Trennahan arrived late in the evening,
and went directly to the Yorbas’ to dinner.
He saw Magdalena alone for a moment before the others
came downstairs, and his delight at meeting her again
was so boyish that she could hardly have recalled
his eventful forty years had she tried. He was
one of those men, who, having a great deal of nervous
energy, are possessed briefly by the high animal spirits
of youth when in unusual mental and physical tenor,-with
coincident obliteration of the bills of time.
Trennahan was in the highest spirits this evening.
He was delighted to get back to California, delighted
to see Magdalena, whom he thought improved and almost
pretty in her smart frock. Moreover, no woman
had ever seemed to him half so sincere, half so well
worth the loving, as this girl who said so little
and breathed so much.
Don Roberto and Mr. Polk detained
him some time after dinner, and Magdalena, who thought
them most inconsiderate, awaited him in the green-and-brown
reception-room. She knew the ugliness of these
rooms now, and wondered, as Trennahan finally entered,
if it clashed with his sentiment. But he gave
no sign. He pushed a small sofa before the fire,
drew her beside him, and demanded the history of the
past four months. He held her hand and looked
at her with boyish delight. Even the lines had
left his face for the moment, the grimness his mouth.
He looked twenty-six.
“Your trip has done you more
good than California did. You never looked so
well here.”
“I have been funereal since
the day I left. This is pure reaction. I
never felt so happy in my life. Couldn’t
we have a walk or ride somewhere to-morrow early-out
to the Presidio? I want to be in the open air
with you.”
“I am afraid we couldn’t.
Nobody does such things, you know-except
Helena. Someone would be sure to see us, and it
would be all over town before night. Then we
should have to announce-I’d rather
not do that until just before-I should
hate being discussed.”
“Well, but I must have you to
myself in my own way. I wonder if your mother
would bring you down to my house for a few days.
Don Roberto and Mr. Polk could come down every evening.”
“I think they would like it.”
“And you?”
“Oh, I should like it. The woods must be
lovely in winter.”
“Who has been teaching you coquetry?
Who has fallen in love with you since I left?”
“With me? No one. No one would ever
think of such a thing but you-”
“I love you with an unerring instinct.”
“They are all in love with Helena.
I suppose you heard of her in New York.”
“It certainly was not your fault if I did not.”
“But surely you must have heard otherwise.
She is a great, great belle.”
“My dearest girl, you do not
hear California mentioned in New York once a month.
It might be on Mars. The East remembers California’s
existence about as often as Europe remembers America’s.
They don’t know what they miss. When am
I to see your Helena?”
“A week from to-night; she gives
a ball then at Del Monte. She and her father
have already gone, because each thought the other needed
rest.”
“Monterey,-that is
the scene of your Ysabel’s tragedy. We will
explore the old part of the town together.”
She moved closer to him, her eyes
glistening. “That has been one of my dreams,-to
be there with you-for the first time.
We can guess where they all lived-and go
to the cemetery on the hill where so many are buried-and
there is the Custom House on the rocks, where the ball
was and where Ysabel jumped off-it will
be heaven!”
He laughed and caught her in his arms,
kissing her fondly. “You dear little Spanish
maid,” he said. “You don’t belong
to the present at all. No wonder you bewitched
me. I am beginning to feel quite out of place
in the present, myself. It is a novel and delightful
sensation.”