Theron Ware looked about him with
frankly undisguised astonishment.
The room in which he found himself
was so dark at first that it yielded little to the
eye, and that little seemed altogether beyond his
comprehension. His gaze helplessly followed Celia
and her candle about as she busied herself in the
work of illumination. When she had finished,
and pinched out the taper, there were seven lights
in the apartment lights beaming softly
through half-opaque alternating rectangles of blue
and yellow glass. They must be set in some sort
of lanterns around against the wall, he thought, but
the shape of these he could hardly make out.
Gradually his sight adapted itself
to this subdued light, and he began to see other things.
These queer lamps were placed, apparently, so as to
shed a special radiance upon some statues which stood
in the corners of the chamber, and upon some pictures
which were embedded in the walls. Theron noted
that the statues, the marble of which lost its aggressive
whiteness under the tinted lights, were mostly of naked
men and women; the pictures, four or five in number,
were all variations of a single theme the
Virgin Mary and the Child.
A less untutored vision than his would
have caught more swiftly the scheme of color and line
in which these works of art bore their share.
The walls of the room were in part of flat upright
wooden columns, terminating high above in simple capitals,
and they were all painted in pale amber and straw
and primrose hues, irregularly wavering here and there
toward suggestions of white. Between these pilasters
were broader panels of stamped leather, in gently
varying shades of peacock blue. These contrasted
colors vaguely interwove and mingled in what he could
see of the shadowed ceiling far above. They were
repeated in the draperies and huge cushions and pillows
of the low, wide divan which ran about three sides
of the room. Even the floor, where it revealed
itself among the scattered rugs, was laid in a mosaic
pattern of matched woods, which, like the rugs, gave
back these same shifting blues and uncertain yellows.
The fourth side of the apartment was
broken in outline at one end by the door through which
they had entered, and at the other by a broad, square
opening, hung with looped-back curtains of a thin silken
stuff. Between the two apertures rose against
the wall what Theron took at first glance to be an
altar. There were pyramidal rows of tall candles
here on either side, each masked with a little silken
hood; below, in the centre, a shelf-like projection
supported what seemed a massive, carved casket, and
in the beautiful intricacies of this, and the receding
canopy of delicate ornamentation which depended above
it, the dominant color was white, deepening away in
its shadows, by tenderly minute gradations, to the
tints which ruled the rest of the room.
Celia lighted some of the high, thick
tapers in these candelabra, and opened the top of
the casket. Theron saw with surprise that she
had uncovered the keyboard of a piano. He viewed
with much greater amazement her next proceeding which
was to put a cigarette between her lips, and, bending
over one of the candles with it for an instant, turn
to him with a filmy, opalescent veil of smoke above
her head.
“Make yourself comfortable anywhere,”
she said, with a gesture which comprehended all the
divans and pillows in the place. “Will you
smoke?”
“I have never tried since I
was a little boy,” said Theron, “but I
think I could. If you don’t mind, I should
like to see.”
Lounging at his ease on the oriental
couch, Theron experimented cautiously upon the unaccustomed
tobacco, and looked at Celia with what he felt to
be the confident quiet of a man of the world.
She had thrown aside her hat, and in doing so had
half released some of the heavy strands of hair coiled
at the back of her head. His glance instinctively
rested upon this wonderful hair of hers. There
was no mistaking the sudden fascination its disorder
had for his eye.
She stood before him with the cigarette
poised daintily between thumb and finger of a shapely
hand, and smiled comprehendingly down on her guest.
“I suffered the horrors of the
damned with this hair of mine when I was a child,”
she said. “I daresay all children have a
taste for persecuting red-heads; but it’s a
specialty with Irish children. They get hold
somehow of an ancient national superstition, or legend,
that red hair was brought into Ireland by the Danes.
It’s been a term of reproach with us since Brian
Boru’s time to call a child a Dane. I used
to be pursued and baited with it every day of my life,
until the one dream of my ambition was to get old
enough to be a Sister of Charity, so that I might
hide my hair under one of their big beastly white linen
caps. I’ve got rather away from that ideal
since, I’m afraid,” she added, with a
droll downward curl of her lip.
“Your hair is very beautiful,”
said Theron, in the calm tone of a connoisseur.
“I like it myself,” Celia
admitted, and blew a little smoke-ring toward him.
“I’ve made this whole room to match it.
The colors, I mean,” she explained, in deference
to his uplifted brows. “Between us, we make
up what Whistler would call a symphony. That
reminds me I was going to play for you.
Let me finish the cigarette first.”
Theron felt grateful for her reticence
about the fact that he had laid his own aside.
“I have never seen a room at all like this,”
he remarked. “You are right; it does fit
you perfectly.”
She nodded her sense of his appreciation.
“It is what I like,” she said. “It
expresses me. I will not have anything about
me or anybody either that I
don’t like. I suppose if an old Greek could
see it, it would make him sick, but it represents
what I mean by being a Greek. It is as near as
an Irishman can get to it.”
“I remember your puzzling me
by saying that you were a Greek.”
Celia laughed, and tossed the cigarette-end
away. “I’d puzzle you more, I’m
afraid, if I tried to explain to you what I really
meant by it. I divide people up into two classes,
you know Greeks and Jews. Once you
get hold of that principle, all other divisions and
classifications, such as by race or language or nationality,
seem pure foolishness. It is the only true division
there is. It is just as true among negroes or
wild Indians who never heard of Greece or Jerusalem,
as it is among white folks. That is the beauty
of it. It works everywhere, always.”
“Try it on me,” urged
Theron, with a twinkling eye. “Which am
I?”
“Both,” said the girl,
with a merry nod of the head. “But now I’ll
play. I told you you were to hear Chopin.
I prescribe him for you. He is the Greekiest
of the Greeks. There was a nation where all
the people were artists, where everybody was an intellectual
aristocrat, where the Philistine was as unknown, as
extinct, as the dodo. Chopin might have written
his music for them.”
“I am interested in Shopang,”
put in Theron, suddenly recalling Sister Soulsby’s
confidences as to the source of her tunes. “He
lived with what’s his name George
something. We were speaking about him only this
afternoon.”
Celia looked down into her visitor’s
face at first inquiringly, then with a latent grin
about her lips. “Yes George something,”
she said, in a tone which mystified him.
The Rev. Mr. Ware was sitting up,
a minute afterward, in a ferment of awakened consciousness
that he had never heard the piano played before.
After a little, he noiselessly rearranged the cushions,
and settled himself again in a recumbent posture.
It was beyond his strength to follow that first impulse,
and keep his mind abreast with what his ears took
in. He sighed and lay back, and surrendered his
senses to the mere unthinking charm of it all.
It was the Fourth Prelude that was
singing in the air about him a simple,
plaintive strain wandering at will over a surface of
steady rhythmic movement underneath, always creeping
upward through mysteries of sweetness, always sinking
again in cadences of semi-tones. With only a
moment’s pause, there came the Seventh Waltz a
rich, bold confusion which yet was not confused.
Theron’s ears dwelt with eager delight upon
the chasing medley of swift, tinkling sounds, but it
left his thoughts free.
From where he reclined, he turned
his head to scrutinize, one by one, the statues in
the corners. No doubt they were beautiful for
this was a department in which he was all humility and
one of them, the figure of a broad-browed, stately,
though thick-waisted woman, bending slightly forward
and with both arms broken off, was decently robed from
the hips downward. The others were not robed
at all. Theron stared at them with the erratic,
rippling jangle of the waltz in his ears, and felt
that he possessed a new and disturbing conception
of what female emancipation meant in these later days.
Roving along the wall, his glance rested again upon
the largest of the Virgin pictures a full-length
figure in sweeping draperies, its radiant, aureoled
head upturned in rapt adoration, its feet resting
on a crescent moon which shone forth in bluish silver
through festooned clouds of cherubs. The incongruity
between the unashamed statues and this serene incarnation
of holy womanhood jarred upon him for the instant.
Then his mind went to the piano.
Without a break the waltz had slowed
and expanded into a passage of what might be church
music, an exquisitely modulated and gently solemn chant,
through which a soft, lingering song roved capriciously,
forcing the listener to wonder where it was coming
out, even while it caressed and soothed to repose.
He looked from the Madonna to Celia.
Beyond the carelessly drooping braids and coils of
hair which blazed between the candles, he could see
the outline of her brow and cheek, the noble contour
of her lifted chin and full, modelled throat, all
pink as the most delicate rose leaf is pink, against
the cool lights of the altar-like wall. The sight
convicted him in the court of his own soul as a prurient
and mean-minded rustic. In the presence of such
a face, of such music, there ceased to be any such
thing as nudity, and statues no more needed clothes
than did those slow, deep, magnificent chords which
came now, gravely accumulating their spell upon him.
“It is all singing!” the
player called out to him over her shoulder, in a minute
of rest. “That is what Chopin does he
sings!”
She began, with an effect of thinking
of something else, the Sixth Nocturne, and Theron
at first thought she was not playing anything in particular,
so deliberately, haltingly, did the chain of charm
unwind itself into sequence. Then it came closer
to him than the others had done. The dreamy,
wistful, meditative beauty of it all at once oppressed
and inspired him. He saw Celia’s shoulders
sway under the impulse of the rubato license the
privilege to invest each measure with the stress of
the whole, to loiter, to weep, to run and laugh at
will and the music she made spoke to him
as with a human voice. There was the wooing sense
of roses and moonlight, of perfumes, white skins, alluring
languorous eyes, and then
“You know this part, of course,” he heard
her say.
On the instant they had stepped from
the dark, scented, starlit garden, where the nightingale
sang, into a great cathedral. A sombre and lofty
anthem arose, and filled the place with the splendor
of such dignified pomp of harmony and such suggestions
of measureless choral power and authority that Theron
sat abruptly up, then was drawn resistlessly to his
feet. He stood motionless in the strange room,
feeling most of all that one should kneel to hear
such music.
“This you’ll know too the
funeral march from the Second Sonata,” she was
saying, before he realized that the end of the other
had come. He sank upon the divan again, bending
forward and clasping his hands tight around his knees.
His heart beat furiously as he listened to the weird,
mediaeval processional, with its wild, clashing chords
held down in the bondage of an orderly sadness.
There was a propelling motion in the thing a
sense of being borne bodily along which
affected him like dizziness. He breathed hard
through the robust portions of stern, vigorous noise,
and rocked himself to and fro when, as rosy morn breaks
upon a storm-swept night, the drums are silenced for
the sweet, comforting strain of solitary melody.
The clanging minor harmonies into which the march
relapses came to their abrupt end. Theron rose
once more, and moved with a hesitating step to the
piano.
“I want to rest a little,”
he said, with his hand on her shoulder.
“Whew! so do I,” exclaimed
Celia, letting her hands fall with an exaggerated
gesture of weariness. “The sonatas take
it out of one! They are hideously difficult,
you know. They are rarely played.”
“I didn’t know,”
remarked Theron. She seemed not to mind his hand
upon her shoulder, and he kept it there. “I
didn’t know anything about music at all.
What I do know now is that that this evening
is an event in my life.”
She looked up at him and smiled.
He read unsuspected tendernesses and tolerances of
friendship in the depths of her eyes, which emboldened
him to stir the fingers of that audacious hand in a
lingering, caressing trill upon her shoulder.
The movement was of the faintest, but having ventured
it, he drew his hand abruptly away.
“You are getting on,”
she said to him. There was an enigmatic twinkle
in the smile with which she continued to regard him.
“We are Hellenizing you at a great rate.”
A sudden thought seemed to strike
her. She shifted her eyes toward vacancy with
a swift, abstracted glance, reflected for a moment,
then let a sparkling half-wink and the dimpling beginnings
of an almost roguish smile mark her assent to the
conceit, whatever it might be.
“I will be with you in a moment,”
he heard her say; and while the words were still in
his ears she had risen and passed out of sight through
the broad, open doorway to the right. The looped
curtains fell together behind her. Presently
a mellow light spread over their delicately translucent
surface a creamy, undulating radiance which
gave the effect of moving about among the myriad folds
of the silk.
Theron gazed at these curtains for
a little, then straightened his shoulders with a gesture
of decision, and, turning on his heel, went over and
examined the statues in the further corners minutely.
“If you would like some more,
I will play you the Berceuse now.”
Her voice came to him with a delicious
shock. He wheeled round and beheld her standing
at the piano, with one hand resting, palm upward,
on the keys. She was facing him. Her tall
form was robed now in some shapeless, clinging drapery,
lustrous and creamy and exquisitely soft, like the
curtains. The wonderful hair hung free and luxuriant
about her neck and shoulders, and glowed with an intensity
of fiery color which made all the other hues of the
room pale and vague. A fillet of faint, sky-like
blue drew a gracious span through the flame of red
above her temples, and from this there rose the gleam
of jewels. Her head inclined gently, gravely,
toward him with the posture of that armless
woman in marble he had been studying and
her brown eyes, regarding him from the shadows, emitted
light.
“It is a lullaby the
only one he wrote,” she said, as Theron, pale-faced
and with tightened lips, approached her. “No you
mustn’t stand there,” she added, sinking
into the seat before the instrument; “go back
and sit where you were.”
The most perfect of lullabies, with
its swaying abandonment to cooing rhythm, ever and
again rising in ripples to the point of insisting on
something, one knows not what, and then rocking, melting
away once more, passed, so to speak, over Theron’s
head. He leaned back upon the cushions, and watched
the white, rounded forearm which the falling folds
of this strange, statue-like drapery made bare.
There was more that appealed to his
mood in the Third Ballade. It seemed to him that
there were words going along with it incoherent
and impulsive yet very earnest words, appealing to
him in strenuous argument and persuasion. Each
time he almost knew what they said, and strained after
their meaning with a passionate desire, and then there
would come a kind of cuckoo call, and everything would
swing dancing off again into a mockery of inconsequence.
Upon the silence there fell the pure,
liquid, mellifluous melody of a soft-throated woman
singing to her lover.
“It is like Heine simply
a love-poem,” said the girl, over her shoulder.
Theron followed now with all his senses,
as she carried the Ninth Nocturne onward. The
stormy passage, which she banged finely forth, was
in truth a lover’s quarrel; and then the mild,
placid flow of sweet harmonies into which the furore
sank, dying languorously away upon a silence all alive
with tender memories of sound was that not
also a part of love?
They sat motionless through a minute the
man on the divan, the girl at the piano and
Theron listened for what he felt must be the audible
thumping of his heart.
Then, throwing back her head, with
upturned face, Celia began what she had withheld for
the last the Sixteenth Mazurka. This
strange foreign thing she played with her eyes closed,
her head tilted obliquely so that Theron could see
the rose-tinted, beautiful countenance, framed as if
asleep in the billowing luxuriance of unloosed auburn
hair. He fancied her beholding visions as she
wrought the music visions full of barbaric
color and romantic forms. As his mind swam along
with the gliding, tricksy phantom of a tune, it seemed
as if he too could see these visions as
if he gazed at them through her eyes.
It could not be helped. He lifted
himself noiselessly to his feet, and stole with caution
toward her. He would hear the rest of this weird,
voluptuous fantasy standing thus, so close behind her
that he could look down upon her full, uplifted lace so
close that, if she moved, that glowing nimbus of hair
would touch him.
There had been some curious and awkward
pauses in this last piece, which Theron, by some side
cerebration, had put down to her not watching what
her fingers did. There came another of these pauses
now an odd, unaccountable halt in what
seemed the middle of everything. He stared intently
down upon her statuesque, dreaming face during the
hush, and caught his breath as he waited. There
fell at last a few faltering ascending notes, making
a half-finished strain, and then again there was silence.
Celia opened her eyes, and poured
a direct, deep gaze into the face above hers.
Its pale lips were parted in suspense, and the color
had faded from its cheeks.
“That is the end,” she
said, and, with a turn of her lithe body, stood swiftly
up, even while the echoes of the broken melody seemed
panting in the air about her for completion.
Theron put his hands to his face,
and pressed them tightly against eyes and brow for
an instant. Then, throwing them aside with an
expansive downward sweep of the arms, and holding
them clenched, he returned Celia’s glance.
It was as if he had never looked into a woman’s
eyes before.
“It can’t be the
end!” he heard himself saying, in a low voice
charged with deep significance. He held her gaze
in the grasp of his with implacable tenacity.
There was a trouble about breathing, and the mosaic
floor seemed to stir under his feet. He clung
defiantly to the one idea of not releasing her eyes.
“How could it be the end?”
he demanded, lifting an uncertain hand to his breast
as he spoke, and spreading it there as if to control
the tumultuous fluttering of his heart. “Things
don’t end that way!”
A sharp, blinding spasm of giddiness
closed upon and shook him, while the brave words were
on his lips. He blinked and tottered under it,
as it passed, and then backed humbly to his divan
and sat down, gasping a little, and patting his hand
on his heart. There was fright written all over
his whitened face.
“We we forgot that
I am a sick man,” he said feebly, answering Celia’s
look of surprised inquiry with a forced, wan smile.
“I was afraid my heart had gone wrong.”
She scrutinized him for a further
moment, with growing reassurance in her air.
Then, piling up the pillows and cushions behind him
for support, for all the world like a big sister again,
she stepped into the inner room, and returned with
a flagon of quaint shape and a tiny glass. She
poured this latter full to the brim of a thick yellowish,
aromatic liquid, and gave it him to drink.
“This Benedictine is all I happen
to have,” she said. “Swallow it down.
It will do you good.”
Theron obeyed her. It brought
tears to his eyes; but, upon reflection, it was grateful
and warming. He did feel better almost immediately.
A great wave of comfort seemed to enfold him as he
settled himself back on the divan. For that one
flashing instant he had thought that he was dying.
He drew a long grateful breath of relief, and smiled
his content.
Celia had seated herself beside him,
a little away. She sat with her head against
the wall, and one foot curled under her, and almost
faced him.
“I dare say we forced the pace
a little,” she remarked, after a pause, looking
down at the floor, with the puckers of a ruminating
amusement playing in the corners of her mouth.
“It doesn’t do for a man to get to be
a Greek all of a sudden. He must work along up
to it gradually.”
He remembered the music. “Oh,
if I only knew how to tell you,” he murmured
ecstatically, “what a revelation your playing
has been to me! I had never imagined anything
like it. I shall think of it to my dying day.”
He began to remember as well the spirit
that was in the air when the music ended. The
details of what he had felt and said rose vaguely in
his mind. Pondering them, his eye roved past Celia’s
white-robed figure to the broad, open doorway beyond.
The curtains behind which she had disappeared were
again parted and fastened back. A dim light was
burning within, out of sight, and its faint illumination
disclosed a room filled with white marbles, white
silks, white draperies of varying sorts, which shaped
themselves, as he looked, into the canopy and trappings
of an extravagantly over-sized and sumptuous bed.
He looked away again.
“I wish you would tell me what
you really mean by that Greek idea of yours,”
he said with the abruptness of confusion.
Celia did not display much enthusiasm
in the tone of her answer. “Oh,”
she said almost indifferently, “lots of things.
Absolute freedom from moral bugbears, for one thing.
The recognition that beauty is the only thing in life
that is worth while. The courage to kick out of
one’s life everything that isn’t worth
while; and so on.”
“But,” said Theron, watching
the mingled delicacy and power of the bared arm and
the shapely grace of the hand which she had lifted
to her face, “I am going to get you to teach
it all to me.” The memories began
crowding in upon him now, and the baffling note upon
which the mazurka had stopped short chimed like a
tuning-fork in his ears. “I want to be
a Greek myself, if you’re one. I want to
get as close to you to your ideal, that
is, as I can. You open up to me a whole world
that I had not even dreamed existed. We swore
our friendship long ago, you know: and now, after
tonight you and the music have decided me.
I am going to put the things out of my life that
are not worthwhile. Only you must help me; you
must tell me how to begin.”
He looked up as he spoke, to enforce
the almost tender entreaty of his words. The
spectacle of a yawn, only fractionally concealed behind
those talented fingers, chilled his soft speech, and
sent a flush over his face. He rose on the instant.
Celia was nothing abashed at his discovery.
She laughed gayly in confession of her fault, and
held her hand out to let him help her disentangle
her foot from her draperies, and get off the divan.
It seemed to be her meaning that he should continue
holding her hand after she was also standing.
“You forgive me, don’t
you?” she urged smilingly. “Chopin
always first excites me, then sends me to sleep.
You see how you sleep tonight!”
The brown, velvety eyes rested upon
him, from under their heavy lids, with a languorous
kindliness. Her warm, large palm clasped his in
frank liking.
“I don’t want to sleep
at all,” Mr. Ware was impelled to say. “I
want to lie awake and think about about
everything all over again.”
She smiled drowsily. “And
you’re sure you feel strong enough to walk home?”
“Yes,” he replied, with
a lingering dilatory note, which deepened upon reflection
into a sigh. “Oh, yes.”
He followed her and her candle down
the magnificent stairway again. She blew the
light out in the hall, and, opening the front door,
stood with him for a silent moment on the threshold.
Then they shook hands once more, and with a whispered
good-night, parted.
Celia, returning to the blue and yellow
room, lighted a cigarette and helped herself to some
Benedictine in the glass which Theron had used.
She looked meditatively at this little glass for a
moment, turning it about in her fingers with a smile.
The smile warmed itself suddenly into a joyous laugh.
She tossed the glass aside, and, holding out her flowing
skirts with both hands, executed a swinging pirouette
in front of the gravely beautiful statue of the armless
woman.