lime avenues of the park. He talked all the time, as fast as he walked.
    “Season of mists,” he said, “and mellow fruitfulness. Am I not brilliant to know that? But this morning you can hardly see the mellow fruitfulness for the mists.”
    And indeed there was a thin fog all round us, out of which loomed great yellow trees. The grass was soaking wet and my indoor shoes were already leaking.
    “I do love,” he went on, “getting up with the lark and going for a walk before breakfast.”
    “Do you always?” I said.
    Some people did, I knew.
    “Never, never, never. But this morning I told my man to put a call through to Paris, thinking it would take quite an hour, but it came through at once, so now I am at a loose end with time on my hands. Do I not know wonderful English?”
    This ringing up of Paris seemed to me a most dashing extravagance. Aunt Sadie and Aunt Emily only made trunk calls in times of crisis, and even then they generally rang off in the middle of a sentence when the three-minute signal went. Davey, it is true,spoke to his doctor in London most days, but that was only from Kent, and in any case Davey’s health could really be said to constitute a perpetual crisis. But Paris, abroad!
    “Is somebody ill?” I ventured.
    “Not exactly ill, but she bores herself, poor thing. I quite understand it. Paris must be terrible without me. I don’t know how she can bear it. I do pity her, really.”
    “Who?” I said, curiosity overcoming my shyness, and indeed it would be difficult to feel shy for long with this extraordinary man.
    “My fiancée,” he said, carelessly.
    Alas! Something had told me this would be the reply, my heart sank and I said, dimly, “Oh! How exciting! You are engaged?”
    He gave me a sidelong whimsical look.
    “Oh, yes,” he said, “engaged!”
    “And are you going to be married soon?”
    But why, I wondered had he come away alone, without her? If I had such a fascinating fiancé I would follow him everywhere, I knew, like a faithful spaniel.
    “I don’t imagine it will be very soon,” he said gaily. “You know what it is with the Vatican. Time is nothing to them—a thousand ages in their sight are as an evening gone. Do I not know a lot of English poetry?”
    “If you call it poetry. It’s a hymn, really. But what has your marriage got to do with the Vatican? Isn’t that in Rome?”
    “It is. There is such a thing as the Church of Rome, my dear young lady, which I belong to, and this Church must annul the marriage of my affianced—do you say affianced?”
    “You could. It’s rather affected.”
    “My inamorata, my Dulcinea (brilliant?) must annul her marriage before she is at liberty to marry me.”
    “Goodness! Is she married already?”
    “Yes, yes, of course.

Similar Books

Land of Hope and Glory

Geoffrey Wilson

Deadfall

Anna Carey

I Want My MTV

Craig Marks

Fallout

James W. Huston

The Perfect Concubine

Michelle Styles