Notwithstanding my misanthropy I had
to see a few people on account of all these Royalist
affairs which I couldn’t very well drop, and
in truth did not wish to drop. They were my
excuse for remaining in Europe, which somehow I had
not the strength of mind to leave for the West Indies,
or elsewhere. On the other hand, my adventurous
pursuit kept me in contact with the sea where I found
occupation, protection, consolation, the mental relief
of grappling with concrete problems, the sanity one
acquires from close contact with simple mankind, a
little self-confidence born from the dealings with
the elemental powers of nature. I couldn’t
give all that up. And besides all this was related
to Dona Rita. I had, as it were, received it
all from her own hand, from that hand the clasp of
which was as frank as a man’s and yet conveyed
a unique sensation. The very memory of it would
go through me like a wave of heat. It was over
that hand that we first got into the habit of quarrelling,
with the irritability of sufferers from some obscure
pain and yet half unconscious of their disease.
Rita’s own spirit hovered over the troubled
waters of Legitimity. But as to the sound of
the four magic letters of her name I was not very
likely to hear it fall sweetly on my ear. For
instance, the distinguished personality in the world
of finance with whom I had to confer several times,
alluded to the irresistible seduction of the power
which reigned over my heart and my mind; which had
a mysterious and unforgettable face, the brilliance
of sunshine together with the unfathomable splendour
of the night as Madame de Lastaola.
That’s how that steel-grey man called the greatest
mystery of the universe. When uttering that
assumed name he would make for himself a guardedly
solemn and reserved face as though he were afraid
lest I should presume to smile, lest he himself should
venture to smile, and the sacred formality of our
relations should be outraged beyond mending.
He would refer in a studiously grave
tone to Madame de Lastaola’s wishes, plans,
activities, instructions, movements; or picking up
a letter from the usual litter of paper found on such
men’s desks, glance at it to refresh his memory;
and, while the very sight of the handwriting would
make my lips go dry, would ask me in a bloodless voice
whether perchance I had “a direct communication
from er Paris lately.”
And there would be other maddening circumstances
connected with those visits. He would treat
me as a serious person having a clear view of certain
eventualities, while at the very moment my vision could
see nothing but streaming across the wall at his back,
abundant and misty, unearthly and adorable, a mass
of tawny hair that seemed to have hot sparks tangled
in it. Another nuisance was the atmosphere of
Royalism, of Legitimacy, that pervaded the room, thin
as air, intangible, as though no Legitimist of flesh
and blood had ever existed to the man’s mind
except perhaps myself. He, of course, was just
simply a banker, a very distinguished, a very influential,
and a very impeccable banker. He persisted also
in deferring to my judgment and sense with an over-emphasis
called out by his perpetual surprise at my youth.
Though he had seen me many times (I even knew his
wife) he could never get over my immature age.
He himself was born about fifty years old, all complete,
with his iron-grey whiskers and his bilious eyes,
which he had the habit of frequently closing during
a conversation. On one occasion he said to me.
“By the by, the Marquis of Villarel is here
for a time. He inquired after you the last time
he called on me. May I let him know that you
are in town?”
I didn’t say anything to that.
The Marquis of Villarel was the Don Rafael of Rita’s
own story. What had I to do with Spanish grandees?
And for that matter what had she, the woman of all
time, to do with all the villainous or splendid disguises
human dust takes upon itself? All this was in
the past, and I was acutely aware that for me there
was no present, no future, nothing but a hollow pain,
a vain passion of such magnitude that being locked
up within my breast it gave me an illusion of lonely
greatness with my miserable head uplifted amongst the
stars. But when I made up my mind (which I did
quickly, to be done with it) to call on the banker’s
wife, almost the first thing she said to me was that
the Marquis de Villarel was “amongst us.”
She said it joyously. If in her husband’s
room at the bank legitimism was a mere unpopulated
principle, in her salon Legitimacy was nothing but
persons. “Il m’a cause beaucoup de
vous,” she said as if there had been a joke
in it of which I ought to be proud. I slunk
away from her. I couldn’t believe that
the grandee had talked to her about me. I had
never felt myself part of the great Royalist enterprise.
I confess that I was so indifferent to everything,
so profoundly demoralized, that having once got into
that drawing-room I hadn’t the strength to get
away; though I could see perfectly well my volatile
hostess going from one to another of her acquaintances
in order to tell them with a little gesture, “Look!
Over there in that corner. That’s
the notorious Monsieur George.” At last
she herself drove me out by coming to sit by me vivaciously
and going into ecstasies over “ce cher
Monsieur Mills” and that magnificent Lord X;
and ultimately, with a perfectly odious snap in the
eyes and drop in the voice, dragging in the name of
Madame de Lastaola and asking me whether I was really
so much in the confidence of that astonishing person.
“Vous devez bien regretter son depart pour
Paris,” she cooed, looking with affected
bashfulness at her fan. . . . How I got out of
the room I really don’t know. There was
also a staircase. I did not fall down it head
first that much I am certain of; and I
also remember that I wandered for a long time about
the seashore and went home very late, by the way of
the Prado, giving in passing a fearful glance at the
Villa. It showed not a gleam of light through
the thin foliage of its trees.
I spent the next day with Dominic
on board the little craft watching the shipwrights
at work on her deck. From the way they went about
their business those men must have been perfectly
sane; and I felt greatly refreshed by my company during
the day. Dominic, too, devoted himself to his
business, but his taciturnity was sardonic. Then
I dropped in at the cafe and Madame Leonore’s
loud “Eh, Signorino, here you are at last!”
pleased me by its resonant friendliness. But
I found the sparkle of her black eyes as she sat down
for a moment opposite me while I was having my drink
rather difficult to bear. That man and that woman
seemed to know something. What did they know?
At parting she pressed my hand significantly.
What did she mean? But I didn’t feel offended
by these manifestations. The souls within these
people’s breasts were not volatile in the manner
of slightly scented and inflated bladders. Neither
had they the impervious skins which seem the rule in
the fine world that wants only to get on. Somehow
they had sensed that there was something wrong; and
whatever impression they might have formed for themselves
I had the certitude that it would not be for them a
matter of grins at my expense.
That day on returning home I found
Therese looking out for me, a very unusual occurrence
of late. She handed me a card bearing the name
of the Marquis de Villarel.
“How did you come by this?”
I asked. She turned on at once the tap of her
volubility and I was not surprised to learn that the
grandee had not done such an extraordinary thing as
to call upon me in person. A young gentleman
had brought it. Such a nice young gentleman,
she interjected with her piously ghoulish expression.
He was not very tall. He had a very smooth
complexion (that woman was incorrigible) and a nice,
tiny black moustache. Therese was sure that
he must have been an officer en las filas legitimas.
With that notion in her head she had asked him about
the welfare of that other model of charm and elegance,
Captain Blunt. To her extreme surprise the charming
young gentleman with beautiful eyes had apparently
never heard of Blunt. But he seemed very much
interested in his surroundings, looked all round the
hall, noted the costly wood of the door panels, paid
some attention to the silver statuette holding up
the defective gas burner at the foot of the stairs,
and, finally, asked whether this was in very truth
the house of the most excellent Senora Dona Rita de
Lastaola. The question staggered Therese, but
with great presence of mind she answered the young
gentleman that she didn’t know what excellence
there was about it, but that the house was her property,
having been given to her by her own sister. At
this the young gentleman looked both puzzled and angry,
turned on his heel, and got back into his fiacre.
Why should people be angry with a poor girl who had
never done a single reprehensible thing in her whole
life?
“I suppose our Rita does tell
people awful lies about her poor sister.”
She sighed deeply (she had several kinds of sighs and
this was the hopeless kind) and added reflectively,
“Sin on sin, wickedness on wickedness!
And the longer she lives the worse it will be.
It would be better for our Rita to be dead.”
I told “Mademoiselle Therese”
that it was really impossible to tell whether she
was more stupid or atrocious; but I wasn’t really
very much shocked. These outbursts did not signify
anything in Therese. One got used to them.
They were merely the expression of her rapacity and
her righteousness; so that our conversation ended
by my asking her whether she had any dinner ready
for me that evening.
“What’s the good of getting
you anything to eat, my dear young Monsieur,”
she quizzed me tenderly. “You just only
peck like a little bird. Much better let me
save the money for you.” It will show the
super-terrestrial nature of my misery when I say that
I was quite surprised at Therese’s view of my
appetite. Perhaps she was right. I certainly
did not know. I stared hard at her and in the
end she admitted that the dinner was in fact ready
that very moment.
The new young gentleman within Therese’s
horizon didn’t surprise me very much.
Villarel would travel with some sort of suite, a couple
of secretaries at least. I had heard enough
of Carlist headquarters to know that the man had been
(very likely was still) Captain General of the Royal
Bodyguard and was a person of great political (and
domestic) influence at Court. The card was,
under its social form, a mere command to present myself
before the grandee. No Royalist devoted by conviction,
as I must have appeared to him, could have mistaken
the meaning. I put the card in my pocket and
after dining or not dining I really don’t
remember spent the evening smoking in the
studio, pursuing thoughts of tenderness and grief,
visions exalting and cruel. From time to time
I looked at the dummy. I even got up once from
the couch on which I had been writhing like a worm
and walked towards it as if to touch it, but refrained,
not from sudden shame but from sheer despair.
By and by Therese drifted in. It was then late
and, I imagine, she was on her way to bed. She
looked the picture of cheerful, rustic innocence and
started propounding to me a conundrum which began
with the words:
“If our Rita were to die before long . . .”
She didn’t get any further because
I had jumped up and frightened her by shouting:
“Is she ill? What has happened? Have
you had a letter?”
She had had a letter. I didn’t
ask her to show it to me, though I daresay she would
have done so. I had an idea that there was no
meaning in anything, at least no meaning that mattered.
But the interruption had made Therese apparently
forget her sinister conundrum. She observed me
with her shrewd, unintelligent eyes for a bit, and
then with the fatuous remark about the Law being just
she left me to the horrors of the studio. I believe
I went to sleep there from sheer exhaustion.
Some time during the night I woke up chilled to the
bone and in the dark. These were horrors and
no mistake. I dragged myself upstairs to bed
past the indefatigable statuette holding up the ever-miserable
light. The black-and-white hall was like an
ice-house.
The main consideration which induced
me to call on the Marquis of Villarel was the fact
that after all I was a discovery of Dona Rita’s,
her own recruit. My fidelity and steadfastness
had been guaranteed by her and no one else.
I couldn’t bear the idea of her being criticized
by every empty-headed chatterer belonging to the Cause.
And as, apart from that, nothing mattered much, why,
then I would get this over.
But it appeared that I had not reflected
sufficiently on all the consequences of that step.
First of all the sight of the Villa looking shabbily
cheerful in the sunshine (but not containing her any
longer) was so perturbing that I very nearly went
away from the gate. Then when I got in after
much hesitation being admitted by the man
in the green baize apron who recognized me the
thought of entering that room, out of which she was
gone as completely as if she had been dead, gave me
such an emotion that I had to steady myself against
the table till the faintness was past. Yet I
was irritated as at a treason when the man in the baize
apron instead of letting me into the Pompeiian dining-room
crossed the hall to another door not at all in the
Pompeiian style (more Louis XV rather that
Villa was like a Salade Russe of styles) and
introduced me into a big, light room full of very
modern furniture. The portrait en pied
of an officer in a sky-blue uniform hung on the end
wall. The officer had a small head, a black
beard cut square, a robust body, and leaned with gauntleted
hands on the simple hilt of a straight sword.
That striking picture dominated a massive mahogany
desk, and, in front of this desk, a very roomy, tall-backed
armchair of dark green velvet. I thought I had
been announced into an empty room till glancing along
the extremely loud carpet I detected a pair of feet
under the armchair.
I advanced towards it and discovered
a little man, who had made no sound or movement till
I came into his view, sunk deep in the green velvet.
He altered his position slowly and rested his hollow,
black, quietly burning eyes on my face in prolonged
scrutiny. I detected something comminatory in
his yellow, emaciated countenance, but I believe now
he was simply startled by my youth. I bowed
profoundly. He extended a meagre little hand.
“Take a chair, Don Jorge.”
He was very small, frail, and thin,
but his voice was not languid, though he spoke hardly
above his breath. Such was the envelope and the
voice of the fanatical soul belonging to the Grand-master
of Ceremonies and Captain General of the Bodyguard
at the Headquarters of the Legitimist Court, now detached
on a special mission. He was all fidelity, inflexibility,
and sombre conviction, but like some great saints he
had very little body to keep all these merits in.
“You are very young,”
he remarked, to begin with. “The matters
on which I desired to converse with you are very grave.”
“I was under the impression
that your Excellency wished to see me at once.
But if your Excellency prefers it I will return in,
say, seven years’ time when I may perhaps be
old enough to talk about grave matters.”
He didn’t stir hand or foot
and not even the quiver of an eyelid proved that he
had heard my shockingly unbecoming retort.
“You have been recommended to
us by a noble and loyal lady, in whom His Majesty whom
God preserve reposes an entire confidence.
God will reward her as she deserves and you, too,
Senor, according to the disposition you bring to this
great work which has the blessing (here he crossed
himself) of our Holy Mother the Church.”
“I suppose your Excellency understands
that in all this I am not looking for reward of any
kind.”
At this he made a faint, almost ethereal grimace.
“I was speaking of the spiritual
blessing which rewards the service of religion and
will be of benefit to your soul,” he explained
with a slight touch of acidity. “The other
is perfectly understood and your fidelity is taken
for granted. His Majesty whom God
preserve has been already pleased to signify
his satisfaction with your services to the most noble
and loyal Dona Rita by a letter in his own hand.”
Perhaps he expected me to acknowledge
this announcement in some way, speech, or bow, or
something, because before my immobility he made a
slight movement in his chair which smacked of impatience.
“I am afraid, Senor, that you are affected
by the spirit of scoffing and irreverence which pervades
this unhappy country of France in which both you and
I are strangers, I believe. Are you a young
man of that sort?”
“I am a very good gun-runner,
your Excellency,” I answered quietly.
He bowed his head gravely. “We
are aware. But I was looking for the motives
which ought to have their pure source in religion.”
“I must confess frankly that
I have not reflected on my motives,” I said.
“It is enough for me to know that they are not
dishonourable and that anybody can see they are not
the motives of an adventurer seeking some sordid advantage.”
He had listened patiently and when
he saw that there was nothing more to come he ended
the discussion.
“Senor, we should reflect upon
our motives. It is salutary for our conscience
and is recommended (he crossed himself) by our Holy
Mother the Church. I have here certain letters
from Paris on which I would consult your young sagacity
which is accredited to us by the most loyal Dona Rita.”
The sound of that name on his lips
was simply odious. I was convinced that this
man of forms and ceremonies and fanatical royalism
was perfectly heartless. Perhaps he reflected
on his motives; but it seemed to me that his conscience
could be nothing else but a monstrous thing which
very few actions could disturb appreciably. Yet
for the credit of Dona Rita I did not withhold from
him my young sagacity. What he thought of it
I don’t know, The matters we discussed were not
of course of high policy, though from the point of
view of the war in the south they were important enough.
We agreed on certain things to be done, and finally,
always out of regard for Dona Rita’s credit,
I put myself generally at his disposition or of any
Carlist agent he would appoint in his place; for I
did not suppose that he would remain very long in Marseilles.
He got out of the chair laboriously, like a sick
child might have done. The audience was over
but he noticed my eyes wandering to the portrait and
he said in his measured, breathed-out tones:
“I owe the pleasure of having
this admirable work here to the gracious attention
of Madame de Lastaola, who, knowing my attachment to
the royal person of my Master, has sent it down from
Paris to greet me in this house which has been given
up for my occupation also through her generosity to
the Royal Cause. Unfortunately she, too, is touched
by the infection of this irreverent and unfaithful
age. But she is young yet. She is young.”
These last words were pronounced in
a strange tone of menace as though he were supernaturally
aware of some suspended disasters. With his burning
eyes he was the image of an Inquisitor with an unconquerable
soul in that frail body. But suddenly he dropped
his eyelids and the conversation finished as characteristically
as it had begun: with a slow, dismissing inclination
of the head and an “Adios, Senor may
God guard you from sin.”