In Florence the nascent swan-feathers
of Anne Champneys grew into perfect plumage.
She was like a spirit new-born to another world, with
all the dun-colored ties of a darker existence swept
away, and only a residue of thought and feeling left
of its former experience. This bright and rosy
world, enriched by nature and art, was so new, its
values were so different, that at first she was dazed
into dumbness by it.
She came face to face with beauty
and art made a part of daily life. She thought
she had never seen color, or flowers, or even a real
sky, until now. An existence unimaginably rich,
vistas that receded into an almost fabled past, opened
and spread before her glamourously. The vividness
of her impressions, her reaction to this new phase
of experience, the whole-souled ardor with which she
flung herself into the study of Italian, her eagerness
to know more, her delight in the fine old house in
which they had set up their household gods, amused
and charmed Mrs. Vandervelde. She felt as if
she were teaching and training an unspoiled, delighted,
and delightful child, and contact with this fresh and
eager spirit stimulated her own.
Many of her former school friends,
girls belonging to fine Florentine families, some
now noble matrons, mothers of families, one or two
great conventual superioresses, still resided in the
city, and these welcomed their beloved Marcia delightedly.
There were, too, the American and English colonies,
and a coterie of well-known artists. Marcia Vandervelde
was a born hostess, a center around which the brightest
and cleverest naturally revolved. She changed
the large, drafty rooms of the old palace into charming
reflections of her own personality. A woman of
wide sympathies and cultivated tastes, she delighted
in the clever cosmopolitan society that gathered in
her drawing-room; and it was in this opalescent social
sea that she launched young Mrs. Champneys.
Mrs. Champneys was at first but a
mild success, a sort of pale luminosity reflected
from the more dominant Mrs. Vandervelde. But it
so happened, that a gifted young Italian lost his heart
at sight to her red hair and green eyes, and discovering
that she had no heart of her own at least,
none for him he wrote, in a sort of frenzy
of inspiration, a very fine sonnet sequence narrating
his hapless passion. The poet had been as extravagantly
assertive as poets in love usually are, and the sonnets
were really notable; so the young man was swept into
a gust of fame; all Italy read his verse and sympathized
with him. The object of a popular poet’s
romantic and unfortunate love is always the object
of curiosity and interest, as Anne Champneys discovered
to her surprise and annoyance.
“He was such a little idiot!”
she told Marcia Vandervelde, disgustedly. “Always
sighing and rolling his eyes, and looking at one like
a sick calf, more than once I was tempted
to catch him by the shoulders and shake him!”
“He’s a poet, my child,”
said Mrs. Vandervelde, mischievously, “and you’re
the lady in the case. It’s been the making
of him, and it hasn’t done you any harm:
you’ll be a legend in your own lifetime.”
Marcia was quite right. The poet’s
love clung to Anne like an intangible perfume, and
a halo of romance encircled her red head. The
Florentines discovered that she was beautiful; the
English and Americans, cooler in judgment, found her
charming. And a noted German artist came along
and declared that he had found in her his ideal Undine.
Mrs. Peter remained unchanged and
unimpressed. She shrugged indifferent shoulders;
she wasn’t particularly interested in herself
as the object of poetic adoration.
She was, however, immensely interested
in the beauty and romance of Florence. The street
crowds, so vivacious, so good-humored, the vivid Florentine
faces, enchanted her. More astonishing than storied
buildings, or even imperishable art, were the figures
that moved across the red-and-gold background of the
city’s history, figures like Dante,
Lorenzo the Magnificent, and that great prior of San
Marco whose “soul went out in fire.”
Curiously enough, it was Savonarola who made the most
profound impression upon her. It seemed to her
that the immortal monk still dominated Florence, and
when she saw his old worn crucifix in his cell at
San Marco, something awoke in her spirit, a
sense of religious values. Religion, then, was
not a mere fixed convention, subscribed to as a sort
of proof of conservatism and respectability; religion
was really a fixed reality, an eternal power.
She read everything that she could lay her hands on
covering the history of Fra Girolamo. Then
she bought a picture of his red Indian-like visage,
and hung it up in her room. The titanic reformer
remained, a shadowy but very deep power, in the background
of her consciousness, and it was this long-dead preacher
who taught her to pray. He won her profoundest
reverence and faith, because he had been true, he
had sealed his faith with his life; she felt that
she could trust him. His honesty appealed to her
own.
It was such curious phases as this
of the girl’s unfolding character, that made
her a never-failing source of interest to Marcia Vandervelde.
Under her superimposed, surface indifference, Marcia
reflected, Anne had a deep strain of pure unworldliness,
vast possibilities. Give Anne an ideal, once
arouse her enthusiasm, and she was capable of tossing
aside the world for it. Marcia was vastly interested,
too, in the serene detachment of the girl’s attitude
toward all those with whom she came in contact.
One might evoke interest, sympathy, compassion, even
a quiet friendliness, but her heart remained quiet,
aloof, secure from invasion. Handsome young men
who fell in love with her and there were
several such seemed unable to stir any
emotion in her, except perhaps, an impatient resentment.
Marcia, of course, knew nothing of Glenn Mitchell.
But Anne Champneys remembered him poignantly.
She had learned her lesson.
They had been some six or eight months
in Florence when Mr. Berkeley Hayden put in his appearance,
somewhat to Mrs. Vandervelde’s surprise.
She had not expected this! She studied her old
friend speculatively. H’m! She remembered
the pale face of the young Italian poet whose sad
sonnets all Italy was reading with delight. Then
she looked at the red-headed source of those sonnets, and
she had no doubt as to the cause of Mr. Hayden’s
appearance in Florence at this time, and
wondered a bit. The situation gave a fillip to
her imagination; it was piquant. One wondered
how it would end.
Peter Champneys? Marcia scented
disruption, where that impalpable relationship was
concerned. She was ignorant as to Anne’s
real feelings and intentions in regard to her absentee
husband. Anne never mentioned him. She bore
his name, she held herself rigidly aloof from all
lovers; herein one saw her sole concessions to the
tie binding her. Marcia didn’t see how it
was possible that the two should avoid hating each
other; the mere fact that they had been arbitrarily
forced upon each other by the imperious will of old
Chadwick, would inevitably militate against any hope
of future affection between them. And now here
was Berkeley Hayden, quite as imperious as Chadwick
Champneys had ever been, and who was quite as successful
in getting what he wanted.
Anne had welcomed Mr. Hayden gladly.
She was honestly delighted to see him. Florence
had taught her, signally, the depths of her own lack
of culture, and this biting knowledge increased her
respect for Mr. Berkeley Hayden. Marcia was immensely
clever, charmingly cultivated, a woman of the world
in the best sense, but Anne’s native shrewdness
told her that Marcia’s knowledge was not equal
to Hayden’s. His culture was surer and
deeper. He was more than a mere amateur; he knew.
He stood apart, in her mind, and just a little higher
than anybody else. She turned to him eagerly,
and there was established between them, almost unconsciously,
the most potent, perfect, and dangerous of all relationships,
because it is the most beautiful and natural, that,
in which the man is the teacher and the woman the
pupil.
Hayden saw her, too, to greater advantage,
here under this Florentine sky, against the background
of perhaps the most beautiful city in the world.
She glowed, splendidly young and vivid. She did
not laugh often, but when she did, it was like a peal
of music; it came straight from her heart and went
direct to yours. It was as catching as fire,
as exhilarating as the chime of sleigh-bells on a
frosty Thanksgiving morning, as clear and true as a
redbird’s whistle; and it had tucked away in
it a funny, throaty chuckle so irresistibly infectious
that suspicious old St. Anthony himself, would have
joined in accord with it, had he heard its silver echo
in his wilderness. Berkeley Hayden’s immortal
soul stood on the tiptoe of ecstasy when Anne Champneys
laughed.
She no longer thought of herself as
Nancy Simms; she knew herself now as Anne Champneys,
a newer and better personality dominating that old,
unhappy, ignorant self. If at times the man glimpsed
that other shadowy self of hers, it was part of her
mysterious appeal, her enthralling, baffling charm.
It invested her with a shade of inscrutable, prescient
sorrow, as of old unhappy far-off things. He
hadn’t the faintest idea of Nancy Simms, a creature
utterly foreign to his experience. And because
she did not love him, Anne Champneys never spoke of
that old self, never confided in him. He did not
know her as she had been, he only knew her as she
was now. That, however, fully satisfied his critical
taste. The marvel of her alabaster skin, fleckless
and flawless, the glory of her glittering red hair,
the sea-depths of her cool, gray-green eyes, the reserve
of her expression, the virginal curve of her lip,
enchanted him. He liked the tall, slender strength
of her, the lightness of her step, her grace when
she danced, her spirited pose when she rode. Here
was the woman, the one woman, to bear his name, to
be the mistress of his house. She was the only
woman he had ever really wished to marry. And
she was nominally married to Peter Champneys.
Hayden was honorable. Had hers
been a real marriage, had she been a happy wife, he
would have respected the tie that bound her, and gone
his way. But the situation was exceptional.
She wasn’t really a wife at all, and like Mrs.
Vandervelde, he could see in such a marriage nothing
but a cause for mutual disgust and dislike. Well,
then, if he loved her, and Peter Champneys didn’t,
he certainly was not working Peter Champneys any harm
in winning away from him a wife he didn’t want.
Why should he stand aside and let her go, for such
a shadow as that ceremony had been? The Champneys
money? That meant nothing weighed in the balance
with his desire. He could give her as much, and
more, than she would forego. Mrs. Berkeley Hayden
would eclipse Mrs. Peter Champneys.
Deliberately, then, but delicately,
after his fashion, Hayden set himself to win Anne
Champneys. He felt that his passion for her gave
him the right. He meant to make her happy.
She could have her marriage annulled. Then she
would become Mrs. Berkeley Hayden. Even the fact
that he really knew very little about her did not trouble
him. He coveted her, and he meant to have her.
He read the young Italian’s
sonnets, which she had inspired, and they made him
thoughtful. He could readily understand the depths
of feeling such a woman could arouse. Had she
no heart, as the Italian lamented? He wondered.
It came to him that she was, in truth, detached, sufficient
to herself, an ungregarious creature moving solitarily
in a mysterious world all her own. What did she
think? What did she feel? He didn’t
know. He was allowed to see certain aspects of
her intelligence, and her quickness of perception,
the delicacy of her fancy, her childlike and morning
freshness, and a pungently shrewd Americanism that
flashed out at odd and unexpected moments, never failed
to delight him. But her deeper thoughts, her
real feelings, her heart, remained sealed and closed
to him.
He saw half-pleasedly, half-jealously
the interest she aroused in other men. Nothing
but her almost unbelievable indifference held his
jealousy in check. He reflected with satisfaction
that she was on a friendlier footing with him than
with any other man of her acquaintance, that she had
a more instant welcome for him than for any other,
and for which cause he was cordially hated by several
otherwise amiable gentlemen. And then he waxed
gloomy, remembering how emotionless, how impersonal,
that friendship really was. At times he laughed
at himself wryly, recalling the passionate friendship
other women had lavished upon him, and how wearisome
it had been to him, how he had wished to escape it.
If but a modicum of that passion had been bestowed
upon him by this girl, how changed the world would
be for him!
And in the meantime Anne Champneys
liked him serenely, was grateful to him, aware that
his intellect was as a key that was unlocking her
own; welcomed him openly and was maddeningly respectful
to him. This made him rage. What did she
think he was, anyhow? An old professor, an antiquarian,
an archaeologist? She might as well consider him
an antediluvian at once!
“Marcia,” he said to Mrs.
Vandervelde one evening, “I want you to tell
me all you know about this Champneys business.
Just exactly how does the affair stand?” Anne
had been carried off by some American friends, the
smart throng that had filled Mrs. Vandervelde’s
rooms had gone, and Hayden and his hostess had the
big, softly lighted drawing-room to themselves.
At his query Mrs. Vandervelde turned in her chair,
shading her eyes with her hand the better to observe
him.
“Why, you know as much as I
do, Berkeley! You know how and why the marriage
was contracted, and what hinges upon it,” said
she, cautiously.
He made an impatient gesture.
“I want to know what she’s going to do.
Surely she isn’t going to allow herself to be
bound by that old lunatic’s will, is she?”
“He wasn’t an old lunatic;
he was an old genius. Jason had an almost superstitious
reverence for his judgment. Somehow, his plans
always managed to come out all right, in
the end. Even when they seemed wild, they came
out all right. They’re still coming out
all right.”
“And you think this insane marriage
is likely to come out all right in the end, too?”
he asked sharply.
“I don’t know. Stranger
things have happened. Why shouldn’t this?”
“Why should it? That fellow Champneys ”
“Is said to be a great painter.
At least, he is certainly a very successful one.
Whether or not he can make good as Anne Champneys’s
husband remains to be seen.” Mrs. Vandervelde
was not above the innate feminine cattiness.
Hayden rose abruptly and began to pace the room.
He was vaguely aware that he had been astrally scratched
across the nose.
“And you think a girl like Anne
will be willing to play patient Griselda?” he
asked, scornfully.
“I don’t know. You think she shouldn’t?”
“I think she shouldn’t. I tell you
frankly he doesn’t deserve it.”
“Oh, as for that!” said Mrs. Vandervelde,
airily.
Hayden paused in his restless walk, and looked at
her earnestly.
“Berkeley,” said she,
changing her light tone, “am I to understand
that you are really in earnest?”
“I am so much in earnest,”
he replied, deliberately, “that I do not mind
telling you, Marcia, that I want this girl. More,
I mean to have her, if I can make her care for me.”
She considered this carefully.
He had never known what it meant to have his wishes
thwarted, and now he would move heaven and earth to
win Anne Champneys. Well, but! She
liked Hayden, and she didn’t think, all things
considered, that Anne Champneys could do better, if
she wished to have her marriage to Peter annulled,
than to marry Berkeley. But how would Jason consider
such a move? Jason had been greatly attached
to old Mr. Champneys. Indeed, his connection with
that astute old wizard had just about doubled their
income. Jason wouldn’t be likely to look
with friendly eyes upon this bringing to naught, what
he knew had been Champneys’s fondest scheme.
She said, after a pause:
“Does Anne know?”
“Who knows what Anne knows?
But on the face of it, I should say she doesn’t.
At least, she doesn’t appear to. I have
been very circumspect,” said he,
moodily. And he added angrily: “She
seems to regard me as a sort of cicerone, a perambulating,
vocal Baedeker!”
Mrs. Vandervelde smiled openly.
“It is your surest hold upon her. I shouldn’t
cavil at it, if I were you. To Anne you are the
sum total of human knowledge. Your dictum is
the last word to be said about anything.”
But Berkeley still looked sulky.
The idea of being what Sydney Smith said Macaulay
was a book in breeches didn’t
appeal to him at all.
“What would you advise me to
do?” he asked, after a pause.
She said reflectively: “Let
her alone for a while, Berkeley. If her liking
for you grows naturally into affection, and
it may, you know, that would be best.
If you try to force it, you may drive her from you
altogether. I tell you frankly, she is not in
the least interested in any man as a lover, so far
as I can judge.”
He was forced to admit the truth of
this. She wasn’t. She seemed to dislike
any faintest sign of loverliness from any man toward
her. Hayden had observed her icy attitude toward
the painter who had fancied he found in her his ideal
Undine, and who showed too openly his desire to help
her gain a soul for herself. The idea that she
might look at him as she had looked at the painter
was highly unpleasant to him. He asked again:
“But what am I to do?”
“Nothing,” said Mrs. Vandervelde, succinctly.
“But suppose she falls in love with somebody
else.”
“She is more likely to fall
in love with you, I should imagine, if you keep quiet
for a while and allow her to do so. Just remain
her guide, philosopher, and friend, can’t you?”
The clever, cosmopolitan Mr. Berkeley
Hayden tugged at his short mustache and looked astonishingly
like a sulky school-boy.
“Well, if you think that’s
the best thing I can do ” he began.
“I know it is,” said she.
And she reflected that even the cleverest man, when
he is really in love, is something of a fool.
Here Anne herself came in and the
three dined together, a statuesque maid in a yellow
bodice and a purple skirt waiting on them. Agata’s
“Si?” was like a flute-note, and the two
women loved to see her moving about their rooms.
It was like having Hebe wait on them.
Anne turned to Hayden eagerly.
She wished his opinion of a piece of tapestry an antiquarian
in the Via Ricasoli wished to sell her. Would
he go and look at it with her? And there was an
old lamp she fancied but of the genuineness of which
she wasn’t sure. And she added, dropping
her voice, that she’d gotten a copy of one of
Fra Girolamo Savonarola’s sermons, beautifully
done on vellum, evidently by some loving monkish follower
of his. Didn’t he want to see it?
She looked at him eagerly. Mrs. Vandervelde, catching
his eye, smiled.
Hayden played his part beautifully,
concealing the tumult of his feelings under the polished
surface of the serene manner that Anne so greatly
admired. He made himself indispensable; he gave
her his best, unstintedly, and Hayden at his best
was inimitable. Marcia Vandervelde regarded him
with new respect and admiration. Berkeley was
really wonderful!
When he took his departure, Anne Champneys
felt that the glamour of Florence had departed with
him. It was as if the sunshine had been withdrawn,
along with that polished presence, that gem-like mind.
She missed him to an extent that astonished her.
She thought that even Giotto’s Campanile looked
bleak, the day Berkeley Hayden left.
“I’m going to miss you
hideously,” she told him truthfully.
“I hope so,” he said guardedly.
He did not wish to show too plainly how overjoyed
he was at that admission. “And I’m
going to hope you’ll find me necessary in New
York. I’m looking forward to seeing you
in New York, you know. I have two new pictures
I want you to see.”
Her face brightened. “Your
being there will make me glad to go back to New York,”
she said happily. And Hayden had to resist a wild
impulse to shout, to catch her in his arms. He
went away with hope in his heart.
But Mrs. Vandervelde, watching her
closely, thought she was too open in her regret.
N-no, Anne wasn’t in love with Hayden yet.
She picked up her studies, to which he had given impetus,
with too hearty a zest. And when he wrote her
amusing, witty, delightful letters, she was too willing
to have Marcia read them.
They remained in Italy six months
or so more; and then one day Anne returned from a
picnic, and said to Marcia abruptly:
“Would you mind if I asked you
to leave Florence, if I should want to
go home?”
Marcia said quietly: “No.
If you wish to go, we will go. Are you tired
of Italy?”
Anne Champneys looked at her with
wide eyes. For a moment she hesitated, then ran
to Marcia, and clung to her with her head against
her friend’s shoulder.
“You’re so good to me and
I care so much for you, I’ll tell
you the truth,” she said in a whisper.
“I I heard something to-day, Marcia, he’s
coming to Rome soon. And of course
he’ll come here, too.”
“He? Who?”
“Peter Champneys,” said
Peter’s wife, and literally shook in her shoes.
Her clasp tightened. Marcia put her arms around
her, and felt, to her surprise, that Anne was frightened.
“You are sure?”
“Yes. I heard it accidentally,
but I am sure. You know how pretty the Arno is
at the spot where we picnicked. We strolled about,
and I didn’t want to talk to anybody,
so I slipped away by myself. There were a couple
of English artists painting near by, and just as I
came up I overheard what they were saying. Marcia, they
were talking about him. They
said he’d been called to Rome to paint somebody’s
picture, the pope’s, maybe, and
they’d probably see him here, later. They
seemed to be friends of his, from the way
they spoke.” She shivered. “Italy
isn’t big enough to hold us two!” she
said, desperately. “Marcia, I can’t run
the risk of meeting Peter Champneys. Not until
I have to. I I’ve got to get
away!” Her voice broke.
“All right, dear. We’ll
go,” said Marcia, soothingly. “Jason’s
about finished his work in Brazil, and he’ll
be back in New York by this. Do you want to go
directly home?”
“Yes,” said Anne Champneys.
“Italy’s a very little place compared
with America. Let’s go back to America,
Marcia.”
Mrs. Vandervelde stroked the red head.
It seemed to her that fate was playing into Mr. Berkeley
Hayden’s hands.