A FURTHER NOTE FROM REY
“I had a long mental work-out
this morning in the room before breakfast,”
she began. “I even thought about what brings
you here, and about my long talk with the Glow-worm
last night, which I’ll get to if
you are a very interested listener. After breakfast,
I walked for an hour in the grounds. Have you
been over to the Inlet, where Senor Rey’s beautiful
sailing-yacht lies the Savonarola?”
“I’ve seen it from the road,” Bedient
answered.
“A stairway goes down from the
bluff under the road, a hundred steps or more to the
water of the cove. In fact, the tall spars of
the Savonarola aren’t nearly so high
as the level of the bluff. I love a sailing-ship,
and on the way back I met Senor Rey in his wheel-chair,
and told him how the wonderful little harbor and his
thorough-bred, lying there, had appealed to me.
He inclined his head benignly. His yacht, I said,
had the effective lines of her namesake’s profile and
that pleased him. Followed, a technical discussion
of different sailing-ships that once swept the waters
of the world, I furnishing enthusiasm and a text-book
inquiry now and then. This brought not only an
invitation to sail within a few days, but also an invitation
to a private dinner this evening in the Flamingo Room,
’with Senora Rey and a few most cherished guests.’
And I must not forget the Senor
informed me that his wife was very fond of me....
“I observed that the ‘Flamingo
Room’ had a most enticing sound. He hoped
I would find it so; said the idea was his own, and
that, to him, the tint of a flamingo feather was the
fairest of all tints save one, to be found
in the cheeks of an American girl. I answered
that it was very clear to me now whose sense of beauty
had made The Pleiad and its gardens the rarest
delight of my travels.”
Miss Mallory regarded Bedient’s
amusement appreciatively for a moment, and went on
swiftly:
“Then I walked beside his wheel-chair
through the shadowy, scented paths, and presently
I mentioned you and Colonel Rizzio among the interesting
people I had met. He declared you were a true
gentleman spoke feelingly a stranger
at The Pleiad, though not to the Island.
I explained how you had kept aloof on the ship coming
down, how you seemed to be the prey of some devouring
grief.... All that I said, he regarded with that
terribly bright attention of his. It made me
think of a pack of hounds tossing and tearing at a
morsel, the way his faculties caught my sentences,
hounds playing a hare at the end of a run. Oh,
devious and winding are the ways of the Spaniard and
past finding out! But I frankly confessed my
interest in you, and that you were absolutely self-contained;
indeed, it was because of that I appealed to him.
I am sure he found that my sayings balanced in the
most sensitive scales of his mind; and decided I was
too young to be artistic with the fine tools of untruth.
“Finally, I asked about war,
told him the New York papers predicted another war
in Equatoria, and that I had never seen one. The
Senor declared he was very sorry if my trip to Equatoria
proved a disappointment in any way, but he didn’t
see what there was to fight about; that no one deplored
so much as he the recent attempt upon the life of
Dictator Jaffier; and as for himself, he was identified
with all the interests of Equatoria, which were moving
forward exceedingly well.... Altogether it was
an absorbing half-hour.”
“And now I must tell you about
Senora Key,” Miss Mallory continued hurriedly,
since they could not be seen talking together long....
“She asked me to come to her rooms, and I followed
a servant. I couldn’t find the place now
alone. A small room in orange lamplight!
The Glow-worm was lying upon a tiger-rug; very tall
and silken she looked, and her great yellow eyes settled
upon me. It seemed to me that her emotions had
no outlet, but turned back to rend and devour each
other. I couldn’t help thinking that first
moment, that some one must pay a big price for making
her suffer. Queer, wasn’t it? And pitiful how
she seemed to need me. It is true, she trusted
me from the beginning, seemed dying to leap into some
one’s heart. And she told me her story
in whispered fragments heart-hunger, hatred,
and mystery these fragments. I’ve
really been challenged to build a character out of
her, and since I thought about her half the night,
I ought to be able to make you see and feel her story.
I wonder if I can? It came to me something like
this:
“There had been a night ah,
long ago in which Senor Rey summoned her
from her companions. It was in a house in Buenos
Aires. The Senor had come to that house before.
The Senor was always feared. He was always obeyed.
She, nor any of her companions, could taste
the wine he bought for them. It did not make them laugh like other wine. Oh,
yes, they drank it, but they could not taste the flavor with him in the room!...
On this night the Senor had bade her come with him. She could not answer, but
obey only. She remembered how hushed her companions became when she went away
with the Senor; how strangely they had looked at her what helpless sorrow was in
their eyes.... Even now she could see the faces of her companions gathered
about; the Senor smiling at the door; his carriage with black, restless ponies
and shining lights; the driver upon his seat, like to whom she quickly became
never answering the Senor, and always obeying!... Ah, yes, there had been a hush
in her house as she left it, laughter in all the other houses about; and away
they had driven, past the last of the lights
“Such was the tale, whispered,
overlapped with repetitions, a succession of touches
like that, done lightly but with a passion oh,
you should have been there to understand! The
meaning of a wild, sad life was in them. And
her big yellow eyes were hungry upon me. I seemed
to see the vast South American town, as old as Europe
in sin and as new as Wyoming in heart.”
“You make me see it all,” Bedient said.
“Can you understand that the
Glow-worm is expiring to get back to that old mad
life?” Miss Mallory asked.
“Yes, from what you tell me of her.”
“It is true, only it must be
so he cannot follow.... It must be as it
was before he came when she could taste
and feel and see as it was before the chill
settled down upon her senses, before the shuddering
began. That’s how she expresses it....
She overpowered me a little at first. I was slow
to realize how one’s intents and sensations could
be absolutely physical. I could pity, but there
was something actually creepy about her. I was
inane enough to ask if she could not return for a
visit. She sank back and shut her eyes and clenched
her hands, saying:
“’When he is dead or when
he is tired of me, I shall go back not for
a visit, but to stay! He would not let
me go for a visit, and I could not oh,
I wouldn’t dare to run from him! Always
I’d think him after me. There would be
no sleep for me. I’d think him after me you
know how it is in a dream, when you are like a ghost all
limp in the limbs, but trying to run! It would
be like that, if I fled from him always
expecting him to clutch me from behind!... My
God, if he would only make me mad! But he won’t he
won’t!’
“‘What do you mean?’ I asked.
“‘I mean,’ the Glow-worm
whispered, drawing my head down to hers, ’I
mean I would kill him. Oh, he’s all but
dead! I could kill him with my hands, if he would
fill me with rage, so I could forget his eyes.
He is all alive in his eyes!... But it shall
never be. He will say do this and
come and go and rest and rise, and do that and
I shall obey like the Chinese.... Oh, tell me
what you would do, if the Senor said to you, looking
right into your skull, ‘Come with me to-night!’”
“I told her I should laugh at
the Senor, and suggest possibly that he had drunk
too much wine. She seemed unable to comprehend,
and repeated, ‘If he should look right into
your skull, could you say that?’ I assured her
I could, and she tried to believe, but she concluded
that I only thought I could be that strong.
“Then she told me it had been
months since she talked to anyone without being afraid;
that she felt at once it would be safe to talk with
me; that so much she wanted to tell had been shut
up like a swelling in her throat ’ah,
God, so long!’... ’And then you would
say with a laugh as you tell me,’
the Senora went on, as if memorizing my method.
Her lips mumbled and trailed the words, so deep was
the effort of her mind. ’You would say,
“Senor Rey, you have drunk too much wine!”
and he would answer with a laugh, too, “It is
true, no doubt, as you say. I am an old and a
very foolish man, my dear Senorita Mallory!”
and you would smile and think of it no more.’
The Glow-worm laughed in a lost, mirthless way, and
held me tightly as she finished, ’But that very
night, just the same, you would find yourself with
him! And he would laugh at you then and say,
coming closer, “Forgive an old and foolish man."’
“I was startled at the way she
said it,” Miss Mallory concluded. “’You
mean he would have me anyway?’ I said....
‘Yes,’ the Glow-worm replied wearily.
’My lord gets what he desires all
but his youth he cannot get that and
his fear of hell he cannot get rid of that!
And he is afraid to die!’ She spoke the last
triumphantly, as if it were the only happy thing she
could think of.... That was last night and
that is all.... To-morrow evening join me in
the lobby a little before eight.... Here comes
the servant and we must talk about orchids until
I finish this sherbet
The following evening Bedient met
Miss Mallory in the main hall, and exceeding cleverness
was required to impart her information, as they moved
together among the crowd.
“The handsome man is here.
I saw him last night,” she said, without the
faintest trace of excitement. “I am beginning
to share some of the Glow-worm’s fear of Senor
Rey. It’s all tremendously thrilling.
The place is a mine of terrors all the
worse for this beautiful setting and the gardens....
The Sorensons are the horrible Russian pair. I
met them at dinner in the Flamingo Room, and after
listening to the Senora, the courtesies of the Spaniard
were like so many cold shuddery waves of dread.
Again last night, after the dinner, the Glow-worm drew
me into her boudoir and poured into my ears months
of accumulated toxins of hate and fear
“I’m sorry they have frightened
you,” Bedient said. “Your kindness
to me
“Oh, I’m not really afraid,”
she said hastily. “It’s all very
wonderful. The Senora repays me with a most devoted
attention services of her own hand, and
not a little sweet and endearing in their way....
Presently she asked me if I had met the imposing Senor
Framtree. Of course I had not. She said
he had been here for many weeks, but she had only
met him a few times always with the Senor....
’He is the sort of man I am not allowed to meet
alone,’ she said languidly, her eyelids drawn
against the yellow light. ‘But I have no
choice no choice here,’ she went
on, ‘though I feel sorry for him.’
“I asked why, and she said he
was alone in a strange country, and that it was dreadful
to be young and alone in a strange country.
Plainly she had something more to say, so I told her
to speak what was in her mind. The substance
was that Mr. Framtree had lasted much longer than
most, therefore he must be a very great artist with
the cards. Many men had come with fortunes to
The Pleiad, and most of them were ready to
gamble with her lord, who invariably got their money
in the end. It was not only the money, but he
had a vast pride in his mastery, and in the house
he had built. It was not possible for him to continue
to lose any length of time. Then Senora Rey informed
me that the two were together now, and if she dared,
she could show me some things about her lord’s
house.
“I begged her to, though fearfully,
you may believe. She said it was risking murder
if we were caught, but I saw she wanted to show me.
Also, I thought of many things, and it looked important for
one in my capacity not to miss. So I asked again....
’You see, I can refuse you nothing,’ she
said. ’I love you for coming to me.
I am a woman again even young and glad.
Before you came, I was a snake crushed at midday that
could not die until the dark.’
“I think the adventure really
fascinated her, because she hates the Senor so.
Anyway, I followed through several inner rooms of oppressive
magnificence which the Spaniard reserves for his own
use. Then we entered a corridor. No lock
could be seen, but the Senora touched the panel in
a certain way. It closed of itself as we entered,
with the sound of a lock indeed a heavy,
oiled, smooth-running click, but very soft. I
hated to hear it behind. The corridor was narrow
and dim. It was high, but the thickly shaded
lamps were far apart and close to the rugs, so that
one’s shoes were lit, but faces hardly recognizable.
Low voices mingled in a bewildering complication throughout
the corridor. There was a sliding ladder with
carpeted steps, which could be pushed noiselessly
along one wall. An arrangement like it is used
in libraries to reach the upper shelves. The
Glow-worm was trembling, and squeezed my hand repeatedly
to insure silence, and slid the ladder along nearly
to the end. I could hear her quick, frightened
breathing. The thing was locked by some unseen
turn of the Senora’s finger, and I was directed
to climb. Up three steps, and I saw light through
the wall on the level of my eyes. Closer, it
appeared that only a dark gauze almost transparent
hung between me and another room. The gauze covered
a slit plenty large enough to look through.
“Senor Rey and the handsome
man were facing each other in a dull green room.
The latter’s back was toward me, and a table
was between them, but they were not at cards.
The young man’s profile was half-turned so I
could see, and he moved restlessly in his chair.
He lit a cigarette as I stood there, and the Senor
observed that it was sad to be old. You could
hear their words, as clearly as you hear mine.
The Framtree gentleman laughed softly. He has
a manner, I confess. He declared that he didn’t
believe there was ever a time when the Senor could
have solved the problem at hand.
“The Glow-worm was pulling at
my skirts to come down, but I listened a moment longer.
The Senor said he must have done Dictator Jaffier an
injustice all these years in considering him the stupidest
of men. The other replied that ‘four nights
more’ would tell the story; that it was irksome
to wait even that long. I had to leave, for the
Senora was becoming frenzied, but I caught one more
remark from Senor Rey, as mysterious as the rest.
‘But he’ll be gone before that,’
he said.”
“What an astonishing bit of work!” Bedient
exclaimed.
“We reached the quarters from
which we came the orange lamplight room in
safety, but the Glow-worm’s face was livid with
fear. I suppose mine was, too. She said
the whole house was so arranged.... I told her
they were not playing cards, and something of what
I had heard. The Glow-worm was sure they were
talking about ’a young man, known to be one
of the mainstays of the government,’ who had
come to stay at The Pleiad for some
incomprehensible reason. Evidently, she has not
seen you.... What do you suppose Rey meant by,
’He’ll be gone before that,’ within
four days?”
“I don’t appear able to
learn anything by myself,” Bedient said.
“It would seem the best way to wait
and see.”
“Oh, but I wouldn’t please!...
Is it worth that to see this Framtree, whom the Spaniard
has probably commanded to keep in hiding? I am
afraid for you!... And the whole house,
even the sleeping-rooms, are under that devilish eye.
I dared not turn on the light last night
They parted after less than twenty
minutes. Bedient did not go in to dinner....
To him, the night was but a sorry repetition.
Miss Mallory’s disclosures could not long hold
his thoughts. He had no intention of telling
Jaffier that something big was to happen within four
days. What was strangest was the fate which made
it so hard for him to come into contact with Framtree.
He could not give up this thing this last
link to reality. He felt himself better off here than
alone at the hacienda.
This time, between two and three in
the morning, he was so tense and animate that he heard
the soft, swift tread of a Chinese in the hall and
the faintest possible rustle of a paper thrust under
his door. He waited a moment before turning on
the light.... It was another missive from the
Spaniard, and read:
MY ESTEEMED BEDIENT:
The request herein to be set forth
may appear to you as a reflection upon the quality
of my friendship, as it certainly is an indication
of the force of your personality. You are felt
in this establishment, my valued friend, like
some tarrying Nemesis. Permit me to observe,
and I am smiling as I write, that you have a wearing
effect upon many of my guests. Personally, I should
ask nothing finer of the Fates than the privilege
to devote myself exclusively to you but
that is impossible now. To-morrow at noon my
servants will assist you to any quarters elsewhere,
that you may have chosen by that time if,
indeed, you are staying longer in Coral City.
Believe me, when a certain tension is lifted, my house
will be open to you again, as is always the heart of
CELESTINO REY.