It was not a high wall, that is, not
very high. Many a time in the country Daphne
had climbed more formidable ones, and there was no
reason why she should not try this. No one was
in sight except a shepherd, watching a great flock
of sheep. There was a forgotten rose garden
over in that field; had Cæsar planted it, or Tiberius,
centuries ago? Certainly no one had tended it
for a thousand years or two, and the late pink roses
grew unchecked. Daphne slowly worked her way
to the top of the wall; this close masonry made the
proceeding more difficult than it usually was at home.
She stood for a moment on the summit, glorying in
the widened view, then sprang, with the lightness
of a kitten, to the other side. There was a skurry
of frightened sheep, and then a silence.
She knew that she was sitting on the
grass, and that her left wrist pained. Some
one was coming toward her.
“Are you hurt?” asked Apollo anxiously.
“Not at all,” she answered, continuing
to sit on the grass.
“If you were hurt, where would it be?”
“In my wrist,” said the girl, with a little
groan.
The questioner kneeled beside her,
and Daphne gave a start of surprise that was touched
with fear.
“It isn’t you?” she stammered.
“You aren’t the shepherd?”
A sheepskin coat disguised him.
The rough hat was of soft drooping felt, like that
of any shepherd watching on the hills, and in his hand
he held a crook. An anxious mother-sheep was
sniffing eagerly at his pockets, remembering gifts
of salt.
“Apollo was a shepherd,”
said Daphne slowly, with wonder in her face.
“He kept the flocks of King Admetus.”
“You seem to be well read in
the classical dictionary,” remarked the stranger,
with twinkling eyes. “You have them in
America then?”
He was examining her wrist with practiced
fingers, touching it firmly here and there.
“We have everything in America,”
said the girl, eyeing him dubiously.
“But no gods except money, I have heard.”
“Yes, gods, and impostors too,” she answered
significantly.
“So I have heard,” said Apollo, with composure.
The maddening thing was that she could
not look away from him some radiance of
life in his face compelled her eyes. He had thrown
his hat upon the grass, and the girl could see strength
and sweetness and repose in every line of forehead,
lip, and chin. There was pride there, too, and
with it a slight leaning forward of the head.
“I presume that comes from listening
to beseeching prayers,” she was thinking to
herself.
“Ow!” she remarked suddenly.
“That is the place, is it?”
He drew from one of the pockets of
the grotesque coat a piece of sheepskin, which he
proceeded to cut into two strips with his knife.
“It seems to be a very slight
sprain,” remarked Apollo. “I must
bandage it. Have you any pins about you?”
“Can the gods lack pins?”
asked the girl, smiling. She searched, and found
two in her belt, and handed them to him.
“The gods do not explain themselves,”
he answered, binding the sheepskin tightly about her
wrist.
“So I observe,” she remarked dryly.
“Is that right?” he asked.
“Now, when you reach home, you must remove
the bandage and hold your hand and wrist first in very
hot water, then in cold. Is there some one who
can put the bandage back as I have it? See, it
simply goes about the wrist, and is rather tight.
You must pardon my taking possession of the case,
but no one else was near. Apollo has always been
something of a physician, you know.”
“You apparently used the same
classical dictionary that I did,” retorted Daphne.
“I remember the statement there.”
Then she became uncomfortable, and
wished her words unsaid, for awe had come upon her.
After all, nothing could be more unreal than she was
to herself in these days of wonder. Her mind
was full of dreams as they sat and watched white clouds
drifting over the deep blue of the sky. Near
them the sheep were cropping grass, and all the rest
was silence.
“You look anxious,” said
the physician. “Is it the wrist?”
“No,” answered the girl,
facing him bravely, under the momentary inspiration
of a wave of common sense, “I am wondering why
you make this ridiculous assumption about yourself.
Tell me who you really are.”
If he had defended himself she would
have argued, but he was silent and she half believed.
“But you look like a mortal,”
she protested, answering her own thoughts. “And
you wear conventional clothing. I don’t
mean this sheepskin, but the other day.”
“It is a realistic age,”
he answered, smiling. “People no longer
believe what they do not see. We are forced to
adopt modern methods and modern costume to show that
we exist.”
“You do not look like the statue
of Apollo,” ventured Daphne.
“Did people ever dare tell the
truth about the gods? Never! They made
up a notion of what a divine nose should be and bestowed
it upon all the gods impartially. So with the
forehead, so with the hair. I assure you, Miss
Willis, we are much more individual than Greek art
would lead you to expect.”
“Do you mind just telling me
why you are keeping sheep now?”
“I will, if you will promise
not to consider a question of mine impertinent.”
“What is the question?”
“I only wished to know why an
American young lady should bear a Greek name?
It is a beautiful name, and one that is a favorite
of mine as you may know.”
“I didn’t know,”
said Daphne. “It was given me by my father.
He was born in America, but he had a Greek soul.
He has always longed to live in Greece, but he has
to go on preaching, preaching, for he is a rector,
you know, in a little church in New York, that isn’t
very rich, though it is very old. All his life
he has been hungry for the beauty and the greatness
of the world over here.”
“That accounts for your expression,” observed
Apollo.
“What expression?”
“That isn’t the question
I promised to answer. If you will take a few
steps out of your way, I can satisfy you in regard
to the first one you asked.”
He rose, and the white shepherd dog
sprang ahead, barking joyously. The sheep looked
up and nibbled in anxious haste, fearing that any other
bit of pasture might be less juicy than this.
Daphne followed the shepherd god to a little clump
of oak trees, where she saw a small, rough gray tent,
perhaps four feet in height. Under it, on brown
blankets, lay a bearded man, whose eyes lighted at
Apollo’s approach. A blue bowl with a silver
spoon in it stood on the ground near his head, and
a small heap of charred sticks with an overhanging
kettle showed that cooking had been done there.
“The shepherd has a touch of
fever,” explained the guide. “Meanwhile,
somebody must take care of the sheep. I am glad
to get back my two occupations as shepherd and physician
at the same time.”
The dog and his master accompanied
her part way down the hill, and the girl was silent,
for her mind was busy, revolving many thoughts.
At the top of the last height above the villa she
stopped and looked at her companion. The sun
was setting, and a golden haze filled the air.
It ringed with light the figure before her, standing
there, the face, with its beauty of color, and its
almost insolent joyousness, rising above the rough
sheepskin coat.
“Who are you?” she gasped,
terrified. “Who are you, really?”
The confused splendor dazzled her eyes, and she turned
and ran swiftly down the hill.