It was some fair dream that would
be gone too soon, he told himself, as they drove rapidly
through the twilight streets, down from the Pincio
and up the long slope of the Quirinal. They came
to a stop in the gray courtyard of a palazzo, and
ascended in a sleepy elevator to the fifth floor.
Emerging, they encountered a tall man who was turning
away from the Countess’ door, which he had just
closed. The landing was not lighted, and for
a moment he failed to see the American following Madame
de Vaurigard.
“Eow, it’s you, is it,”
he said informally. “Waitin’ a devil
of a long time for you. I’ve gawt a message
for you. He’s comin’. He writes
that Cooley ”
"Attention!" she interrupted
under her breath, and, stepping forward quickly, touched
the bell. “I have brought a frien’
of our dear, droll Cooley with me to tea. Monsieur
Mellin, you mus’ make acquaintance with
Monsieur Sneyd. He is English, but we shall forgive
him because he is a such olé frien’ of
mine.”
“Ah, yes,” said Mellin.
“Remember seeing you on the boat, running across
the pond.”
“Yes, ev coss,” responded
Mr. Sneyd cordially. “I wawsn’t so
fawchnit as to meet you, but dyuh eold Cooley’s
talked ev you often. Heop I sh’ll see maw
of you hyuh.”
A very trim, very intelligent-looking
maid opened the door, and the two men followed Madame
de Vaurigard into a square hall, hung with tapestries
and lit by two candles of a Brobdingnagian species
Mellin had heretofore seen only in cathedrals.
Here Mr. Sneyd paused.
“I weon’t be bawthring
you,” he said. “Just a wad with you,
Cantess, and I’m off.”
The intelligent-looking maid drew
back some heavy curtains leading to a salon beyond
the hall, and her mistress smiled brightly at Mellin.
“I shall keep him to jus’
his one word,” she said, as the young man passed
between the curtains.
It was a nobly proportioned room that
he entered, so large that, in spite of the amount
of old furniture it contained, the first impression
it gave was one of spaciousness. Panels of carved
and blackened wood lined the walls higher than his
head; above them, Spanish leather gleamed here and
there with flickerings of red and gilt, reflecting
dimly a small but brisk wood fire which crackled in
a carved stone fireplace. His feet slipped on
the floor of polished tiles and wandered from silky
rugs to lose themselves in great black bear skins as
in unmown sward. He went from the portrait of
a “cinquecento” cardinal to a splendid
tryptich set over a Gothic chest, from a cabinet sheltering
a collection of old glass to an Annunciation by an
unknown Primitive. He told himself that this
was a “room in a book,” and became dreamily
assured that he was a man in a book. Finally he
stumbled upon something almost grotesquely out of
place: a large, new, perfectly-appointed card-table
with a sliding top, a smooth, thick, green cover and
patent compartments.
He halted before this incongruity,
regarding it with astonishment. Then a light
laugh rippled behind him, and he turned to find Madame
de Vaurigard seated in a big red Venetian chair by
the fire.
She wore a black lace dress, almost
severe in fashion, which gracefully emphasized her
slenderness; and she sat with her knees crossed, the
firelight twinkling on the beads of her slipper, on
her silken instep, and flashing again from the rings
upon the slender fingers she had clasped about her
knee.
She had lit a thin, long Russian cigarette.
“You see?” she laughed.
“I mus’ keep up with the time.
I mus’ do somesing to hold my frien’s
about me. Even the ladies like to play now that
breedge w’ich is so tiresome they
play, play, play! And you you Americans,
you refuse to endure us if we do not let you play.
So for my frien’s when they come to my house if
they wish it, there is that foolish little table.
I fear” she concluded with a bewitching
affectation of sadness “they prefer
that to talkin’ wiz me.”
“You know that couldn’t
be so, Comtesse,” he said. “I
would rather talk to you than than ”
“Ah, yes, you say so, Monsieur!”
She looked at him gravely; a little sigh seemed to
breathe upon her lips; she leaned forward nearer the
fire, her face wistful in the thin, rosy light, and
it seemed to him he had never seen anything so beautiful
in his life.
He came across to her and sat upon
a stool at her feet. “On my soul,”
he began huskily, “I swear ”
She laid her finger on her lips, shaking
her head gently; and he was silent, while the intelligent
maid at that moment entering arranged
a tea-table and departed.
“American an’ Russian,
they are the worse,” said the Countess thoughtfully,
as she served him with a generous cup, laced with rum,
“but the American he is the bes’ to play
wiz.” Mellin found her irresistible
when she said “wiz.”
“Why is that?”
“Oh, the Russian play high,
yes but the American” she
laughed delightedly and stretched her arms wide “he
make’ it all a joke! He is beeg like his
beeg country. If he win or lose, he don’
care! Ah, I mus’ tell you of my great
American frien’, that Honor-able Chanlair Pedlow,
who is comin’ to Rome. You have heard of
Honor-able Chanlair Pedlow in America?”
“I remember hearing that name.”
“Ah, I shall make you know him.
He is a man of distinction; he did sit in your Chamber
of Deputies what you call it? yes,
your Con-gress. He is funny, eccentric always
he roar like a lion Boum! but
so simple, so good, a man of such fine heart so
lovable!”
“I’ll be glad to meet him,” said
Mellin coldly.
“An’, oh, yes, I almos’
forget to tell you,” she went on, “your
frien’, that dear Cooley, he is on his way from
Monte Carlo in his automobile. I have a note
from him to-day.”
“Good sort of fellow, little
Cooley, in his way,” remarked her companion
graciously. “Not especially intellectual
or that, you know. His father was a manufacturer
chap, I believe, or something of the sort. I suppose
you saw a lot of him in Paris?”
“Eh, I thought he is dead!” cried Madame
de Vaurigard.
“The father is. I mean, little Cooley.”
“Oh, yes,” she laughed
softly. “We had some gay times, a little
party of us. We shall be happy here, too; you
will see. I mus’ make a little dinner
very soon, but not unless you will come. You will?”
“Do you want me very much?”
He placed his empty cup on the table
and leaned closer to her, smiling. She did not
smile in response; instead, her eyes fell and there
was the faintest, pathetic quiver of her lower lip.
“Already you know that,” she said in a
low voice.
She rose quickly, turned away from
him and walked across the room to the curtains which
opened upon the hall. One of these she drew back.
“My frien’, you mus’
go now,” she said in the same low voice.
“To-morrow I will see you again. Come at
four an’ you shall drive with me but
not not more now.
Please!”
She stood waiting, not looking at
him, but with head bent and eyes veiled. As he
came near she put out a limp hand. He held it
for a few seconds of distinctly emotional silence,
then strode swiftly into the hall.
She immediately let the curtain fall
behind him, and as he got his hat and coat he heard
her catch her breath sharply with a sound like a little
sob.
Dazed with glory, he returned to the
hotel. In the lobby he approached the glittering
concierge and said firmly:
“What is the Salone Margherita?
Cam you get me a box there to-night?”