I fell from the skies on Barbizon
about two o’clock of a September afternoon.
It is the dead hour of the day; all the workers have
gone painting, all the idlers strolling, in the forest
or the plain; the winding causewayed street is solitary,
and the inn deserted. I was the more pleased
to find one of my old companions in the dining-room;
his town clothes marked him for a man in the act of
departure; and indeed his portmanteau lay beside him
on the floor.
“Why, Stennis,” I cried,
“you’re the last man I expected to find
here.”
“You won’t find me here
long,” he replied. “King Pandion he
is dead; all his friends are lapped in lead.
For men of our antiquity, the poor old shop is played
out.”
“I have had playmates, I have
had companions,” I quoted in return. We
were both moved, I think, to meet again in this scene
of our old pleasure parties so unexpectedly, after
so long an interval, and both already so much altered.
“That is the sentiment,”
he replied. “All, all are gone, the old
familiar faces. I have been here a week, and the
only living creature who seemed to recollect me was
the Pharaon. Bar the Sirons, of course, and the
perennial Bodmer.”
“Is there no survivor?” I inquired.
“Of our geological epoch? not
one,” he replied. “This is the city
of Petra in Edom.”
“And what sort of Bedouins encamp
among the ruins?” I asked.
“Youth, Dodd, youth; blooming,
conscious youth,” he returned. “Such
a gang, such reptiles! to think we were like that!
I wonder Siron didn’t sweep us from his premises.”
“Perhaps we weren’t so bad,” I suggested.
“Don’t let me depress
you,” said he. “We were both Anglo-Saxons,
anyway, and the only redeeming feature to-day is another.”
The thought of my quest, a moment
driven out by this rencounter, revived in my mind.
“Who is he?” I cried. “Tell
me about him.”
“What, the Redeeming Feature?”
said he. “Well, he’s a very pleasing
creature, rather dim, and dull, and genteel, but really
pleasing. He is very British, though, the artless
Briton! Perhaps you’ll find him too much
so for the transatlantic nerves. Come to think
of it, on the other hand, you ought to get on famously.
He is an admirer of your great republic in one of
its (excuse me) shoddiest features; he takes in and
sedulously reads a lot of American papers. I warned
you he was artless.”
“What papers are they?” cried I.
“San Francisco papers,”
said he. “He gets a bale of them about twice
a week, and studies them like the Bible. That’s
one of his weaknesses; another is to be incalculably
rich. He has taken Masson’s old studio you
remember? at the corner of the road; he
has furnished it regardless of expense, and lives
there surrounded with vins fins and works of
art. When the youth of to-day goes up to the Caverne
des Brigands to make punch they do
all that we did, like some nauseous form of ape (I
never appreciated before what a creature of tradition
mankind is) this Madden follows with a
basket of champagne. I told him he was wrong,
and the punch tasted better; but he thought the boys
liked the style of the thing, and I suppose they do.
He is a very good-natured soul, and a very melancholy,
and rather a helpless. O, and he has a third
weakness which I came near forgetting. He paints.
He has never been taught, and he’s past thirty,
and he paints.”
“How?” I asked.
“Rather well, I think,”
was the reply. “That’s the annoying
part of it. See for yourself. That panel
is his.”
I stepped toward the window.
It was the old familiar room, with the tables set
like a Greek P, and the sideboard, and the aphasiac
piano, and the panels on the wall. There were
Romeo and Juliet, Antwerp from the river, Enfield’s
ships among the ice, and the huge huntsman winding
a huge horn; mingled with them a few new ones, the
thin crop of a succeeding generation, not better and
not worse. It was to one of these I was directed;
a thing coarsely and wittily handled, mostly with the
palette-knife, the colour in some parts excellent,
the canvas in others loaded with mere clay. But
it was the scene, and not the art or want of it, that
riveted my notice. The foreground was of sand
and scrub and wreckwood; in the middle distance the
many-hued and smooth expanse of a lagoon, enclosed
by a wall of breakers; beyond, a blue strip of ocean.
The sky was cloudless, and I could hear the surf break.
For the place was Midway Island; the point of view
the very spot at which I had landed with the captain
for the first time, and from which I had re-embarked
the day before we sailed. I had already been gazing
for some seconds, before my attention was arrested
by a blur on the sea-line; and stooping to look, I
recognised the smoke of a steamer.
“Yes,” said I, turning
toward Stennis, “it has merit. What is it?”
“A fancy piece,” he returned.
“That’s what pleased me. So few of
the fellows in our time had the imagination of a garden
snail.”
“Madden, you say his name is?” I pursued.
“Madden,” he repeated.
“Has he travelled much?” I inquired.
“I haven’t an idea.
He is one of the least autobiographical of men.
He sits, and smokes, and giggles, and sometimes he
makes small jests; but his contributions to the art
of pleasing are generally confined to looking like
a gentleman and being one. No,” added Stennis,
“he’ll never suit you, Dodd; you like
more head on your liquor. You’ll find him
as dull as ditch water.”
“Has he big blonde side-whiskers
like tusks?” I asked, mindful of the photograph
of Goddedaal.
“Certainly not: why should he?” was
the reply.
“Does he write many letters?” I continued.
“God knows,” said Stennis.
“What is wrong with you? I never saw you
taken this way before.”
“The fact is, I think I know
the man,” said I. “I think I’m
looking for him. I rather think he is my long-lost
brother.”
“Not twins, anyway,” returned Stennis.
And about the same time, a carriage
driving up to the inn, he took his departure.
I walked till dinner-time in the plain,
keeping to the fields; for I instinctively shunned
observation, and was racked by many incongruous and
impatient feelings. Here was a man whose voice
I had once heard, whose doings had filled so many
days of my life with interest and distress, whom I
had lain awake to dream of like a lover; and now his
hand was on the door; now we were to meet; now I was
to learn at last the mystery of the substituted crew.
The sun went down over the plain of the Angelus, and
as the hour approached, my courage lessened. I
let the laggard peasants pass me on the homeward way.
The lamps were lit, the soup was served, the company
were all at table, and the room sounded already with
multitudinous talk before I entered. I took my
place and found I was opposite to Madden. Over
six feet high and well set up, the hair dark and streaked
with silver, the eyes dark and kindly, the mouth very
good-natured, the teeth admirable; linen and hands
exquisite; English clothes, an English voice, an English
bearing: the man stood out conspicuous from the
company. Yet he had made himself at home, and
seemed to enjoy a certain quiet popularity among the
noisy boys of the table d’hote. He had
an odd, silver giggle of a laugh, that sounded nervous
even when he was really amused, and accorded ill with
his big stature and manly, melancholy face. This
laugh fell in continually all through dinner like
the note of the triangle in a piece of modern French
music; and he had at times a kind of pleasantry, rather
of manner than of words, with which he started or
maintained the merriment. He took his share in
these diversions, not so much like a man in high spirits,
but like one of an approved good nature, habitually
self-forgetful, accustomed to please and to follow
others. I have remarked in old soldiers much
the same smiling sadness and sociable self-effacement.
I feared to look at him, lest my glances
should betray my deep excitement, and chance served
me so well that the soup was scarce removed before
we were naturally introduced. My first sip of
Chateau Siron, a vintage from which I had been long
estranged, startled me into speech.
“O, this’ll never do!” I cried,
in English.
“Dreadful stuff, isn’t
it?” said Madden, in the same language.
“Do let me ask you to share my bottle.
They call it Chambertin, which it isn’t; but
it’s fairly palatable, and there’s nothing
in this house that a man can drink at all.”
I accepted; anything would do that
paved the way to better knowledge.
“Your name is Madden, I think,”
said I. “My old friend Stennis told me
about you when I came.”
“Yes, I am sorry he went; I
feel such a Grandfather William, alone among all these
lads,” he replied.
“My name is Dodd,” I resumed.
“Yes,” said he, “so Madame Siron
told me.”
“Dodd, of San Francisco,” I continued.
“Late of Pinkerton and Dodd.”
“Montana Block, I think?” said he.
“The same,” said I.
Neither of us looked at each other;
but I could see his hand deliberately making bread
pills.
“That’s a nice thing of
yours,” I pursued, “that panel. The
foreground is a little clayey, perhaps, but the lagoon
is excellent.”
“You ought to know,” said he.
“Yes,” returned I, “I’m rather
a good judge of that panel.”
There was a considerable pause.
“You know a man by the name of Bellairs, don’t
you?” he resumed.
“Ah!” cried I, “you have heard from
Doctor Urquart?”
“This very morning,” he replied.
“Well, there is no hurry about
Bellairs,” said I. “It’s rather
a long story and rather a silly one. But I think
we have a good deal to tell each other, and perhaps
we had better wait till we are more alone.”
“I think so,” said he.
“Not that any of these fellows know English,
but we’ll be more comfortable over at my place.
Your health, Dodd.”
And we took wine together across the table.
Thus had this singular introduction
passed unperceived in the midst of more than thirty
persons, art students, ladies in dressing-gowns and
covered with rice powder, six foot of Siron whisking
dishes over our head, and his noisy sons clattering
in and out with fresh relays.
“One question more,” said I: “Did
you recognise my voice?”
“Your voice?” he repeated.
“How should I? I had never heard it we
have never met.”
“And yet, we have been in conversation
before now,” said I, “and I asked you
a question which you never answered, and which I have
since had many thousand better reasons for putting
to myself.”
He turned suddenly white. “Good
God!” he cried, “are you the man in the
telephone?”
I nodded.
“Well, well!” said he.
“It would take a good deal of magnanimity to
forgive you that. What nights I have passed!
That little whisper has whistled in my ear ever since,
like the wind in a keyhole. Who could it be?
What could it mean? I suppose I have had more
real, solid misery out of that ...” He
paused, and looked troubled. “Though I had
more to bother me, or ought to have,” he added,
and slowly emptied his glass.
“It seems we were born to drive
each other crazy with conundrums,” said I.
“I have often thought my head would split.”
Carthew burst into his foolish laugh.
“And yet neither you nor I had the worst of
the puzzle,” he cried. “There were
others deeper in.”
“And who were they?” I asked.
“The underwriters,” said he.
“Why, to be sure!” cried
I, “I never thought of that. What could
they make of it?”
“Nothing,” replied Carthew.
“It couldn’t be explained. They were
a crowd of small dealers at Lloyd’s who took
it up in syndicate; one of them has a carriage now;
and people say he is a deuce of a deep fellow, and
has the makings of a great financier. Another
furnished a small villa on the profits. But they’re
all hopelessly muddled; and when they meet each other,
they don’t know where to look, like the Augurs.”
Dinner was no sooner at an end than
he carried me across the road to Masson’s old
studio. It was strangely changed. On the
walls were tapestry, a few good etchings, and some
amazing pictures a Rousseau, a Corot, a
really superb old Crome, a Whistler, and a piece which
my host claimed (and I believe) to be a Titian.
The room was furnished with comfortable English smoking-room
chairs, some American rockers, and an elaborate business
table; spirits and soda-water (with the mark of Schweppe,
no less) stood ready on a butler’s tray, and
in one corner, behind a half-drawn curtain, I spied
a camp-bed and a capacious tub. Such a room in
Barbizon astonished the beholder, like the glories
of the cave of Monte Cristo.
“Now,” said he, “we
are quiet. Sit down, if you don’t mind,
and tell me your story all through.”
I did as he asked, beginning with
the day when Jim showed me the passage in the Daily
Occidental, and winding up with the stamp album
and the Chailly postmark. It was a long business;
and Carthew made it longer, for he was insatiable
of details; and it had struck midnight on the old
eight-day clock in the corner, before I had made an
end.
“And now,” said he, “turn
about: I must tell you my side, much as I hate
it. Mine is a beastly story. You’ll
wonder how I can sleep. I’ve told it once
before, Mr. Dodd.”
“To Lady Ann?” I asked.
“As you suppose,” he answered;
“and to say the truth, I had sworn never to
tell it again. Only, you seem somehow entitled
to the thing; you have paid dear enough, God knows;
and God knows I hope you may like it, now you’ve
got it!”
With that he began his yarn.
A new day had dawned, the cocks crew in the village
and the early woodmen were afoot, when he concluded.