As first published in Atlantic Monthly, August 1904
CHAPTER I
“Above all,” the letter
ended, “don’t leave Siena without seeing
Doctor Lombard’s Leonardo. Lombard is a
queer old Englishman, a mystic or a madman (if the
two are not synonymous), and a devout student of the
Italian Renaissance. He has lived for years in
Italy, exploring its remotest corners, and has lately
picked up an undoubted Leonardo, which came to light
in a farmhouse near Bergamo. It is believed to
be one of the missing pictures mentioned by Vasari,
and is at any rate, according to the most competent
authorities, a genuine and almost untouched example
of the best period.
“Lombard is a queer stick, and
jealous of showing his treasures; but we struck up
a friendship when I was working on the Sodomas in Siena
three years ago, and if you will give him the enclosed
line you may get a peep at the Leonardo. Probably
not more than a peep, though, for I hear he refuses
to have it reproduced. I want badly to use it
in my monograph on the Windsor drawings, so please
see what you can do for me, and if you can’t
persuade him to let you take a photograph or make a
sketch, at least jot down a detailed description of
the picture and get from him all the facts you can.
I hear that the French and Italian governments have
offered him a large advance on his purchase, but that
he refuses to sell at any price, though he certainly
can’t afford such luxuries; in fact, I don’t
see where he got enough money to buy the picture.
He lives in the Via Papa Giulio.”
Wyant sat at the table d’hote
of his hotel, re-reading his friend’s letter
over a late luncheon. He had been five days in
Siena without having found time to call on Doctor
Lombard; not from any indifference to the opportunity
presented, but because it was his first visit to the
strange red city and he was still under the spell of
its more conspicuous wonders the brick
palaces flinging out their wrought-iron torch-holders
with a gesture of arrogant suzerainty; the great council-chamber
emblazoned with civic allegories; the pageant of Pope
Julius on the Library walls; the Sodomas smiling balefully
through the dusk of mouldering chapels and
it was only when his first hunger was appeased that
he remembered that one course in the banquet was still
untasted.
He put the letter in his pocket and
turned to leave the room, with a nod to its only other
occupant, an olive-skinned young man with lustrous
eyes and a low collar, who sat on the other side of
the table, perusing the Fanfulla di Domenica.
This gentleman, his daily vis-a-vis, returned the
nod with a Latin eloquence of gesture, and Wyant passed
on to the ante-chamber, where he paused to light a
cigarette. He was just restoring the case to
his pocket when he heard a hurried step behind him,
and the lustrous-eyed young man advanced through the
glass doors of the dining-room.
“Pardon me, sir,” he said
in measured English, and with an intonation of exquisite
politeness; “you have let this letter fall.”
Wyant, recognizing his friend’s
note of introduction to Doctor Lombard, took it with
a word of thanks, and was about to turn away when he
perceived that the eyes of his fellow diner remained
fixed on him with a gaze of melancholy interrogation.
“Again pardon me,” the
young man at length ventured, “but are you by
chance the friend of the illustrious Doctor Lombard?”
“No,” returned Wyant,
with the instinctive Anglo-Saxon distrust of foreign
advances. Then, fearing to appear rude, he said
with a guarded politeness: “Perhaps, by
the way, you can tell me the number of his house.
I see it is not given here.”
The young man brightened perceptibly.
“The number of the house is thirteen; but any
one can indicate it to you it is well known
in Siena. It is called,” he continued after
a moment, “the House of the Dead Hand.”
Wyant stared. “What a queer name!”
he said.
“The name comes from an antique
hand of marble which for many hundred years has been
above the door.”
Wyant was turning away with a gesture
of thanks, when the other added: “If you
would have the kindness to ring twice.”
“To ring twice?”
“At the doctor’s.” The young
man smiled. “It is the custom.”
It was a dazzling March afternoon,
with a shower of sun from the mid-blue, and a marshalling
of slaty clouds behind the umber-colored hills.
For nearly an hour Wyant loitered on the Lizza, watching
the shadows race across the naked landscape and the
thunder blacken in the west; then he decided to set
out for the House of the Dead Hand. The map in
his guidebook showed him that the Via Papa Giulio was
one of the streets which radiate from the Piazza,
and thither he bent his course, pausing at every other
step to fill his eye with some fresh image of weather-beaten
beauty. The clouds had rolled upward, obscuring
the sunshine and hanging like a funereal baldachin
above the projecting cornices of Doctor Lombard’s
street, and Wyant walked for some distance in the
shade of the beetling palace fronts before his eye
fell on a doorway surmounted by a sallow marble hand.
He stood for a moment staring up at the strange emblem.
The hand was a woman’s a dead drooping
hand, which hung there convulsed and helpless, as though
it had been thrust forth in denunciation of some evil
mystery within the house, and had sunk struggling
into death.
A girl who was drawing water from
the well in the court said that the English doctor
lived on the first floor, and Wyant, passing through
a glazed door, mounted the damp degrees of a vaulted
stairway with a plaster AEsculapius mouldering in
a niche on the landing. Facing the AEsculapius
was another door, and as Wyant put his hand on the
bell-rope he remembered his unknown friend’s
injunction, and rang twice.
His ring was answered by a peasant
woman with a low forehead and small close-set eyes,
who, after a prolonged scrutiny of himself, his card,
and his letter of introduction, left him standing in
a high, cold ante-chamber floored with brick.
He heard her wooden pattens click down an interminable
corridor, and after some delay she returned and told
him to follow her.
They passed through a long saloon,
bare as the ante-chamber, but loftily vaulted, and
frescoed with a seventeenth-century Triumph of Scipio
or Alexander martial figures following
Wyant with the filmed melancholy gaze of shades in
limbo. At the end of this apartment he was admitted
to a smaller room, with the same atmosphere of mortal
cold, but showing more obvious signs of occupancy.
The walls were covered with tapestry which had faded
to the gray-brown tints of decaying vegetation, so
that the young man felt as though he were entering
a sunless autumn wood. Against these hangings
stood a few tall cabinets on heavy gilt feet, and
at a table in the window three persons were seated:
an elderly lady who was warming her hands over a brazier,
a girl bent above a strip of needle-work, and an old
man.
As the latter advanced toward Wyant,
the young man was conscious of staring with unseemly
intentness at his small round-backed figure, dressed
with shabby disorder and surmounted by a wonderful
head, lean, vulpine, eagle-beaked as that of some
art-loving despot of the Renaissance: a head
combining the venerable hair and large prominent eyes
of the humanist with the greedy profile of the adventurer.
Wyant, in musing on the Italian portrait-medals of
the fifteenth century, had often fancied that only
in that period of fierce individualism could types
so paradoxical have been produced; yet the subtle craftsmen
who committed them to the bronze had never drawn a
face more strangely stamped with contradictory passions
than that of Doctor Lombard.
“I am glad to see you,”
he said to Wyant, extending a hand which seemed a
mere framework held together by knotted veins.
“We lead a quiet life here and receive few visitors,
but any friend of Professor Clyde’s is welcome.”
Then, with a gesture which included the two women,
he added dryly: “My wife and daughter often
talk of Professor Clyde.”
“Oh yes he used to
make me such nice toast; they don’t understand
toast in Italy,” said Mrs. Lombard in a high
plaintive voice.
It would have been difficult, from
Doctor Lombard’s manner and appearance to guess
his nationality; but his wife was so inconsciently
and ineradicably English that even the silhouette of
her cap seemed a protest against Continental laxities.
She was a stout fair woman, with pale cheeks netted
with red lines. A brooch with a miniature portrait
sustained a bogwood watch-chain upon her bosom, and
at her elbow lay a heap of knitting and an old copy
of The Queen.
The young girl, who had remained standing,
was a slim replica of her mother, with an apple-cheeked
face and opaque blue eyes. Her small head was
prodigally laden with braids of dull fair hair, and
she might have had a kind of transient prettiness
but for the sullen droop of her round mouth.
It was hard to say whether her expression implied ill-temper
or apathy; but Wyant was struck by the contrast between
the fierce vitality of the doctor’s age and
the inanimateness of his daughter’s youth.
Seating himself in the chair which
his host advanced, the young man tried to open the
conversation by addressing to Mrs. Lombard some random
remark on the beauties of Siena. The lady murmured
a resigned assent, and Doctor Lombard interposed with
a smile: “My dear sir, my wife considers
Siena a most salubrious spot, and is favorably impressed
by the cheapness of the marketing; but she deplores
the total absence of muffins and cannel coal, and
cannot resign herself to the Italian method of dusting
furniture.”
“But they don’t, you know they
don’t dust it!” Mrs. Lombard protested,
without showing any resentment of her husband’s
manner.
“Precisely they don’t
dust it. Since we have lived in Siena we have
not once seen the cobwebs removed from the battlements
of the Mangia. Can you conceive of such housekeeping?
My wife has never yet dared to write it home to her
aunts at Bonchurch.”
Mrs. Lombard accepted in silence this
remarkable statement of her views, and her husband,
with a malicious smile at Wyant’s embarrassment,
planted himself suddenly before the young man.
“And now,” said he, “do you want
to see my Leonardo?”
“Do I?” cried Wyant, on his feet
in a flash.
The doctor chuckled. “Ah,”
he said, with a kind of crooning deliberation, “that’s
the way they all behave that’s what
they all come for.” He turned to his daughter
with another variation of mockery in his smile.
“Don’t fancy it’s for your beaux
yeux, my dear; or for the mature charms of Mrs.
Lombard,” he added, glaring suddenly at his wife,
who had taken up her knitting and was softly murmuring
over the number of her stitches.
Neither lady appeared to notice his
pleasantries, and he continued, addressing himself
to Wyant: “They all come they
all come; but many are called and few are chosen.”
His voice sank to solemnity. “While I live,”
he said, “no unworthy eye shall desecrate that
picture. But I will not do my friend Clyde the
injustice to suppose that he would send an unworthy
representative. He tells me he wishes a description
of the picture for his book; and you shall describe
it to him if you can.”
Wyant hesitated, not knowing whether
it was a propitious moment to put in his appeal for
a photograph.
“Well, sir,” he said,
“you know Clyde wants me to take away all I can
of it.”
Doctor Lombard eyed him sardonically.
“You’re welcome to take away all you can
carry,” he replied; adding, as he turned to his
daughter: “That is, if he has your permission,
Sybilla.”
The girl rose without a word, and
laying aside her work, took a key from a secret drawer
in one of the cabinets, while the doctor continued
in the same note of grim jocularity: “For
you must know that the picture is not mine it
is my daughter’s.”
He followed with evident amusement
the surprised glance which Wyant turned on the young
girl’s impassive figure.
“Sybilla,” he pursued,
“is a votary of the arts; she has inherited her
fond father’s passion for the unattainable.
Luckily, however, she also recently inherited a tidy
legacy from her grandmother; and having seen the Leonardo,
on which its discoverer had placed a price far beyond
my reach, she took a step which deserves to go down
to history: she invested her whole inheritance
in the purchase of the picture, thus enabling me to
spend my closing years in communion with one of the
world’s masterpieces. My dear sir, could
Antigone do more?”
The object of this strange eulogy
had meanwhile drawn aside one of the tapestry hangings,
and fitted her key into a concealed door.
“Come,” said Doctor Lombard,
“let us go before the light fails us.”
Wyant glanced at Mrs. Lombard, who
continued to knit impassively.
“No, no,” said his host,
“my wife will not come with us. You might
not suspect it from her conversation, but my wife has
no feeling for art Italian art, that is;
for no one is fonder of our early Victorian school.”
“Frith’s Railway Station,
you know,” said Mrs. Lombard, smiling. “I
like an animated picture.”
Miss Lombard, who had unlocked the
door, held back the tapestry to let her father and
Wyant pass out; then she followed them down a narrow
stone passage with another door at its end. This
door was iron-barred, and Wyant noticed that it had
a complicated patent lock. The girl fitted another
key into the lock, and Doctor Lombard led the way into
a small room. The dark panelling of this apartment
was irradiated by streams of yellow light slanting
through the disbanded thunder clouds, and in the central
brightness hung a picture concealed by a curtain of
faded velvet.
“A little too bright, Sybilla,”
said Doctor Lombard. His face had grown solemn,
and his mouth twitched nervously as his daughter drew
a linen drapery across the upper part of the window.
“That will do that
will do.” He turned impressively to Wyant.
“Do you see the pomegranate bud in this rug?
Place yourself there keep your left foot
on it, please. And now, Sybilla, draw the cord.”
Miss Lombard advanced and placed her
hand on a cord hidden behind the velvet curtain.
“Ah,” said the doctor,
“one moment: I should like you, while looking
at the picture, to have in mind a few lines of verse.
Sybilla ”
Without the slightest change of countenance,
and with a promptness which proved her to be prepared
for the request, Miss Lombard began to recite, in
a full round voice like her mother’s, St. Bernard’s
invocation to the Virgin, in the thirty-third canto
of the Paradise.
“Thank you, my dear,”
said her father, drawing a deep breath as she ended.
“That unapproachable combination of vowel sounds
prepares one better than anything I know for the contemplation
of the picture.”
As he spoke the folds of velvet slowly
parted, and the Leonardo appeared in its frame of
tarnished gold:
From the nature of Miss Lombard’s
recitation Wyant had expected a sacred subject, and
his surprise was therefore great as the composition
was gradually revealed by the widening division of
the curtain.
In the background a steel-colored
river wound through a pale calcareous landscape; while
to the left, on a lonely peak, a crucified Christ
hung livid against indigo clouds. The central
figure of the foreground, however, was that of a woman
seated in an antique chair of marble with bas-reliefs
of dancing maenads. Her feet rested on a meadow
sprinkled with minute wild-flowers, and her attitude
of smiling majesty recalled that of Dosso Dossi’s
Circe. She wore a red robe, flowing in closely
fluted lines from under a fancifully embroidered cloak.
Above her high forehead the crinkled golden hair flowed
sideways beneath a veil; one hand drooped on the arm
of her chair; the other held up an inverted human
skull, into which a young Dionysus, smooth, brown and
sidelong as the St. John of the Louvre, poured a stream
of wine from a high-poised flagon. At the lady’s
feet lay the symbols of art and luxury: a flute
and a roll of music, a platter heaped with grapes and
roses, the torso of a Greek statuette, and a bowl
overflowing with coins and jewels; behind her, on
the chalky hilltop, hung the crucified Christ.
A scroll in a corner of the foreground bore the legend:
Lux Mundi.
Wyant, emerging from the first plunge
of wonder, turned inquiringly toward his companions.
Neither had moved. Miss Lombard stood with her
hand on the cord, her lids lowered, her mouth drooping;
the doctor, his strange Thoth-like profile turned
toward his guest, was still lost in rapt contemplation
of his treasure.
Wyant addressed the young girl.
“You are fortunate,” he
said, “to be the possessor of anything so perfect.”
“It is considered very beautiful,” she
said coldly.
“Beautiful beautiful!”
the doctor burst out. “Ah, the poor, worn
out, over-worked word! There are no adjectives
in the language fresh enough to describe such pristine
brilliancy; all their brightness has been worn off
by misuse. Think of the things that have been
called beautiful, and then look at that!”
“It is worthy of a new vocabulary,” Wyant
agreed.
“Yes,” Doctor Lombard
continued, “my daughter is indeed fortunate.
She has chosen what Catholics call the higher life the
counsel of perfection. What other private person
enjoys the same opportunity of understanding the master?
Who else lives under the same roof with an untouched
masterpiece of Leonardo’s? Think of the
happiness of being always under the influence of such
a creation; of living into it; of partaking of
it in daily and hourly communion! This room is
a chapel; the sight of that picture is a sacrament.
What an atmosphere for a young life to unfold itself
in! My daughter is singularly blessed. Sybilla,
point out some of the details to Mr. Wyant; I see that
he will appreciate them.”
The girl turned her dense blue eyes
toward Wyant; then, glancing away from him, she pointed
to the canvas.
“Notice the modeling of the
left hand,” she began in a monotonous voice;
“it recalls the hand of the Mona Lisa. The
head of the naked genius will remind you of that of
the St. John of the Louvre, but it is more purely
pagan and is turned a little less to the right.
The embroidery on the cloak is symbolic: you
will see that the roots of this plant have burst through
the vase. This recalls the famous definition of
Hamlet’s character in Wilhelm Meister.
Here are the mystic rose, the flame, and the serpent,
emblem of eternity. Some of the other symbols
we have not yet been able to decipher.”
Wyant watched her curiously; she seemed
to be reciting a lesson.
“And the picture itself?”
he said. “How do you explain that?
Lux Mundi what a curious device
to connect with such a subject! What can it mean?”
Miss Lombard dropped her eyes:
the answer was evidently not included in her lesson.
“What, indeed?” the doctor
interposed. “What does life mean? As
one may define it in a hundred different ways, so
one may find a hundred different meanings in this
picture. Its symbolism is as many-faceted as
a well-cut diamond. Who, for instance, is that
divine lady? Is it she who is the true Lux
Mundi the light reflected from jewels
and young eyes, from polished marble and clear waters
and statues of bronze? Or is that the Light of
the World, extinguished on yonder stormy hill, and
is this lady the Pride of Life, feasting blindly on
the wine of iniquity, with her back turned to the
light which has shone for her in vain? Something
of both these meanings may be traced in the picture;
but to me it symbolizes rather the central truth of
existence: that all that is raised in incorruption
is sown in corruption; art, beauty, love, religion;
that all our wine is drunk out of skulls, and poured
for us by the mysterious genius of a remote and cruel
past.”
The doctor’s face blazed:
his bent figure seemed to straighten itself and become
taller.
“Ah,” he cried, growing
more dithyrambic, “how lightly you ask what
it means! How confidently you expect an answer!
Yet here am I who have given my life to the study
of the Renaissance; who have violated its tomb, laid
open its dead body, and traced the course of every
muscle, bone, and artery; who have sucked its very
soul from the pages of poets and humanists; who have
wept and believed with Joachim of Flora, smiled and
doubted with AEneas Sylvius Piccolomini; who have patiently
followed to its source the least inspiration of the
masters, and groped in neolithic caverns and Babylonian
ruins for the first unfolding tendrils of the arabesques
of Mantegna and Crivelli; and I tell you that I stand
abashed and ignorant before the mystery of this picture.
It means nothing it means all things.
It may represent the period which saw its creation;
it may represent all ages past and to come. There
are volumes of meaning in the tiniest emblem on the
lady’s cloak; the blossoms of its border are
rooted in the deepest soil of myth and tradition.
Don’t ask what it means, young man, but bow
your head in thankfulness for having seen it!”
Miss Lombard laid her hand on his arm.
“Don’t excite yourself,
father,” she said in the detached tone of a
professional nurse.
He answered with a despairing gesture.
“Ah, it’s easy for you to talk. You
have years and years to spend with it; I am an old
man, and every moment counts!”
“It’s bad for you,” she repeated
with gentle obstinacy.
The doctor’s sacred fury had
in fact burnt itself out. He dropped into a seat
with dull eyes and slackening lips, and his daughter
drew the curtain across the picture.
Wyant turned away reluctantly.
He felt that his opportunity was slipping from him,
yet he dared not refer to Clyde’s wish for a
photograph. He now understood the meaning of
the laugh with which Doctor Lombard had given him
leave to carry away all the details he could remember.
The picture was so dazzling, so unexpected, so crossed
with elusive and contradictory suggestions, that the
most alert observer, when placed suddenly before it,
must lose his coordinating faculty in a sense of confused
wonder. Yet how valuable to Clyde the record of
such a work would be! In some ways it seemed
to be the summing up of the master’s thought,
the key to his enigmatic philosophy.
The doctor had risen and was walking
slowly toward the door. His daughter unlocked
it, and Wyant followed them back in silence to the
room in which they had left Mrs. Lombard. That
lady was no longer there, and he could think of no
excuse for lingering.
He thanked the doctor, and turned
to Miss Lombard, who stood in the middle of the room
as though awaiting farther orders.
“It is very good of you,”
he said, “to allow one even a glimpse of such
a treasure.”
She looked at him with her odd directness.
“You will come again?” she said quickly;
and turning to her father she added: “You
know what Professor Clyde asked. This gentleman
cannot give him any account of the picture without
seeing it again.”
Doctor Lombard glanced at her vaguely;
he was still like a person in a trance.
“Eh?” he said, rousing himself with an
effort.
“I said, father, that Mr. Wyant
must see the picture again if he is to tell Professor
Clyde about it,” Miss Lombard repeated with extraordinary
precision of tone.
Wyant was silent. He had the
puzzled sense that his wishes were being divined and
gratified for reasons with which he was in no way connected.
“Well, well,” the doctor
muttered, “I don’t say no I
don’t say no. I know what Clyde wants I
don’t refuse to help him.” He turned
to Wyant. “You may come again you
may make notes,” he added with a sudden effort.
“Jot down what occurs to you. I’m
willing to concede that.”
Wyant again caught the girl’s
eye, but its emphatic message perplexed him.
“You’re very good,”
he said tentatively, “but the fact is the picture
is so mysterious so full of complicated
detail that I’m afraid no notes I
could make would serve Clyde’s purpose as well
as as a photograph, say. If you would
allow me ”
Miss Lombard’s brow darkened,
and her father raised his head furiously.
“A photograph? A photograph,
did you say? Good God, man, not ten people have
been allowed to set foot in that room! A photograph?”
Wyant saw his mistake, but saw also
that he had gone too far to retreat.
“I know, sir, from what Clyde
has told me, that you object to having any reproduction
of the picture published; but he hoped you might let
me take a photograph for his personal use not
to be reproduced in his book, but simply to give him
something to work by. I should take the photograph
myself, and the negative would of course be yours.
If you wished it, only one impression would be struck
off, and that one Clyde could return to you when he
had done with it.”
Doctor Lombard interrupted him with
a snarl. “When he had done with it?
Just so: I thank thee for that word! When
it had been re-photographed, drawn, traced, autotyped,
passed about from hand to hand, defiled by every ignorant
eye in England, vulgarized by the blundering praise
of every art-scribbler in Europe! Bah! I’d
as soon give you the picture itself: why don’t
you ask for that?”
“Well, sir,” said Wyant
calmly, “if you will trust me with it, I’ll
engage to take it safely to England and back, and to
let no eye but Clyde’s see it while it is out
of your keeping.”
The doctor received this remarkable
proposal in silence; then he burst into a laugh.
“Upon my soul!” he said with sardonic
good humor.
It was Miss Lombard’s turn to
look perplexedly at Wyant. His last words and
her father’s unexpected reply had evidently carried
her beyond her depth.
“Well, sir, am I to take the
picture?” Wyant smilingly pursued.
“No, young man; nor a photograph
of it. Nor a sketch, either; mind that, nothing
that can be reproduced. Sybilla,” he cried
with sudden passion, “swear to me that the picture
shall never be reproduced! No photograph, no
sketch now or afterward. Do you hear
me?”
“Yes, father,” said the girl quietly.
“The vandals,” he muttered,
“the desecrators of beauty; if I thought it
would ever get into their hands I’d burn it first,
by God!” He turned to Wyant, speaking more quietly.
“I said you might come back I never
retract what I say. But you must give me your
word that no one but Clyde shall see the notes you
make.”
Wyant was growing warm.
“If you won’t trust me
with a photograph I wonder you trust me not to show
my notes!” he exclaimed.
The doctor looked at him with a malicious smile.
“Humph!” he said; “would they be
of much use to anybody?”
Wyant saw that he was losing ground and controlled
his impatience.
“To Clyde, I hope, at any rate,”
he answered, holding out his hand. The doctor
shook it without a trace of resentment, and Wyant added:
“When shall I come, sir?”
“To-morrow to-morrow morning,”
cried Miss Lombard, speaking suddenly.
She looked fixedly at her father, and he shrugged
his shoulders.
“The picture is hers,” he said to Wyant.
In the ante-chamber the young man
was met by the woman who had admitted him. She
handed him his hat and stick, and turned to unbar the
door. As the bolt slipped back he felt a touch
on his arm.
“You have a letter?” she said in a low
tone.
“A letter?” He stared. “What
letter?”
She shrugged her shoulders, and drew back to let him
pass.
CHAPTER II
As Wyant emerged from the house he
paused once more to glance up at its scarred brick
façade. The marble hand drooped tragically above
the entrance: in the waning light it seemed to
have relaxed into the passiveness of despair, and
Wyant stood musing on its hidden meaning. But
the Dead Hand was not the only mysterious thing about
Doctor Lombard’s house. What were the relations
between Miss Lombard and her father? Above all,
between Miss Lombard and her picture? She did
not look like a person capable of a disinterested
passion for the arts; and there had been moments when
it struck Wyant that she hated the picture.
The sky at the end of the street was
flooded with turbulent yellow light, and the young
man turned his steps toward the church of San Domenico,
in the hope of catching the lingering brightness on
Sodoma’s St. Catherine.
The great bare aisles were almost
dark when he entered, and he had to grope his way
to the chapel steps. Under the momentary evocation
of the sunset, the saint’s figure emerged pale
and swooning from the dusk, and the warm light gave
a sensual tinge to her ecstasy. The flesh seemed
to glow and heave, the eyelids to tremble; Wyant stood
fascinated by the accidental collaboration of light
and color.
Suddenly he noticed that something
white had fluttered to the ground at his feet.
He stooped and picked up a small thin sheet of note-paper,
folded and sealed like an old-fashioned letter, and
bearing the superscription:
To the Count Ottaviano Celsi.
Wyant stared at this mysterious document.
Where had it come from? He was distinctly conscious
of having seen it fall through the air, close to his
feet. He glanced up at the dark ceiling of the
chapel; then he turned and looked about the church.
There was only one figure in it, that of a man who
knelt near the high altar.
Suddenly Wyant recalled the question
of Doctor Lombard’s maid-servant. Was this
the letter she had asked for? Had he been unconsciously
carrying it about with him all the afternoon?
Who was Count Ottaviano Celsi, and how came Wyant
to have been chosen to act as that nobleman’s
ambulant letter-box?
Wyant laid his hat and stick on the
chapel steps and began to explore his pockets, in
the irrational hope of finding there some clue to the
mystery; but they held nothing which he had not himself
put there, and he was reduced to wondering how the
letter, supposing some unknown hand to have bestowed
it on him, had happened to fall out while he stood
motionless before the picture.
At this point he was disturbed by
a step on the floor of the aisle, and turning, he
saw his lustrous-eyed neighbor of the table d’hote.
The young man bowed and waved an apologetic hand.
“I do not intrude?” he inquired suavely.
Without waiting for a reply, he mounted
the steps of the chapel, glancing about him with the
affable air of an afternoon caller.
“I see,” he remarked with
a smile, “that you know the hour at which our
saint should be visited.”
Wyant agreed that the hour was indeed felicitous.
The stranger stood beamingly before the picture.
“What grace! What poetry!”
he murmured, apostrophizing the St. Catherine, but
letting his glance slip rapidly about the chapel as
he spoke.
Wyant, detecting the manoeuvre, murmured a brief assent.
“But it is cold here mortally
cold; you do not find it so?” The intruder put
on his hat. “It is permitted at this hour when
the church is empty. And you, my dear sir do
you not feel the dampness? You are an artist,
are you not? And to artists it is permitted to
cover the head when they are engaged in the study
of the paintings.”
He darted suddenly toward the steps and bent over
Wyant’s hat.
“Permit me cover
yourself!” he said a moment later, holding out
the hat with an ingratiating gesture.
A light flashed on Wyant.
“Perhaps,” he said, looking
straight at the young man, “you will tell me
your name. My own is Wyant.”
The stranger, surprised, but not disconcerted,
drew forth a coroneted card, which he offered with
a low bow. On the card was engraved:
Il Conte Ottaviano
Celsi.
“I am much obliged to you,”
said Wyant; “and I may as well tell you that
the letter which you apparently expected to find in
the lining of my hat is not there, but in my pocket.”
He drew it out and handed it to its
owner, who had grown very pale.
“And now,” Wyant continued,
“you will perhaps be good enough to tell me
what all this means.”
There was no mistaking the effect
produced on Count Ottaviano by this request.
His lips moved, but he achieved only an ineffectual
smile.
“I suppose you know,”
Wyant went on, his anger rising at the sight of the
other’s discomfiture, “that you have taken
an unwarrantable liberty. I don’t yet understand
what part I have been made to play, but it’s
evident that you have made use of me to serve some
purpose of your own, and I propose to know the reason
why.”
Count Ottaviano advanced with an imploring gesture.
“Sir,” he pleaded, “you permit me
to speak?”
“I expect you to,” cried
Wyant. “But not here,” he added, hearing
the clank of the verger’s keys. “It
is growing dark, and we shall be turned out in a few
minutes.”
He walked across the church, and Count
Ottaviano followed him out into the deserted
square.
“Now,” said Wyant, pausing on the steps.
The Count, who had regained some measure
of self-possession, began to speak in a high key,
with an accompaniment of conciliatory gesture.
“My dear sir my dear
Mr. Wyant you find me in an abominable
position that, as a man of honor, I immediately
confess. I have taken advantage of you yes!
I have counted on your amiability, your chivalry too
far, perhaps? I confess it! But what could
I do? It was to oblige a lady” he
laid a hand on his heart “a lady whom
I would die to serve!” He went on with increasing
volubility, his deliberate English swept away by a
torrent of Italian, through which Wyant, with some
difficulty, struggled to a comprehension of the case.
Count Ottaviano, according to
his own statement, had come to Siena some months previously,
on business connected with his mother’s property;
the paternal estate being near Orvieto, of which ancient
city his father was syndic. Soon after his arrival
in Siena the young Count had met the incomparable
daughter of Doctor Lombard, and falling deeply in love
with her, had prevailed on his parents to ask her
hand in marriage. Doctor Lombard had not opposed
his suit, but when the question of settlements arose
it became known that Miss Lombard, who was possessed
of a small property in her own right, had a short
time before invested the whole amount in the purchase
of the Bergamo Leonardo. Thereupon Count Ottaviano’s
parents had politely suggested that she should sell
the picture and thus recover her independence; and
this proposal being met by a curt refusal from Doctor
Lombard, they had withdrawn their consent to their
son’s marriage. The young lady’s attitude
had hitherto been one of passive submission; she was
horribly afraid of her father, and would never venture
openly to oppose him; but she had made known to Ottaviano
her intention of not giving him up, of waiting patiently
till events should take a more favorable turn.
She seemed hardly aware, the Count said with a sigh,
that the means of escape lay in her own hands; that
she was of age, and had a right to sell the picture,
and to marry without asking her father’s consent.
Meanwhile her suitor spared no pains to keep himself
before her, to remind her that he, too, was waiting
and would never give her up.
Doctor Lombard, who suspected the
young man of trying to persuade Sybilla to sell the
picture, had forbidden the lovers to meet or to correspond;
they were thus driven to clandestine communication,
and had several times, the Count ingenuously avowed,
made use of the doctor’s visitors as a means
of exchanging letters.
“And you told the visitors to
ring twice?” Wyant interposed.
The young man extended his hands in
a deprecating gesture. Could Mr. Wyant blame
him? He was young, he was ardent, he was enamored!
The young lady had done him the supreme honor of avowing
her attachment, of pledging her unalterable fidelity;
should he suffer his devotion to be outdone?
But his purpose in writing to her, he admitted, was
not merely to reiterate his fidelity; he was trying
by every means in his power to induce her to sell
the picture. He had organized a plan of action;
every detail was complete; if she would but have the
courage to carry out his instructions he would answer
for the result. His idea was that she should
secretly retire to a convent of which his aunt was
the Mother Superior, and from that stronghold should
transact the sale of the Leonardo. He had a purchaser
ready, who was willing to pay a large sum; a sum,
Count Ottaviano whispered, considerably in excess
of the young lady’s original inheritance; once
the picture sold, it could, if necessary, be removed
by force from Doctor Lombard’s house, and his
daughter, being safely in the convent, would be spared
the painful scenes incidental to the removal.
Finally, if Doctor Lombard were vindictive enough
to refuse his consent to her marriage, she had only
to make a sommation respectueuse, and at
the end of the prescribed delay no power on earth
could prevent her becoming the wife of Count Ottaviano.
Wyant’s anger had fallen at
the recital of this simple romance. It was absurd
to be angry with a young man who confided his secrets
to the first stranger he met in the streets, and placed
his hand on his heart whenever he mentioned the name
of his betrothed. The easiest way out of the
business was to take it as a joke. Wyant had played
the wall to this new Pyramus and Thisbe, and was philosophic
enough to laugh at the part he had unwittingly performed.
He held out his hand with a smile to Count Ottaviano.
“I won’t deprive you any
longer,” he said, “of the pleasure of reading
your letter.”
“Oh, sir, a thousand thanks!
And when you return to the casa Lombard, you will
take a message from me the letter she expected
this afternoon?”
“The letter she expected?”
Wyant paused. “No, thank you. I thought
you understood that where I come from we don’t
do that kind of thing knowingly.”
“But, sir, to serve a young lady!”
“I’m sorry for the young
lady, if what you tell me is true” the
Count’s expressive hands resented the doubt “but
remember that if I am under obligations to any one
in this matter, it is to her father, who has admitted
me to his house and has allowed me to see his picture.”
“His picture? Hers!”
“Well, the house is his, at all events.”
“Unhappily since to her it is a dungeon!”
“Why doesn’t she leave it, then?”
exclaimed Wyant impatiently.
The Count clasped his hands.
“Ah, how you say that with what force,
with what virility! If you would but say it to
her in that tone you, her countryman!
She has no one to advise her; the mother is an idiot;
the father is terrible; she is in his power; it is
my belief that he would kill her if she resisted him.
Mr. Wyant, I tremble for her life while she remains
in that house!”
“Oh, come,” said Wyant
lightly, “they seem to understand each other
well enough. But in any case, you must see that
I can’t interfere at least you would
if you were an Englishman,” he added with an
escape of contempt.
CHAPTER III
Wyant’s affiliations in Siena
being restricted to an acquaintance with his land-lady,
he was forced to apply to her for the verification
of Count Ottaviano’s story.
The young nobleman had, it appeared,
given a perfectly correct account of his situation.
His father, Count Celsi-Mongirone, was a man of distinguished
family and some wealth. He was syndic of Orvieto,
and lived either in that town or on his neighboring
estate of Mongirone. His wife owned a large property
near Siena, and Count Ottaviano, who was the
second son, came there from time to time to look into
its management. The eldest son was in the army,
the youngest in the Church; and an aunt of Count Ottaviano’s
was Mother Superior of the Visitandine convent
in Siena. At one time it had been said that Count
Ottaviano, who was a most amiable and accomplished
young man, was to marry the daughter of the strange
Englishman, Doctor Lombard, but difficulties having
arisen as to the adjustment of the young lady’s
dower, Count Celsi-Mongirone had very properly broken
off the match. It was sad for the young man, however,
who was said to be deeply in love, and to find frequent
excuses for coming to Siena to inspect his mother’s
estate.
Viewed in the light of Count Ottaviano’s
personality the story had a tinge of opera bouffe;
but the next morning, as Wyant mounted the stairs
of the House of the Dead Hand, the situation insensibly
assumed another aspect. It was impossible to
take Doctor Lombard lightly; and there was a suggestion
of fatality in the appearance of his gaunt dwelling.
Who could tell amid what tragic records of domestic
tyranny and fluttering broken purposes the little
drama of Miss Lombard’s fate was being played
out? Might not the accumulated influences of such
a house modify the lives within it in a manner unguessed
by the inmates of a suburban villa with sanitary plumbing
and a telephone?
One person, at least, remained unperturbed
by such fanciful problems; and that was Mrs. Lombard,
who, at Wyant’s entrance, raised a placidly
wrinkled brow from her knitting. The morning was
mild, and her chair had been wheeled into a bar of
sunshine near the window, so that she made a cheerful
spot of prose in the poetic gloom of her surroundings.
“What a nice morning!”
she said; “it must be delightful weather at
Bonchurch.”
Her dull blue glance wandered across
the narrow street with its threatening house fronts,
and fluttered back baffled, like a bird with clipped
wings. It was evident, poor lady, that she had
never seen beyond the opposite houses.
Wyant was not sorry to find her alone.
Seeing that she was surprised at his reappearance
he said at once: “I have come back to study
Miss Lombard’s picture.”
“Oh, the picture ”
Mrs. Lombard’s face expressed a gentle disappointment,
which might have been boredom in a person of acuter
sensibilities. “It’s an original Leonardo,
you know,” she said mechanically.
“And Miss Lombard is very proud
of it, I suppose? She seems to have inherited
her father’s love for art.”
Mrs. Lombard counted her stitches,
and he went on: “It’s unusual in so
young a girl. Such tastes generally develop later.”
Mrs. Lombard looked up eagerly.
“That’s what I say! I was quite different
at her age, you know. I liked dancing, and doing
a pretty bit of fancy-work. Not that I couldn’t
sketch, too; I had a master down from London.
My aunts have some of my crayons hung up in their drawing-room
now I did a view of Kenilworth which was
thought pleasing. But I liked a picnic, too,
or a pretty walk through the woods with young people
of my own age. I say it’s more natural,
Mr. Wyant; one may have a feeling for art, and do
crayons that are worth framing, and yet not give up
everything else. I was taught that there were
other things.”
Wyant, half-ashamed of provoking these
innocent confidences, could not resist another question.
“And Miss Lombard cares for nothing else?”
Her mother looked troubled.
“Sybilla is so clever she
says I don’t understand. You know how self-confident
young people are! My husband never said that of
me, now he knows I had an excellent education.
My aunts were very particular; I was brought up to
have opinions, and my husband has always respected
them. He says himself that he wouldn’t for
the world miss hearing my opinion on any subject;
you may have noticed that he often refers to my tastes.
He has always respected my preference for living in
England; he likes to hear me give my reasons for it.
He is so much interested in my ideas that he often
says he knows just what I am going to say before I
speak. But Sybilla does not care for what I think ”
At this point Doctor Lombard entered.
He glanced sharply at Wyant. “The servant
is a fool; she didn’t tell me you were here.”
His eye turned to his wife. “Well, my dear,
what have you been telling Mr. Wyant? About the
aunts at Bonchurch, I’ll be bound!”
Mrs. Lombard looked triumphantly at
Wyant, and her husband rubbed his hooked fingers,
with a smile.
“Mrs. Lombard’s aunts
are very superior women. They subscribe to the
circulating library, and borrow Good Words and the
Monthly Packet from the curate’s wife across
the way. They have the rector to tea twice a
year, and keep a page-boy, and are visited by two baronets’
wives. They devoted themselves to the education
of their orphan niece, and I think I may say without
boasting that Mrs. Lombard’s conversation shows
marked traces of the advantages she enjoyed.”
Mrs. Lombard colored with pleasure.
“I was telling Mr. Wyant that my aunts were
very particular.”
“Quite so, my dear; and did
you mention that they never sleep in anything but
linen, and that Miss Sophia puts away the furs and
blankets every spring with her own hands? Both
those facts are interesting to the student of human
nature.” Doctor Lombard glanced at his watch.
“But we are missing an incomparable moment;
the light is perfect at this hour.”
Wyant rose, and the doctor led him
through the tapestried door and down the passageway.
The light was, in fact, perfect, and
the picture shone with an inner radiancy, as though
a lamp burned behind the soft screen of the lady’s
flesh. Every detail of the foreground detached
itself with jewel-like precision. Wyant noticed
a dozen accessories which had escaped him on the previous
day.
He drew out his note-book, and the
doctor, who had dropped his sardonic grin for a look
of devout contemplation, pushed a chair forward, and
seated himself on a carved settle against the wall.
“Now, then,” he said,
“tell Clyde what you can; but the letter killeth.”
He sank down, his hands hanging on
the arm of the settle like the claws of a dead bird,
his eyes fixed on Wyant’s notebook with the obvious
intention of detecting any attempt at a surreptitious
sketch.
Wyant, nettled at this surveillance,
and disturbed by the speculations which Doctor Lombard’s
strange household excited, sat motionless for a few
minutes, staring first at the picture and then at the
blank pages of the note-book. The thought that
Doctor Lombard was enjoying his discomfiture at length
roused him, and he began to write.
He was interrupted by a knock on the
iron door. Doctor Lombard rose to unlock it,
and his daughter entered.
She bowed hurriedly to Wyant, without looking at him.
“Father, had you forgotten that
the man from Monte Amiato was to come back this morning
with an answer about the bas-relief? He is here
now; he says he can’t wait.”
“The devil!” cried her
father impatiently. “Didn’t you tell
him ”
“Yes; but he says he can’t
come back. If you want to see him you must come
now.”
“Then you think there’s a chance? ”
She nodded.
He turned and looked at Wyant, who was writing assiduously.
“You will stay here, Sybilla; I shall be back
in a moment.”
He hurried out, locking the door behind him.
Wyant had looked up, wondering if
Miss Lombard would show any surprise at being locked
in with him; but it was his turn to be surprised, for
hardly had they heard the key withdrawn when she moved
close to him, her small face pale and tumultuous.
“I arranged it I
must speak to you,” she gasped. “He’ll
be back in five minutes.”
Her courage seemed to fail, and she looked at him
helplessly.
Wyant had a sense of stepping among
explosives. He glanced about him at the dusky
vaulted room, at the haunting smile of the strange
picture overhead, and at the pink-and-white girl whispering
of conspiracies in a voice meant to exchange platitudes
with a curate.
“How can I help you?” he said with a rush
of compassion.
“Oh, if you would! I never
have a chance to speak to any one; it’s so difficult he
watches me he’ll be back immediately.”
“Try to tell me what I can do.”
“I don’t dare; I feel
as if he were behind me.” She turned away,
fixing her eyes on the picture. A sound startled
her. “There he comes, and I haven’t
spoken! It was my only chance; but it bewilders
me so to be hurried.”
“I don’t hear any one,” said Wyant,
listening. “Try to tell me.”
“How can I make you understand?
It would take so long to explain.” She
drew a deep breath, and then with a plunge “Will
you come here again this afternoon at about
five?” she whispered.
“Come here again?”
“Yes you can ask
to see the picture, make some excuse.
He will come with you, of course; I will open the
door for you and and lock you
both in” she gasped.
“Lock us in?”
“You see? You understand?
It’s the only way for me to leave the house if
I am ever to do it” She drew another
difficult breath. “The key will be returned by
a safe person in half an hour, perhaps
sooner ”
She trembled so much that she was
obliged to lean against the settle for support.
“Wyant looked at her steadily; he was very sorry
for her.
“I can’t, Miss Lombard,” he said
at length.
“You can’t?”
“I’m sorry; I must seem cruel; but consider ”
He was stopped by the futility of
the word: as well ask a hunted rabbit to pause
in its dash for a hole!
Wyant took her hand; it was cold and nerveless.
“I will serve you in any way
I can; but you must see that this way is impossible.
Can’t I talk to you again? Perhaps ”
“Oh,” she cried, starting up, “there
he comes!”
Doctor Lombard’s step sounded in the passage.
Wyant held her fast. “Tell
me one thing: he won’t let you sell the
picture?”
“No hush!”
“Make no pledges for the future, then; promise
me that.”
“The future?”
“In case he should die:
your father is an old man. You haven’t
promised?”
She shook her head.
“Don’t, then; remember that.”
She made no answer, and the key turned in the lock.
As he passed out of the house, its
scowling cornice and façade of ravaged brick looked
down on him with the startlingness of a strange face,
seen momentarily in a crowd, and impressing itself
on the brain as part of an inevitable future.
Above the doorway, the marble hand reached out like
the cry of an imprisoned anguish.
Wyant turned away impatiently.
“Rubbish!” he said to
himself. “She isn’t walled in;
she can get out if she wants to.”
CHAPTER IV
Wyant had any number of plans for
coming to Miss Lombard’s aid: he was elaborating
the twentieth when, on the same afternoon, he stepped
into the express train for Florence. By the time
the train reached Certaldo he was convinced that,
in thus hastening his departure, he had followed the
only reasonable course; at Empoli, he began to reflect
that the priest and the Levite had probably justified
themselves in much the same manner.
A month later, after his return to
England, he was unexpectedly relieved from these alternatives
of extenuation and approval. A paragraph in the
morning paper announced the sudden death of Doctor
Lombard, the distinguished English dilettante who
had long resided in Siena. Wyant’s justification
was complete. Our blindest impulses become evidence
of perspicacity when they fall in with the course
of events.
Wyant could now comfortably speculate
on the particular complications from which his foresight
had probably saved him. The climax was unexpectedly
dramatic. Miss Lombard, on the brink of a step
which, whatever its issue, would have burdened her
with retrospective compunction, had been set free
before her suitor’s ardor could have had time
to cool, and was now doubtless planning a life of domestic
felicity on the proceeds of the Leonardo. One
thing, however, struck Wyant as odd he
saw no mention of the sale of the picture. He
had scanned the papers for an immediate announcement
of its transfer to one of the great museums; but presently
concluding that Miss Lombard, out of filial piety,
had wished to avoid an appearance of unseemly haste
in the disposal of her treasure, he dismissed the
matter from his mind. Other affairs happened
to engage him; the months slipped by, and gradually
the lady and the picture dwelt less vividly in his
mind.
It was not till five or six years
later, when chance took him again to Siena, that the
recollection started from some inner fold of memory.
He found himself, as it happened, at the head of Doctor
Lombard’s street, and glancing down that grim
thoroughfare, caught an oblique glimpse of the doctor’s
house front, with the Dead Hand projecting above its
threshold. The sight revived his interest, and
that evening, over an admirable frittata, he
questioned his landlady about Miss Lombard’s
marriage.
“The daughter of the English
doctor? But she has never married, signore.”
“Never married? What, then, became of Count
Ottaviano?”
“For a long time he waited;
but last year he married a noble lady of the Maremma.”
“But what happened why was the marriage
broken?”
The landlady enacted a pantomime of baffled interrogation.
“And Miss Lombard still lives in her father’s
house?”
“Yes, signore; she is still there.”
“And the Leonardo ”
“The Leonardo, also, is still there.”
The next day, as Wyant entered the
House of the Dead Hand, he remembered Count Ottaviano’s
injunction to ring twice, and smiled mournfully to
think that so much subtlety had been vain. But
what could have prevented the marriage? If Doctor
Lombard’s death had been long delayed, time
might have acted as a dissolvent, or the young lady’s
resolve have failed; but it seemed impossible that
the white heat of ardor in which Wyant had left the
lovers should have cooled in a few short weeks.
As he ascended the vaulted stairway
the atmosphere of the place seemed a reply to his
conjectures. The same numbing air fell on him,
like an emanation from some persistent will-power,
a something fierce and imminent which might reduce
to impotence every impulse within its range.
Wyant could almost fancy a hand on his shoulder, guiding
him upward with the ironical intent of confronting
him with the evidence of its work.
A strange servant opened the door,
and he was presently introduced to the tapestried
room, where, from their usual seats in the window,
Mrs. Lombard and her daughter advanced to welcome
him with faint ejaculations of surprise.
Both had grown oddly old, but in a
dry, smooth way, as fruits might shrivel on a shelf
instead of ripening on the tree. Mrs. Lombard
was still knitting, and pausing now and then to warm
her swollen hands above the brazier; and Miss Lombard,
in rising, had laid aside a strip of needle-work which
might have been the same on which Wyant had first seen
her engaged.
Their visitor inquired discreetly
how they had fared in the interval, and learned that
they had thought of returning to England, but had
somehow never done so.
“I am sorry not to see my aunts
again,” Mrs. Lombard said resignedly; “but
Sybilla thinks it best that we should not go this year.”
“Next year, perhaps,”
murmured Miss Lombard, in a voice which seemed to
suggest that they had a great waste of time to fill.
She had returned to her seat, and
sat bending over her work. Her hair enveloped
her head in the same thick braids, but the rose color
of her cheeks had turned to blotches of dull red,
like some pigment which has darkened in drying.
“And Professor Clyde is
he well?” Mrs. Lombard asked affably; continuing,
as her daughter raised a startled eye: “Surely,
Sybilla, Mr. Wyant was the gentleman who was sent
by Professor Clyde to see the Leonardo?”
Miss Lombard was silent, but Wyant
hastened to assure the elder lady of his friend’s
well-being.
“Ah perhaps, then,
he will come back some day to Siena,” she said,
sighing. Wyant declared that it was more than
likely; and there ensued a pause, which he presently
broke by saying to Miss Lombard: “And you
still have the picture?”
She raised her eyes and looked at
him. “Should you like to see it?”
she asked.
On his assenting, she rose, and extracting
the same key from the same secret drawer, unlocked
the door beneath the tapestry. They walked down
the passage in silence, and she stood aside with a
grave gesture, making Wyant pass before her into the
room. Then she crossed over and drew the curtain
back from the picture.
The light of the early afternoon poured
full on it: its surface appeared to ripple and
heave with a fluid splendor. The colors had lost
none of their warmth, the outlines none of their pure
precision; it seemed to Wyant like some magical flower
which had burst suddenly from the mould of darkness
and oblivion.
He turned to Miss Lombard with a movement
of comprehension.
“Ah, I understand you
couldn’t part with it, after all!” he cried.
“No I couldn’t part with it,”
she answered.
“It’s too beautiful, too beautiful,” he
assented.
“Too beautiful?” She turned
on him with a curious stare. “I have never
thought it beautiful, you know.”
He gave back the stare. “You have never ”
She shook her head. “It’s
not that. I hate it; I’ve always hated it.
But he wouldn’t let me he will never
let me now.”
Wyant was startled by her use of the
present tense. Her look surprised him, too:
there was a strange fixity of resentment in her innocuous
eye. Was it possible that she was laboring under
some delusion? Or did the pronoun not refer to
her father?
“You mean that Doctor Lombard
did not wish you to part with the picture?”
“No he prevented me; he will always
prevent me.”
There was another pause. “You promised
him, then, before his death ”
“No; I promised nothing.
He died too suddenly to make me.” Her voice
sank to a whisper. “I was free perfectly
free or I thought I was till I tried.”
“Till you tried?”
“To disobey him to
sell the picture. Then I found it was impossible.
I tried again and again; but he was always in the
room with me.”
She glanced over her shoulder as though
she had heard a step; and to Wyant, too, for a moment,
the room seemed full of a third presence.
“And you can’t” he
faltered, unconsciously dropping his voice to the
pitch of hers.
She shook her head, gazing at him
mystically. “I can’t lock him out;
I can never lock him out now. I told you I should
never have another chance.”
Wyant felt the chill of her words
like a cold breath in his hair.
“Oh” he groaned;
but she cut him off with a grave gesture.
“It is too late,” she
said; “but you ought to have helped me that day.”