The street in which Mr. Blunt lived
presented itself to our eyes, narrow, silent, empty,
and dark, but with enough gas-lamps in it to disclose
its most striking feature: a quantity of flag-poles
sticking out above many of its closed portals.
It was the street of Consuls and I remarked to Mr.
Blunt that coming out in the morning he could survey
the flags of all nations almost except
his own. (The U. S. consulate was on the other side
of the town.) He mumbled through his teeth that he
took good care to keep clear of his own consulate.
“Are you afraid of the consul’s
dog?” I asked jocularly. The consul’s
dog weighed about a pound and a half and was known
to the whole town as exhibited on the consular fore-arm
in all places, at all hours, but mainly at the hour
of the fashionable promenade on the Prado.
But I felt my jest misplaced when
Mills growled low in my ear: “They are
all Yankees there.”
I murmured a confused “Of course.”
Books are nothing. I discovered
that I had never been aware before that the Civil
War in America was not printed matter but a fact only
about ten years old. Of course. He was
a South Carolinian gentleman. I was a little
ashamed of my want of tact. Meantime, looking
like the conventional conception of a fashionable
reveller, with his opera-hat pushed off his forehead,
Captain Blunt was having some slight difficulty with
his latch-key; for the house before which we had stopped
was not one of those many-storied houses that made
up the greater part of the street. It had only
one row of windows above the ground floor. Dead
walls abutting on to it indicated that it had a garden.
Its dark front presented no marked architectural
character, and in the flickering light of a street
lamp it looked a little as though it had gone down
in the world. The greater then was my surprise
to enter a hall paved in black and white marble and
in its dimness appearing of palatial proportions.
Mr. Blunt did not turn up the small solitary gas-jet,
but led the way across the black and white pavement
past the end of the staircase, past a door of gleaming
dark wood with a heavy bronze handle. It gave
access to his rooms he said; but he took us straight
on to the studio at the end of the passage.
It was rather a small place tacked
on in the manner of a lean-to to the garden side of
the house. A large lamp was burning brightly
there. The floor was of mere flag-stones but
the few rugs scattered about though extremely worn
were very costly. There was also there a beautiful
sofa upholstered in pink figured silk, an enormous
divan with many cushions, some splendid arm-chairs
of various shapes (but all very shabby), a round table,
and in the midst of these fine things a small common
iron stove. Somebody must have been attending
it lately, for the fire roared and the warmth of the
place was very grateful after the bone-searching cold
blasts of mistral outside.
Mills without a word flung himself
on the divan and, propped on his arm, gazed thoughtfully
at a distant corner where in the shadow of a monumental
carved wardrobe an articulated dummy without head or
hands but with beautifully shaped limbs composed in
a shrinking attitude, seemed to be embarrassed by
his stare.
As we sat enjoying the bivouac
hospitality (the dish was really excellent and our
host in a shabby grey jacket still looked the accomplished
man-about-town) my eyes kept on straying towards that
corner. Blunt noticed this and remarked that
I seemed to be attracted by the Empress.
“It’s disagreeable,”
I said. “It seems to lurk there like a
shy skeleton at the feast. But why do you give
the name of Empress to that dummy?”
“Because it sat for days and
days in the robes of a Byzantine Empress to a painter.
. . I wonder where he discovered these priceless
stuffs. . . You knew him, I believe?”
Mills lowered his head slowly, then
tossed down his throat some wine out of a Venetian
goblet.
“This house is full of costly
objects. So are all his other houses, so is
his place in Paris that mysterious Pavilion
hidden away in Passy somewhere.”
Mills knew the Pavilion. The
wine had, I suppose, loosened his tongue. Blunt,
too, lost something of his reserve. From their
talk I gathered the notion of an eccentric personality,
a man of great wealth, not so much solitary as difficult
of access, a collector of fine things, a painter known
only to very few people and not at all to the public
market. But as meantime I had been emptying my
Venetian goblet with a certain regularity (the amount
of heat given out by that iron stove was amazing;
it parched one’s throat, and the straw-coloured
wine didn’t seem much stronger than so much
pleasantly flavoured water) the voices and the impressions
they conveyed acquired something fantastic to my mind.
Suddenly I perceived that Mills was sitting in his
shirt-sleeves. I had not noticed him taking
off his coat. Blunt had unbuttoned his shabby
jacket, exposing a lot of starched shirt-front with
the white tie under his dark shaved chin. He
had a strange air of insolence or so it
seemed to me. I addressed him much louder than
I intended really.
“Did you know that extraordinary man?”
“To know him personally one
had to be either very distinguished or very lucky.
Mr. Mills here . . .”
“Yes, I have been lucky,”
Mills struck in. “It was my cousin who
was distinguished. That’s how I managed
to enter his house in Paris it was called
the Pavilion twice.”
“And saw Dona Rita twice, too?”
asked Blunt with an indefinite smile and a marked
emphasis. Mills was also emphatic in his reply
but with a serious face.
“I am not an easy enthusiast
where women are concerned, but she was without doubt
the most admirable find of his amongst all the priceless
items he had accumulated in that house the
most admirable. . . "
“Ah! But, you see, of
all the objects there she was the only one that was
alive,” pointed out Blunt with the slightest
possible flavour of sarcasm.
“Immensely so,” affirmed
Mills. “Not because she was restless, indeed
she hardly ever moved from that couch between the windows you
know.”
“No. I don’t know.
I’ve never been in there,” announced Blunt
with that flash of white teeth so strangely without
any character of its own that it was merely disturbing.
“But she radiated life,”
continued Mills. “She had plenty of it,
and it had a quality. My cousin and Henry Allegre
had a lot to say to each other and so I was free to
talk to her. At the second visit we were like
old friends, which was absurd considering that all
the chances were that we would never meet again in
this world or in the next. I am not meddling
with theology but it seems to me that in the Elysian
fields she’ll have her place in a very special
company.”
All this in a sympathetic voice and
in his unmoved manner. Blunt produced another
disturbing white flash and muttered:
“I should say mixed.”
Then louder: “As for instance . . . "
“As for instance Cleopatra,”
answered Mills quietly. He added after a pause:
“Who was not exactly pretty.”
“I should have thought rather
a La Valliere,” Blunt dropped with an indifference
of which one did not know what to make. He may
have begun to be bored with the subject. But
it may have been put on, for the whole personality
was not clearly definable. I, however, was not
indifferent. A woman is always an interesting
subject and I was thoroughly awake to that interest.
Mills pondered for a while with a sort of dispassionate
benevolence, at last:
“Yes, Dona Rita as far as I
know her is so varied in her simplicity that even
that is possible,” he said. “Yes.
A romantic resigned La Valliere . . . who had a big
mouth.”
I felt moved to make myself heard.
“Did you know La Valliere, too?” I asked
impertinently.
Mills only smiled at me. “No.
I am not quite so old as that,” he said.
“But it’s not very difficult to know facts
of that kind about a historical personage. There
were some ribald verses made at the time, and Louis
XIV was congratulated on the possession I
really don’t remember how it goes on
the possession of:
“. . . de ce bec
amoureux
Qui d’une oreille
a l’autre va,
Tra la la.
or something of the sort. It
needn’t be from ear to ear, but it’s a
fact that a big mouth is often a sign of a certain
generosity of mind and feeling. Young man, beware
of women with small mouths. Beware of the others,
too, of course; but a small mouth is a fatal sign.
Well, the royalist sympathizers can’t charge
Dona Rita with any lack of generosity from what I
hear. Why should I judge her? I have known
her for, say, six hours altogether. It was enough
to feel the seduction of her native intelligence and
of her splendid physique. And all that was brought
home to me so quickly,” he concluded, “because
she had what some Frenchman has called the ’terrible
gift of familiarity’.”
Blunt had been listening moodily. He nodded
assent.
“Yes!” Mills’ thoughts
were still dwelling in the past. “And when
saying good-bye she could put in an instant an immense
distance between herself and you. A slight stiffening
of that perfect figure, a change of the physiognomy:
it was like being dismissed by a person born in the
purple. Even if she did offer you her hand as
she did to me it was as if across a broad
river. Trick of manner or a bit of truth peeping
out? Perhaps she’s really one of those
inaccessible beings. What do you think, Blunt?”
It was a direct question which for
some reason (as if my range of sensitiveness had been
increased already) displeased or rather disturbed
me strangely. Blunt seemed not to have heard
it. But after a while he turned to me.
“That thick man,” he said
in a tone of perfect urbanity, “is as fine as
a needle. All these statements about the seduction
and then this final doubt expressed after only two
visits which could not have included more than six
hours altogether and this some three years ago!
But it is Henry Allegre that you should ask this
question, Mr. Mills.”
“I haven’t the secret
of raising the dead,” answered Mills good humouredly.
“And if I had I would hesitate. It would
seem such a liberty to take with a person one had
known so slightly in life.”
“And yet Henry Allegre is the
only person to ask about her, after all this uninterrupted
companionship of years, ever since he discovered her;
all the time, every breathing moment of it, till, literally,
his very last breath. I don’t mean to
say she nursed him. He had his confidential
man for that. He couldn’t bear women about
his person. But then apparently he couldn’t
bear this one out of his sight. She’s the
only woman who ever sat to him, for he would never
suffer a model inside his house. That’s
why the ‘Girl in the Hat’ and the ‘Byzantine
Empress’ have that family air, though neither
of them is really a likeness of Dona Rita. . .
You know my mother?”
Mills inclined his body slightly and
a fugitive smile vanished from his lips. Blunt’s
eyes were fastened on the very centre of his empty
plate.
“Then perhaps you know my mother’s
artistic and literary associations,” Blunt went
on in a subtly changed tone. “My mother
has been writing verse since she was a girl of fifteen.
She’s still writing verse. She’s
still fifteen a spoiled girl of genius.
So she requested one of her poet friends no
less than Versoy himself to arrange for
a visit to Henry Allègre’s house.
At first he thought he hadn’t heard aright.
You must know that for my mother a man that doesn’t
jump out of his skin for any woman’s caprice
is not chivalrous. But perhaps you do know? .
. .”
Mills shook his head with an amused
air. Blunt, who had raised his eyes from his
plate to look at him, started afresh with great deliberation.
“She gives no peace to herself
or her friends. My mother’s exquisitely
absurd. You understand that all these painters,
poets, art collectors (and dealers in bric-a-brac,
he interjected through his teeth) of my mother are
not in my way; but Versoy lives more like a man of
the world. One day I met him at the fencing school.
He was furious. He asked me to tell my mother
that this was the last effort of his chivalry.
The jobs she gave him to do were too difficult.
But I daresay he had been pleased enough to show
the influence he had in that quarter. He knew
my mother would tell the world’s wife all about
it. He’s a spiteful, gingery little wretch.
The top of his head shines like a billiard ball.
I believe he polishes it every morning with a cloth.
Of course they didn’t get further than the
big drawing-room on the first floor, an enormous drawing-room
with three pairs of columns in the middle. The
double doors on the top of the staircase had been
thrown wide open, as if for a visit from royalty.
You can picture to yourself my mother, with her white
hair done in some 18th century fashion and her sparkling
black eyes, penetrating into those splendours attended
by a sort of bald-headed, vexed squirrel and
Henry Allegre coming forward to meet them like a severe
prince with the face of a tombstone Crusader, big white
hands, muffled silken voice, half-shut eyes, as if
looking down at them from a balcony. You remember
that trick of his, Mills?”
Mills emitted an enormous cloud of
smoke out of his distended cheeks.
“I daresay he was furious, too,”
Blunt continued dispassionately. “But
he was extremely civil. He showed her all the
‘treasures’ in the room, ivories, enamels,
miniatures, all sorts of monstrosities from Japan,
from India, from Timbuctoo . . . for all I know. .
. He pushed his condescension so far as to have
the ‘Girl in the Hat’ brought down into
the drawing-room half length, unframed.
They put her on a chair for my mother to look at.
The ‘Byzantine Empress’ was already there,
hung on the end wall full length, gold
frame weighing half a ton. My mother first overwhelms
the ‘Master’ with thanks, and then absorbs
herself in the adoration of the ‘Girl in the
Hat.’ Then she sighs out: ’It
should be called Diaphanéité, if there is such
a word. Ah! This is the last expression
of modernity!’ She puts up suddenly her face-a-main
and looks towards the end wall. ’And that Byzantium
itself! Who was she, this sullen and beautiful
Empress?’
“‘The one I had in my
mind was Theodosia!’ Allegre consented to answer.
‘Originally a slave girl from somewhere.’
“My mother can be marvellously
indiscreet when the whim takes her. She finds
nothing better to do than to ask the ‘Master’
why he took his inspiration for those two faces from
the same model. No doubt she was proud of her
discerning eye. It was really clever of her.
Allegre, however, looked on it as a colossal impertinence;
but he answered in his silkiest tones:
“’Perhaps it is because
I saw in that woman something of the women of all
time.’
“My mother might have guessed
that she was on thin ice there. She is extremely
intelligent. Moreover, she ought to have known.
But women can be miraculously dense sometimes.
So she exclaims, ’Then she is a wonder!’
And with some notion of being complimentary goes on
to say that only the eyes of the discoverer of so
many wonders of art could have discovered something
so marvellous in life. I suppose Allegre lost
his temper altogether then; or perhaps he only wanted
to pay my mother out, for all these ‘Masters’
she had been throwing at his head for the last two
hours. He insinuates with the utmost politeness:
“’As you are honouring
my poor collection with a visit you may like to judge
for yourself as to the inspiration of these two pictures.
She is upstairs changing her dress after our morning
ride. But she wouldn’t be very long.
She might be a little surprised at first to be called
down like this, but with a few words of preparation
and purely as a matter of art . . .’
“There were never two people
more taken aback. Versoy himself confesses that
he dropped his tall hat with a crash. I am a
dutiful son, I hope, but I must say I should have
liked to have seen the retreat down the great staircase.
Ha! Ha! Ha!”
He laughed most undutifully and then
his face twitched grimly.
“That implacable brute Allegre
followed them down ceremoniously and put my mother
into the fiacre at the door with the greatest deference.
He didn’t open his lips though, and made a
great bow as the fiacre drove away. My mother
didn’t recover from her consternation for three
days. I lunch with her almost daily and I couldn’t
imagine what was the matter. Then one day . .
.”
He glanced round the table, jumped
up and with a word of excuse left the studio by a
small door in a corner. This startled me into
the consciousness that I had been as if I had not
existed for these two men. With his elbows propped
on the table Mills had his hands in front of his face
clasping the pipe from which he extracted now and then
a puff of smoke, staring stolidly across the room.
I was moved to ask in a whisper:
“Do you know him well?”
“I don’t know what he
is driving at,” he answered drily. “But
as to his mother she is not as volatile as all that.
I suspect it was business. It may have been
a deep plot to get a picture out of Allegre for somebody.
My cousin as likely as not. Or simply to discover
what he had. The Blunts lost all their property
and in Paris there are various ways of making a little
money, without actually breaking anything. Not
even the law. And Mrs. Blunt really had a position
once in the days of the Second Empire and
so. . .”
I listened open-mouthed to these things
into which my West-Indian experiences could not have
given me an insight. But Mills checked himself
and ended in a changed tone.
“It’s not easy to know
what she would be at, either, in any given instance.
For the rest, spotlessly honourable. A delightful,
aristocratic old lady. Only poor.”
A bump at the door silenced him and
immediately Mr. John Blunt, Captain of Cavalry in
the Army of Legitimity, first-rate cook (as to one
dish at least), and generous host, entered clutching
the necks of four more bottles between the fingers
of his hand.
“I stumbled and nearly smashed
the lot,” he remarked casually. But even
I, with all my innocence, never for a moment believed
he had stumbled accidentally. During the uncorking
and the filling up of glasses a profound silence reigned;
but neither of us took it seriously any
more than his stumble.
“One day,” he went on
again in that curiously flavoured voice of his, “my
mother took a heroic decision and made up her mind
to get up in the middle of the night. You must
understand my mother’s phraseology. It
meant that she would be up and dressed by nine o’clock.
This time it was not Versoy that was commanded for
attendance, but I. You may imagine how delighted
I was. . . .”
It was very plain to me that Blunt
was addressing himself exclusively to Mills:
Mills the mind, even more than Mills the man.
It was as if Mills represented something initiated
and to be reckoned with. I, of course, could
have no such pretensions. If I represented anything
it was a perfect freshness of sensations and a refreshing
ignorance, not so much of what life may give one (as
to that I had some ideas at least) but of what it
really contains. I knew very well that I was
utterly insignificant in these men’s eyes.
Yet my attention was not checked by that knowledge.
It’s true they were talking of a woman, but
I was yet at the age when this subject by itself is
not of overwhelming interest. My imagination
would have been more stimulated probably by the adventures
and fortunes of a man. What kept my interest
from flagging was Mr. Blunt himself. The play
of the white gleams of his smile round the suspicion
of grimness of his tone fascinated me like a moral
incongruity.
So at the age when one sleeps well
indeed but does feel sometimes as if the need of sleep
were a mere weakness of a distant old age, I kept
easily awake; and in my freshness I was kept amused
by the contrast of personalities, of the disclosed
facts and moral outlook with the rough initiations
of my West-Indian experience. And all these things
were dominated by a feminine figure which to my imagination
had only a floating outline, now invested with the
grace of girlhood, now with the prestige of a woman;
and indistinct in both these characters. For
these two men had seen her, while to me she
was only being “presented,” elusively,
in vanishing words, in the shifting tones of an unfamiliar
voice.
She was being presented to me now
in the Bois de Boulogne at the early hour of the ultra-fashionable
world (so I understood), on a light bay “bit
of blood” attended on the off side by that Henry
Allegre mounted on a dark brown powerful weight carrier;
and on the other by one of Allègre’s acquaintances
(the man had no real friends), distinguished frequenters
of that mysterious Pavilion. And so that side
of the frame in which that woman appeared to one down
the perspective of the great Allee was not permanent.
That morning when Mr. Blunt had to escort his mother
there for the gratification of her irresistible curiosity
(of which he highly disapproved) there appeared in
succession, at that woman’s or girl’s
bridle-hand, a cavalry general in red breeches, on
whom she was smiling; a rising politician in a grey
suit, who talked to her with great animation but left
her side abruptly to join a personage in a red fez
and mounted on a white horse; and then, some time afterwards,
the vexed Mr. Blunt and his indiscreet mother (though
I really couldn’t see where the harm was) had
one more chance of a good stare. The third party
that time was the Royal Pretender (Allegre had been
painting his portrait lately), whose hearty, sonorous
laugh was heard long before the mounted trio came
riding very slowly abreast of the Blunts. There
was colour in the girl’s face. She was
not laughing. Her expression was serious and
her eyes thoughtfully downcast. Blunt admitted
that on that occasion the charm, brilliance, and force
of her personality was adequately framed between those
magnificently mounted, paladin-like attendants, one
older than the other but the two composing together
admirably in the different stages of their manhood.
Mr. Blunt had never before seen Henry Allegre so
close. Allegre was riding nearest to the path
on which Blunt was dutifully giving his arm to his
mother (they had got out of their fiacre) and wondering
if that confounded fellow would have the impudence
to take off his hat. But he did not. Perhaps
he didn’t notice. Allegre was not a man
of wandering glances. There were silver hairs
in his beard but he looked as solid as a statue.
Less than three months afterwards he was gone.
“What was it?” asked Mills,
who had not changed his pose for a very long time.
“Oh, an accident. But
he lingered. They were on their way to Corsica.
A yearly pilgrimage. Sentimental perhaps.
It was to Corsica that he carried her off I
mean first of all.”
There was the slightest contraction
of Mr. Blunt’s facial muscles. Very slight;
but I, staring at the narrator after the manner of
all simple souls, noticed it; the twitch of a pain
which surely must have been mental. There was
also a suggestion of effort before he went on:
“I suppose you know how he got hold of her?”
in a tone of ease which was astonishingly ill-assumed
for such a worldly, self-controlled, drawing-room
person.
Mills changed his attitude to look
at him fixedly for a moment. Then he leaned
back in his chair and with interest I don’t
mean curiosity, I mean interest: “Does
anybody know besides the two parties concerned?”
he asked, with something as it were renewed (or was
it refreshed?) in his unmoved quietness. “I
ask because one has never heard any tales. I
remember one evening in a restaurant seeing a man come
in with a lady a beautiful lady very
particularly beautiful, as though she had been stolen
out of Mahomet’s paradise. With Dona Rita
it can’t be anything as definite as that.
But speaking of her in the same strain, I’ve
always felt that she looked as though Allegre had
caught her in the precincts of some temple . . . in
the mountains.”
I was delighted. I had never
heard before a woman spoken about in that way, a real
live woman that is, not a woman in a book. For
this was no poetry and yet it seemed to put her in
the category of visions. And I would have lost
myself in it if Mr. Blunt had not, most unexpectedly,
addressed himself to me.
“I told you that man was as fine as a needle.”
And then to Mills: “Out
of a temple? We know what that means.”
His dark eyes flashed: “And must it be
really in the mountains?” he added.
“Or in a desert,” conceded
Mills, “if you prefer that. There have
been temples in deserts, you know.”
Blunt had calmed down suddenly and
assumed a nonchalant pose.
“As a matter of fact, Henry
Allegre caught her very early one morning in his own
old garden full of thrushes and other small birds.
She was sitting on a stone, a fragment of some old
balustrade, with her feet in the damp grass, and reading
a tattered book of some kind. She had on a short,
black, two-penny frock (une petite robe de deux
sous) and there was a hole in one of her stockings.
She raised her eyes and saw him looking down at her
thoughtfully over that ambrosian beard of his, like
Jove at a mortal. They exchanged a good long
stare, for at first she was too startled to move;
and then he murmured, “Restez donc.”
She lowered her eyes again on her book and after
a while heard him walk away on the path. Her
heart thumped while she listened to the little birds
filling the air with their noise. She was not
frightened. I am telling you this positively
because she has told me the tale herself. What
better authority can you have . . .?” Blunt
paused.
“That’s true. She’s
not the sort of person to lie about her own sensations,”
murmured Mills above his clasped hands.
“Nothing can escape his penetration,”
Blunt remarked to me with that equivocal urbanity
which made me always feel uncomfortable on Mills’
account. “Positively nothing.”
He turned to Mills again. “After some
minutes of immobility she told me she
arose from her stone and walked slowly on the track
of that apparition. Allegre was nowhere to be
seen by that time. Under the gateway of the
extremely ugly tenement house, which hides the Pavilion
and the garden from the street, the wife of the porter
was waiting with her arms akimbo. At once she
cried out to Rita: ‘You were caught by
our gentleman.’
“As a matter of fact, that old
woman, being a friend of Rita’s aunt, allowed
the girl to come into the garden whenever Allegre was
away. But Allègre’s goings and comings
were sudden and unannounced; and that morning, Rita,
crossing the narrow, thronged street, had slipped in
through the gateway in ignorance of Allègre’s
return and unseen by the porter’s wife.
“The child, she was but little
more than that then, expressed her regret of having
perhaps got the kind porter’s wife into trouble.
“The old woman said with a peculiar
smile: ’Your face is not of the sort that
gets other people into trouble. My gentleman
wasn’t angry. He says you may come in
any morning you like.’
“Rita, without saying anything
to this, crossed the street back again to the warehouse
full of oranges where she spent most of her waking
hours. Her dreaming, empty, idle, thoughtless,
unperturbed hours, she calls them. She crossed
the street with a hole in her stocking. She had
a hole in her stocking not because her uncle and aunt
were poor (they had around them never less than eight
thousand oranges, mostly in cases) but because she
was then careless and untidy and totally unconscious
of her personal appearance. She told me herself
that she was not even conscious then of her personal
existence. She was a mere adjunct in the twilight
life of her aunt, a Frenchwoman, and her uncle, the
orange merchant, a Basque peasant, to whom her other
uncle, the great man of the family, the priest of
some parish in the hills near Tolosa, had sent her
up at the age of thirteen or thereabouts for safe
keeping. She is of peasant stock, you know.
This is the true origin of the ‘Girl in the
Hat’ and of the ‘Byzantine Empress’
which excited my dear mother so much; of the mysterious
girl that the privileged personalities great in art,
in letters, in politics, or simply in the world, could
see on the big sofa during the gatherings in Allègre’s
exclusive Pavilion: the Dona Rita of their
respectful addresses, manifest and mysterious, like
an object of art from some unknown period; the Dona
Rita of the initiated Paris. Dona Rita and nothing
more unique and indefinable.”
He stopped with a disagreeable smile.
“And of peasant stock?”
I exclaimed in the strangely conscious silence that
fell between Mills and Blunt.
“Oh! All these Basques
have been ennobled by Don Sanche II,” said Captain
Blunt moodily. “You see coats of arms carved
over the doorways of the most miserable caserios.
As far as that goes she’s Dona Rita right enough
whatever else she is or is not in herself or in the
eyes of others. In your eyes, for instance,
Mills. Eh?”
For a time Mills preserved that conscious silence.
“Why think about it at all?”
he murmured coldly at last. “A strange
bird is hatched sometimes in a nest in an unaccountable
way and then the fate of such a bird is bound to be
ill-defined, uncertain, questionable. And so
that is how Henry Allegre saw her first? And
what happened next?”
“What happened next?”
repeated Mr. Blunt, with an affected surprise in his
tone. “Is it necessary to ask that question?
If you had asked how the next happened. .
. But as you may imagine she hasn’t told
me anything about that. She didn’t,”
he continued with polite sarcasm, “enlarge upon
the facts. That confounded Allegre, with his
impudent assumption of princely airs, must have (I
shouldn’t wonder) made the fact of his notice
appear as a sort of favour dropped from Olympus.
I really can’t tell how the minds and the imaginations
of such aunts and uncles are affected by such rare
visitations. Mythology may give us a hint.
There is the story of Danae, for instance.”
“There is,” remarked Mills
calmly, “but I don’t remember any aunt
or uncle in that connection.”
“And there are also certain
stories of the discovery and acquisition of some unique
objects of art. The sly approaches, the astute
negotiations, the lying and the circumventing . .
. for the love of beauty, you know.”
With his dark face and with the perpetual
smiles playing about his grimness, Mr. Blunt appeared
to me positively satanic. Mills’ hand was
toying absently with an empty glass. Again they
had forgotten my existence altogether.
“I don’t know how an object
of art would feel,” went on Blunt, in an unexpectedly
grating voice, which, however, recovered its tone
immediately. “I don’t know.
But I do know that Rita herself was not a Danae,
never, not at any time of her life. She didn’t
mind the holes in her stockings. She wouldn’t
mind holes in her stockings now. . . That is
if she manages to keep any stockings at all,”
he added, with a sort of suppressed fury so funnily
unexpected that I would have burst into a laugh if
I hadn’t been lost in astonishment of the simplest
kind.
“No really!”
There was a flash of interest from the quiet Mills.
“Yes, really,” Blunt
nodded and knitted his brows very devilishly indeed.
“She may yet be left without a single pair of
stockings.”
“The world’s a thief,”
declared Mills, with the utmost composure. “It
wouldn’t mind robbing a lonely traveller.”
“He is so subtle.”
Blunt remembered my existence for the purpose of that
remark and as usual it made me very uncomfortable.
“Perfectly true. A lonely traveller.
They are all in the scramble from the lowest to the
highest. Heavens! What a gang! There
was even an Archbishop in it.”
“Vous plaisantez,”
said Mills, but without any marked show of incredulity.
“I joke very seldom,”
Blunt protested earnestly. “That’s
why I haven’t mentioned His Majesty whom
God preserve. That would have been an exaggeration.
. . However, the end is not yet. We were
talking about the beginning. I have heard that
some dealers in fine objects, quite mercenary people
of course (my mother has an experience in that world),
show sometimes an astonishing reluctance to part with
some specimens, even at a good price. It must
be very funny. It’s just possible that
the uncle and the aunt have been rolling in tears on
the floor, amongst their oranges, or beating their
heads against the walls from rage and despair.
But I doubt it. And in any case Allegre is not
the sort of person that gets into any vulgar trouble.
And it’s just possible that those people stood
open-mouthed at all that magnificence. They weren’t
poor, you know; therefore it wasn’t incumbent
on them to be honest. They are still there in
the old respectable warehouse, I understand.
They have kept their position in their quartier,
I believe. But they didn’t keep their
niece. It might have been an act of sacrifice!
For I seem to remember hearing that after attending
for a while some school round the corner the child
had been set to keep the books of that orange business.
However it might have been, the first fact in Rita’s
and Allègre’s common history is a journey
to Italy, and then to Corsica. You know Allegre
had a house in Corsica somewhere. She has it
now as she has everything he ever had; and that Corsican
palace is the portion that will stick the longest
to Dona Rita, I imagine. Who would want to buy
a place like that? I suppose nobody would take
it for a gift. The fellow was having houses
built all over the place. This very house where
we are sitting belonged to him. Dona Rita has
given it to her sister, I understand. Or at
any rate the sister runs it. She is my landlady
. . .”
“Her sister here!” I exclaimed.
“Her sister!”
Blunt turned to me politely, but only
for a long mute gaze. His eyes were in deep
shadow and it struck me for the first time then that
there was something fatal in that man’s aspect
as soon as he fell silent. I think the effect
was purely physical, but in consequence whatever he
said seemed inadequate and as if produced by a commonplace,
if uneasy, soul.
“Dona Rita brought her down
from her mountains on purpose. She is asleep
somewhere in this house, in one of the vacant rooms.
She lets them, you know, at extortionate prices,
that is, if people will pay them, for she is easily
intimidated. You see, she has never seen such
an enormous town before in her life, nor yet so many
strange people. She has been keeping house for
the uncle-priest in some mountain gorge for years and
years. It’s extraordinary he should have
let her go. There is something mysterious there,
some reason or other. It’s either theology
or Family. The saintly uncle in his wild parish
would know nothing of any other reasons. She
wears a rosary at her waist. Directly she had
seen some real money she developed a love of it.
If you stay with me long enough, and I hope you will
(I really can’t sleep), you will see her going
out to mass at half-past six; but there is nothing
remarkable in her; just a peasant woman of thirty-four
or so. A rustic nun. . . .”
I may as well say at once that we
didn’t stay as long as that. It was not
that morning that I saw for the first time Therese
of the whispering lips and downcast eyes slipping
out to an early mass from the house of iniquity into
the early winter murk of the city of perdition, in
a world steeped in sin. No. It was not
on that morning that I saw Dona Rita’s incredible
sister with her brown, dry face, her gliding motion,
and her really nun-like dress, with a black handkerchief
enfolding her head tightly, with the two pointed ends
hanging down her back. Yes, nun-like enough.
And yet not altogether. People would have turned
round after her if those dartings out to the half-past
six mass hadn’t been the only occasion on which
she ventured into the impious streets. She was
frightened of the streets, but in a particular way,
not as if of a danger but as if of a contamination.
Yet she didn’t fly back to her mountains because
at bottom she had an indomitable character, a peasant
tenacity of purpose, predatory instincts. . . .
No, we didn’t remain long enough
with Mr. Blunt to see even as much as her back glide
out of the house on her prayerful errand. She
was prayerful. She was terrible. Her one-idead
peasant mind was as inaccessible as a closed iron
safe. She was fatal. . . It’s perfectly
ridiculous to confess that they all seem fatal to me
now; but writing to you like this in all sincerity
I don’t mind appearing ridiculous. I suppose
fatality must be expressed, embodied, like other forces
of this earth; and if so why not in such people as
well as in other more glorious or more frightful figures?
We remained, however, long enough
to let Mr. Blunt’s half-hidden acrimony develop
itself or prey on itself in further talk about the
man Allegre and the girl Rita. Mr. Blunt, still
addressing Mills with that story, passed on to what
he called the second act, the disclosure, with, what
he called, the characteristic Allegre impudence which
surpassed the impudence of kings, millionaires, or
tramps, by many degrees the revelation
of Rita’s existence to the world at large.
It wasn’t a very large world, but then it was
most choicely composed. How is one to describe
it shortly? In a sentence it was the world that
rides in the morning in the Bois.
In something less than a year and
a half from the time he found her sitting on a broken
fragment of stone work buried in the grass of his
wild garden, full of thrushes, starlings, and other
innocent creatures of the air, he had given her amongst
other accomplishments the art of sitting admirably
on a horse, and directly they returned to Paris he
took her out with him for their first morning ride.
“I leave you to judge of the
sensation,” continued Mr. Blunt, with a faint
grimace, as though the words had an acrid taste in
his mouth. “And the consternation,”
he added venomously. “Many of those men
on that great morning had some one of their womankind
with them. But their hats had to go off all
the same, especially the hats of the fellows who were
under some sort of obligation to Allegre. You
would be astonished to hear the names of people, of
real personalities in the world, who, not to mince
matters, owed money to Allegre. And I don’t
mean in the world of art only. In the first
rout of the surprise some story of an adopted daughter
was set abroad hastily, I believe. You know ‘adopted’
with a peculiar accent on the word and
it was plausible enough. I have been told that
at that time she looked extremely youthful by his side,
I mean extremely youthful in expression, in the eyes,
in the smile. She must have been . . .”
Blunt pulled himself up short, but
not so short as not to let the confused murmur of
the word “adorable” reach our attentive
ears.
The heavy Mills made a slight movement
in his chair. The effect on me was more inward,
a strange emotion which left me perfectly still; and
for the moment of silence Blunt looked more fatal
than ever.
“I understand it didn’t
last very long,” he addressed us politely again.
“And no wonder! The sort of talk she would
have heard during that first springtime in Paris would
have put an impress on a much less receptive personality;
for of course Allegre didn’t close his doors
to his friends and this new apparition was not of
the sort to make them keep away. After that first
morning she always had somebody to ride at her bridle
hand. Old Doyen, the sculptor, was the first
to approach them. At that age a man may venture
on anything. He rides a strange animal like a
circus horse. Rita had spotted him out of the
corner of her eye as he passed them, putting up his
enormous paw in a still more enormous glove, airily,
you know, like this” (Blunt waved his hand above
his head), “to Allegre. He passes on.
All at once he wheels his fantastic animal round
and comes trotting after them. With the merest
casual ’Bonjour, Allegre’ he ranges
close to her on the other side and addresses her, hat
in hand, in that booming voice of his like a deferential
roar of the sea very far away. His articulation
is not good, and the first words she really made out
were ’I am an old sculptor. . . Of course
there is that habit. . . But I can see you through
all that. . . ’
He put his hat on very much on one
side. ’I am a great sculptor of women,’
he declared. ’I gave up my life to them,
poor unfortunate creatures, the most beautiful, the
wealthiest, the most loved. . . Two generations
of them. . . Just look at me full in the eyes,
mon enfant.’
“They stared at each other.
Dona Rita confessed to me that the old fellow made
her heart beat with such force that she couldn’t
manage to smile at him. And she saw his eyes
run full of tears. He wiped them simply with
the back of his hand and went on booming faintly.
’Thought so. You are enough to make one
cry. I thought my artist’s life was finished,
and here you come along from devil knows where with
this young friend of mine, who isn’t a bad smearer
of canvases but it’s marble and bronze
that you want. . . I shall finish my artist’s
life with your face; but I shall want a bit of those
shoulders, too. . . You hear, Allegre, I must
have a bit of her shoulders, too. I can see through
the cloth that they are divine. If they aren’t
divine I will eat my hat. Yes, I will do your
head and then nunc dimittis.’
“These were the first words
with which the world greeted her, or should I say
civilization did; already both her native mountains
and the cavern of oranges belonged to a prehistoric
age. ’Why don’t you ask him to come
this afternoon?’ Allègre’s voice suggested
gently. ’He knows the way to the house.’
“The old man said with extraordinary
fervour, ‘Oh, yes I will,’ pulled up his
horse and they went on. She told me that she
could feel her heart-beats for a long time.
The remote power of that voice, those old eyes full
of tears, that noble and ruined face, had affected
her extraordinarily she said. But perhaps what
affected her was the shadow, the still living shadow
of a great passion in the man’s heart.
“Allegre remarked to her calmly:
’He has been a little mad all his life.’”