At three o’clock in the afternoon,
all the fashionable world at Nice may be seen on the
Promenade des Anglais a charming
place, for the wide walk, bordered with palms, flowers,
and tropical shrubs, is bounded on one side by the
sea, on the other by the grand drive, lined with hotels
and villas, while beyond lie orange orchards and the
hills. Many nations are represented, many languages
spoken, many costumes worn, and on a sunny day the
spectacle is as gay and brilliant as a carnival.
Haughty English, lively French, sober Germans, handsome
Spaniards, ugly Russians, meek Jews, free-and-easy
Americans, all drive, sit, or saunter here, chatting
over the news, and criticizing the latest celebrity
who has arrived Ristori or Dickens, Victor
Emmanuel or the Queen of the Sandwich Islands.
The équipages are as varied as the company and
attract as much attention, especially the low basket
barouches in which ladies drive themselves, with a
pair of dashing ponies, gay nets to keep their voluminous
flounces from overflowing the diminutive vehicles,
and little grooms on the perch behind.
Along this walk, on Christmas Day,
a tall young man walked slowly, with his hands behind
him, and a somewhat absent expression of countenance.
He looked like an Italian, was dressed like an Englishman,
and had the independent air of an American a
combination which caused sundry pairs of feminine
eyes to look approvingly after him, and sundry dandies
in black velvet suits, with rose-colored neckties,
buff gloves, and orange flowers in their buttonholes,
to shrug their shoulders, and then envy him his inches.
There were plenty of pretty faces to admire, but the
young man took little notice of them, except to glance
now and then at some blonde girl in blue. Presently
he strolled out of the promenade and stood a moment
at the crossing, as if undecided whether to go and
listen to the band in the Jardin Publique, or to wander
along the beach toward Castle Hill. The quick
trot of ponies’ feet made him look up, as one
of the little carriages, containing a single young
lady, came rapidly down the street. The lady
was young, blonde, and dressed in blue. He stared
a minute, then his whole face woke up, and, waving
his hat like a boy, he hurried forward to meet her.
“Oh, Laurie, is it really you?
I thought you’d never come!” cried Amy,
dropping the reins and holding out both hands, to the
great scandalization of a French mamma, who hastened
her daughter’s steps, lest she should be demoralized
by beholding the free manners of these ‘mad
English’.
“I was detained by the way,
but I promised to spend Christmas with you, and here
I am.”
“How is your grandfather?
When did you come? Where are you staying?”
“Very well last night at
the Chauvain. I called at your hotel, but you
were out.”
“I have so much to say, I don’t
know where to begin! Get in and we can talk
at our ease. I was going for a drive and longing
for company. Flo’s saving up for tonight.”
“What happens then, a ball?”
“A Christmas party at our hotel.
There are many Americans there, and they give it
in honor of the day. You’ll go with us,
of course? Aunt will be charmed.”
“Thank you. Where now?”
asked Laurie, leaning back and folding his arms, a
proceeding which suited Amy, who preferred to drive,
for her parasol whip and blue reins over the white
ponies’ backs afforded her infinite satisfaction.
“I’m going to the bankers
first for letters, and then to Castle Hill. The
view is so lovely, and I like to feed the peacocks.
Have you ever been there?”
“Often, years ago, but I don’t
mind having a look at it.”
“Now tell me all about yourself.
The last I heard of you, your grandfather wrote that
he expected you from Berlin.”
“Yes, I spent a month there
and then joined him in Paris, where he has settled
for the winter. He has friends there and finds
plenty to amuse him, so I go and come, and we get
on capitally.”
“That’s a sociable arrangement,”
said Amy, missing something in Laurie’s manner,
though she couldn’t tell what.
“Why, you see, he hates to travel,
and I hate to keep still, so we each suit ourselves,
and there is no trouble. I am often with him,
and he enjoys my adventures, while I like to feel
that someone is glad to see me when I get back from
my wanderings. Dirty old hole, isn’t it?”
he added, with a look of disgust as they drove along
the boulevard to the Place Napoleon in the old city.
“The dirt is picturesque, so
I don’t mind. The river and the hills are
delicious, and these glimpses of the narrow cross streets
are my delight. Now we shall have to wait for
that procession to pass. It’s going to
the Church of St. John.”
While Laurie listlessly watched the
procession of priests under their canopies, white-veiled
nuns bearing lighted tapers, and some brotherhood
in blue chanting as they walked, Amy watched him, and
felt a new sort of shyness steal over her, for he
was changed, and she could not find the merry-faced
boy she left in the moody-looking man beside her.
He was handsomer than ever and greatly improved, she
thought, but now that the flush of pleasure at meeting
her was over, he looked tired and spiritless not
sick, nor exactly unhappy, but older and graver than
a year or two of prosperous life should have made him.
She couldn’t understand it and did not venture
to ask questions, so she shook her head and touched
up her ponies, as the procession wound away across
the arches of the Paglioni bridge and vanished in the
church.
“Que pensez-vous?”
she said, airing her French, which had improved in
quantity, if not in quality, since she came abroad.
“That mademoiselle has made
good use of her time, and the result is charming,”
replied Laurie, bowing with his hand on his heart and
an admiring look.
She blushed with pleasure, but somehow
the compliment did not satisfy her like the blunt
praises he used to give her at home, when he promenaded
round her on festival occasions, and told her she was
‘altogether jolly’, with a hearty smile
and an approving pat on the head. She didn’t
like the new tone, for though not blase, it sounded
indifferent in spite of the look.
“If that’s the way he’s
going to grow up, I wish he’d stay a boy,”
she thought, with a curious sense of disappointment
and discomfort, trying meantime to seem quite easy
and gay.
At Avigdor’s she found the precious
home letters and, giving the reins to Laurie, read
them luxuriously as they wound up the shady road between
green hedges, where tea roses bloomed as freshly as
in June.
“Beth is very poorly, Mother
says. I often think I ought to go home, but
they all say ‘stay’. So I do, for
I shall never have another chance like this,”
said Amy, looking sober over one page.
“I think you are right, there.
You could do nothing at home, and it is a great comfort
to them to know that you are well and happy, and enjoying
so much, my dear.”
He drew a little nearer, and looked
more like his old self as he said that, and the fear
that sometimes weighed on Amy’s heart was lightened,
for the look, the act, the brotherly ‘my dear’,
seemed to assure her that if any trouble did come,
she would not be alone in a strange land. Presently
she laughed and showed him a small sketch of Jo in
her scribbling suit, with the bow rampantly erect
upon her cap, and issuing from her mouth the words,
‘Genius burns!’.
Laurie smiled, took it, put it in
his vest pocket ’to keep it from blowing away’,
and listened with interest to the lively letter Amy
read him.
“This will be a regularly merry
Christmas to me, with presents in the morning, you
and letters in the afternoon, and a party at night,”
said Amy, as they alighted among the ruins of the
old fort, and a flock of splendid peacocks came trooping
about them, tamely waiting to be fed. While Amy
stood laughing on the bank above him as she scattered
crumbs to the brilliant birds, Laurie looked at her
as she had looked at him, with a natural curiosity
to see what changes time and absence had wrought.
He found nothing to perplex or disappoint, much to
admire and approve, for overlooking a few little affectations
of speech and manner, she was as sprightly and graceful
as ever, with the addition of that indescribable something
in dress and bearing which we call elegance.
Always mature for her age, she had gained a certain
aplomb in both carriage and conversation, which made
her seem more of a woman of the world than she was,
but her old petulance now and then showed itself,
her strong will still held its own, and her native
frankness was unspoiled by foreign polish.
Laurie did not read all this while
he watched her feed the peacocks, but he saw enough
to satisfy and interest him, and carried away a pretty
little picture of a bright-faced girl standing in the
sunshine, which brought out the soft hue of her dress,
the fresh color of her cheeks, the golden gloss of
her hair, and made her a prominent figure in the pleasant
scene.
As they came up onto the stone plateau
that crowns the hill, Amy waved her hand as if welcoming
him to her favorite haunt, and said, pointing here
and there, “Do you remember the Cathedral and
the Corso, the fishermen dragging their nets in the
bay, and the lovely road to Villa Franca, Schubert’s
Tower, just below, and best of all, that speck far
out to sea which they say is Corsica?”
“I remember. It’s
not much changed,” he answered without enthusiasm.
“What Jo would give for a sight
of that famous speck!” said Amy, feeling in
good spirits and anxious to see him so also.
“Yes,” was all he said,
but he turned and strained his eyes to see the island
which a greater usurper than even Napoleon now made
interesting in his sight.
“Take a good look at it for
her sake, and then come and tell me what you have
been doing with yourself all this while,” said
Amy, seating herself, ready for a good talk.
But she did not get it, for though
he joined her and answered all her questions freely,
she could only learn that he had roved about the Continent
and been to Greece. So after idling away an hour,
they drove home again, and having paid his respects
to Mrs. Carrol, Laurie left them, promising to return
in the evening.
It must be recorded of Amy that she
deliberately prinked that night. Time and absence
had done its work on both the young people. She
had seen her old friend in a new light, not as ‘our
boy’, but as a handsome and agreeable man, and
she was conscious of a very natural desire to find
favor in his sight. Amy knew her good points,
and made the most of them with the taste and skill
which is a fortune to a poor and pretty woman.
Tarlatan and tulle were cheap at Nice,
so she enveloped herself in them on such occasions,
and following the sensible English fashion of simple
dress for young girls, got up charming little toilettes
with fresh flowers, a few trinkets, and all manner
of dainty devices, which were both inexpensive and
effective. It must be confessed that the artist
sometimes got possession of the woman, and indulged
in antique coiffures, statuesque attitudes,
and classic draperies. But, dear heart, we all
have our little weaknesses, and find it easy to pardon
such in the young, who satisfy our eyes with their
comeliness, and keep our hearts merry with their artless
vanities.
“I do want him to think I look
well, and tell them so at home,” said Amy to
herself, as she put on Flo’s old white silk ball
dress, and covered it with a cloud of fresh illusion,
out of which her white shoulders and golden head emerged
with a most artistic effect. Her hair she had
the sense to let alone, after gathering up the thick
waves and curls into a Hebe-like knot at the back
of her head.
“It’s not the fashion,
but it’s becoming, and I can’t afford to
make a fright of myself,” she used to say, when
advised to frizzle, puff, or braid, as the latest
style commanded.
Having no ornaments fine enough for
this important occasion, Amy looped her fleecy skirts
with rosy clusters of azalea, and framed the white
shoulders in delicate green vines. Remembering
the painted boots, she surveyed her white satin slippers
with girlish satisfaction, and chassed down the room,
admiring her aristocratic feet all by herself.
“My new fan just matches my
flowers, my gloves fit to a charm, and the real lace
on Aunt’s mouchoir gives an air to my whole
dress. If I only had a classical nose and mouth
I should be perfectly happy,” she said, surveying
herself with a critical eye and a candle in each hand.
In spite of this affliction, she looked
unusually gay and graceful as she glided away.
She seldom ran it did not suit her style,
she thought, for being tall, the stately and Junoesque
was more appropriate than the sportive or piquante.
She walked up and down the long saloon while waiting
for Laurie, and once arranged herself under the chandelier,
which had a good effect upon her hair, then she thought
better of it, and went away to the other end of the
room, as if ashamed of the girlish desire to have
the first view a propitious one. It so happened
that she could not have done a better thing, for Laurie
came in so quietly she did not hear him, and as she
stood at the distant window, with her head half turned
and one hand gathering up her dress, the slender,
white figure against the red curtains was as effective
as a well-placed statue.
“Good evening, Diana!”
said Laurie, with the look of satisfaction she liked
to see in his eyes when they rested on her.
“Good evening, Apollo!”
she answered, smiling back at him, for he too looked
unusually debonair, and the thought of entering the
ballroom on the arm of such a personable man caused
Amy to pity the four plain Misses Davis from the bottom
of her heart.
“Here are your flowers.
I arranged them myself, remembering that you didn’t
like what Hannah calls a ’sot-bookay’,”
said Laurie, handing her a delicate nosegay, in a
holder that she had long coveted as she daily passed
it in Cardiglia’s window.
“How kind you are!” she
exclaimed gratefully. “If I’d known
you were coming I’d have had something ready
for you today, though not as pretty as this, I’m
afraid.”
“Thank you. It isn’t
what it should be, but you have improved it,”
he added, as she snapped the silver bracelet on her
wrist.
“Please don’t.”
“I thought you liked that sort of thing.”
“Not from you, it doesn’t
sound natural, and I like your old bluntness better.”
“I’m glad of it,”
he answered, with a look of relief, then buttoned her
gloves for her, and asked if his tie was straight,
just as he used to do when they went to parties together
at home.
The company assembled in the long
salle a manger, that evening, was such as one
sees nowhere but on the Continent. The hospitable
Americans had invited every acquaintance they had in
Nice, and having no prejudice against titles, secured
a few to add luster to their Christmas ball.
A Russian prince condescended to sit
in a corner for an hour and talk with a massive lady,
dressed like Hamlet’s mother in black velvet
with a pearl bridle under her chin. A Polish
count, aged eighteen, devoted himself to the ladies,
who pronounced him, ‘a fascinating dear’,
and a German Serene Something, having come to supper
alone, roamed vaguely about, seeking what he might
devour. Baron Rothschild’s private secretary,
a large-nosed Jew in tight boots, affably beamed upon
the world, as if his master’s name crowned him
with a golden halo. A stout Frenchman, who knew
the Emperor, came to indulge his mania for dancing,
and Lady de Jones, a British matron, adorned the scene
with her little family of eight. Of course,
there were many light-footed, shrill-voiced American
girls, handsome, lifeless-looking English ditto, and
a few plain but piquante French demoiselles,
likewise the usual set of traveling young gentlemen
who disported themselves gaily, while mammas of all
nations lined the walls and smiled upon them benignly
when they danced with their daughters.
Any young girl can imagine Amy’s
state of mind when she ’took the stage’
that night, leaning on Laurie’s arm. She
knew she looked well, she loved to dance, she felt
that her foot was on her native heath in a ballroom,
and enjoyed the delightful sense of power which comes
when young girls first discover the new and lovely
kingdom they are born to rule by virtue of beauty,
youth, and womanhood. She did pity the Davis
girls, who were awkward, plain, and destitute of escort,
except a grim papa and three grimmer maiden aunts,
and she bowed to them in her friendliest manner as
she passed, which was good of her, as it permitted
them to see her dress, and burn with curiosity to know
who her distinguished-looking friend might be.
With the first burst of the band, Amy’s color
rose, her eyes began to sparkle, and her feet to tap
the floor impatiently, for she danced well and wanted
Laurie to know it. Therefore the shock she received
can better be imagined than described, when he said
in a perfectly tranquil tone, “Do you care to
dance?”
“One usually does at a ball.”
Her amazed look and quick answer caused
Laurie to repair his error as fast as possible.
“I meant the first dance. May I have the
honor?”
“I can give you one if I put
off the Count. He dances devinely, but he will
excuse me, as you are an old friend,” said Amy,
hoping that the name would have a good effect, and
show Laurie that she was not to be trifled with.
“Nice little boy, but rather a short Pole to
support...
A daughter of the gods,
Devinely tall, and most devinely
fair,”
was all the satisfaction she got, however.
The set in which they found themselves
was composed of English, and Amy was compelled to
walk decorously through a cotillion, feeling all the
while as if she could dance the tarantella with relish.
Laurie resigned her to the ‘nice little boy’,
and went to do his duty to Flo, without securing Amy
for the joys to come, which reprehensible want of
forethought was properly punished, for she immediately
engaged herself till supper, meaning to relent if
he then gave any signs penitence. She showed
him her ball book with demure satisfaction when he
strolled instead of rushed up to claim her for the
next, a glorious polka redowa. But his polite
regrets didn’t impose upon her, and when she
galloped away with the Count, she saw Laurie sit down
by her aunt with an actual expression of relief.
That was unpardonable, and Amy took
no more notice of him for a long while, except a word
now and then when she came to her chaperon between
the dances for a necessary pin or a moment’s
rest. Her anger had a good effect, however,
for she hid it under a smiling face, and seemed unusually
blithe and brilliant. Laurie’s eyes followed
her with pleasure, for she neither romped nor sauntered,
but danced with spirit and grace, making the delightsome
pastime what it should be. He very naturally
fell to studying her from this new point of view, and
before the evening was half over, had decided that
’little Amy was going to make a very charming
woman’.
It was a lively scene, for soon the
spirit of the social season took possession of everyone,
and Christmas merriment made all faces shine, hearts
happy, and heels light. The musicians fiddled,
tooted, and banged as if they enjoyed it, everybody
danced who could, and those who couldn’t admired
their neighbors with uncommon warmth. The air
was dark with Davises, and many Joneses gamboled like
a flock of young giraffes. The golden secretary
darted through the room like a meteor with a dashing
French-woman who carpeted the floor with her pink satin
train. The serene Teuton found the supper-table
and was happy, eating steadily through the bill of
fare, and dismayed the garcons by the ravages he committed.
But the Emperor’s friend covered himself with
glory, for he danced everything, whether he knew it
or not, and introduced impromptu pirouettes when
the figures bewildered him. The boyish abandon
of that stout man was charming to behold, for though
he ‘carried weight’, he danced like an
India-rubber ball. He ran, he flew, he pranced,
his face glowed, his bald head shown, his coattails
waved wildly, his pumps actually twinkled in the air,
and when the music stopped, he wiped the drops from
his brow, and beamed upon his fellow men like a French
Pickwick without glasses.
Amy and her Pole distinguished themselves
by equal enthusiasm but more graceful agility, and
Laurie found himself involuntarily keeping time to
the rhythmic rise and fall of the white slippers as
they flew by as indefatigably as if winged. When
little Vladimir finally relinquished her, with assurances
that he was ‘desolated to leave so early’,
she was ready to rest, and see how her recreant knight
had borne his punishment.
It had been successful, for at three-and-twenty,
blighted affections find a balm in friendly society,
and young nerves will thrill, young blood dance, and
healthy young spirits rise, when subjected to the
enchantment of beauty, light, music, and motion.
Laurie had a waked-up look as he rose to give her
his seat, and when he hurried away to bring her some
supper, she said to herself, with a satisfied smile,
“Ah, I thought that would do him good!”
“You look like Balzac’s
’Femme Peinte Par Elle-Meme’,”
he said, as he fanned her with one hand and held her
coffee cup in the other.
“My rouge won’t come off.”
and Amy rubbed her brilliant cheek, and showed him
her white glove with a sober simplicity that made him
laugh outright.
“What do you call this stuff?”
he asked, touching a fold of her dress that had blown
over his knee.
“Illusion.”
“Good name for it. It’s very pretty new
thing, isn’t it?”
“It’s as old as the hills.
You have seen it on dozens of girls, and you never
found out that it was pretty till now stupide!”
“I never saw it on you before, which accounts
for the mistake, you see.”
“None of that, it is forbidden.
I’d rather take coffee than compliments just
now. No, don’t lounge, it makes me nervous.”
Laurie sat bold upright, and meekly
took her empty plate feeling an odd sort of pleasure
in having ‘little Amy’ order him about,
for she had lost her shyness now, and felt an irrestible
desire to trample on him, as girls have a delightful
way of doing when lords of creation show any signs
of subjection.
“Where did you learn all this
sort of thing?” he asked with a quizzical look.
“As ‘this sort of thing’
is rather a vague expression, would you kindly explain?”
returned Amy, knowing perfectly well what he meant,
but wickedly leaving him to describe what is indescribable.
“Well the general
air, the style, the self-possession, the the illusion you
know”, laughed Laurie, breaking down and helping
himself out of his quandary with the new word.
Amy was gratified, but of course didn’t
show it, and demurely answered, “Foreign life
polishes one in spite of one’s self. I
study as well as play, and as for this” with
a little gesture toward her dress “why,
tulle is cheap, posies to be had for nothing, and I
am used to making the most of my poor little things.”
Amy rather regretted that last sentence,
fearing it wasn’t in good taste, but Laurie
liked her better for it, and found himself both admiring
and respecting the brave patience that made the most
of opportunity, and the cheerful spirit that covered
poverty with flowers. Amy did not know why he
looked at her so kindly, nor why he filled up her
book with his own name, and devoted himself to her
for the rest of the evening in the most delightful
manner; but the impulse that wrought this agreeable
change was the result of one of the new impressions
which both of them were unconsciously giving and receiving.