In spite of dykes and dams, said Dick,
we had arrived at a place to visit which had once
seemed to him as wonderful as finding the key of the
rainbow. Yet here we were; and Granada after
we had entered at last by crossing still another river came
out from under its spell of enchantment when we saw
it at close quarters. Only that wonderful hill
above was magical still, as magical to the eye as
when Ibraham the astrologer decreed its gardens.
More than half the miradored Moorish
houses had given place to modern French ones; and
descendants of the banished owners in far Tetuan and
Tunis, might as well fling their keys and title-deeds
away.
The dome of Isabella’s cathedral
and the towers of old, old churches rose from among
the roofs of commonplace streets; ordinary shops of
yesterday and to-day ran up the steep hill towards
the Alhambra; but at a great gateway la
Puerta de las Granadas, raised by Charles the Fifth the
centuries opened and let us drive through into the
past.
At this hour of the morning, the deep
green forest of the Alhambra park, beyond the classic
arch, was still as the enchanted wood which hid from
the world the Sleeping Beauty in her palace. The
nightingales had gone to sleep, and the daylight birds
had finished their first concert, but another voice
was singing, the joyous high soprano of water water
unseen, rippling through subterranean channels; water
seen tumbling in crystal runnels on either side of
the road in its bubbling way downhill.
Still we saw nothing of the enchanted
vermilion towers which draw all the world across sea
and land. There was but a glimpse of ruddy battlements
once at a turn of the road, through a netting of trees
and branches; then we were in a green cutting in the
deep wood, where two pleasant, old-fashioned hotels
faced each other.
We were expected at the house named
after that delicate and genial soul who awoke Europe
and America to the charm of the Alhambra. I had
hopefully telegraphed from Ronda that we would arrive
early, en automobile; nevertheless, the landlord,
knowing the route, was smilingly surprised to see
us.
There was a telegram; that was the
first thing we learned; and it was from Colonel O’Donnel;
but he had no news to tell. He merely wired his
advice that, if possible, Senor Waring should come
back to Seville immediately, as his evidence was now
wanted in the affair of the bomb.
Dick at once said that he would not
desert me, but I urged upon him the advisability of
going. He had seen me through my great adventure;
and if Carmona and the others were in Granada there
was nothing he could do at the moment which I could
not do for myself. If he failed to appear in
Seville, there might be trouble; and should I find
that I needed his help, I would telegraph.
Pilar’s name was not spoken,
but it rang in our thoughts, and Dick could not hide
the flash of eagerness that lit his eyes. Perhaps
by this time she would have made up her mind whether
he were to have “yes” or “no”
for his answer.
“My going shall depend on whether
Carmona’s here or not,” he said; and I
turned to the landlord with a question. Did he
know whether the Duke of Carmona and his mother had
come, and brought friends to their palace in Granada?
The Spaniard laughed. He knew
but too well, since the arrival of the distinguished
family had roused something like an émeute in
his and other hotels. Carmona palace was perhaps
the most interesting show-place left in the town of
Granada, except the tombs of los Reyes Catolicos in
the cathedral. It was the palace where Boabdil
had fled from his father’s wrath; and after
the Alhambra and the Generalife it was the one thing
that tourists came to see. Now they were prevented
from seeing it by the arrival of the Duke and Duchess,
a calamity which did not happen in the high season
once in ten years. If the house (which had in
these days but one grand suite of furnished and habitable
rooms) was occupied by its owners, it was usually
for a few weeks in the height of summer, after strangers
had ceased to come south; or else in the autumn, before
the time for travellers. Now there was great
dissatisfaction among the foreign visitors, who considered
themselves defrauded of their rights. Yesterday
morning several parties of tourists had insisted upon
an entrance, and in the afternoon, in fulfilment of
the Duke’s request, two civil guards had been
stationed before the door to keep would-be intruders
at a distance.
This did not seem a hopeful outlook
for me, in case I wished to try some such coup
d’etat as I had planned in Seville.
But there would be other ways of reaching Monica,
I told myself, when the landlord had gone on to say
that the Duke was supposed to be seriously ill.
If Carmona were suffering, he would not be able to
watch the members of his household as closely as before,
and it ought not to be impossible to let Monica know
that I was in Granada. Once she understood that
I was ready and waiting to take her away, means would
be found to reach her.
There was only time, when Dick had
finally decided to go, for a bath and breakfast before
I spun him down to the station for the morning train.
Meanwhile I had learned that every
room in our landlord’s two hotels was occupied,
for it was the most crowded season. But I was
to have a villa belonging to the hotels given to me
for my entire use, a villa in an old Moorish garden
of tinkling fountains, flowing rills, rose-entwined
miradores, jasmine arbours, myrtle hedges, and magnolia
trees. The Carmen de Mata Moros was to be mine
for as few days or as many weeks as I chose to remain.
Satisfied, therefore, that I should not have to camp
under the trees of the park, I determined, when I
had seen Dick off, to put up the car in the town of
Granada, and reconnoitre the neighbourhood of the
Carmona palace.
An inquiry here and there took me
to the street without much delay. The palace,
sacred to memories of Boabdil, his gentle Sultana Zorayda,
and his stern mother Ayxa, was to be found on the
outskirts of the Albaicin, that part of Granada once
favoured by the Moorish aristocracy, now almost given
up to the poorer Spaniards, and gypsies rich enough
and sophisticated enough to desert their caves.
Ferdinand and Isabel had granted the house to a rich
Moorish noble who had fore-sworn his religion to help
them in their wars, and who became the first Duque
de Carmona, owner of many estates and many palaces.
My landlord had not been misinformed.
The fine entrance, with its fifteenth century Spanish
coat of arms over the Moorish portal, was kept by
two civil guards. I walked up, and with the air
of a tourist, inquired how soon the palace would be
open to visitors. The men could not tell me.
Was the Duke ill? They believed so. And as
I could get nothing further from them I walked away.
Above, on the hill, clustered the
red towers of the Alhambra. I fancied that in
those towers there must be windows which overlooked
the patio of Boabdil’s old palace, and
I resolved to prove this presently, but I was not
yet ready to leave the Albaicin.
I had brought down my Kodak as an
excuse for lingering, and now I began, within sight
of Carmona’s doors, to take leisurely snapshots.
When I had been thus engaged for nearly half an hour,
I saw a young woman, evidently a servant, leaving
the palace with a small bundle under her arm; and
without appearing to notice her, I strolled in the
direction she was taking. Once beyond eyeshot
of the civil guards, I spoke to the girl, taking off
my hat politely.
“You are from the Duke of Carmona’s?”
I said. “I am an acquaintance of his, and
intended to call, but I hear he is seeing no one.”
“That is true, senor,”
replied the girl, a handsome creature of the gypsy
type, with bold eyes which took in every detail of
my features and clothing. “His Grace arrived
very fatigued and is obliged to lie in bed; which
is inconvenient, as there are foreign guests who must
be so constantly entertained by Her Grace the Duchess,
that she has no time to nurse her son.”
“I trust he has a clever doctor,” said
I.
“Oh, a very clever one,”
the girl answered eagerly. “Not an ordinary
physician, but a wonderful person. My brother
knows him well, and goes into the Sierra to find herbs
and flowers for his medicines and balsams.”
Evidently the girl was proud of the
acquaintance, and I humoured her.
“Such remedies are good in cases
of fever and malaria,” I said.
“And for many other things,”
she persisted. “His Grace has contracted
some poisoning of the hand. I do not know how;
but he is better already, and will no doubt soon be
well. If the senor would care to send a line of
sympathy, I might arrange for it to reach the Duke.
At present not even the most intimate friends are
admitted, but I am in the confidence of Her Grace’s
maid, who came with her from Seville. Indeed I’m
now on the way to do an errand for her.”
I caught at this opening.
“I should like to send a note,” I said,
“but not to the Duke.”
Having got so far, I took a roll of
bank-notes from my pocket, as we strolled slowly on
together. A young woman so anxious to convey an
impression of her own importance, must have ambitions
beyond her place in life.
The dark face sparkled at sight of
the money, and tactfully I explained that my principal
interest centred in a young guest of the Duchess’s.
Any person who could take word from me to her, unknown
to others, would be well rewarded. I should not
think five hundred pesetas too much, to give
for such a service.
A hint was enough. In an instant
the girl became a woman of business and a mistress
of intrigue. She would not, she said, dare attempt
to deliver a note. It would be simpler, less
dangerous for all concerned, to be at work in a corridor
through which the English senorita must pass; to murmur
a few words which would attract her attention; to
receive a verbal message in return; and to bring it
to me when she could not to-day; that would
be impossible; but to-morrow evening about nine, at
which time she had already permission to go out.
Should I trust her? Her face
was one to inspire a man’s admiration rather
than trust, but I had no alternative. If I surrendered
this chance, I should hardly find another as promising;
and as I must depend upon someone in Carmona’s
house, why not upon this woman? The bribe I offered
was tempting enough to keep her true, if anything
could.
I hesitated no more than a moment
in accepting her amendment of my proposal, since she
assured me it was impossible to make an appointment
sooner. And the message I sent Monica was cautiously
worded.
The friends who had seen her last
in the cathedral of Seville were anxious to see her
again, and begged that she would arrange to meet them
as soon as possible, to carry out the plan which had
been interrupted.
The girl repeated these words after
me, promised to remember them and give me the answer
to-morrow night at nine, in case any message were entrusted
to her. We were not to meet at the same place,
however, but on the Alhambra Hill, in the road leading
up from the “Wasinton” (as she called
the hotel) to the Carmen de Mata Moros. She had
a brother living not far from there, she said, whom
she expected to visit the following evening. I
offered half the money in advance as an incentive to
loyalty, and it was accepted with dignity. Then,
when we were parting, I asked if one could see into
the palace patio from the Alhambra, which towered
above us on the height.
“From the middle window of the
Sala de Ambajadores the senor will find himself able
to see very well,” she answered. “And
there is still another patio, into which there
is a better view from the gardens of the Generalife.
Certainly the gardens are very high and far; but if
the senor has a spy-glass of some sort? And if
he chooses I can try to tell the young lady that he
will be first in one place, then in the other, hoping
for a sight of her. Let us say, in the afternoon
between four and six at the Alhambra; after that,
at the Generalife, till the sun is gone.”
This neat plan was worth an extra
twenty-five peseta note, and I gave it. Afterwards,
having no other personal affairs to distract my attention,
I wandered through the streets of Granada and into
the chill cathedral before going up to make acquaintance
with the Carmen de Mata Moros.
When I had seen the villa, with its
enchanting terraced garden, hanging on the hillside
high above the Vega, a wild hope blazed within me that
I might snatch Monica, persuade the English Consul
to marry us, and keep her here for the honeymoon,
flaunting my happiness in Carmona’s face.
Of course the idea was fantastic, but it gave me a
few moments of happiness.
I lunched in the garden under the
thick shade of nísperos trees, and before the
time agreed upon I started to walk to the Alhambra.
Not for worlds would I have taken
a guide to show the way. All my life, since the
days when my mother told me legends of treasure hidden
and Moorish warriors enchanted, the Alhambra had been
a fairy dream to me. There was no one in the
world, save only Monica, whose company I would have
craved for this expedition. Other people’s
thoughts and impressions of the place might be better
than mine, but I did not want to hear them; I wanted
only my own.
Under the huge leaning elms, which
people who trust guide-books attribute to Wellington,
I wandered until I came to a great red tower, with
a horseshoe arch for entrance. There on the keystone
was the carved hand; beyond, over the arch within,
the key; and remembering the legend that never would
disaster come until the Hand had grasped the Key, I
knew that this must be the Gate of Justice.
Now, a spell fell upon me. It
was as if the Hand had come down to touch me on the
shoulder, and give the Key to hidden wonders, which
only I might be allowed to see. That was the
fiction with which I pleased myself; for he who comes
to the most famous of places is as truly a discoverer
as he who finds a new world. No matter how much
he has read, how many faithful photographs seen, he
must discover everything anew, since it is certain
that nowhere will he find anything more than he has
within himself. The picture he sees will fit
the frame his mind can give, and no one ever has,
no one ever will, see there exactly what he sees.
If a man’s mind cannot create a beautiful frame,
then the picture must have but a poor effect for him,
and he will go away belittling it.
Now, I believed that I had been making
a fine jewelled frame for this picture of the Alhambra,
and I hoped that I deserved the Key which the Hand
had lent.
Inside the gateway, when I had climbed
a winding lane, I found myself in the great Place
of the Cisterns, which, with the vast incongruous palace
half finished by Charles the Fifth, I recognized from
many pictures; but not yet would I look down over
Granada and the Vega. I would wait until I could
stand at a window in the Hall of the Ambassadors and
see what I had been promised. So, without a glance
over the parapet, I walked on to an open door, where
stood two or three men in gold-laced hats. One
moved resignedly forward to act as guide, but a word
and a piece of silver convinced him that I was a person
who might be trusted alone, though I lacked a student’s
ticket.
I passed through the room devoted
to officialdom, and then the time had come
to use the key, for I was already in fairyland; the
covers of the “Arabian Nights” had closed
on me, and shut me in between the pages.
Physically I was not alone; for there
were faded and strident tourists in the marble-paved
court of the Alberca, whom I fain would have had
stopped outside and put into appropriate costume for
fairyland; but spiritually I had the place to myself.
The little glittering fish, like tropical
flowers under green glass, flashed towards me through
the beryl water, just as ancestor fish had flashed
when jewelled hands of harem beauties crumbled cake
into the gleaming tank. My mother had told me
a legend, that fair favourites of banished sultans
prayed to return after death to the Alhambra, in the
bronze and gold, rose and purple forms of these fish
of the Alberca; and now I half believed the story.
Where since Mahomet grants no heaven to
women could they be happier than here?
Floating ever under their roof of emerald, did they
think themselves more fortunate than their husbands,
lovers, and brothers permitted to rest within the Alhambra
walls in the guise of martens wailing shrilly for
days that might not come again?
Dreaming, I passed into the Court
of Lions, where I and the twelve quaint, stone guardians
of the place stared at one another across a few feet
of marble pavement that measured centuries. Each
prim beast, beautiful because of his crude hideousness
differing from his fellows; each with a different
story to tell if he would. Which one remembered
that night when the brave Abencerrages faced death,
there in the hall to the right, where the fountain
kept ominous stains of brown? Which had the seeing
eye in these fallen times, to watch when the ghost
of those noble Moors passed by silent and sad in the
moonlight? Upon which had blood-drops spattered
when the boy princes died for jealous Fatima’s
pleasure? Which had known the touch of Morayma’s
little hand or lovely Galiana’s?
I asked the questions; yet the deep
answering silence of the court, and of all this hidden,
secret, fairy palace seemed to say so much that it
was not like silence, but reserve.
“The Alhambra is music and colour
and knowledge,” I said to the lions. “When
I am gone I shall shut my eyes and hear as well as
see it; hear the magic music of the silence, played
on silver lutes of Moors, and tinkling fountains,
a siren’s song to draw me back again; and I shall
know and feel things which I’ve never been able
to think out quite clearly before.”
Would Monica come here? I wondered.
No face more lovely than hers had ever looked down
from those latticed windows supported by pillars delicate
as a child’s white arm. If I could but
see her face now! Not seeing it, I knew that
no place, however beautiful, could be perfect for me.
Shadows of sorrow, of separation, would stand out
the blacker against the sunlit, jewelled walls of
the fairy palace; and even happiness must sing in minor
notes here, lest it strike out a discord in the tragic
poem of the Alhambra. No wonder, in losing their
crown jewel, the Moors lost hope, and with it all
the art and science which had set them far above their
Christian rivals! No wonder they plunged, despairing,
into the deserts they had left, mingling among savage
races as some bright spring mingles with a dark subterranean
river, never to glitter in the light again.
But none of my day dreams cheated
me into losing count of time.
If my messenger were true, soon Monica
would be in one of the patios of Carmona’s
palace, looking up at the Alhambra towers. “The
middle window as you go into the Hall of the Ambassadors,”
I repeated, and found my way back through the court
of the Alberca; for you do not need to know the
Alhambra to find your way from sala to sala,
seen a hundred times in imagination.
So beautiful had I guessed that room
above all others, that I had not expected to be surprised;
yet I was surprised, and oddly excited, for supreme
beauty is always exciting to the Latin mind. A
vast bower of jewels, and old point-lace embroidered
with tarnished gold threads and yellowing pearls,
it seemed; its portals lace-curtained too; rich hanging
folds of lace and fringe, like the lifted drapery of
a sultan’s tent, supported on delicate poles
of polished ivory.
Behind me was the beryl block of the
fish-pond, set in silver instead of marble by the
sunshine in the court. Before me, across the pink-jewelled
dusk of the Sala de los Ambajadores, a blue and green
picture of sky and mountains was framed by lace and
precious stones.
I walked to the middle window and
looked sheer down over tall tree-tops to the valley
of the Darro, where the roofs of the Albaicin clustered
together, softly grey and glistening as the ruffled
plumage of nestling birds.
Far away to the left lay the Vega,
shimmering under a mist of heat, which gave the look
of a crystal sea engulfing the plain, trees and scattered
villages gleaming through the transparent flood.
Straight before my eyes, on the cactus-clothed shoulder
of a hill opposite the tower, glittered a splash of
whitewash dotted with black holes, which were the doors
and windows of gypsy caverns. And above me, to
the right on a higher hillside, rose the towers and
miradores of that ancient “summer palace of delights,”
the Generalife.
One sweeping glance gave me these
details; then, adjusting the field-glass I had brought,
I fixed my attention on a house near the Albaicin,
which I easily identified as Carmona’s palace.
Gazing down from such a height, I
had a bird’s-eye view of double patios
thick with clustering shrubs, orange trees, and cypresses.
The powerful glasses brought out clearly the delicate
marble pillars supporting the Moorish archways of
the upper gallery in one of these patios; but
the other was shrouded for me by a group of cypresses.
For a long time I waited hours
it seemed; but no one moved along the gallery or appeared
in the half-shuttered windows that looked down into
the court; and at last I decided to try the gardens
of the Generalife, which I had been told commanded
the second patio.
Once, said legend, a prince had been
secluded by his father in those gardens and those
towers, lest he see the face of a woman, and learn
sorrow through love; nevertheless, he had found out
the great secret, and had had news of the most beautiful
lady in the world. I hoped, as I walked along
the avenue of cypresses, that I might be as fortunate;
and in the gardens all things spoke of love.
There, under the giant cypress, the handsome Abencerrage
had come to keep the tryst which cost his head, and
thirty-five others as noble. There, at the top
of that shaded flight of stone steps, whose balustrades
were jewelled with running water, Prince Ahmed had
sat to play his lute. From that arcaded balcony
Zorayda had looked when love was young, and Boabdil
still the lover. In the mirrors of the water-patio
Galiana had bent to her own image and asked, “Am
I worthy to be loved?”
Out of the tangle of red and white
roses, bunched in with golden oranges and scented
blooms mingling together in one huge bouquet, I looked
to find my love. It was true, I could see clearly
now into the cypress patio; and suddenly a
white figure came out from a window upon the gallery.
The glass at my eye, I thought I recognized Monica’s
slender girlishness; but a moment later a larger form
appeared. The two women stood together looking
up, Lady Vale-Avon pointing towards the towers of the
Alhambra or the Generalife.
Was it possible she saw me? Yet
no, she could not without glasses. But if Monica
had indeed been told where I would be at a certain
time, could she not have contrived some means to elude
her mother and come to the balcony alone?
Long after the two vanished I lingered;
waited until sunset; waited until the sky was flooded
with rose and gold, and towers and hills were purple
in a violet mist. But Monica did not come again.
If she had not been given the message,
what guarantee had I that she would receive the other
far more important?
It was in a fever of uncertainty that
I must spend the next four-and-twenty hours.