Dennis, our Epicurean sage, addressed
us all as we lolled on his terrace, drank his tea,
and divided our attention between his fluent wisdom
and his spacious view of the Valdarno.
“The question is,” he
repeated, “what will Emma do? Will she be
brave, or, rather ordinary enough, to act for herself
and him, or will she refuse him because of what she
thinks we shall think of them both? As we calmly
sit here she may be deciding. That is if you are
sure, Harwood, that Crocker was really bound for Emma’s
when you saw him.”
“How could anybody mistake his
beaming Emma face?” growled Harwood. “He
was marching like a squad of Bersaglieri.”
“And she knows that Crocker wants it terribly?”
added the Sage’s wife.
“She does, indeed,” sighed
Frau Stern repentantly, “for that demon (pointing
to Harwood) did tell me and I haf, babylike, told her.”
“Here is the case, then,”
resumed Dennis: “She knows we know Crocker
wants her and it, but she doesn’t know he doesn’t
know she has it.”
“Precisely, most clearly and
gracefully put, my dear,” laughed Mrs. Dennis.
“And she knows, too,”
he pursued imperturbably, “that we may think
he wants her merely for it.”
“Bravo!” puffed Harwood
smokily from his camp-stool. “She is too
clever to expect any weak generosity from any of us.
She believes we will think the worst. And won’t
we? Viva Nietzsche, and perish pity!”
“Shame upon us, then,”
cried Frau Stern. “She will gif up that
fine young man for fear of our talk? Never!”
“She will send him away, dear
Frau Stern, the moment he gives her the chance,”
declared Dennis. “What else can she do?
She can never take the chance of our surmises.
Behold us, the destroyers! The victims are prepared.”
“Can’t we do something
about it?” Harwood chuckled. “Repent?
Be as harmless as doves? Let’s write a
roundrobin solemnly stating that, to the best of our
knowledge and belief, he wants her for herself and
not for it.”
“Gently,” exclaimed Mrs.
Dennis, as she blew out Harwood’s poised and
lighted match. “You surely don’t imagine
Crocker will propose the very day she shows it to
him.”
“My dear,” protested Dennis,
“don’t we all know him well enough to
understand that any shock will produce that effect?
If his mother died or his horse, his vines got the
scale, his Ghirlandaio sprung a crack, his university
gave him an honorary degree these would
all be reasons for proposing to Emma. Dear old
Crocker is like that; any jolt would affect him that
way.”
“Has it occurred to anybody
that Emma may have foreseen just this complication
and quietly got rid of it first?” suggested Mrs.
Dennis, the really practical member of our group,
adding, “That’s how I’d have served
you if I’d wanted him.”
“Never,” responded Dennis.
“She loves it too well, and then she would feel
we felt she had spirited it away on purpose.”
“Besides,” continued Harwood,
whose buried aspirations Emmawards had long ago flowered
into a minute analysis of her moods, “she is
true blue, you know. She will never serve us
like that. She may immolate the mighty Crocker
upon the altar of our collective curiosity, but she
will never dodge us.”
“Cannot we all go back to our
own countries and leave them alone,” suggested
Frau Stern almost tearfully; “but no; we no longer
haf countries. Here we belong; elsewhere the
air is too strong for our little lungs. I pity
us, and I pity more those poor young people. If
only they will but haf the sense to trample on our
talk.”
“That, too, would be a sensation,”
Dennis added cheerfully, and we went our ways, as
usual, without having reached anything so vulgar as
a conclusion.
Meanwhile Emma Verplanck stood in
the loggia of her tiny villa and winced in
the focus of the curiosities she despised. She
scanned the white road that rimmed her valley before
descending sharply to Florence beyond the hill, and
especially the crescent of dust where an approaching
figure would first appear. Now and then, as if
for a rest, her eye traced the line of flaming willows
down toward the plunge of her brook into the larger
valley, or the file of spectral poplars that led into
the vineyards hanging on the declivity of Fiesole.
Above all, the gaunt and gashed bulk of Monte Ceceri
glistened hotly against a pale blue sky, for if it
was a backward April, the first stirring of summer
was already in the air. She thrilled with disgust
as she asked herself why she dreaded this call.
Why should she fear lest an elementary test, a very
simple explanation such as she planned for that afternoon,
should compromise an established friendship?
Interrupting this self-examination
the mighty but unwieldy form of Morton Crocker loomed
in the white dust crescent, and his premature panama
swiftly followed the curve of the low grey wall towards
her gate. As his steps were heard, her mind flew
to the forbidding St. Michael on his gold background
in her den and she could fairly hear Harwood saying
to all of us, “Three to one on the Saint, who
takes me?” The jangling of the bell recalled
her to Crocker, and she braced herself in the full
sunlight to receive him. For a moment, as he
loomed in the archway, she indulged that especial
pride which we reserve for that which we might possess
but austerely deny ourselves.
Her mingled moods produced an unusual
softness. Crocker felt it and wondered as she
gave him her hand and had him sit for a prudent moment
outside. All the hot way up the valley he had
had a sense of a crisis. It was odd to be summoned
whither he had been drifting for four years, and now
the sight of Emma disarmed, perplexed him. It
seemed ominous. One finds such transparent kindness
in clever people generally at parting, when one would
be remembered for one’s self and not for a phrase.
Then Crocker for an instant glimpsed the wilder hope
that the softening was for him and not for an occasion.
Emma had never seemed more desirable than to-day.
A white strand or two in her yellow hair, the tiny
wrinkles at the corners of her steady grey eyes, and
the untimely thinness of her long white fingers made
him eager to ward off the advancing years at her side,
to keep unchanged, as it were, these precious evidences
that she had lived.
Some sense of his tenderness she must
have had, for as she chatted gravely about his farming,
about the lateness of the almond blossoms, about everything
except people, who always tempted her sharp tongue,
her manner became almost maternally solicitous.
“To-day you shall have your first tea in my
den, Crocker” (so much she presumed on her two
years’ seniority), she said at last, “and
you are commanded to like my things.” “What
has thy servitor done to deserve this grace?”
he managed to reply. “Nothing,” she
said, “graces never are for deserts. Or,
rather, you poor fellow, you have been asked to tramp
out here in this glare and really deserve to sit where
it is cool.” As they walked through the
hall and the little drawing-room Crocker still felt
uneasily that no road with Emma Verplanck could be
quite as smooth as it seemed.
The den deserved its name, being a
tiny brown room with a single arched window that looked
askance at the cypresses and bell towers of Fiesole.
Beside a couch, an Empire desk, and solid shelves of
books, the den contained only a couple of chairs and
the handful of things that Emma laughingly called
her collection. As Crocker took in vaguely bits
of Hispano-Moresque and mellow ivories, a broad
medal or so and a well-poised Renaissance bronze,
a Japanese painting on the lighted wall, and one or
two drawings by great contemporaries, Emma’s
friends, he was amazed at the quality of everything.
A sense of extreme fastidiousness rebuked, in a way,
his more indiscriminate zeal as a collector.
Uncomfortably near him on the dark wall he began to
be aware of something marvellous on old gold when
tea interrupted his observations. Tea with Emma
was always engrossing. The mere practice and etiquette
of it brought the gentlewoman in her into a lovely
salience. Her hands and eyes became magical,
her talk light and constant without insistency.
A symbolist might imagine eternal correspondence between
the amber brew and her sunny hair. It was easy
to adore Emma at tea, and generally she did not resent
a discreetly pronounced homage. But this afternoon
she grew almost petulant with Crocker as they talked
at random, and finally laughed out impatiently:
“I really can’t bear your ignoring my St
Michael, especially as you have never seen him before
and may never see him again. St. Michael, Mr.
Morton Crocker.”
“My respects,” smiled
Crocker, as he turned lazily toward the gilded panel.
There was the warrior saint, his lines stiff, expressive
and hieratic, his armour glistening in grey-blue fastened
with embossed gilded clasps; here and there gorgeous
hints of a crimson doublet the unmistakable
enamel, the grave and delicate tension of a masterpiece
by the rare Venetian, Carlo Crivelli. Crocker
gasped and started from his seat, losing at once his
cup, his muffin, and his manners. “By Jove,
Miss Verplanck, Emma, it’s my missing St. Michael.
Where did you ever find it? I must have it.”
His toasted muffin rolled unconsidered beside the spoon
at his feet. Emma retrieved the cup one
of a precious six in old Meissen he retained
the saucer painfully gripped in both hands.
“I was afraid it was,”
she answered, “but look well and be sure.”
“Of course we must be sure.
You’ll let me measure it, won’t you?
It’s the only way.” Assuming his
permission he climbed awkwardly upon the chair, happily
a stout Italian construction, and as she watched him
with a strange pity, he read off from a pocket rule:
“One metre thirty-seven. A shade taller
than mine, but there is no frame. Thirty-one centimetres;
the same thing. Yes, it is my missing St. Michael,”
and as he climbed down excitedly he hurried on:
“How strange to find it here. I never talked
to you about it, did I? That’s odd, too.
I’ve been hunting for it for years. You
didn’t know, I suppose. I want it awfully.
What can we do about it?” For Crocker, this
fairly amounted to a speech, and before replying Emma
gave him time to sit down, and thrust another cup of
tea into his unwilling hands. Having thus occupied
and calmed him, she said, “I’m very sorry,
I hoped it would turn out to be something else.
I only learned last week that you wanted it.
You have seldom talked about your collecting to me.
There’s nothing to do about it. I wish there
were. You want it so much. But I can’t
give it to you. That wouldn’t do. And
I won’t sell it to you. I wouldn’t
to anybody, and then that wouldn’t do, either.
So there we are. Only think of their talk, and
you’ll see the situation is impossible.”
Crocker’s eyes flashed.
“There’s a lot we might do about it if
you will, Emma. Damn the St. Michael. If
his case is so complicated, and I don’t see
it, leave him out of the reckoning between us.
Can’t you see what I need and want?”
“They wouldn’t see it,
and I’m shamefully afraid of them,” she
said simply, and then she added indignantly, “How
could you dare, to-day? I can’t trust you
for any perception, can I?”
Not perceiving that her scruple was
belated, Crocker blurted out ruefully. “I’m
an ass, and I’m sorry and I’m not.
It’s what I have wanted to say these many days,
and perhaps it might as well be so. But I’ve
wounded you and for that I’m more than sorry.”
“Let’s not talk about
it,” Emma said gently. “Of course
I’ll forgive an old friend for saying a little
more than he should. Only you must stop here.
You’ll forgive me, too, for owning your St. Michael.
I’m honestly sorry it happened so. I would
dismiss him if I could, for he is likely to cost me
a good friend. But he creates a kind of impossibility
between us, doesn’t he, and for a while it’s
best you shouldn’t come, not till things change
with you. It’s kindest so, isn’t it,
Crocker?”
There was more debate to this effect
before the impassive St. Michael, until at last Crocker
agreed impatiently, “You’re right, Emma,
or at least you have me at a disadvantage, which comes
to the same thing. And yet it’s all wrong.
You are putting a painted saint between yourself and
a friend who wants to be more. It’s logical,
but it isn’t human. As for their talk,
they’ll talk, anyhow, and we might as well stand
it together. I’m probably off for a long
time, Emma. I hope you’ll find your St.
Michael companionable. When you decide to throw
him out of the window, let me know. Forgive me
again. Good-by.” She gave him her hand
silently and followed him out into the loggia.
As she watched him striding angrily down the valley
and away, she had the air of a woman who would have
cried if she were not Emma Verplanck.
Crocker was right, we all did talk.
And naturally, for had we not all been eagerly awaiting
the collision announced by the cessation of his visits
and the rumour that he was bound north. In council
on Dennis’s terrace, however, we came to no
unanimous reading of the affair. Generally, we
felt that even if Emma wanted a way out, which we guessed
to be the fact, she would never expose herself to our
batteries, and with regret we opined that there was
no way, had we wished, to divest ourselves of our
collective formidableness. On all sides we divined
a deadlock, with Dennis the only dissenting voice.
He insisted scornfully that we none of us knew Emma,
that we underestimated both her emotional capacity
and her resourcefulness, and, finally, in a burst of
rash clairvoyancy he declared that she would give
away both the St. Michael and herself, but in her
own time and manner, and with some odd personal reservation
that would content us all. We should see.
Given the rare mixture of the conventional
and instinctive that was Emma Verplanck, something
of the sort did indeed seem probable. For ten
years she had inhabited her nook, becoming as much
of a fixture among us as the Campanile below.
She came, like so many, for the cheapness and dignity
of it primarily. Here her little patrimony meant
independence, safety from perfunctory and uncongenial
contacts at home, and more positively all those purtenances
of the gentlewoman that she required. But, unlike
the merely thrifty Italianates, she never became blunted
by our incessant tea giving and receiving. With
familiarity, the ineffable sweetness of the country
penetrated her with ever-new impressions. She
loved the overlapping blue hills that stretched away
endlessly from the rim of her valley, and the scarred
crag that closed it from behind. She loved the
climbing white roads, her chalky brook sung
as a river by the early poets with its
bordering poplars and willows and its processional
display of violets, anémones, primroses, blueflags,
and roses. She loved even better that constant
passing trickle of fine intelligences which feeds
the Arno valley as her brook refreshed its vineyard.
The best of these came gladly to her, for she was
an open and a disillusioned spirit, with something
of a man’s downrightness under her sensitive
appreciation. Hers was the calm of a temperament
fined but not dulled by conformity and experience.
Mrs. Dennis, whose sources of information were excellent,
said it was rather an unhappy girlish affair with an
unworthy cousin. Within the limits of the possible,
the Verplancks always married cousins, and Emma, it
was thought, had in her ’teens paid sentimental
homage to the family tradition. In any case she
remained surprisingly youthful under her nearly forty
years. Her capacity for intellectual adventure
seemed only to increase as she passed from the first
glow to proved impressions of books, art, persons,
and the all-inclusive Tuscan nature.
Her Stuyvesant Square aunts, who were
authorities on self-sacrifice, agreed that the only
sacrifice Emma had made in a thoroughly selfish life
was the purchase of the St. Michael. She had found
it, on a visit in Romagna, in the hands of a noble
family who knew its value and needed to sell it, but
dreaded the vulgarity of a transaction through the
antiquaries. To Emma, accordingly, whom they assumed
to be rich, they offered it at a price staggering
for her, though still cheap for it. From the
first she had adored it. There had been a swift
exchange of despatches with New York, and the St.
Michael went home with her to Florence. After
that adventure the small victoria, the stocky
pony, and the solemn coachman had never reappeared.
Emma walked to teas or, when she must, suffered the
promiscuity of the trams. To those of us who knew
the store she set by her equipage its exchange for
the St. Michael indicated a fairly fanatical devotion.
To her aunts it meant that she had spent her principal,
which, in their eyes, was an approximation to the
mysterious “sin against the Holy Ghost.”
It was Dennis who speculated most
audaciously, and perhaps truly, about the St. Michael.
When he learned that Emma secreted it in her den, where
she rarely admitted anyone, he maintained that it had
become her incorporeal spouse. The daintiness
with which it fingered a golden sword-hilt, as if
fearing contamination, symbolised the aloofness of
her spirit. The solitary enjoyment of a great
impression of art made her den a sanctuary, absolving
her from commoner or shared pleasures. And in
a manner the Saint was the type of the ultra-virginal
quality she had retained through much contact with
books and life. For her to sell the St. Michael,
Dennis felt, would be a sort of vending of her soul,
to give it away in the present instance would imply,
he insisted, an instinctive self-surrender of which
he judged her incapable.
To Crocker’s side of the affair
we gave very little thought, considering that he,
after all, had created the thrilling importance of
the St. Michael. But our general attitude toward
the unwonted was one of indifference, and Crocker
was too unlike us to permit his orbit to be calculated.
The element of foible in him was almost null.
None of our guesses ever stuck to him, and we had
grown weary of rediscovering that anything so simple
could also be so impermeable to our ingenuity.
In a word, Crocker’s case was as much plainer
than Emma’s as noonday is than twilight.
When one says that he was born in Boston and from birth
dedicated to the Harvard nine, eleven, or crew as
it might befall; that he was graduated a candidate
for the right clubs, that he took to stocks so naturally
that he quickly and safely increased an ample inherited
fortune, and this without neglecting horse, or rod,
or gun; finally that he carried into maturity a fine
boyish ease when this has been said all
has been told about Morton Crocker except the whimsical
chance that made him an Italianate.
Some reminiscence of his grand tour
had beguiled a tedious convalescence and, following
the gleam for want of more serious occupation, he had
set sail for Naples with a motor-car in the hold.
At thirty-three he brought the keenness of a girl
to the galleries, the towns, and the ineffable whole
thing. It was Tuscany that completed his capture.
He bought a villa and, as his strength came back,
began to add new vineyards and orchards to his estate.
But this was his play; his serious work became collecting
and more particularly, as has been hinted, the quest
of the missing St. Michael. When he learned,
as a man of means soon must, that good pictures may
still be bought in Italy, he promptly succumbed to
the covetousness of the collector, and the motor-car
became predatory. Its tonneau had contained surreptitious
Lottos and Carpaccios. Its gyrations became an
object of interest to the Ministry of Public Instruction.
Once on crossing the Alps it had been searched to
the linings. While Crocker had his ups and downs
as a collector, from the first his sense of reality
stood him in stead. Being a Bostonian he naturally
studied, but even before he at all knew why, he disregarded
the pastiches and forgeries, and made unhesitatingly
for the good panel in an array of rubbish.
It was this sense for reality that
impelled him to settle where the rest of us merely
perched. Fifty contadini tilled his domain
and actually began to earn out the costly improvements
he had introduced. His wine and oil were sought
by those who knew and were willing to pay. In
the intervals of the major passion Crocker walked
up and down the grassy roads superintending the larger
operations. His muscular and hulking blondness he
had rowed four years towered above the dark
little men who served, feared, and worshipped him.
Unlike the rest of us who preferred to live in a delightful
Cloud Cuckoo Town, which happened to be Florence also,
he had chosen to take root in Tuscany.
First he purged his castellated villa
of the international abuses it had undergone for a
century. It had hardly regained its fifteenth
century spaciousness and simplicity before it began
to fill up again, but this time with pictures and
fittings of the time. In all directions he bought
with enthusiasm, but his real vocation, after the cultivation
of Emma’s society, soon came to be the completion
of his great and growing altar-piece by Carlo Crivelli.
What is usually a frigid exercise, a mere ascertainment
that the parts of a scattered ancona are at London,
Berlin, St. Petersburg, Boston, etc. a
patient compilation of measurements, documents and
probabilities; what is generally a mere pretext for
a solid article in a heavy journal or at
best a question of pasting photographs together in
the order the artist intended Crocker converted
into an eager and most practical pursuit. Bit
by bit he gradually reconstituted his Crivelli in
its ancient glory of enamel on gold within its ornate
mouldings. The quest prospered capitally until
he stuck hopelessly at the missing St. Michael.
As it stood for a couple of years complete except
for the void where the St. Michael should be, the altar-piece
represented less Crocker’s abundant resources
than his tireless patience and energy. He had
picked up the first fragment, a slender St. Catherine
of Alexandria demurely leaning upon her spiked wheel,
at a provincial antiquary’s in Romagna, not
far from where the ancona had been impiously dismembered.
Fortunately the original Gothic frame remained to give
a clue to other panels. Next, word of a Crivelli
Madonna with Donors at Christie’s took him posthaste
to London. Frame, period and measurements proved
that it was the central panel, and the tiny donors,
a husband and wife with a boy and girl, indicated
that the wings had contained two female and two male
saints. Between the St. Lucy (which turned up
more than a year later in an un-heard-of Swedish collection,
and was had only by a hard exchange for a rare Lorenzo
Monaco and a plausible Fra Angelico) and the
sumptuous St. Augustine, which was brought to the villa
in a barrow by a little dealer, there was a longer
interval. Meanwhile the frame had been reconstructed,
and a niche for the missing saint rose in melancholy
emptiness. A little before the sensational rencontre
in Emma’s den, the chance of finding a rude
pilgrim woodcut on the Quai Voltaire revealed the
saint’s identity. This ugly print informed
the faithful that the “prodigious image”
of Our Lady existed in the Church of the Carmélites
at Borgo San Libérale. One might
distinguish at the extreme right of the five compartments
a willowy St. Michael in armour, like Chaucer’s
Squire in a black-letter folio, or if the identification
had been doubtful, there was the name below in all
letters.
When the print was shown to the scheming
Harwood over the afternoon vermouth, he suspended
a long discourse on the contemptible fate of being
born an Anglo-Saxon, and it came over him with a blessed
shock that Emma had the missing St. Michael.
Penetrated by the joy of the situation, he hesitated
for a moment whether to give the initiative to the
man or the woman. A glance at Crocker’s
uncompromising sturdiness convinced him that on that
side the situation might be quickly exhausted.
Emma he could trust to do it full justice. Excusing
himself abruptly, he made for Frau Stern’s
lodgings, and with the taste of Crocker’s vermouth
still in his faithless mouth, told her that Emma’s
Crivelli was no other than the missing St. Michael.
To make matters sure he solemnly bound Frau Stern to
secrecy. That accomplished, he strode whistling
down through the purple twilight to his well-earned
fritto at Paoli’s. The next day began
our wondering what Emma would do. She did, as
is known, a thing that her simple Knickerbocker ancestresses
would have approved presented Crocker to
the St. Michael and left the decision modestly to the
men. Behind the frankness of her procedure lay,
perhaps, a curiosity to see how Crocker would bear
himself in a delicate emergency. It was to be
in some fashion his ordeal. Thus she might at
least shake the appalling equanimity with which he
had passed from the stage of comrade to that of suppliant.
Not that she doubted him; nobody did that, but she
resented a little in retrospect his silence on the
subject of the great quest. Was it possible that
for these five years he had chatted only about his
college pranks, his fishing trips, his orchards and
vineyards, and the views? As she reviewed their
countless walks and teas, it really seemed as if he
had never paid her the compliment of being impersonal.
Well, that was ended now at any rate. A little
misgiving filled her that she had never revealed the
presence of the St. Michael to so good a play-fellow.
A delicacy, knowing his incorrigible zeal as a collector,
had restrained her, and then, as Dennis had guessed,
her den was her sanctuary, admission to which implied
an intimacy difficult to concede. Whatever the
merits of the case, the rupture had produced in a milieu
consumed by the desire to guess what Emma would do,
at least one person who was solely interested in what
Crocker’s next move might be. For the first
time in a singularly calculable life he had become
an object of genuine curiosity.
He acted with his usual simplicity.
To Emma he wrote a brief note upbraiding her for fearing
the voices of the valley, professing his eagerness
to return when the St. Michael had been put out of
the reckoning, and declaring that if it were not soon,
he would willy-nilly come back and see how things
were between them. It was a letter that wounded
Emma, yet somehow warmed her, too, and from its reception
we found her in an unwonted attitude of nonconformity
to the verdicts of the valley. She began to speak
up in behalf of this or that human specimen under
our diminishing lenses with the unsubtle and disconcerting
bluntness of Morton Crocker himself. The phenomenon
kept alive our waning interest during nearly a year
of waiting. As for Crocker he gave it out ostentatiously
that he was bound for a wonderful Cima in Northumbria
and afterward was to try dry-fly fishing on the Itchen.
Beyond that he had no plans. All this was characteristically
the truth; he bought the Cima, wrote of his baskets
to Harwood, but stayed away past his melons, his grapes
and his olives. By early winter we heard of him
shooting the moose in New Brunswick, and later planning
a system of art education in the Massachusetts schools,
and it was not till the brisk days of March that we
learned the west wind was bringing him our way again.
Meanwhile Emma had acquired a few
more grey hairs and had resolutely declined to dispossess
herself of the St. Michael. A couple of months
after Crocker’s leave-taking, a note had come
to her from Crespi, the unfrocked priest and consummate
antiquarian, who, to the point of improvising a chef
d’oeuvre, will furnish anything that this
gilded age demands. Crespi most respectfully
begged to represent an urgent client, a Russian prince,
who desired a fine Crivelli. Would the most gentle
Miss Verplanck haply part with hers? The price
should be what she chose to name. It was no question
of money, but of obliging a client whom Crespi could
ill afford to disappoint. Emma curtly declined
the offer. The St. Michael was valued for personal
reasons and was not for sale. Six weeks later
came a more insidious suggestion. The Director
of the Uffizi, learning that she possessed a
masterpiece of a school sparsely represented in the
first Italian gallery, pleading that such an object
should not pass from Italy, and representing a number
of generous art-lovers who desired to add it to the
collections under his care, made the following offer,
trusting, however, not to any pecuniary inducement
but to her loyalty as an honorary citizen of Florence.
The price named was something less than the London
value, but its acceptance would have perpetually endowed
the victoria, and perhaps. If the
malicious Harwood had not passed the word that the
offer was a ruse of the wily Crocker, we all believed
that she would have accepted. Indeed, we regretted
her obduracy. It would have been such a capital
way out, with no sacrifice of her scruples nor waiver
of our collective impressiveness. So Harwood
came in for mild reprehension, the Sage Dennis remarking
with some asperity that when the gods have provided
us with farces, comedies, and tragedies in from one
to five acts it is unseemly to string them out to
six or seven.
Early March, then, saw the deadlock
unbroken. The St. Michael had not been dislodged.
Emma still was unwavering so far as we knew. We
were unable, had we willed, to divest ourselves of
our deterrent attributes. But the situation had
changed to this extent that Crocker was said to be
on his way down to oversee a new system of spring tillage
in person.
Emma took his approach with something
between terror and an unwonted resignation. From
the day when he had planted himself firmly beside her
fireplace with a boyish wonder at finding himself so
much at home, he had represented the incalculable
in her carefully planned life. Declining to accept
the attitude of other people toward her, he had almost
upset her attitude toward herself. He was the
first man since the scapegrace cousin who had neither
feared nor yet provoked her sharp tongue. While
he relished her wit, it had always been with an unspoken
deprecation of its cutting edge. He gave her
a queer feeling of having allowances made for her a
condescension that in anybody but this big, likable
boy she would have requited with sarcasm. But
against him the cheveux de frise she successfully
presented to the world seemed of no avail. He
knew it was not timber but twigs, and that at worst
one was scratched and not impaled. Day by day
she watched the cropping of the long line of flaming
willow plumes that escorted her brook toward the level.
The line dwindled as the shorn pollards gave up their
withes to bind the vines to the dwarf maples.
She felt the miles between herself and Crocker lessening,
and (at rare moments) her scruples ready to be garnered
for some sweet and ill-defined but surely serviceable
use. But she would not have been Emma Verplanck
if the manner of her not impossible surrender had not
troubled her more than the act itself. Any lack
of tact on the part of the husbandman might still
spoil things. She had a whimsical sense that any
one of the flaming willows might refuse its contribution
to the vineyard should the pruner approach with anything
short of a persuasive “con permesso.”
Crocker’s “by your leave”
was so far from persuasive that it left her with a
panicky desire to run away again a new sensation.
He wrote:
DEAR EMMA
“We have had an endless year
to think it over, and the only change on my side is
that I need you more than ever. I will go away
for real reasons, for your reasons, but for no others.
If it is only their talk that separates us, their
talk has had twelve good months and shall have no
more. I must see you. May I come tomorrow
at the old hour?
“As always yours,
“MORTON CROCKER.”
Something between wrath and dismay
was the result of this challenge. She sat down
to answer him according to his impudence, and the words
would not come. The greatness of the required
sacrifice came over her and therewith the desire to
temporise. The voice of many Knickerbocker ancestresses
spoke in her, and between herself and a real emergency
she interposed the impenetrable buckler of a conventionality.
She wrote:
“PENSIOIN SCHALCK, Bad Weisstein, Austrian Tyrol.
MY DEAR CROCKER
“It would be pleasant to see
you and talk over your trip, but you see by this address
it is for the present impossible. As always,
“Cordially yours,
“EMMA VERPLANCK.”
When Crocker found Emma’s valley
as effectually barred as if a battery guarded the
approaches, he gave way to a deep resentment.
Instinctively hating anything like a trick, to be
tricked by Emma at this point was intolerable.
His gloom was such that he confided to the malicious
Harwood a profound disgust with the irreality of the
life Italianate. The podere should be
sold as soon as it could be put in order. Such
pictures as the Italian Government coveted, it should
keep, the rest should go to the Museum at Boston.
He himself would grow orange trees in North Cuba where
there were things to shoot and, thank heaven, no civilisation.
Harwood came breathlessly to Dennis’s with the
tale, gloating openly that there was to be a seventh
act if not an eighth.
A long hard day with his bailiff and
the peasants restored Crocker’s poise.
He looked for the hundredth time over into Emma’s
valley and divined her attitude. Dreading an
interview, she had left the way open to parley.
She virtually pleaded for a delay. It was a new
and, in a way, delightful sensation to be feared.
For the first time in any human relation he exploited
a personal advantage and wrote, addressing Bad Weisstein:
DEAREST EMMA
“You have wanted a delay.
Well, you have it probably a week already.
Make the most of it, for two weeks from this date I
give you time to recover from your journey I
am coming for tea in the old way. Meanwhile you
can hardly imagine the impatience of
“Yours more than ever,
“MORTON CROCKER.”
Whether Crocker or Emma was more miserable
during the fortnight even Dennis could not have told.
But there was in his woe something of the sublime
stolidity of the man who is going to stand up to be
shot or reprieved, whereas she suffered the uncertainty
of the soldier who has been drawn to make up the “firing
party” for a comrade. She feared that she
would not have courage enough to despatch him, and
then she feared she would. Meantime the days
passed, and she woke up one morning with an odd little
shiver reminding her that it was no longer possible
to get a note to him by way of Bad Weisstein.
Nor had she the heart to move to a nearer coign of
constructive absence. Of half measures she was,
after all, a foe. Her determination to send Crocker
away daily increased, and the implacable St. Michael
seemed to command that course. “You are
not for him. You represent a whole artificial
world in which he cannot breathe. I, the finest
incarnation of the most exquisite mannerism of a bygone
time, am your spiritual spouse, and you may not lightly
renounce me. You have devoted yourself to graceful
irrealities and must now abide by your choice.”
Thus the St. Michael had spoken in a dream in the
troubled hours before daybreak, and when Emma went
to her den late the next morning she confronted him
and admitted, “You are right, St. Michael.
It’s all true.” That afternoon Crocker
was coming for tea, and if her New York aunts could
have known, even they would have granted that, for
the second time in a thoroughly selfish life, Emma
was displaying capacities for self-sacrifice.
As Emma and Crocker shook hands that
afternoon, one might see that both had aged a little,
but he most. Something of the appealing boyishness
had gone out of his eyes. He had become her contemporary.
A certain moral advantage, too, had passed to his
side and she, whose prerogative it had been to take
the leading part, now waited for him to begin.
As if on honour to do nothing abruptly, he sketched
his year for her his sports and committees,
his kinsfolk and hers; their fresh, invigorating,
half-made land. She listened almost in silence
until he turned to her and said:
“With me, Emma, it is and always
will be the same. You know that. Has anything
changed with you?”
“I don’t think so, Crocker.
How can I tell? I’m glad you’re here,
in spite of the shabby trick I’ve played you.
Let me say just that I’m heartily glad to see
an old friend.”
“No, I must have more than that
or less. I want much more than that.”
“You want too much. You
want more than I can give to anybody. O!
Why can’t you see it all? You are alive,
even here in Florence but, I, I am no longer a real
person that can love or be loved. Can’t
you see that I am only a sensibility that absorbs
the sweetness of this valley, a mere bundle of scruples
and fears, a weather-cock veering with the talk of
the rest of them? Think of that and take back
what you have thought about me.”
“Emma, you admit a need, and
that is very sweet to me. You want some one to
strengthen you against all this that you call the valley.
Mightn’t that helper be I?”
“You shan’t be committed to anything so
hopeless.”
“It isn’t as hopeless
as it seems. The strength of the valley is only
in its weakness, and we shall be strong together.”
“I have forgotten how to be
strong, for years I have only been clever.”
“You’d be dull enough
with me as you well know. I can do that for both.
But don’t talk as if there were some fate between
us. There can be none except your indifference,
and I believe you do care a little and will more.”
“Of course, I care, Crocker,
but not as you wish. You have refreshed me in
this opiate air. You have represented the real
country I have exchanged for this illusion, the real
life I might have lived had I been braver or more
fortunate. But you can have no part in what I
have come to be. Go, for both our sakes.”
“Not for any such reason.
I can’t surrender my happiness for a phrase;
I can’t leave you to these delusions about yourself.”
“It is no delusion; I wish it
were. It’s in my blood and breeding.
For generations my people have lived the unreal life.
I am the fine flower of my race, and in coming to
this valley of dreams and this no-life I am merely
fulfilling a destiny a fate, as you say and
coming to my own.”
“But Emma, the worthy Verplancks?”
“No, listen to me. For
generations the Verplancks have been what people expected
them to be, incarnate formulas of etiquette and timid
living. They took their colour from the gossiping
society in which they seemed to live. They prudently
married other Verplancks, cousins or cousins’
cousins. They hoarded their little fortunes without
increasing them, and if what they called the rabble
had not peopled New York and raised the price of land,
which my people were merely too stolid to sell, we
should long ago have gone under in penury. We
have led nobody and made nothing, but have been maintained
by stronger forces and persons, toward whom we have
always taken the air of doing a favour. That mistake
at least I shall not make with you, Crocker.
I want you to feel the full nullity of me. As
I see you now I have a twinge because my great grandfather,
who was a small banker, would have called yours, who
was a farmer you see I have looked you
up not ‘Mister’ but ‘My
Good Man.’”
For a moment she paused, and Crocker
groped for a reply. “All this may be true,
Emma,” he said at last, “and yet mean very
little to you and me. Besides, I’m quite
willing you should call me your Good Man. In fact,
I’d rather like it.”
“You must take me seriously you
shall. I cannot marry. I’m married
already. Dennis says I am. Come and see my
bridegroom.” And she fairly dragged the
bewildered Crocker into her den and set him once more
before the missing St. Michael.
“There he is, an incarnated
weakness and fastidiousness. His hand is too
delicate to draw his own sword. If he really cast
out Satan, it must have been by merely staring him
down. His helmet rests with no weight upon his
curled and perfumed locks his buckles are
soft gold where iron should be. He represents
the dull, collective, aristocratic intolerance of
Heaven for the only individualist it ever managed to
produce. He pretends to be a warrior and is as
feminine as your St. Catherine. He is the imperturbable
champion of celestial good form, and Dennis, who sees
through things, says he is my spiritual husband.
He is the weakest of the weak and is too strong for
you, Crocker.”
For a space that seemed minutes they
faced each other, Emma excited, with a diffused indignation
that defied impartially the missing St. Michael and
the puzzled man before her; Crocker with a perplexity
that renewed the old boyish expression in his eyes.
He seemed to be thinking, and, as he thought, the
tension of Emma’s attitude relaxed, she forgot
to look at the St. Michael and wondered at the even,
steady patience of the big likable boy she was dismissing.
She pitied him in advance for the futile argument
he must be revolving. She had despatched him as
in duty bound and was both sorry and glad.
But his counterplea when it came was
of a disconcerting briefness and potency. He
said very slowly, “Yes, I see it all. There
is your spiritual husband; there are they” (indicating
the valley with a sweep of a big hand), “and
there are you, Emma, caught in a web of baffling and
false ideas; and here am I, a real man who loves you,
fearing neither the St. Michael nor them” (another
gesture) “nor your doubts. I set myself,
Morton Crocker, your lover, against them all and take
my own so.”
There was a frightened second in which
his sturdy arms closed about her. There was a
little shudder, as the same big hand that had defied
the valley sought her head and pressed it to his shoulder.
When Emma at last looked up the mockery she always
carried in her eyes had given place to a new serenity,
and her hand reached up timidly for his.
Crocker and Emma we now
instinctively gave him the precedence were
inconsiderate enough to remove themselves without making
clear the fate of the no longer missing St. Michael.
We still speculated indolently as to the nature of
the afterpiece in which we assumed this ex-hero of
our comedy might yet appear. Then we learned
that Emma was to be married without delay from the
stone manor house under the Taconics where her people
had dwelt since patroon days. Only a handful of
friends with Crocker’s nearest kin and her inevitable
New York aunts were to be present. These venerable
ladies had admitted that in marrying, even opulently,
out of the family, Emma had once more shown velleities
of self-sacrifice. Then we heard of Crocker and
Emma on his boat along the coast “Down East.”
Later we were shocked by rumours of a canoe trip through
Canadian waterways. Hereupon the usually benevolent
Dennis protested as he glanced approvingly at the
well-kept Tuscan landscape. “Crocker needn’t
rub it in,” he opined. “Why, it’s
the same scrubby spruce tree from the Plains of Abraham
to James’s Bay-and Emma, who hated being bored!
Why, it’s marriage by capture; it’s barbaric.”
“It’s worse; it’s rheumatic,”
shuddered Harwood as he declined Marsala and took
whisky. “But he’ll have to bring her
back to civilisation some time, if only to hospital.
We shall have her again.” “He will
bring her back, but we shall never have her again,”
said Dennis solemnly. “She has renounced
us and all our works.” “Renouncing
our works isn’t so difficult,” smiled
Mrs. Dennis, and then the talk drifted elsewhere, to
new Emmas who were just beginning to eat the Tuscan
lotus.
Before the year had turned to June
again we had nearly forgotten our runaways, when a
quite unusual activity about her villa and Crocker’s
warned us that they were coming back. Harwood
had seen in transit a box which he thought corresponded
to the St. Michael’s stature, but was not sure.
In a few days came a circular note from Crocker through
Dennis saying that they were fairly settled and he
glad to see any or all of us. She, however, was
still fatigued by the journey and must for a time
keep her room.
Harwood straightway volunteered to
undertake the preliminary reconnaissance, while Frau
Stern engaged to penetrate to Emma herself.
On a beatific afternoon we sat in
council on Dennis’s terrace awaiting the envoys.
Below, the misty plain rose on and on till it gathered
into an amber surge in Monte Morello and rippled away
again through the Fiesolan hills. Nearer, torrid
bell-towers pierced the shimmering reek, like stakes
in a sweltering lagoon. In the centre of all,
the great dome swam lightly, a gigantic celestial
buoy in a vaporous sea. The spell that bound
us all was doubly potent that day. The sense of
a continuous life that had made the dome and the belfries
an inevitable emanation from the clean crumbling earth,
lulled us all, and we hardly stirred when Harwood
bustled in, saying, “Cheer up. I have seen
Crocker, and it isn’t there.” “You
mean,” said the cautious Dennis, “that
Crocker still possesses only the hole, aperture, frame,
or niche that the missing St. Michael may yet adorn.”
“I only know that it isn’t there now,”
growled Harwood. “I deal merely in facts,
but you may get theories, if you must have them, from
Frau Stern, who heroically forced her way to Emma over
Crocker’s prostrate form.”
As he spoke we heard Frau Stern’s
timid, well-meaning ring, and in a moment her smile
filled the archway.
“We don’t need to ask
if you have news,” cried Mrs. Dennis from afar.
“If I haf news. Guess what
it is. It is too lovely. You cannot think?
Well, there will be a baby next autumn, what you call
it?” “Michaelmas, I suppose,” grunted
Harwood through his pipe-smoke and subsided into indifference.
“All this is most charming and
interesting, Frau Stern,” expostulated Dennis,
“but, as our enthusiastic friend Harwood delicately
hints, what we really let you go for was to locate
the Missing St. Michael.” “I haf
almost forgot that,” she apologised as she nibbled
her brioche, “Emma was so happy.
But for the bothersome St. Michael there is no change.
I saw it in what she calls her new den. She laughed
to me and said, ’I cannot let him have it, you
see, you would all say he married me for it.’”
“Bravo!” shouted Dennis
and Harwood in unison, and the Sage added with unction,
“So she has not been able to renounce us utterly.”
“It is not now for long,”
rejoined Frau Stern, “it is only to the time
we haf said.” “Michaelmas,”
repeated Harwood disgustedly.
“Yes, that is it,” she
pursued tranquilly, “Emma told me in confidence,
’To Crocker I cannot give it because of you all,
but to our child I may, and it shall do with it what
it will.’ Now do you prevail, Misters Dennis
and Harwood?”
“We are a bit downcast but not
discomfited,” acknowledged Dennis, while Harwood
remained glumly within his smoke. “Emma
has escaped us, but she still pays us the tribute
of a subterfuge. It is enough, we will forgive
her, even if her way lies from us dozers here.
For to-day the same sunshine drenches her and us.
It is a bond. Let us enjoy it while we may.”