I.
There was no part of Paula’s
journey in which Somerset did not think of her.
He imagined her in the hotel at Havre, in her brief
rest at Paris; her drive past the Place de la Bastille
to the Boulevart Mazas to take the train for Lyons;
her tedious progress through the dark of a winter
night till she crossed the isothermal line which told
of the beginning of a southern atmosphere, and onwards
to the ancient blue sea.
Thus, between the hours devoted to
architecture, he passed the next three days.
One morning he set himself, by the help of John, to
practise on the telegraph instrument, expecting a
message. But though he watched the machine at
every opportunity, or kept some other person on the
alert in its neighbourhood, no message arrived to
gratify him till after the lapse of nearly a fortnight.
Then she spoke from her new habitation nine hundred
miles away, in these meagre words:
’Are settled at the address
given. Can now attend to any inquiry about the
building.’
The pointed implication that she could
attend to inquiries about nothing else, breathed of
the veritable Paula so distinctly that he could forgive
its sauciness. His reply was soon despatched:
‘Will write particulars of our
progress. Always the same.’
The last three words formed the sentimental
appendage which she had assured him she could tolerate,
and which he hoped she might desire.
He spent the remainder of the day
in making a little sketch to show what had been done
in the castle since her departure. This he despatched
with a letter of explanation ending in a paragraph
of a different tenor:
’I have demonstrated our progress
as well as I could; but another subject has been in
my mind, even whilst writing the former. Ask
yourself if you use me well in keeping me a fortnight
before you so much as say that you have arrived?
The one thing that reconciled me to your departure
was the thought that I should hear early from you:
my idea of being able to submit to your absence was
based entirely upon that.
’But I have resolved not to
be out of humour, and to believe that your scheme
of reserve is not unreasonable; neither do I quarrel
with your injunction to keep silence to all relatives.
I do not know anything I can say to show you more
plainly my acquiescence in your wish “not to
go too far” (in short, to keep yourself dear by
dear I mean not cheap you have been dear
in the other sense a long time, as you know), than
by not urging you to go a single degree further in
warmth than you please.’
When this was posted he again turned
his attention to her walls and towers, which indeed
were a dumb consolation in many ways for the lack
of herself. There was no nook in the castle to
which he had not access or could not easily obtain
access by applying for the keys, and this propinquity
of things belonging to her served to keep her image
before him even more constantly than his memories
would have done.
Three days and a half after the despatch
of his subdued effusion the telegraph called to tell
him the good news that
’Your letter and drawing are
just received. Thanks for the latter. Will
reply to the former by post this afternoon.’
It was with cheerful patience that
he attended to his three draughtsmen in the studio,
or walked about the environs of the fortress during
the fifty hours spent by her presumably tender missive
on the road. A light fleece of snow fell during
the second night of waiting, inverting the position
of long-established lights and shades, and lowering
to a dingy grey the approximately white walls of other
weathers; he could trace the postman’s footmarks
as he entered over the bridge, knowing them by the
dot of his walking-stick: on entering the expected
letter was waiting upon his table. He looked
at its direction with glad curiosity; it was the first
letter he had ever received from her.
’Hotel , nice,
Feb 14.
‘My dear Mr.
Somerset’ (the ‘George,’ then,
to which she had so kindly treated him in her last
conversation, was not to be continued in black and
white),
’Your letter explaining the
progress of the work, aided by the sketch enclosed,
gave me as clear an idea of the advance made since
my departure as I could have gained by being present.
I feel every confidence in you, and am quite sure
the restoration is in good hands. In this opinion
both my aunt and my uncle coincide. Please act
entirely on your own judgment in everything, and as
soon as you give a certificate to the builders for
the first instalment of their money it will be promptly
sent by my solicitors.
’You bid me ask myself if I
have used you well in not sending intelligence of
myself till a fortnight after I had left you.
Now, George, don’t be unreasonable! Let
me remind you that, as a certain apostle said, there
are a thousand things lawful which are not expedient.
I say this, not from pride in my own conduct, but to
offer you a very fair explanation of it. Your
resolve not to be out of humour with me suggests that
you have been sorely tempted that way, else why should
such a resolve have been necessary?
’If you only knew what passes
in my mind sometimes you would perhaps not be so ready
to blame. Shall I tell you? No. For,
if it is a great emotion, it may afford you a cruel
satisfaction at finding I suffer through separation;
and if it be a growing indifference to you, it will
be inflicting gratuitous unhappiness upon you to say
so, if you care for me; as I sometimes think
you may do A little.’
(’O, Paula!’ said Somerset.)
’Please which way would you
have it? But it is better that you should guess
at what I feel than that you should distinctly know
it. Notwithstanding this assertion you will,
I know, adhere to your first prepossession in favour
of prompt confessions. In spite of that, I fear
that upon trial such promptness would not produce that
happiness which your fancy leads you to expect.
Your heart would weary in time, and when once that
happens, good-bye to the emotion you have told me of.
Imagine such a case clearly, and you will perceive
the probability of what I say. At the same time
I admit that a woman who is only a creature of
evasions and disguises is very disagreeable.
’Do not write very frequently,
and never write at all unless you have some real information
about the castle works to communicate. I will
explain to you on another occasion why I make this
request. You will possibly set it down as additional
evidence of my cold-heartedness. If so you must.
Would you also mind writing the business letter on
an independent sheet, with a proper beginning and ending?
Whether you inclose another sheet is of course optional. Sincerely
yours, Paula power.’
Somerset had a suspicion that her
order to him not to neglect the business letter was
to escape any invidious remarks from her uncle.
He wished she would be more explicit, so that he might
know exactly how matters stood with them, and whether
Abner Power had ever ventured to express disapproval
of him as her lover.
But not knowing, he waited anxiously
for a new architectural event on which he might legitimately
send her another line. This occurred about a
week later, when the men engaged in digging foundations
discovered remains of old ones which warranted a modification
of the original plan. He accordingly sent off
his professional advice on the point, requesting her
assent or otherwise to the amendment, winding up the
inquiry with ‘Yours faithfully.’
On another sheet he wrote: ’Do you
suffer from any unpleasantness in the manner of others
on account of me? If so, inform me, Paula.
I cannot otherwise interpret your request for the separate
sheets. While on this point I will tell you what
I have learnt relative to the authorship of that false
paragraph about your engagement. It was communicated
to the paper by your uncle. Was the wish father
to the thought, or could he have been misled, as many
were, by appearances at the theatricals?
’If I am not to write to you
without a professional reason, surely you can write
to me without such an excuse? When you write tell
me of yourself. There is nothing I so much wish
to hear of. Write a great deal about your daily
doings, for my mind’s eye keeps those sweet operations
more distinctly before me than my bodily sight does
my own.
’You say nothing of having been
to look at the chapel-of-ease I told you of, the plans
of which I made when an architect’s pupil, working
in metres instead of feet and inches, to my immense
perplexity, that the drawings might be understood
by the foreign workmen. Go there and tell me
what you think of its design. I can assure you
that every curve thereof is my own.
’How I wish you would invite
me to run over and see you, if only for a day or two,
for my heart runs after you in a most distracted manner.
Dearest, you entirely fill my life! But I forget;
we have resolved not to go very far.
But the fact is I am half afraid lest, with such reticence,
you should not remember how very much I am yours, and
with what a dogged constancy I shall always remember
you. Paula, sometimes I have horrible misgivings
that something will divide us, especially if we do
not make a more distinct show of our true relationship.
True do I say? I mean the relationship which
I think exists between us, but which you do not affirm
too clearly. Yours always.’
Away southward like the swallow went
the tender lines. He wondered if she would notice
his hint of being ready to pay her a flying visit,
if permitted to do so. His fancy dwelt on that
further side of France, the very contours of whose
shore were now lines of beauty for him. He prowled
in the library, and found interest in the mustiest
facts relating to that place, learning with aesthetic
pleasure that the number of its population was fifty
thousand, that the mean temperature of its atmosphere
was 60 degrees Fahrenheit, and that the peculiarities
of a mistral were far from agreeable.
He waited overlong for her reply;
but it ultimately came. After the usual business
preliminary, she said:
’As requested, I have visited
the little church you designed. It gave me great
pleasure to stand before a building whose outline and
details had come from the brain of such a valued friend
and adviser.’
(’Valued friend and adviser,’
repeated Somerset critically.)
’I like the style much, especially
that of the windows Early English are they
not? I am going to attend service there next Sunday,
because you were the architect,
and for no godly reason at
all. Does that content you? Fie for
your despondency! Remember M. Aurelius: “This
is the chief thing: Be not perturbed; for all
things are of the nature of the Universal.”
Indeed I am a little surprised at your having forebodings,
after my assurance to you before I left. I have
none. My opinion is that, to be happy, it is
best to think that, as we are the product of events,
events will continue to produce that which is in harmony
with us.... You are too faint-hearted, and that’s
the truth of it. I advise you not to abandon
yourself to idolatry too readily; you know what I
mean. It fills me with remorse when I think how
very far below such a position my actual worth removes
me.
’I should like to receive another
letter from you as soon as you have got over the misgiving
you speak of, but don’t write too soon.
I wish I could write anything to raise your spirits,
but you may be so perverse that if, in order to do
this, I tell you of the races, routs, scenery, gaieties,
and gambling going on in this place and neighbourhood
(into which of course I cannot help being a little
drawn), you may declare that my words make you worse
than ever. Don’t pass the line I have set
down in the way you were tempted to do in your last;
and not too many Dearests at least as yet.
This is not a time for effusion. You have my
very warm affection, and that’s enough for the
present.’
As a love-letter this missive was
tantalizing enough, but since its form was simply
a continuation of what she had practised before she
left, it produced no undue misgiving in him.
Far more was he impressed by her omitting to answer
the two important questions he had put to her.
First, concerning her uncle’s attitude towards
them, and his conduct in giving such strange information
to the reporter. Second, on his, Somerset’s,
paying her a flying visit some time during the spring.
Since she had requested it, he made no haste in his
reply. When penned, it ran in the words subjoined,
which, in common with every line of their correspondence,
acquired from the strangeness of subsequent circumstances
an interest and a force that perhaps they did not
intrinsically possess.
‘People cannot’ (he wrote)
’be for ever in good spirits on this gloomy
side of the Channel, even though you seem to be so
on yours. However, that I can abstain from letting
you know whether my spirits are good or otherwise,
I will prove in our future correspondence. I admire
you more and more, both for the warm feeling towards
me which I firmly believe you have, and for your ability
to maintain side by side with it so much dignity and
resolution with regard to foolish sentiment. Sometimes
I think I could have put up with a little more weakness
if it had brought with it a little more tenderness,
but I dismiss all that when I mentally survey your
other qualities. I have thought of fifty things
to say to you of the too far sort, not one
of any other; so that your prohibition is very unfortunate,
for by it I am doomed to say things that do not rise
spontaneously to my lips. You say that our shut-up
feelings are not to be mentioned yet. How long
is the yet to last?
’But, to speak more solemnly,
matters grow very serious with us, Paula at
least with me: and there are times when this restraint
is really unbearable. It is possible to put up
with reserve when the reserved being is by one’s
side, for the eyes may reveal what the lips do not.
But when she is absent, what was piquancy becomes harshness,
tender railleries become cruel sarcasm, and
tacit understandings misunderstandings. However
that may be, you shall never be able to reproach me
for touchiness. I still esteem you as a friend;
I admire you and love you as a woman. This I
shall always do, however unconfiding you prove.’
II.
Without knowing it, Somerset was drawing
near to a crisis in this soft correspondence which
would speedily put his assertions to the test; but
the knowledge came upon him soon enough for his peace.
Her next letter, dated March 9th,
was the shortest of all he had received, and beyond
the portion devoted to the building-works it contained
only the following sentences:
’I am almost angry with you,
George, for being vexed because I am not more effusive.
Why should the verbal I love you be ever
uttered between two beings of opposite sex who have
eyes to see signs? During the seven or eight
months that we have known each other, you have discovered
my regard for you, and what more can you desire?
Would a reiterated assertion of passion really do
any good? Remember it is a natural instinct with
us women to retain the power of obliging a man to hope,
fear, pray, and beseech as long as we think fit, before
we confess to a reciprocal affection.
’I am now going to own to a
weakness about which I had intended to keep silent.
It will not perhaps add to your respect for me.
My uncle, whom in many ways I like, is displeased
with me for keeping up this correspondence so regularly.
I am quite perverse enough to venture to disregard
his feelings; but considering the relationship, and
his kindness in other respects, I should prefer not
to do so at present. Honestly speaking, I want
the courage to resist him in some things. He
said to me the other day that he was very much surprised
that I did not depend upon his judgment for my future
happiness. Whether that meant much or little,
I have resolved to communicate with you only by telegrams
for the remainder of the time we are here. Please
reply by the same means only. There, now, don’t
flush and call me names! It is for the best,
and we want no nonsense, you and I. Dear George, I
feel more than I say, and if I do not speak more plainly,
you will understand what is behind after all I have
hinted. I can promise you that you will not like
me less upon knowing me better. Hope ever.
I would give up a good deal for you. Good-bye!’
This brought Somerset some cheerfulness
and a good deal of gloom. He silently reproached
her, who was apparently so independent, for lacking
independence in such a vital matter. Perhaps it
was mere sex, perhaps it was peculiar to a few, that
her independence and courage, like Cleopatra’s,
failed her occasionally at the last moment.
One curious impression which had often
haunted him now returned with redoubled force.
He could not see himself as the husband of Paula Power
in any likely future. He could not imagine her
his wife. People were apt to run into mistakes
in their presentiments; but though he could picture
her as queening it over him, as avowing her love for
him unreservedly, even as compromising herself for
him, he could not see her in a state of domesticity
with him.
Telegrams being commanded, to the
telegraph he repaired, when, after two days, an immediate
wish to communicate with her led him to dismiss vague
conjecture on the future situation. His first
telegram took the following form:
’I give up the letter writing.
I will part with anything to please you but yourself.
Your comfort with your relative is the first thing
to be considered: not for the world do I wish
you to make divisions within doors. Yours.’
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday passed,
and on Saturday a telegram came in reply:
’I can fear, grieve at, and
complain of nothing, having your nice promise to consider
my comfort always.’
This was very pretty; but it admitted
little. Such short messages were in themselves
poor substitutes for letters, but their speed and easy
frequency were good qualities which the letters did
not possess. Three days later he replied:
’You do not once say to me “Come.”
Would such a strange accident as my arrival disturb
you much?’
She replied rather quickly:
’I am indisposed to answer you
too clearly. Keep your heart strong: ’tis
a censorious world.’
The vagueness there shown made Somerset
peremptory, and he could not help replying somewhat
more impetuously than usual: ’Why
do you give me so much cause for anxiety! Why
treat me to so much mystification! Say once,
distinctly, that what I have asked is given.’
He awaited for the answer, one day,
two days, a week; but none came. It was now the
end of March, and when Somerset walked of an afternoon
by the river and pool in the lower part of the grounds,
his ear newly greeted by the small voices of frogs
and toads and other creatures who had been torpid
through the winter, he became doubtful and uneasy that
she alone should be silent in the awakening year.
He waited through a second week, and
there was still no reply. It was possible that
the urgency of his request had tempted her to punish
him, and he continued his walks, to, fro, and around,
with as close an ear to the undertones of nature,
and as attentive an eye to the charms of his own art,
as the grand passion would allow. Now came the
days of battle between winter and spring. On
these excursions, though spring was to the forward
during the daylight, winter would reassert itself at
night, and not unfrequently at other moments.
Tepid airs and nipping breezes met on the confines
of sunshine and shade; trembling raindrops that were
still akin to frost crystals dashed themselves from
the bushes as he pursued his way from town to castle;
the birds were like an orchestra waiting for the signal
to strike up, and colour began to enter into the country
round.
But he gave only a modicum of thought
to these proceedings. He rather thought such
things as, ’She can afford to be saucy, and to
find a source of blitheness in my love, considering
the power that wealth gives her to pick and choose
almost where she will.’ He was bound to
own, however, that one of the charms of her conversation
was the complete absence of the note of the heiress
from its accents. That, other things equal, her
interest would naturally incline to a person bearing
the name of De Stancy, was evident from her avowed
predilections. His original assumption, that
she was a personification of the modern spirit, who
had been dropped, like a seed from the bill of a bird,
into a chink of mediaevalism, required some qualification.
Romanticism, which will exist in every human breast
as long as human nature itself exists, had asserted
itself in her. Veneration for things old, not
because of any merit in them, but because of their
long continuance, had developed in her; and her modern
spirit was taking to itself wings and flying away.
Whether his image was flying with the other was a question
which moved him all the more deeply now that her silence
gave him dread of an affirmative answer.
For another seven days he stoically
left in suspension all forecasts of his possibly grim
fate in being the employed and not the beloved.
The week passed: he telegraphed: there was
no reply: he had sudden fears for her personal
safety and resolved to break her command by writing.
’Stancycastle, April 13.
’Dear Paula, Are
you ill or in trouble? It is impossible in the
very unquiet state you have put me into by your silence
that I should abstain from writing. Without affectation,
you sorely distress me, and I think you would hardly
have done it could you know what a degree of anxiety
you cause. Why, Paula, do you not write or send
to me? What have I done that you should treat
me like this? Do write, if it is only to reproach
me. I am compelled to pass the greater part of
the day in this castle, which reminds me constantly
of you, and yet eternally lacks your presence.
I am unfortunate indeed that you have not been able
to find half-an-hour during the last month to tell
me at least that you are alive.
’You have always been ambiguous,
it is true; but I thought I saw encouragement in your
eyes; encouragement certainly was in your eyes, and
who would not have been deluded by them and have believed
them sincere? Yet what tenderness can there be
in a heart that can cause me pain so wilfully!
’There may, of course, be some
deliberate scheming on the part of your relations
to intercept our letters; but I cannot think it.
I know that the housekeeper has received a letter
from your aunt this very week, in which she incidentally
mentions that all are well, and in the same place
as before. How then can I excuse you?
’Then write, Paula, or at least
telegraph, as you proposed. Otherwise I am resolved
to take your silence as a signal to treat your fair
words as wind, and to write to you no more.’
III.
He despatched the letter, and half-an-hour
afterwards felt sure that it would mortally offend
her. But he had now reached a state of temporary
indifference, and could contemplate the loss of such
a tantalizing property with reasonable calm.
In the interim of waiting for a reply
he was one day walking to Markton, when, passing Myrtle
Villa, he saw Sir William De Stancy ambling about
his garden-path and examining the crocuses that palisaded
its edge. Sir William saw him and asked him to
come in. Somerset was in the mood for any diversion
from his own affairs, and they seated themselves by
the drawing-room fire.
‘I am much alone now,’
said Sir William, ’and if the weather were not
very mild, so that I can get out into the garden every
day, I should feel it a great deal.’
‘You allude to your daughter’s absence?’
’And my son’s. Strange
to say, I do not miss her so much as I miss him.
She offers to return at any moment; but I do not wish
to deprive her of the advantages of a little foreign
travel with her friend. Always, Mr. Somerset,
give your spare time to foreign countries, especially
those which contrast with your own in topography,
language, and art. That’s my advice to
all young people of your age. Don’t waste
your money on expensive amusements at home. Practise
the strictest economy at home, to have a margin for
going abroad.’
Economy, which Sir William had never
practised, but to which, after exhausting all other
practices, he now raised an altar, as the Athenians
did to the unknown God, was a topic likely to prolong
itself on the baronet’s lips, and Somerset contrived
to interrupt him by asking
’Captain De Stancy, too, has
gone? Has the artillery, then, left the barracks?’
‘No,’ said Sir William.
’But my son has made use of his leave in running
over to see his sister at Nice.’
The current of quiet meditation in
Somerset changed to a busy whirl at this reply.
That Paula should become indifferent to his existence
from a sense of superiority, physical, spiritual,
or social, was a sufficiently ironical thing; but
that she should have relinquished him because of the
presence of a rival lent commonplace dreariness to
her cruelty.
Sir William, noting nothing, continued
in the tone of clever childishness which characterized
him: ’It is very singular how the present
situation has been led up to by me. Policy, and
policy alone, has been the rule of my conduct for
many years past; and when I say that I have saved
my family by it, I believe time will show that I am
within the truth. I hope you don’t let
your passions outrun your policy, as so many young
men are apt to do. Better be poor and politic,
than rich and headstrong: that’s the opinion
of an old man. However, I was going to say that
it was purely from policy that I allowed a friendship
to develop between my daughter and Miss Power, and
now events are proving the wisdom of my course.
Straws show how the wind blows, and there are little
signs that my son Captain De Stancy will return to
Stancy Castle by the fortunate step of marrying its
owner. I say nothing to either of them, and they
say nothing to me; but my wisdom lies in doing nothing
to hinder such a consummation, despite inherited prejudices.’
Somerset had quite time enough to
rein himself in during the old gentleman’s locution,
and the voice in which he answered was so cold and
reckless that it did not seem his own: ’But
how will they live happily together when she is a
Dissenter, and a Radical, and a New-light, and a Neo-Greek,
and a person of red blood; while Captain De Stancy
is the reverse of them all!’
‘I anticipate no difficulty
on that score,’ said the baronet. ’My
son’s star lies in that direction, and, like
the Magi, he is following it without trifling with
his opportunity. You have skill in architecture,
therefore you follow it. My son has skill in gallantry,
and now he is about to exercise it profitably.’
‘May nobody wish him more harm
in that exercise than I do!’ said Somerset fervently.
A stagnant moodiness of several hours
which followed his visit to Myrtle Villa resulted
in a resolve to journey over to Paula the very next
day. He now felt perfectly convinced that the
inviting of Captain De Stancy to visit them at Nice
was a second stage in the scheme of Paula’s uncle,
the premature announcement of her marriage having been
the first. The roundness and neatness of the
whole plan could not fail to recommend it to the mind
which delighted in putting involved things straight,
and such a mind Abner Power’s seemed to be.
In fact, the felicity, in a politic sense, of pairing
the captain with the heiress furnished no little excuse
for manoeuvring to bring it about, so long as that
manoeuvring fell short of unfairness, which Mr. Power’s
could scarcely be said to do.
The next day was spent in furnishing
the builders with such instructions as they might
require for a coming week or ten days, and in dropping
a short note to Paula; ending as follows:
’I am coming to see you.
Possibly you will refuse me an interview. Never
mind, I am coming Yours, G. Somerset.’
The morning after that he was up and
away. Between him and Paula stretched nine hundred
miles by the line of journey that he found it necessary
to adopt, namely, the way of London, in order to inform
his father of his movements and to make one or two
business calls. The afternoon was passed in attending
to these matters, the night in speeding onward, and
by the time that nine o’clock sounded next morning
through the sunless and leaden air of the English Channel
coasts, he had reduced the number of miles on his
list by two hundred, and cut off the sea from the
impediments between him and Paula.
On awakening from a fitful sleep in
the grey dawn of the morning following he looked out
upon Lyons, quiet enough now, the citizens unaroused
to the daily round of bread-winning, and enveloped
in a haze of fog.
Six hundred and fifty miles of his
journey had been got over; there still intervened
two hundred and fifty between him and the end of suspense.
When he thought of that he was disinclined to pause;
and pressed on by the same train, which set him down
at Marseilles at mid-day.
Here he considered. By going
on to Nice that afternoon he would arrive at too late
an hour to call upon her the same evening: it
would therefore be advisable to sleep in Marseilles
and proceed the next morning to his journey’s
end, so as to meet her in a brighter condition than
he could boast of to-day. This he accordingly
did, and leaving Marseilles the next morning about
eight, found himself at Nice early in the afternoon.
Now that he was actually at the centre
of his gravitation he seemed even further away from
a feasible meeting with her than in England. While
afar off, his presence at Nice had appeared to be the
one thing needful for the solution of his trouble,
but the very house fronts seemed now to ask him what
right he had there. Unluckily, in writing from
England, he had not allowed her time to reply before
his departure, so that he did not know what difficulties
might lie in the way of her seeing him privately.
Before deciding what to do, he walked down the Avenue
de la Gare to the promenade between
the shore and the Jardin Public, and sat down to think.
The hotel which she had given him
as her address looked right out upon him and the sea
beyond, and he rested there with the pleasing hope
that her eyes might glance from a window and discover
his form. Everything in the scene was sunny and
gay. Behind him in the gardens a band was playing;
before him was the sea, the Great sea, the historical
and original Mediterranean; the sea of innumerable
characters in history and legend that arranged themselves
before him in a long frieze of memories so diverse
as to include both AEneas and St. Paul.
Northern eyes are not prepared on
a sudden for the impact of such images of warmth and
colour as meet them southward, or for the vigorous
light that falls from the sky of this favoured shore.
In any other circumstances the transparency and serenity
of the air, the perfume of the sea, the radiant houses,
the palms and flowers, would have acted upon Somerset
as an enchantment, and wrapped him in a reverie; but
at present he only saw and felt these things as through
a thick glass which kept out half their atmosphere.
At last he made up his mind.
He would take up his quarters at her hotel, and catch
echoes of her and her people, to learn somehow if their
attitude towards him as a lover were actually hostile,
before formally encountering them. Under this
crystalline light, full of gaieties, sentiment, languor,
seductiveness, and ready-made romance, the memory of
a solitary unimportant man in the lugubrious North
might have faded from her mind. He was only her
hired designer. He was an artist; but he had
been engaged by her, and was not a volunteer; and she
did not as yet know that he meant to accept no return
for his labours but the pleasure of presenting them
to her as a love-offering.
So off he went at once towards the
imposing building whither his letters had preceded
him. Owing to a press of visitors there was a
moment’s delay before he could be attended to
at the bureau, and he turned to the large staircase
that confronted him, momentarily hoping that her figure
might descend. Her skirts must indeed have brushed
the carpeting of those steps scores of times.
He engaged his room, ordered his luggage to be sent
for, and finally inquired for the party he sought.
‘They left Nice yesterday, monsieur,’
replied madame.
Was she quite sure, Somerset asked her?
Yes, she was quite sure. Two
of the hotel carriages had driven them to the station.
Did she know where they had gone to?
This and other inquiries resulted
in the information that they had gone to the hotel
at Monte Carlo; that how long they were going to stay
there, and whether they were coming back again, was
not known. His final question whether Miss Power
had received a letter from England which must have
arrived the day previous was answered in the affirmative.
Somerset’s first and sudden
resolve was to follow on after them to the hotel named;
but he finally decided to make his immediate visit
to Monte Carlo only a cautious reconnoitre, returning
to Nice to sleep.
Accordingly, after an early dinner,
he again set forth through the broad Avenue de
la Gare, and an hour on the coast railway
brought him to the beautiful and sinister little spot
to which the Power and De Stancy party had strayed
in common with the rest of the frivolous throng.
He assumed that their visit thither
would be chiefly one of curiosity, and therefore not
prolonged. This proved to be the case in even
greater measure than he had anticipated. On inquiry
at the hotel he learnt that they had stayed only one
night, leaving a short time before his arrival, though
it was believed that some of the party were still in
the town.
In a state of indecision Somerset
strolled into the gardens of the Casino, and looked
out upon the sea. There it still lay, calm yet
lively; of an unmixed blue, yet variegated; hushed,
but articulate even to melodiousness. Everything
about and around this coast appeared indeed jaunty,
tuneful, and at ease, reciprocating with heartiness
the rays of the splendid sun; everything, except himself.
The palms and flowers on the terraces before him were
undisturbed by a single cold breath. The marble
work of parapets and steps was unsplintered by frosts.
The whole was like a conservatory with the sky for
its dome.
For want of other occupation he went
round towards the public entrance to the Casino, and
ascended the great staircase into the pillared hall.
It was possible, after all, that upon leaving the hotel
and sending on their luggage they had taken another
turn through the rooms, to follow by a later train.
With more than curiosity he scanned first the reading-rooms,
only however to see not a face that he knew. He
then crossed the vestibule to the gaming-tables.
IV.
Here he was confronted by a heated
phantasmagoria of splendour and a high pressure of
suspense that seemed to make the air quiver. A
low whisper of conversation prevailed, which might
probably have been not wrongly defined as the lowest
note of social harmony.
The people gathered at this negative
pole of industry had come from all civilized countries;
their tongues were familiar with many forms of utterance,
that of each racial group or type being unintelligible
in its subtler variations, if not entirely, to the
rest. But the language of meum and tuum
they collectively comprehended without translation.
In a half-charmed spell-bound state they had congregated
in knots, standing, or sitting in hollow circles round
the notorious oval tables marked with figures and
lines. The eyes of all these sets of people were
watching the Roulette. Somerset went from table
to table, looking among the loungers rather than among
the regular players, for faces, or at least for one
face, which did not meet his gaze.
The suggestive charm which the centuries-old
impersonality Gaming, rather than games and gamesters,
had for Somerset, led him to loiter on even when his
hope of meeting any of the Power and De Stancy party
had vanished. As a non-participant in its profits
and losses, fevers and frenzies, it had that stage
effect upon his imagination which is usually exercised
over those who behold Chance presented to them with
spectacular piquancy without advancing far enough in
its acquaintance to suffer from its ghastly reprisals
and impish tricks. He beheld a hundred diametrically
opposed wishes issuing from the murky intelligences
around a table, and spreading down across each other
upon the figured diagram in their midst, each to its
own number. It was a network of hopes; which
at the announcement, ‘Sept, Rouge, Impair, et
Manque,’ disappeared like magic gossamer, to
be replaced in a moment by new. That all the people
there, including himself, could be interested in what
to the eye of perfect reason was a somewhat monotonous
thing the property of numbers to recur
at certain longer or shorter intervals in a machine
containing them in other words, the blind
groping after fractions of a result the whole of which
was well known was one testimony among many
of the powerlessness of logic when confronted with
imagination.
At this juncture our lounger discerned
at one of the tables about the last person in the
world he could have wished to encounter there.
It was Dare, whom he had supposed to be a thousand
miles off, hanging about the purlieus of Markton.
Dare was seated beside a table in
an attitude of application which seemed to imply that
he had come early and engaged in this pursuit in a
systematic manner. Somerset had never witnessed
Dare and De Stancy together, neither had he heard
of any engagement of Dare by the travelling party
as artist, courier, or otherwise; and yet it crossed
his mind that Dare might have had something to do with
them, or at least have seen them. This possibility
was enough to overmaster Somerset’s reluctance
to speak to the young man, and he did so as soon as
an opportunity occurred.
Dare’s face was as rigid and
dry as if it had been encrusted with plaster, and
he was like one turned into a computing machine which
no longer had the power of feeling. He recognized
Somerset as indifferently as if he had met him in
the ward of Stancy Castle, and replying to his remarks
by a word or two, concentrated on the game anew.
‘Are you here alone?’ said Somerset presently.
‘Quite alone.’ There
was a silence, till Dare added, ’But I have seen
some friends of yours.’ He again became
absorbed in the events of the table. Somerset
retreated a few steps, and pondered the question whether
Dare could know where they had gone. He disliked
to be beholden to Dare for information, but he would
give a great deal to know. While pausing he watched
Dare’s play. He staked only five-franc pieces,
but it was done with an assiduity worthy of larger
coin. At every half-minute or so he placed his
money on a certain spot, and as regularly had the
mortification of seeing it swept away by the croupier’s
rake. After a while he varied his procedure.
He risked his money, which from the look of his face
seemed rather to have dwindled than increased, less
recklessly against long odds than before. Leaving
off backing numbers en plein, he laid his venture
a cheval; then tried it upon the dozens; then
upon two numbers; then upon a square; and, apparently
getting nearer and nearer defeat, at last upon the
simple chances of even or odd, over or under, red
or black. Yet with a few fluctuations in his favour
fortune bore steadily against him, till he could breast
her blows no longer. He rose from the table and
came towards Somerset, and they both moved on together
into the entrance-hall.
Dare was at that moment the victim
of an overpowering mania for more money. His
presence in the South of Europe had its origin, as
may be guessed, in Captain De Stancy’s journey
in the same direction, whom he had followed, and troubled
with persistent request for more funds, carefully
keeping out of sight of Paula and the rest. His
dream of involving Paula in the De Stancy pedigree
knew no abatement. But Somerset had lighted upon
him at an instant when that idea, though not displaced,
was overwhelmed by a rage for play. In hope of
being able to continue it by Somerset’s aid
he was prepared to do almost anything to please the
architect.
‘You asked me,’ said Dare,
stroking his impassive brow, ’if I had seen
anything of the Powers. I have seen them; and
if I can be of any use to you in giving information
about them I shall only be too glad.’
‘What information can you give?’
‘I can tell you where they are gone to.’
‘Where?’
‘To the Grand Hotel, Genoa. They went on
there this afternoon.’
‘Whom do you refer to by they?’
’Mrs. Goodman, Mr. Power, Miss
Power, Miss De Stancy, and the worthy captain.
He leaves them tomorrow: he comes back here for
a day on his way to England.’
Somerset was silent. Dare continued:
’Now I have done you a favour, will you do me
one in return?’
Somerset looked towards the gaming-rooms, and said
dubiously, ‘Well?’
‘Lend me two hundred francs.’
‘Yes,’ said Somerset;
’but on one condition: that I don’t
give them to you till you are inside the hotel you
are staying at.’
‘That can’t be; it’s at Nice.’
’Well I am going back to Nice,
and I’ll lend you the money the instant we get
there.’
‘But I want it here, now, instantly!’
cried Dare; and for the first time there was a wiry
unreasonableness in his voice that fortified his companion
more firmly than ever in his determination to lend
the young man no money whilst he remained inside that
building.
‘You want it to throw it away.
I don’t approve of it; so come with me.’
‘But,’ said Dare, ’I
arrived here with a hundred napoleons and more,
expressly to work out my theory of chances and recurrences,
which is sound; I have studied it hundreds of times
by the help of this.’ He partially drew
from his pocket the little volume that we have before
seen in his hands. ’If I only persevere
in my system, the certainty that I must win is almost
mathematical. I have staked and lost two hundred
and thirty-three times. Allowing out of that one
chance in every thirty-six, which is the average of
zero being marked, and two hundred and four times
for the backers of the other numbers, I have the mathematical
expectation of six times at least, which would nearly
recoup me. And shall I, then, sacrifice that vast
foundation of waste chances that I have laid down,
and paid for, merely for want of a little ready money?’
’You might persevere for a twelvemonth,
and still not get the better of your reverses.
Time tells in favour of the bank. Just imagine
for the sake of argument that all the people who have
ever placed a stake upon a certain number to be one
person playing continuously. Has that imaginary
person won? The existence of the bank is a sufficient
answer.’
’But a particular player has
the option of leaving off at any point favourable
to himself, which the bank has not; and there’s
my opportunity.’
‘Which from your mood you will
be sure not to take advantage of.’
‘I shall go on playing,’ said Dare doggedly.
‘Not with my money.’
‘Very well; we won’t part
as enemies,’ replied Dare, with the flawless
politeness of a man whose speech has no longer any
kinship with his feelings. ’Shall we share
a bottle of wine? You will not? Well, I hope
your luck with your lady will be more magnificent than
mine has been here; but mind Captain De
Stancy! he’s a fearful wildfowl for you.’
’He’s a harmless inoffensive
soldier, as far as I know. If he is not let
him be what he may for me.’
‘And do his worst to cut you out, I suppose?’
‘Ay if you will.’
Somerset, much against his judgment, was being stimulated
by these pricks into words of irritation. ’Captain
De Stancy might, I think, be better employed than
in dangling at the heels of a lady who can well dispense
with his company. And you might be better employed
than in wasting your wages here.’
’Wages a fit word
for my money. May I ask you at what stage in the
appearance of a man whose way of existence is unknown,
his money ceases to be called wages and begins to
be called means?’
Somerset turned and left him without
replying, Dare following his receding figure with
a look of ripe resentment, not less likely to vent
itself in mischief from the want of moral ballast in
him who emitted it. He then fixed a nettled and
unsatisfied gaze upon the gaming-rooms, and in another
minute or two left the Casino also.
Dare and Somerset met no more that
day. The latter returned to Nice by the evening
train and went straight to the hotel. He now thanked
his fortune that he had not precipitately given up
his room there, for a telegram from Paula awaited
him. His hand almost trembled as he opened it,
to read the following few short words, dated from the
Grand Hotel, Genoa:
’Letter received. Am glad
to hear of your journey. We are not returning
to Nice, but stay here a week. I direct this at
a venture.’
This tantalizing message the
first breaking of her recent silence was
saucy, almost cruel, in its dry frigidity. It
led him to give up his idea of following at once to
Genoa. That was what she obviously expected him
to do, and it was possible that his non-arrival might
draw a letter or message from her of a sweeter composition
than this. That would at least be the effect
of his tardiness if she cared in the least for him;
if she did not he could bear the worst. The argument
was good enough as far as it went, but, like many
more, failed from the narrowness of its premises,
the contingent intervention of Dare being entirely
undreamt of. It was altogether a fatal miscalculation,
which cost him dear.
Passing by the telegraph-office in
the Rue Pont-Neuf at an early hour the next morning
he saw Dare coming out from the door. It was Somerset’s
momentary impulse to thank Dare for the information
given as to Paula’s whereabouts, information
which had now proved true. But Dare did not seem
to appreciate his friendliness, and after a few words
of studied civility the young man moved on.
And well he might. Five minutes
before that time he had thrown open a gulf of treachery
between himself and the architect which nothing in
life could ever close. Before leaving the telegraph-office
Dare had despatched the following message to Paula
direct, as a set-off against what he called Somerset’s
ingratitude for valuable information, though it was
really the fruit of many passions, motives, and desires:
’G. Somerset, Nice, to Miss Power, Grand
Hotel, Genoa.
’Have lost all at Monte Carlo.
Have learnt that Captain D. S. returns here to-morrow.
Please send me one hundred pounds by him, and save
me from disgrace. Will await him at eleven o’clock
and four, on the Pont-Neuf.’
V.
Five hours after the despatch of that
telegram Captain De Stancy was rattling along the
coast railway of the Riviera from Genoa to Nice.
He was returning to England by way of Marseilles; but
before turning northwards he had engaged to perform
on Miss Power’s account a peculiar and somewhat
disagreeable duty. This was to place in Somerset’s
hands a hundred and twenty-five napoleons which
had been demanded from her by a message in Somerset’s
name. The money was in his pocket all
in gold, in a canvas bag, tied up by Paula’s
own hands, which he had observed to tremble as she
tied it.
As he leaned in the corner of the
carriage he was thinking over the events of the morning
which had culminated in that liberal response.
At ten o’clock, before he had gone out from
the hotel where he had taken up his quarters, which
was not the same as the one patronized by Paula and
her friends, he had been summoned to her presence in
a manner so unexpected as to imply that something
serious was in question. On entering her room
he had been struck by the absence of that saucy independence
usually apparent in her bearing towards him, notwithstanding
the persistency with which he had hovered near her
for the previous month, and gradually, by the position
of his sister, and the favour of Paula’s uncle
in intercepting one of Somerset’s letters and
several of his telegrams, established himself as an
intimate member of the travelling party. His
entry, however, this time as always, had had the effect
of a tonic, and it was quite with her customary self-possession
that she had told him of the object of her message.
‘You think of returning to Nice
this afternoon?’ she inquired.
De Stancy informed her that such was
his intention, and asked if he could do anything for
her there.
Then, he remembered, she had hesitated.
‘I have received a telegram,’ she said
at length; and so she allowed to escape her bit by
bit the information that her architect, whose name
she seemed reluctant to utter, had travelled from
England to Nice that week, partly to consult her,
partly for a holiday trip; that he had gone on to Monte
Carlo, had there lost his money and got into difficulties,
and had appealed to her to help him out of them by
the immediate advance of some ready cash. It
was a sad case, an unexpected case, she murmured, with
her eyes fixed on the window. Indeed she could
not comprehend it.
To De Stancy there appeared nothing
so very extraordinary in Somerset’s apparent
fiasco, except in so far as that he should have applied
to Paula for relief from his distresses instead of
elsewhere. It was a self-humiliation which a
lover would have avoided at all costs, he thought.
Yet after a momentary reflection on his theory of Somerset’s
character, it seemed sufficiently natural that he should
lean persistently on Paula, if only with a view of
keeping himself linked to her memory, without thinking
too profoundly of his own dignity. That the esteem
in which she had held Somerset up to that hour suffered
a tremendous blow by his apparent scrape was clearly
visible in her, reticent as she was; and De Stancy,
while pitying Somerset, thanked him in his mind for
having gratuitously given a rival an advantage which
that rival’s attentions had never been able to
gain of themselves.
After a little further conversation
she had said: ’Since you are to be my messenger,
I must tell you that I have decided to send the hundred
pounds asked for, and you will please to deliver them
into no hands but his own.’ A curious little
blush crept over her sobered face perhaps
it was a blush of shame at the conduct of the young
man in whom she had of late been suspiciously interested as
she added, ’He will be on the Pont-Neuf
at four this afternoon and again at eleven tomorrow.
Can you meet him there?’
‘Certainly,’ De Stancy replied.
She then asked him, rather anxiously,
how he could account for Mr. Somerset knowing that
he, Captain De Stancy, was about to return to Nice?
De Stancy informed her that he left
word at the hotel of his intention to return, which
was quite true; moreover, there did not lurk in his
mind at the moment of speaking the faintest suspicion
that Somerset had seen Dare.
She then tied the bag and handed it
to him, leaving him with a serene and impenetrable
bearing, which he hoped for his own sake meant an
acquired indifference to Somerset and his fortunes.
Her sending the architect a sum of money which she
could easily spare might be set down to natural generosity
towards a man with whom she was artistically co-operating
for the improvement of her home.
She came back to him again for a moment.
’Could you possibly get there before four this
afternoon?’ she asked, and he informed her that
he could just do so by leaving almost at once, which
he was very willing to do, though by so forestalling
his time he would lose the projected morning with
her and the rest at the Palazzo Doria.
’I may tell you that I shall
not go to the Palazzo Doria either, if it is any consolation
to you to know it,’ was her reply. ’I
shall sit indoors and think of you on your journey.’
The answer admitted of two translations,
and conjectures thereon filled the gallant soldier’s
mind during the greater part of the journey. He
arrived at the hotel they had all stayed at in succession
about six hours after Somerset had left it for a little
excursion to San Remo and its neighbourhood, as a
means of passing a few days till Paula should write
again to inquire why he had not come on. De Stancy
saw no one he knew, and in obedience to Paula’s
commands he promptly set off on foot for the Pont-Neuf.
Though opposed to the architect as
a lover, De Stancy felt for him as a poor devil in
need of money, having had experiences of that sort
himself, and he was really anxious that the needful
supply entrusted to him should reach Somerset’s
hands. He was on the bridge five minutes before
the hour, and when the clock struck a hand was laid
on his shoulder: turning he beheld Dare.
Knowing that the youth was loitering
somewhere along the coast, for they had frequently
met together on De Stancy’s previous visit, the
latter merely said, ’Don’t bother me for
the present, Willy, I have an engagement. You
can see me at the hotel this evening.’
’When you have given me the
hundred pounds I will fly like a rocket, captain,’
said the young gentleman. ’I keep the appointment
instead of the other man.’
De Stancy looked hard at him.
‘How do you know about this?’
he asked breathlessly.
‘I have seen him.’
De Stancy took the young man by the
two shoulders and gazed into his eyes. The scrutiny
seemed not altogether to remove the suspicion which
had suddenly started up in his mind. ‘My
soul,’ he said, dropping his arms, ‘can
this be true?’
‘What?’
‘You know.’
Dare shrugged his shoulders; ’Are
you going to hand over the money or no?’ he
said.
‘I am going to make inquiries,’
said De Stancy, walking away with a vehement tread.
‘Captain, you are without natural
affection,’ said Dare, walking by his side,
in a tone which showed his fear that he had over-estimated
that emotion. ’See what I have done for
you. You have been my constant care and anxiety
for I can’t tell how long. I have stayed
awake at night thinking how I might best give you
a good start in the world by arranging this judicious
marriage, when you have been sleeping as sound as
a top with no cares upon your mind at all, and now
I have got into a scrape as the most thoughtful
of us may sometimes you go to make inquiries.’
’I have promised the lady to
whom this money belongs whose generosity
has been shamefully abused in some way that
I will deliver it into no hands but those of one man,
and he has not yet appeared. I therefore go to
find him.’
Dare laid his hand upon De Stancy’s
arm. ’Captain, we are both warm, and punctilious
on points of honour; this will come to a split between
us if we don’t mind. So, not to bring matters
to a crisis, lend me ten pounds here to enable me
to get home, and I’ll disappear.’
In a state bordering on distraction,
eager to get the young man out of his sight before
worse revelations should rise up between them, De
Stancy without pausing in his walk gave him the sum
demanded. He soon reached the post-office, where
he inquired if a Mr. Somerset had left any directions
for forwarding letters.
It was just what Somerset had done.
De Stancy was told that Mr. Somerset had commanded
that any letters should be sent on to him at the Hotel
Victoria, San Remo.
It was now evident that the scheme
of getting money from Paula was either of Dare’s
invention, or that Somerset, ashamed of his first
impulse, had abandoned it as speedily as it had been
formed. De Stancy turned and went out. Dare,
in keeping with his promise, had vanished. Captain
De Stancy resolved to do nothing in the case till further
events should enlighten him, beyond sending a line
to Miss Power to inform her that Somerset had not
appeared, and that he therefore retained the money
for further instructions.