MY FRIEND IL p p O<sP lv v-/ O HENRY MY FRIEND PROSPERO MY FRIEND PROSPERO A NOVEL ; HENRY HAUL AN . AUTHOR OF THE CARDINA1 THE LADY PARAM< Frontispiece by Jmiis NEW YORK McCLURE, PHILLIPS MCMIV CO. .f. J:IX- DRAWN BY LOUIS LOEB PRINCESS MARIA DOLORES OF ZELT-NEUMINSTER MY FRIEND PROSPERO A NOVEL BY HENRY HARLAND AUTHOR OF THE CARDINAL S SNUFF-BOX THE LADY PARAMOUNT, ETC. Frontispiece by Louis Loeb NEW YORK McCLURE, PHILLIPS $ MCMIV CO, COPTBIGHT, 1904, BY HENRY HARLAND Published, January, 1904 COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY S. S. MCCLURE COMPANY fv MY FRIEND PROSPERO PART FIRST The coachman drew up his horses before the castle gateway, where their hoofs beat a sort of fan fare on the stone pavement; and the footman, letting himself smartly down, pulled, with a per emptory gesture that was j ust not quite a swagger, the bronze hand at the end of the dangling bell- cord. Seated alone in her great high-swung barouche, in the sweet April weather, Lady Blanchemain gave the interval that followed to a consideration of the landscape: first, sleeping in shadowy still ness, the formal Italian garden, its terraced lawns and metrical parterres, its straight dark avenues of ilex, its cypresses, fountains, statues, balus trades ; and then, laughing in the breeze and the sun, the wild Italian valley, a forest of blossoming 961709 4 MY FRIEND PROSPERO fruit-trees, with the river winding and glinting in its midst, with olive-clad hills blue-grey at either side, and beyond the hills, peering over their shoulders, the snow-peaks of mountains, crisp against the sky, and in the level distance the hazy shimmer of the lake. "It is lovely," she exclaimed, fervently, in a whisper, "lovely. And only a generation of blind-worms," was her after-thought, "could dis cern in it the slightest resemblance to the drop- scene of a theatre." II Big, humorous, emotional, imperious, but, above all, interested and sociable Lady Blanchemain: do you know her, I wonder ? Her billowy white hair ? Her handsome soft old face, with its smooth skin, and the good strong bony structure underneath? Her beautiful old grey eyes, full of tenderness and shrewdness, of curiosity, irony, indulgence, over arched and emphasised by regular black eyebrows? PART FIRST 5 Her pretty little plump pink-white hands (like two little elderly Cupids), with their shining panoply of rings ? And her luxurious, courageous, high-hearted manner of dressing? The light colours and jaunty fashion of her gowns? Her laces, ruffles, embroideries? Her gay little bonnets? Her gems ? Linda Baroness Blanchemain, of Fring Place, Sussex; Belmore Gardens, Kensington; and Villa Antonina, San Remo: big, merry, sociable, sentimental, wordly-wise, impetuous Linda Blanche- main: do you know her? If you do, I am sure you love her and rejoice in her; and enough is said. If you don t, I beg leave to present and to com mend her. I spoke, by-the-bye, of her "old" face, her "old" eyes. She is, to be sure, in so far as mere numbers of years tell, an old woman. But I once heard her throw out, in the heat of conversation, the phrase, "a young old thing like me;" and I thought she touched a truth. MY FRIEND PROSPERO III Well, then, the footman, in his masterful way, pulled the bell-cord; Lady Blanchemain con templated the landscape, and had her opinion of a generation that could liken it to the drop-scene of a theatre ; and in due process of things the bell was answered. It was answered by a man in a costume that struck my humorous old friend as pleasing: a sal low little man whose otherwise quite featureless suit of tweeds was embellished by scarlet worsted shoulder-knots. With lack-lustre eyes, from be hind the plexus of the grille, he rather stolidly re garded the imposing British equipage, and waited to be addressed. Lady Blanchemain addressed him in the lan guage of Pistoja. Might one, she inquired, with her air of high affability, in her distinguished old PART FIRST 7 voice, might one visit the castle? a question purely of convention, for she had not come hither without an assurance from her guide-book. Shoulder-knots, however, either to flaunt his attainments, or because indeed Pistoiese (what though the polyglot races of Italy have agreed upon it as a lingua franca) offered the greater difficulties to his Lombardian tongue, replied in French. "I do not think so, Madame," was his reply, in a French sufficiently heavy and stiff -jointed, en forced by a dubious oscillation of the head. Lady Blanchemain s black eyebrows shot up ward, marking her surprise; then drew together, marking her determination. "But of course one can it s in the guide book," she insisted, and held up the red-bound volume. The sceptic gave a shrug, as one who dis claimed responsibility and declined discussion. "Me, I do not think so. But patience! I will go and ask, * he said, and, turning his back, faded 8 MY FRIEND PROSPERO from sight in the depths of the dark tunnel-like porte-cochere. Vexed, perplexed, Lady Blanchemain fidgeted a little. To have taken this long drive for noth ing! sweet though the weather was, fair though the valley : but she was not a person who could let the means excuse the end. She neither liked nor was accustomed to see her enterprises balked, to see doors remain closed in her face. Doors indeed had a habit of flying open at her approach. Be sides, the fellow s manner, his initial stare and silence, his tone when he spoke, his shrug, his ex hortation to patience, and somethkig too in the conduct of his back as he departed, hadn t it lacked I don t know what of becoming deference? To satisfy her amour-propre, at any rate, that the mistake, if there was a mistake, sprang from no malapprehension of her own, she looked up chapter and verse. Yes, there the assurance stood, circumstantial, in all the convincingness of the sturdy, small black type: "From Roccadoro a charming excursion may PART FIRST 9 be made, up the beautiful Val Rampio, to the mediaeval village of Sant Alessina (7 miles), with its magnificent castle, in fine grounds, formerly a seat of the Sforzas, now belonging to the Prince of Zelt-Neuminstcr, and containing the celebrated Zelt-Neuminster collection of paintings. Incor porated in the castle-buildings, a noticeable pecu liarity, are the parish church and presbytery. Accessible daily, except Monday, from 10 to 4 ; attendant 1 fr." So then! To-day was Wednesday, the hour between two and three. So ! Her amour- propre triumphed, but I fancy her vexation mounted. IV "I beg your pardon. It s disgraceful you should have been made to wait. The porter is an idiot. You wish, of course, to see the house ?" The English words, on a key of spontaneous apology, with a very zealous inflection of con- 10 MY FRIEND PROSPERO cern yet, at the same time, with a kind of entirely respectful and amiable abruptness, as of one hail ing a familiar friend, were pronounced in a breath by a brisk, cheerful, unmistakably English voice. Lady Blanchemain, whose attention had still been on the incriminated page, looked quickly up, and (English voice and spontaneous apology notwithstanding) I won t vouch that the answer at the tip of her impulsive tongue mightn t have proved a hasty one but the speaker s appearance gave her pause: the appearance of the tall, smil ing, unmistakably English young man, by whom Shoulder-knots had returned accompanied, and who now, having pushed the grille ajar and issued forth, stood, placing himself with a tentative obeisance at her service, beside the carriage: he was so clearly, first of all what, if it hadn t been for her preoccupation, his voice, tone, accent would have warned her to expect so visibly a gentleman ; and then, with the even pink of his complexion, his yellowish hair and beard, his alert, friendly, very PART FIRST 11 blue blue eyes with his very blue blue flannels too, and his brick-red knitted tie he was so vivid and so unusual. His appearance gave her pause; and in the result she in her turn almost apologised. "This wretched book," she explained, patheti cally bringing forward her piece justificative, "said that it was open to the public." The vivid young man hastened to put her in the right. "It is it is," he eagerly affirmed. "Only," he added, with a vaguely rueful modulation, and always with that amiable abruptness, as a man very mucji at his ease, while his blue eyes whimsi cally brightened, "only the blessed public never comes we re so off the beaten path. And I sup pose one mustn t expect a Scioccone" his voice swelled on the word, and he cast sidelong a scath ing glance at his summoner "to cope with un precedented situations. Will you allow me to help you out?" "Ah," thought Lady Blanchemain, "Eton," 12 MY FRIEND PROSPERO his tone and accent now nicely appraised by an experienced ear. "Eton yes ; and probably h m? Probably Balliol," her experience led her further to surmise. But what with her insatiable curiosity about people, she had of course im mediately begun to wonder what was an Eton and Balliol man doing, apparently in a position of authority, at this remote Italian castle? He helped her out, very gracefully, very gal lantly ; and under his guidance she made the tour of the vast building: its greater court and lesser court ; its cloisters, with their faded frescoes, and their marvellous outlook, northward, upon the Alps; its immense rotunda, springing to the open dome, where the sky was like an inset plaque of turquoise; its "staircase of honour," guarded, in an ascending file, by statues of men in armour; and then, on the piano nobile, its endless chain of PART FIRST 13 big, empty, silent, splendid state apartments, with their pavements of gleaming marble, in many- coloured patterns, their painted and gilded ceil ings, tapestried walls, carved wood and moulded stucco, their pictures, pictures, pictures, and their atmosphere of stately desolation, their memories of another age, their reminders of the power and pomp of people who had long been ghosts. He was tall (with that insatiable curiosity of hers, she was of course continuously studying him), tall and broad-shouldered, but not a bit rigid or inflexible of a figure indeed conspicuously supple, suave in its quick movements, soft in its energetic lines, a figure that could with equal thoroughness be lazy in repose and vehement in action. His yel low hair was thick and fine, and if it hadn t been cropped so close would have curled a little. His beard, in small crinkly spirals, did actually curl, and toward the edge its yellow burned to red. And his blue eyes were so very very blue, and so very keen, and so very frank and pleasant "They are like sailors eyes," thought Lady Blanchemain, 14 MY FRIEND PROSPERO who had a sentiment for sailors. He carried his head well thrown back, as a man who was per fectly sure of himself and perfectly unself-con- scious; and thus unconsciously he drew attention to the vigorous sweep of his profile, the decisive angles of his brow and nose. His voice was brisk and cheerful and masculine; and that abruptness with which he spoke which seemed, as it were, to imply a previous acquaintance was so tem pered by manifest good breeding and so coloured by manifest good will, that it became a positive part and parcel of what one liked in him. It was the abruptness of a man very much at his ease, very much a man of the world, yet it was some how, in its essence, boyish. It expressed freshness, sincerity, conviction, a boyish wholesale surrender of himself to the business of the moment; it ex pressed, perhaps above all, a boyish thorough good understanding with his interlocutor. "It amounts," thought his present interlocutrice, "to a kind of infinitely sublimated bluffness." And then she fell to examining his clothes: PART FIRST 15 his loose, soft, very blue blue flannels, with vague stripes of darker blue; his soft shirt, with its roll ing collar; his red tie, knitted of soft silk, and tied in a loose sailor s-knot. She liked his clothes, and she liked the way he wore them. They suited him. They were loose and comfortable and un conventional, but they were beautifully fresh and well cared for, and showed him, if indifferent to the fashion-plate of the season, meticulous in a fashion of his own. "It s hard to imagine him dressed otherwise," she said, and instantly had a vision of him dressed for dinner. But what what what was he doing at Castel Sant Alessina? VI Meanwhile he plainly knew a tremendous lot about Italian art. Lady Blanchemain herself knew a good deal, and could recognise a pundit. He il lumined their progress by a running fire of expo sition and commentary, learned and discerning, to 16 MY FRIEND PROSPERO she encouragingly listened, and, as occasion esponded. But Boltraffios, Ber- eren a putative Giorgione, could not divert her mind from its human problem. What was he doing at Castel Sant" Akssraa, the according to her guide-book, of an ? What was his status here, ap- parently (bar servants) in solitary occupation? Was IK its tenant ? He couldn t, surely, this well- drested, fcij^li Inn! cultivated young compatriot, he couldn t be a mere employe, a steward or curator? No: probably a tenant. Antecedently indeed it might seem unlikely that a young Eng- should become the tenant of an establish- so huge and so sequestered : but was it con ceivable that this particular young Englishman should be a mere employe? And was there any alternative? She hearkened for a word, a that might throw light: but of such notes, soch words, a young man s conversation, in the t ; iiiMaiam*^ mold perhaps naturally yield a crop. PART FIRST IT "You mustn t let me tire you," he said, pres ently, as one who had forgotten and suddenly remembered that looking at pictures is i iliinilHfe work. "Won t you sit here and rest a littler** They were in a smaller room than any they had previously traversed, an octagonal room, which a single lofty window filled with sunshine. "Oh, thank you," said Lady Blanchemain, and seated herself on the circular divan in the centre of the polished terrazza floor. She wasn t really tired in the least, the indefatigable old sight-seer; but a respite from picture-gazing would enable her to turn the talk. She put up her mother-of- pearl lorgnon, and glanced round the walls; then, lowering it, she frankly raised her eyes, full of curiosity and kindness, to her companion s. "It s a surprise, and a delightful one," she re marked, " having pushed so far afield in a foreign knd, to be met by the good offices of a fellow countryman it s so nice of you to be English." And her eyes softly changed, their curiosity be ing veiled by a kind of humorous content. 18 MY FRIEND PROSPERO The young man s face, from its altitude of six- feet-something, beamed responsively down upon her. "Oh," he laughed, "you mustn t give me too much credit. To be English nowadays is so in- gloriously easy since foreign lands have become merely the wider suburbs of London." Lady Blanchemain s eyes lighted approvingly. Afterward she looked half serious. "True," she discriminated, "London has spread pretty well over the whole of Europe; but Eng land, thanks be to goodness, still remains merci fully small." "Yes," agreed the young man, though with a lilt of dubiety, and a frown of excogitation, as if he weren t sure that he had quite caught her drift. "The mercy of it is," she smilingly pointed out, "that English folk, decent ones, have no need to fight shy of each other when they meet as strangers. We all know more or less about each other by hearsay, or about each other s peo- PART FIRST 19 pie; and we re all pretty sure to have some com mon acquaintances. The smallness of England makes for sociability and confidence." "It ought to, one would think," the young man admitted. "But does it, in fact? It had some how got stuck in my head that English folk, meeting as strangers, were rather apt to glare. We re most of us in such a funk, you see, lest, if we treat a stranger with civility, he should turn out not to be a duke." "Oh," cried Lady Blanchemain, with merriment, "you forget that I said decent. I meant, of course, folk who are dukes. We re all dukes or bagmen." The young man chuckled; but in a minute he pulled a long face, and made big, ominous eyes. "I feel I ought to warn you," he said in a por tentous voice, "that some of us are mere marquises of the house of Carabas." Lady Blanchemain, her whole expansive person, simmered with enjoyment. "Bless you," she cried, "those are the ducalest, 20 MY FRIEND PROSPERO for marquises of the house of Carabas are men of dash and spirit, born to bear everything before them, and to marry the King s daughter." With that, she had a moment of abstraction. Again, her eyeglass up, she glanced round the walls hung, in this octagonal room, with dim- coloured portraits of women, all in wonderful toilets, with wonderful hair and head-gear, all wonderfully young and pleased with things, and all four centuries dead. They caused her a little feeling of uneasiness, they were so dead and silent, and yet somehow, in their fixed postures, with their unblinking eyes, their unvarying smiles, so as it seemed to her so watchful, so intent ; and it was a relief to turn from them to the window, to the picture framed by the window of warm, breathing, heedless nature. But all the while, in her interior mind, she was busy with the man be fore her. "He looks," she considered, "tall as he is, and with his radiant blondeur with the gold in his hair and beard, and the sea-blue in his eyes he looks like a hero out of some old PART FIRST 21 Norse saga. He looks like what s his name? like Odin. I must really compel him to explain himself." It very well may be, meantime, that he was reciprocally busy with her, taking her in, ad miring her, this big, jolly, comely, high-mannered old woman, all in soft silks and drooping laces, who had driven into his solitude from Heaven knew where, and was quite unquestionably Someone, Heaven knew who. She ha d a moment of abstraction; but now, emerging from it, she used her eyeglass as a pointer, and indicatively swept the circle of painted eavesdroppers. "They make one feel like their grandmother, their youth is so flagrant," she sighed, "these grandmothers of the Quattrocento. Ah, well, we can only be old once, and we should take advan tage of the privileges of age while we have em. Old people, I am thankful to say, are allowed, amongst other things, to be inquisitive. I m brazenly so. Now, if one of our common ac- 22 MY FRIEND PROSPERO quaintances were at hand for with England still mercifully small, we re sure to possess a dozen, you and I what do you think is the question I should ask him? I should ask him," she avowed, with a pretty effect of hesitation, and a smile that went as an advance-guard to disarm resentment, "to tell me who you are, and all about you and to introduce you to me." "Oh," cried the young man, laughing. He laughed for a second or two. In the end, pleas antly, with a bow, "My name," he said, "if you can possibly care to know, is Blanchemain." His visitor caught her breath. She sat up straight, and gazed hard at him. "Blanchemain?" she gasped. VII There were, to be sure, reasons and to spare why the name should make her sit up straight. Her curiosity had turned the key, and lo, with a click, here was an entirely changed, immensely com plicated, intensely poignant situation. But our PART FIRST 23 excitable old friend was an Englishwoman: dis simulation would be her second nature; you could trust her to pull the wool over your eyes with a fleet and practised hand. Instinctively, further more, she would seek to extract from such a situation all the fun it promised. Taken off her guard, for the span of ten heart-beats she sat up straight and stared; but with the eleventh her attitude relaxed. She had regained her outward nonchalance, and resolved upon her system of fence. "Ah," she said, on a tone judiciously com pounded of feminine artlessness and of forthright British candour, and with a play of the eyebrows that attributed her momentary suscitation to the workings of memory, "of course Blanchemain. The Sussex Blanchemains. I expect there s only one family of the name?" "I ve never heard of another," assented the young man. "The Ventmere Blanchemains," she pursued pensively. "Lord Blanchemain of Ventmere is your titled head?" 24 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Exactly," said he. "I knew the late Lord Blanchemain I knew him fairly well," she mentioned, always with a certain pensiveness. "Oh ?" said he, politely interested. "Yes," said she. "But I ve never met his suc cessor. The two were not, I believe, on speaking terms. Of course," and her forthright British candour carried her trippingly over the delicate ground, "it s common knowledge that the fam ily is divided against itself hostile branches a Protestant branch and a Catholic. The present lord, if I ve got it right, is a Catholic, and the late lord s distant cousin?" "You ve got it quite right," the young man assured her, with a nod, and a little laugh. "They had the same great-great-grandfather. The last few lords have been Protestants, but in our branch the family have never forsaken the old religion." "I know," said she. "And wasn t it I ve heard the story, but I m a bit hazy about it wasn t PART FIRST 25 it owing to your is recusancy the word? that you lost the title? Wasn t there some sort of sharp practice at your expense in the last century ?" The young man had another little laugh. "Oh, nothing," he answered, "that wasn t very much the fashion. The late lord s great-grand father denounced his elder brother as a Papist and a Jacobite nothing more than that. It was after the Forty-five. So the cadet took the title and estates. But with the death of the late lord, a dozen years or so ago, the younger line became extinct, and the title reverted." "I see," said my lady. She knitted her eye brows, computing. After an instant, "General Blanchemain," she resumed, "as the present lord was called for the best part of his life, is a bache lor. You will be one of his nephews?" She raised her eyes inquiringly. "The son of his brother Philip," said the young man. Lady Blanchemain sat up straight again. 26 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "But then," she cried, forgetting to conceal her perturbation, "then you re the heir. Philip Blanchemain had but one son, and was the Gen eral s immediate junior. You re John Blanche- main John Francis Joseph Mary. You re the heir." The young man smiled at her eagerness, per haps. "The heir-presumptive I suppose I am," he said. Lady Blanchemain leaned back and gently tittered. "See how I know my peerage !" she exclaimed. Then, looking grave, "You re heir to an uncom monly good old title," she informed him. "I hope it may be many a long day before I m anything else," said he. "Your uncle is an old man," she suggestively threw out. "Oh, not so very old," he submitted. "Only seventy, or thereabouts, and younger in many re spects than I am. I hope he ll live forever." PART FIRST 27 "Hum," said she, and appeared to fall a-mus- ing. Absently, as it seemed, and slowly, she was pulling off her gloves. "Feuds in families," she said, in a minute, "are bad things. Why don t you make it up?" The young man waved his hand, a pantomimic non-possumus. "There s no one left to make it up with the others are all dead." "Oh?" she wondered, her eyebrows elevated, whilst automatically her fingers continued to op erate upon her gloves. "I thought the last lord left a widow. I seem to have heard of a Lady Blanchemain somewhere." The young man gave still another of his little laughs. "Linda Lady Blanchemain?" he said. "Yes, one hears a lot of her. A highly original char acter, by all accounts. One hears of her every where." Linda Lady Blanchemain s lip began to quiver; but she got it under control. 28 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Well?" she questioned eyes fixing his, and brimming with a kind of humorous defiance, as if to say, "Think me an impertinent old meddler if you will, and do your worst"- "Why don t you make it up with her?" But he didn t seem to mind the meddling in the least. He stood at ease, and plausibly put his case. "Why don t I? Or why doesn t my uncle? My uncle is a temperamental conservative, a dev otee to his traditions the sort of man who will never do anything that hasn t been the con stant habit of his forebears. He would no more dream of healing a well-established family feud than of selling the family plate. And I well, surely, it would never be for me to make the advances." "No, you re right," acknowledged Lady Blanchemain. "The advances should come from her. But people have such a fatal way even without being temperamental conservatives of leaving things as they find them. Besides, never PART FIRST 29 having seen you, she couldn t know how nice you are. All the same, I ll confess, if you insist upon it, that she ought to be ashamed of herself. Come let s make it up." She rose, a great soft glowing vision of benig- nancy, and held out her hand, now gloveless, her pretty little smooth plump right hand, with its twinkling rings. "Oh!" cried the astonished young man, the as tonished, amused, moved, wondering, and entirely won young man, his sea-blue eyes wide open, and a hundred lights of pleasure and surprise dancing in them. The benignant vision floated toward him, and he took the little white hand in his long lean brown one. 30 MY FRIEND PROSPERO VIII When the first stress of their emotion had in some degree spent itself, Lady Blanchemain, returning to her place on the ottoman, bade John sit down beside her. "Now," she said, genially imperative, whilst all manner of kindly and admiring interest shone in her face, "there are exactly nine million and ninety-nine questions that you ll be obliged to answer before I ve done with you. But to begin, you must clear up at once a mystery that s been troubling me ever since you dashed to my rescue at the gate. What in the name of Reason is the cause of your residence in this ultramundane stronghold ?" John convict me of damnable iteration if you must: Heaven has sent me a laughing hero John laughed. "Oh," he said, "there are several causes there are exactly nine million and ninety-eight." PART FIRST 31 "Name," commanded Lady Blanchemain, "the first and the last." "Well," obeyed he, pondering, "I should think the first, the last, and perhaps the chief inter mediate, would be the whole blessed thing." And his arm described a circle which comprehended the castle and all within it, and the countryside without. "It has a pleasant site, I ll not deny," said Lady Blanchemain. "But don t you find it a trifle far away? And a bit up-hill? I m staying at the Victoria at Roccadoro, and it took me an hour and a half to drive here." "But since," said John, with a flattering glance, "since you are here, I have no further reason to deplore its farawayness. So few places are far away, in these times and climes," he added, on a note of melancholy, as one to whom all climes and times were known. "Hum," said Lady Blanchemain, matter-of-fact. "Have you been here long?" "Let me see," John answered. "To-day is 32 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the 23rd of April. I arrived here I offer the fact for what it may be worth on the feast of All Fools." "Absit omen," cried she. "And you intend to stay?" "Oh, I m at least wise enough not to fetter myself with intentions," answered John. She looked about, calculating, estimating. "I suppose it costs you the very eyes of your head?" she asked. John giggled. "Guess what it costs I give it to you in a thousand." She continued her survey, brought it to a period. "A billion a week," she said, with finality. John exulted. "It costs me," he told her, "six francs fifty a day wine included." "What!" cried she, mistrusting her ears. "Yes," said he. "Fudge," said she, not to be caught with chaff. PART FIRST 33 "It sounds like a traveller s tale, I know ; but that s so often the bother with the truth," said he. "Truth is under no obligation to be vraisem- blable. I m here en pension." Lady Blanchemain sniffed. "Does the Prince of Zelt-Neuminster take in boarders?" she inquired, her nose in the air. "Not exactly," said John. "But the Parroco of Sant Alessina does. I board at the presby tery." "Oh," said Lady Blanchemain, beginning to see light, while her eyebrows went up, went down. "You board at the presbytery?" "For six francs fifty a day wine included," chuckled John. "Wine, and apparently the unhindered enjoy ment of the whole blessed thing," supplemented she, with a reminder of his comprehensive gesture. "Yes the run of the house and garden, the freedom of the hills and valley." "I understand," she said, and was mute for a space, readjusting her impressions. "I had sup- 34 MY FRIEND PROSPERO posed," she went on at last, "from the handsome way in which you snubbed that creature in shoul der-knots, and proceeded to do the honours of the place, that you were little less than its pro prietor." "Well, and so I could almost feel I am," laughed John. "I m alone here there s none my sway to dispute. And as for the creature in shoulder- knots, what becomes of the rights of man or the bases of civil society, if you can t snub a creat ure whom you regularly tip? For five francs a week the creature in shoulder-knots cleans my boots (indifferent well), brushes my clothes, runs my errands (indifferent slow), and swallows my snubs as if they were polenta." "And tries to shoo intrusive trippers from your threshold and gets an extra plateful for his pains," laughed the lady. "Where," she asked, "does the Prince of Zelt-Neuminster keep him self?" "In Vienna, I believe. Anyhow, at a respect ful distance. The parroco, who is also his sort PART FIRST 35 of intendant, tells me he practically never comes to Sant Alessina." "Good easy man," quoth she. "Yes, I certain ly supposed you were his tenant-in-fee, at the least. You have an air." And her bob of the head complimented him upon it. "Oh, we Marquises of Carabas !" cried John, with a flourish. She regarded him doubtfully. "Wouldn t you find yourself in a slightly diffi cult position, if the Prince or his family should suddenly turn up?" she suggested. "I? Why?" asked John, his blue eyes blank. "A young man boarding with the parroco for six francs a day she began. "Six francs fifty, please," he gently inter posed. "Make it seven if you like," her ladyship large ly conceded. "Wouldn t your position be slight ly false? Would they quite realise who you were?" "What could that possibly matter?" wondered John, eyes blanker still. 36 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I could conceive occasions in which it might matter furiously," said she. "Foreigners can t with half an eye distinguish amongst us, as we ourselves can ; and Austrians have such oddly ex alted notions. You wouldn t like to be mistaken for Mr. Snooks?" "I don t know," John reflected, vistas opening before him. "It might be rather a lark." "Whrrr," said Lady Blanchemain, fanning her self with her pocket-handkerchief. Then she eyed him suspiciously. "You re hiding the nine mil lion other causes up your sleeve. It isn t merely the whole blessed thing that s keeping an eaglet of your feather alone in an improbable nest like this it s some one particular thing. In my time," she sighed, "it would have been a woman." "And no wonder," riposted John, with a flowery bow. "You re very good but you confuse the issue," said she. "In my time the world was young and romantic. In this age of prose and prudence is it a woman?" PART FIRST 37 "The world is still, is always, young and ro mantic," said John, sententious. "I can t admit that an age of prose and prudence is possible. The poetry of earth is never dead, and no more is its folly. The world is always romantic, if you have the three gifts needful to make it so." "Is it a woman?" repeated Lady Blanche- main. "And the three gifts are," said he, "Faith, and the sense of Beauty, and the sense of Hu mour." "And I should have thought, an attractive mem ber of the opposite sex," said she. "Is it a wom an?" "Well," he at last replied, appearing to take counsel with himself, "I don t know why I should forbid myself the relief of owning up to you that in a sense it is." "Hurray!" cried she, moving in her seat, agog, as one who scented her pet diversion. "A love affair! I ll be your confidante. Tell me all about it." 38 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Yes, in a sense, a love affair," he confessed. "Good excellent," she approved. "But but what do you mean by in a sense ?" "Ah," said he, darkly nodding, "I mean whole worlds by that." "I don t understand," said she, her face prepared to fall. "It isn t one woman it s a score, a century, of the dear things," he announced. Her face fell. "Oh?" she faltered. "It s a love affair with a type," he explained. She frowned upon him. "A love affair with a type-?" "Yes," said he. She shook her head. "I give you up. In one breath you speak like a Mohammedan, in the next like I don t know what." "With these," said John, his hand stretched toward the wall. "With the type of the Quattro cento." He got upon his feet, and moved from picture to picture ; and a fire, half indeed of mischief, but PART FIRST 39 half it may be of real enthusiasm, glimmered in his eyes. "With these lost ladies of old years; these soft- coloured shadows, that were once rosy flesh; these proud, humble, innocent, subtle, brave, shy, pious, pleasure-loving women of the long ago. With them; with their hair and eyes and jewels, their tip-tilted, scornful, witty little noses, their throats so round and lips so red, their splendid raiment; with their mirth, pathos, passion, kindness and cruelty, their infinite variety, their undying youth. Ah, the pity of it! Their undying youth and they so irrevocably dead. Peace be to their souls ! See," he suddenly declaimed, laughing, "how the sun, the very sun in heaven, is contending with me, as to which of us shall do them the greater homage, the sun that once looked on their living forms, and remembers see how he lights memorial lamps about them," for the sun, reflected from the polished floor, threw a sheen upon the ancient canvases, and burned bright in the bosses of the frames. "Give me these," he wound up, "a book 40 MY FRIEND PROSPERO or two, and a jug of the parroco s included wine my wilderness is paradise enow." Lady Blanchemain s eyes, as she listened, had become deep wells of disappointment, then gush ing fountains of reproach. "Oh, you villain!" she groaned, when he had ended, shaking her pretty fist. "So to have raised my expectations, and so to dash them! Do you really mean," still clinging to a shred of hope, she pleaded, "really, really mean that there s no no actual woman?" "I m sorry," said John, "but I m afraid I really, really do." "And you re not not really in love with any one?" "No not really," he said, with a mien that feigned contrition. "But at your age how old are you?" she broke off to demand. "Somewhere between twenty-nine and thirty, I believe," he laughed. "And in such a romantic environment, and not PART FIRST 41 on account of a woman! It s downright un natural," she declared. "It s flat treason against the kingly state of youth." "I m awfully sorry," said John. "Yet, after all, what s the good of repining? Nothing could happen even if there were a woman." Lady Blanchemain looked alarmed. "Nothing could happen? What do you mean? You re not married? If you are, it must be se cretly, for you re put down as single in Burke." "To the best of my knowledge," John reas sured her, laughing, "Burke is right. And I prayerfully trust he may never have occasion to revise his statement." "For mercy s sake," cried she, "don t tell me you re a woman hater." "That s just the point," said he. "I m an adorer of the sex." "Well, then?" questioned she, at a loss. "How can you prayerfully wish to remain a bachelor? Besides, aren t you heir to a peerage? What of the succession?" 42 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "That s just the point." he perversely ar gued. "And you know there are plenty of cous ins." "Just the point, just the point," fretted Lady Blanchemain. "What s just the point? Just the point that you aren t a woman hater? just the point that you re heir to a peerage ? You talk like Tom o Bedlam." "Well, you see," expounded John, unruffled, "as an adorer of the sex, and heir to a peerage, I shouldn t want to marry a woman unless I could support her in what they call a manner becoming her rank and I couldn t." "Couldn t?" the lady scoffed. "I should like to know why not?" "I m too if you will allow me to clothe my thought in somewhat homely language too beastly poor." "You poor?" ejaculated Lady Blanchemain, falling back. "Ay but honest," asseverated John, to calm her fears. PART FIRST 43 She couldn t help smiling, though she resolutely frowned. "Be serious," she enjoined him. "Doesn t your uncle make you a suitable allowance?" "I should deceive you," answered John, "if I said he made me an wftsuitable one. He makes me, to put it in round numbers, exactly no allowance whatsoever." "The old curmudgeon !" cried Lady Blanche- main, astounded, and fiercely scanning her words. "No," returned John, soothingly, "he isn t a curmudgeon. But he s a very peculiar man. He s a Spartan, and he lacks imagination. It has simply never entered his head that I could need an allowance. And, if you come to that, I can t say that I positively do. I have a tiny patrimony threepence a week, or so enough for my humble necessities, though scarcely perhaps enough to support the state of a future peeress. No, my uncle isn t a curmudgeon ; he s a very fine old boy, of whom I m immensely proud, and though I ve yet to see the colour of his money, we re quite the 44 MY FRIEND PROSPERO best of friends. At any rate, you ll agree that it would be the deuce to pay if I were to fall in love." "Ffff," breathed Lady Blanchemain, fanning. "What did I say of an age of prose and prudence? Yet you don t look cold-blooded. What does money matter? Dominus providebit. Go read Browning. What s the true end, sole and single that we re here for? Besides, have you never heard that there are such things as marriageable heiresses in the world?" "Oh, yes, I ve heard that," John cheerfully as sented. "But don t they almost always squint or something? I ve heard, too, that there are such things as tufted fortune hunters, but theirs is a career that requires a special vocation, and I m afraid I haven t got it." "Then you re no true Marquis of Carabas," the lady took him smartly up. "You ve found me out I m only a faux-mar- quis," he laughed. "Thrrr," breathed Lady Blanchemain, and for PART FIRST 45 a little while appeared lost in thought. By-and- by she got up and went to the window, and stood looking out. "I never saw a lovelier landscape," she said, musingly. "With the grey hills, and the snow-peaks, and the brilliant sky, with the golden light and the purple shadows, and the cypresses and olives, with the river gleaming below there amongst the peach-blossoms, and isn t that a blackcap singing in the mimosa? It only needs a pair of lovers to be perfect it cries for a pair of lovers. And instead of them, I find what? A hermit and celibate. Look here. Make a clean breast of it. Are you cold-blooded?" she asked from over her shoulder. John merely giggled. "It would serve you right," said she, truc- ulently_, "if someone were to rub your eyes with love-in-idleness, to make you dote upon the next live creature that you see." John merely chuckled. "I ll tell you what," she proceeded, "I m a bit of an old witch, and I ll risk a soothword. As 46 MY FRIEND PROSPERO there isn t already a woman, there ll shortly be one my thumbs prick. The stage is set, the scene is too appropriate, the play s inevitable. It was never in the will of Providence that a youth of your complexion should pass the springtime in a spot all teeming with romance like this, and miss a love adventure. A castle in a garden, a flowering valley, and the Italian sky the Italian sun and moon! Your portraits of these smiling dead women too, if you like, to keep your imagination working. And blackcaps singing in the mimosa. No, no. The lady of the piece is waiting in the wings my thumbs prick. Give her but the least excuse, she ll enter, and .... Good heavens, my prophetic soul!" she suddenly, with a sort of catch in her throat, broke off. She turned and faced him, cheeks flushed, eyes flashing. "Oh, you hypocrite! You monstrous fibber!" she cried, on a tone of jubilation, looking daggers. "Why? What s up? What s the matter?" asked John, at fault. PART FIRST 47 "How could you have humbugged me so?" she wailed, in delight, reverting to the window. "Anyhow, she s charming. She s made for the part. I couldn t pray for a more promising heroine." "She? Who?" asked he, crossing to her side. "Who? Fie, you slyboots!" she crowed with glee. "Ah, I see," said John. For, below them, in the garden, just beyond the mimosa (all powdered with fresh gold) where the blackcap was singing, stood a woman. IX She stood in the path, beside a sun-dial, from which she appeared to be taking the time of day, a crumbling ancient thing of grey stone, green and brown with mosses ; and she was smiling pleas antly to herself the while, all unaware of the couple who watched her from above. She wore a 48 MY FRIEND PROSPERO light-coloured garden-frock, and was bare-headed, as one belonging to the place. She was young two or three and twenty, by her aspect: young, slender, of an excellent height, and, I hope you would have agreed, a beautiful countenance. She studied the sun-dial, and smiled; and what with her dark eyes and softly chiselled features, the pale rose in her cheeks and the deeper rose of her mouth, with her hair too, almost black in shadow, but where the sun touched it turning to sombre red, yes, I think you would have agreed that she was beautiful. Lady Blanchemain, at any rate, found her so. "She s quite lovely," she declared. "Her face is exquisite so sensitive, so spiritual ; so distin guished, so aristocratic. And so clever," she added, after a suspension. "Mm," said John, his forehead wrinkled, as if something were puzzling him. "She has a figure she holds herself well," said Lady Blanchemain. "Mm," said John. PART FIRST 49 "I suppose," said she, "you re too much a mere man to be able to appreciate her frock? It s the work of a dressmaker who knows her business. And that lilac muslin (that s so fashionable now) really does, in the open air, with the country for background, show to immense advantage. Come out with it. Tell me all about her. Who is she?" "That s just what I m up a tree to think," said John. "I can t imagine. How long has she been there? From what direction did she come?" "Don t try to hoodwink me any longer," remon strated the lady, unbelieving. "I ve never in my life set eyes on her before," he solemnly averred. She scrutinised him sharply. "Hand on heart?" she doubted. And he, supporting her scrutiny without flinch ing, answered, "Hand on heart." "Well, then," concluded she, with a laugh, "it looks as if I were even more of an old witch than I boasted and my thumbs pricked to some pur pose. Here s the lady of the piece already arrived. 50 MY FRIEND PROSPERO There, she s going away. How well she walks. Have after her have after her quick, and begin your courtship." The smiling young woman, her lilac dress softly bright in the sun, was moving slowly down the gar den-path, toward the cloisters; and now she en tered them, and disappeared. But John, instead of "having after her," remained at his counsellor s side, and watched. "She came from that low doorway, beyond there at the right, where the two cypresses are ; and she came at the very climax of my vaticina tion," said her ladyship. "Without a hat, you ll hardly dispute it s probable she s staying in the house." "No it certainly would seem so," said John, "I m all up a tree." "The garden looks rather dreary and empty, now that she has left, doesn t it?" she asked. "Yet it looked jolly enough before her advent. And see the lizards (there are four of them, aren t there?) that whisked away from the dial at her PART FIRST 51 approach, have come back. Well, your work s cut out. I suppose it wouldn t be possible for you to give a poor woman a dish of tea?" "I was on the very point of proposing it," said John. "May I conduct you to my quarters?" PART SECOND Rather early next morning John was walking among the olives. He had gone (straight from his bed, and in perhaps the least considered of toilets: an old frieze ulster, ornamented with big buttons of mother-of-pearl, a pair of Turkish slippers, a bathing-towel over his shoulder, and for head-covering just his uncombed native thatch) for a swim, some half a mile upstream, to a place he knew where the Rampio the madcap Rampio, all shallows and rapids rests for a moment in a pool, wide and deep, translucent, inviting, and, as you perceive when you have made your plunge, of a most assertive chill. Now he was on his leisurely way home, to the presbytery and what passed there for breakfast. The hill-side rose from the river s bank in a series of irregular terraces, upheld by rough stone PART SECOND 53 walls. The gnarled old trees bent toward each other and away like dwarfs and crookbacks danc ing a fantastic minuet; and in the grass beneath them, where the sun shot his fiery darts and cast his net of shadows, Chloris had scattered innumer able wildflowers: hyacinths, the colour of the sky; violets, that threaded the air for yards about with their sentiment-provoking fragrance; tulips, red and yellow; sometimes a tall, imperial iris; here and there little white nodding companies of jon quils. Here and there, too, the dusty-green reaches were pointed by the dark spire of a cypress, alone, in a kind of glooming isolation; here and there a blossoming peach or almond, gaily pink, sent an inexpressible little thrill of gladness to one s heart. The air was sweetened by many incense-breathing things besides the violets, by moss and bark, the dew-laden grass, the moist brown earth ; and it was quick with music: bees droned, leaves whispered, birds called, sang, gossiped, disputed, and the Rampio played a crystal accompaniment. John swung onward at ease, while lizards, 54 MY FRIEND PROSPERO with tails that seemed extravagantly long, fled from before his feet, terrible to them, no doubt, as an army with banners, for his Turkish slippers, though not in their pristine youth, were of scarlet leather embroidered in a rich device with gold. And presently (an experience unusual at that houf in the olive wood) he became aware of a human voice. "Ohe ! My good men, there ! Will you be so kind as to gather me some of those anemones? Here is a lira for your pains." It was a feminine voice; it was youthful and melodious; it was finished, polished, delicately modulated. And its inflection was at once confident and gracious, clearly the speaker took it for granted that she would receive attention, and she implied her thanks abundantly beforehand. It was a voice that evoked in the imagination a charm ing picture of fresh, young, confident, and gracious womanhood. "Hello!" said John to himself. "Who is there in this part of the world with a voice like that?" PART SECOND 55 And he felt it would not be surprising if on glancing round he should behold as, in fact, he did the stranger of yesterday, the Unknown of the garden. II She stood on one of the higher terraces (a very charming picture indeed, bright and erect, in the warm shadow of the olives), and was calling down to a couple of peasants at work on the other side of the stream. Between the thumb and forefinger of an ungloved fair right hand, she held up a silver lira. Anemones, said she! Near to where the men were working, by the river s brink, there was a space of level ground, perhaps a hundred feet long, and tapering from half that breadth to a point. And this was simply crimson and purple with a countless host of anemones. She called to the men, and one seeing and hear ing her would have thought they must abandon 56 MY FRIEND PROSPERO everything, and spring to do her bidding. But they didn t. Pausing only long enough to give her a phlegmatic stare, as if in doubt whether con ceivably she could have the impertinence to be ad dressing them, and vouchsafing not a word, each went calmly on with his employment; very, very calmly, piano, piano, gently, languidly, filling small baskets with fallen olives, and emptying them upon outspread canvas sheets. There are, and more s the pity, two types of Italian peas ant. There s the old type, which we knew in our youth, and happily it still survives in some num bers, the peasant who, for all his rags and tatters, has manners that will often put one s own to shame, and, with a simpatia like second-sight, is before one s wishes, in his eagerness to serve and please. And there is the new type, which we know to our disgust, and unhappily it multiplies like vermin, the peasant who has lent his ear to the social demo crat, and, his heart envenomed by class hatred, meets your civility with black glances and the be haviour of a churl in the sulks. PART SECOND 57 So, though her voice was sweet to hear, and though, standing there in the warm penumbra of the olive orchard, tall and erect and graceful, in her bright frock, she made a charming picture, and though she offered a silver lira as a prize, the men merely stared at her churlishly, and went on with their work languidly, sluggishly, as men who deemed the necessity to work an outrage, and weren t going to condone it by working with any thing like a will. Now, John Blanchemain, as I have previously mentioned, was an unself-conscious sort of fellow. In his unself-consciousness, forgetting several trifles that might properly have weighed with him (forgetting the tarnished gorgeousness of his Turkish slippers for example, and his tousled head, and the bathing-towel that flowed like a piece of classic drapery from his shoulder), obeying im pulse and instinct, he flung himself into the breach. "Brutes," he muttered between his teeth. Then, in his easiest man-of-the-worldy accents, "If you can wait two minutes," he called aloud to her. 58 MY FRIEND PROSPERO And therewith he went scrambling down the ter races and picked his way from stone to stone across the shallows, to the field of anemones, where their satiny petals, like crisping wavelets, all a-ripple in the moving air, shimmered with constantly chang ing lights. And in a twinkling he had gathered a great armful, and was clambering back. "I beg of you," he said, in his abrupt fashion, holding them out to her, and slightly bowing, with that nothing-doubting assurance of his, while his blue eyes (to put her entirely at her ease) smiled, frank and friendly and serene, into her dark ones. But hers seemed troubled. She looked at the flowers, she looked at John, I think she even looked at her lira. Her eyes seemed undecided. "Do pray take them," said he, still smiling, still frank and assured, but as if a little puzzled, a little amused, by her hesitation, and more airily a man- of-the-world than ever, his tone one of high de tachment, to spare her any possible feeling of personal obligation, and to place his performance in the light of a matter of course, as if indeed PART SECOND 59 he had done nothing more than pick up and re turn, say, a handkerchief she might have dropped. "You were right," he owned to his thought of Lady Blanchemain ; "she is beautiful." Here, at close quarters with her, one s perception of her beauty became acute, here, under the grey old trees, in the leafy dimness, alone with her, at two paces from her, where the birds sang and the violets gave forth their fragrant breath. He saw that her eyes were beautiful (soft and deep and lumi nous, despite their trouble), and her low white brow, and the dark masses of her hair, under her garden-hat, and the rose in her cheeks, and the red-rose of her mouth. And he saw and felt the beauty and the vitality of her strong young body. But meanwhile she had stretched forth, rather timidly, that ungloved fair hand of hers, and taken the flowers. "You are very good, I am sure. Thank you very much," she said, rather faintly, with a grave little inclination of the head. 60 MY FRIEND PROSPERO John, always with magnificent assurance, put up his hand, to doff a man-of-the-worldy hat, and bow himself away; and it encountered his bare locks, bare, and still wet from recent ducking. Whereupon, suddenly, the trifles he had forgotten were remembered, and at last (in the formula of the criminologist) "he realised his position": hat- less and uncombed, with the bathing-towel slung from his shoulder, in that weather-beaten old frieze coat with its ridiculous buttons, in those aw ful Turkish slippers, offering, with his grand manner, flowers to a woman he didn t know, and smiling, to put her at her ease! His pink face burned to a livelier pink, his ears went hot, his heart went cold. The bow he finally accom plished was the blighted bud of the bow he had projected; and, as the earth didn t, of its charity, open and engulf him, he hastened as best he could, and with a painful sense of slinking, to remove his crestfallen person from her range of view. When these unself-conscious fellows are startled PART SECOND 61 into self-consciousness, I fancy they take it hard. I don t know how long it was before John had done heaping silent curses, silent but savage, upon himself, his luck, his "beastly officiousness," upon the whole afflicting incident: curses that he couldn t help diversifying now and then with a catch of splenetic laughter, as a vision of the figure he had cut would recurrently " flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude." "Oh, you ape!" he groaned. "Rigged out like Pudding Jack, and, with your ineffable simagrees, offering a strange woman flowers !" If she had only laughed, had only smiled, it wouldn t have been so bad, it would have shown that she understood. "But through it all," he writhed to recollect, "she was as solemn as a mourner. I suppose she was shocked perhaps she was frightened very likely she took me for a tramp. I wonder she didn t crown my beatitude 62 MY FRIEND PROSPERO by giving me her lira. These foreigners do so lack certain discernments." And with that rather an odd detail came back to him. Was she a foreigner? For it came vaguely back that he, impulsive and unthinking, had spoken to her throughout in English. "And anyhow," this came distinctly back, "it was certainly in English that she thanked me." Ill What passed for breakfast at the presbytery was the usual Continental evasion of that repast, bread and coffee, despatched in your apartment. But at noon the household met to dine. The dining-room, on the ground floor, long and low, with a vaulted ceiling, whitewashed, and a pavement of worn red tiles, was a clean, bare room, that (pervaded by a curious, dry, not un pleasant odour) seemed actually to smell of bare ness, as well as of cleanliness. There was a table, PART SECOND 63 there was a dresser, there were a few unpainted deal chairs, rush-bottomed (exactly like the chairs in the church, in all Italian churches), and there was absolutely nothing else, save a great black and white crucifix attached to the wall. But, by way of compensation, its windows opened south ward, flooding it with sunshine, and commanding the wonderful perspective of the valley, the blue- grey hills, the snow-peaks, the blossoming low lands, and the faraway opalescence that you knew to be the lake. At noon the parroco, his niece Annunziata, and his boarder met to dine. The parroco was a short, stout, florid, black- haired, hawk-nosed, fierce-looking, still youngish man, if five-and- forty may be reckoned youngish, with a pair of thin lips and powerful jaws which, for purposes of speech, he never opened if he could help it. Never, till Sunday came : when, mounting the pulpit, he opened them indeed, and his pent-up utterance burst forth in a perfect tor rent of a sermon, a wild gush of words, shouted at 64 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the topmost stress of a remarkably lusty voice* arresting for a minute or two by reason of the sheer physical energy it represented, and then for a long half hour exquisitely tiresome. But on week-days he maintained a prodigious silence, and this (as, though fierce-looking, he wasn t in the least really fierce), it would often be John s malicious study to tempt him to break. Besides, to-day, John was honestly concerned with the pur suit of knowledge. Accordingly, grace being said, "You never told me," he began, assuming a mien of intelligent in terest, "that the castle was haunted." He looked at the Napoleonic profile of Don Ambrogio, but from the tail of his eye he kept a watch as well upon Annunziata, and he saw that that wise little maiden became attentive. "No," said Don Ambrogio, between two spoon fuls of soup. "You will conceive my astonishment, then," con tinued John, urbanely, "when I discovered that it PART SECOND 65 "It isn t," said Don Ambrogio. He gave him self diligently to the business of the hour; his spoon flew backward and forward like a shuttle. His napkin, tucked into his Roman collar, pro tected his bosom, an effective white cuirass. "Oh? Not the castle?" questioned John. "Only the garden? And the olive wood? True, on reflection, I ve never seen it in the house." "Nothing here is haunted," said the parroco. He made a signal to Annunziata, who rose to change the plates. Her big eyes were alight, her serious little face was alert; but she would never dream of speaking in the presence of her uncle. Marcella, the cook, brought in the inevitable veal. "Oh, for that," insisted John, courteous but firm, "I beg your pardon. I myself have seen it on two occasions; and, lest you should fancy it a subjective illusion, I may tell you that it was yes terday seen simultaneously by another." "It? It? What is it?" asked the parroco, his beaked and ensanguined visage fiercer-looking 66 MY FRIEND PROSPERO than ever, as he fell upon the inevitable veal with a somewhat dull carving-knife. "Ah," said John, "now you make me regret that I haven t a talent for word-painting. It s the form of a woman, a young woman, tall, slender, in some pale diaphanous garment, that appears here, appears there, remaining distinctly visible for some minutes, and then disappears. No, it isn t a subjective illusion. And it isn t, either," the un scrupulous creature added, after a pause, raising his voice, and speaking with emphasis, as if to repel the insinuation, while the darkness of dis enchantment swept the face of Annunziata, "it isn t, either, as some imaginative people might too hastily conclude, a wraith, a phantom, an insub stantial vapour. It s a real material form, that lives and breathes, and even, if driven to it, speaks. There s nothing supernatural about it, unless, indeed, we take the transcendental view that Na ture herself is supernatural. I was wondering, Don Ambrogio, whether, without violating a con fidence, you could tell me whose form it is?" PART SECOND 67 "Nossignore," said Don Ambrogio, economising his breath. "Ah," sighed John, nodding resignedly, "I feared as much. Divining that I would institute inquiries, she has stolen a march upon me, and pledged you to secrecy." "Nossignore," disavowed Don Ambrogio, rais ing eyes the sincerity of which there could be no suspecting. John s face took on an expression of aggrieved surprise. "But then why won t you tell me?" "I cannot tell you because I do not know," said Don Ambrogio. "Oh, I see," said John. "And yet," he argued meditatively, "that s hard to conceive. I don t for a moment mean that I doubt it but it s hard to conceive, like the atomic theory, and some of the articles of religion. (I hear, by-the-bye, that the scientists are throwing the atomic theory over. Oh, fickle scientists ! Oh, shifting sands of science!) Surely there can t be many such tall 68 MY FRIEND PROSPERO slender forms, in diaphanous garments, appearing and disappearing here and there in your parish? And one would suppose, antecedently, that you d know them all." "A peasant, a villager," said Don Ambrogio. "I put it to you as an observer of life," said John, "do peasants, do villagers, wear diaphanous garments ?" "A visitor, a sight-seer, from some place on the lake," said Don Ambrogio. "I put it to you as a student of probabilities," said John, "would a visitor, would a sight-seer, from some place on the lake, walk in the garden of the castle without a hat? And would she ap pear at Sant Alessina on two days in succes sion?" But Don Ambrogio had finished his veal, and when he had finished his veal he always left the table, first twice devoutly making the sign of the cross, and then, with a bow to John, pronouncing the formula, "You will graciously permit? My affairs call me. A thousand regrets." To-day PART SECOND 69 he slightly amplified that formula. "A thousand regrets," he said, "and as many excuses for my inability to afford the information desired." After his departure, John turned to Annun- ziata, where, in her grey cotton pinafore, her lips parted, her big eyes two lively points of interroga tion, she sat opposite to him, impatient to take up the theme. "Well, Mistress Wisdom !" he saluted her, smil ing, and waving his hand. "It is a good and wholesome thing for the young to witness the dis comfiture of the wicked. Your uncle retreats with flying colours. He made, to be sure, a slender dinner, but that s his daily habit. If you have tears to shed, shed them for me. I have made none at all." From points of interrogation, Annunziata s eyes changed to abysses of wonder, and, big as they were, seemed to grow measurably bigger. "You have made no dinner?" she protested, in that strangely deep voice of her, with its effect of immense solemnity. 70 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "No, poor dear," said John, with pathos, "no, I have made no dinner." "But you have eaten a great deal," exclaimed Annunziata, frowning, nonplussed. "And you are still eating." "Quite so," responded John, "though I think it s perhaps the merest trifle unhandsome of you to fling it in my face. I have eaten a great deal, and I am still eating. That is what I come to table for. In an orderly life like mine there is a place for everything. I come to table to eat, just as I go to bed to sleep and to church to say my prayers. Would you have me sleep at table, eat in church, and say my prayers in bed? Eating, however, has nothing to do with the case. I spoke of dining I said I had not dined. Now you shall be the judge. The question is, can a Christian man dine twice on the same day ? Answer me that." "Oh, no," answered Annunziata, her pale face very sober, and she lengthened out her vowels in deprecation of the idea. "At least, it would be gluttony if he did." PART SECOND 71 "There you are," cried John. "And gluttony is not the undeadliest of the Seven Deadly Sins. So, then, unless you would have me guilty of the deadly sin of gluttony, you must agree that I have not dined. For I am going to dine this evening. I am going to dine at the Hotel Vic toria at Roccadoro. I am going to dine with a lady. I am going to dine in all the pomp and circumstance of my dress-suit, with a white tie and pumps. And you yourself have said it, a Christian man may not, without guilt of gluttony, dine twice on the same day. Therefore it is the height of uncharitableness, it s a deliberate im putation of sin, to contend that I have dined already." Annunziata followed his reasoning thoughtful ly, and then gravely set him right. "No," she said, with a drop of the eyelids and a quick little shake of the head, "you do not understand. I will explain." Her eyes were wide open again, and bright with zeal for his instruc tion. "You have dined already. That is a cer- 72 MY FRIEND PROSPERO tain truth, because this meal is dinner, and you have eaten it. But to-night you are going to a dinner of ceremony and that is different. A dinner of ceremony does not count. It is the same as a supper. My uncle himself once went to a dinner of ceremony at Bergamo. No, it will not be gluttony for you to go to a dinner of ceremony." "You speak like a little pope," said John, with enthusiasm. "In matters of Faith and Morals I believe you are infallible. If you could guess the load you have lifted from my conscience !" And he pushed a hearty ouf. "I am glad," said Annunziata. And then she attempted to hark back. Curiosity again light ing her eyes, "This form that you have seen in the garden " she began. "Don t try to change the subject," John inter rupted. "Let us cultivate sequence in our ideas. What I am labouring with hammer and tongs to drag from you is the exact date at which, some- PART SECOND 73 where between the years of our salvation 1387 and 1455, you sat for your portrait to the beati fied painter Giovanni of Fiesole. Now be a duck, and make a clean breast of it." Annunziata s eyes clouded. A kind of scorn, a kind of pity, and a kind of patient longanim- ity looked from them. "That is folly," she said, on the deepest of her deep notes, with a succession of slow, reflective, sidewise nods. "Folly ?" repeated John, surprised, but bland. "Oh? Really?" "Sit for my portrait between the years 1387 and 1455, how could I?" scoffed Annunziata. "Why? What was to prevent you?" innocent ly questioned he. "Ma come! I was not yet alive," said she. John looked at her with startled eyes, and spoke with animation. "Weren t you? Word of honour? Are you sure? How do you know? Have you any defi- 74 MY FRIEND PROSPERO nite recollection that you weren t? Can you clearly recall the period in question, and then, reviewing it in detail, positively attest that you were dead? For there s no third choice. A per son must either be alive or dead. And how, if you weren t alive, how ever did it come to pass that there should be a perfect portrait of you from Giovanni s brush in the Convent of Saint Mark at Florence? Your grave little white face, and your wise little big eyes, and your eager little inquisitive profile, and your curls flowing about your shoulders, and your pinafore that s so like a peplum, there they all are, precise!} 7 as I see them before me now. And how was Giovanni able to do them if you weren t alive? Perhaps you were pre-mortally alive in Heaven? Giovanni s cell, as is well known, had a window that opened straight into Heaven. Perhaps he saw you through that window, and painted you without your knowing it. The name they give your por trait, by-the-bye, would rather seem to confirm that theory. What do you think they call it? PART SECOND 75 They call it an un anglolo. I ve got a copy of it in England. When you come to London to visit the Queen I ll show it to you." Annunziata gave her flowing curls a toss. "The form of the young woman which you have seen in the garden " she began anew. "Ah," said John, "observe how differently the big fish and the little fish will be affected by the same bait." "When you first spoke of it," said she, "I thought you had seen a holy apparition." "Yes," said he. "That was because I couched my communication in language designedly mis leading. I employed the terminology of ghost- lore. I said haunted and appear and things like that. And you were very properly and nat urally deceived. I confidently expected that you would be. No, it is not given to world-stained and world-worn old men like me to see holy apparitions." "Old men? You are not an old man," said An nunziata. 76 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Oh? Not? What am I, then?" said John. "You are a middle-aged man," said she. "Thank you, Golden Tongue," said he, with a bow. "And you are sure that it was merely a real person?" she pursued. "No," said he. "I am too profoundly imbued with the basic principles of metaphysics ever to be sure of the objective reality of phenomena. I can only swear to my impression. My im pression was and is that it was merely a real person." "Then," said Annunziata, with decision, "it must be the person who is visiting the Signora Brandi." "The Signora Brandi?" repeated John. "What a nice name. Who is the Signora Brandi?" "She is an Austrian," said Annunziata. "Oh?" said John. "She lives in the pavilion beyond the clock- tower," said Annunziata. "I wasn t aware," said John, "that the pavilion PART SECOND 77 beyond the clock-tower was inhabited. I wasn t aware that any part of this castle was inhabited, except the porter s lodge and the part that we inhabit. Why have I been left till now in this state of outer darkness?" "The Signora Brandi has been absent," said Annunziata. "She has been in her own country in Austria. But the other day she returned. And with her came a person to visit her. That is the person whose form you have seen in the garden." "How do you know it wasn t the form of the Signora Brandi herself?" John said. "Oh, no," said Annunziata. "The Signora Brandi is not young. She is old. She is as old as" "Methusaleh? Sin? The hills?" suggested John, Annunziata having paused to think. "No," said Annunziata, repudiating the sug gestion with force. "No one is so old as Methu saleh. She is as old as well, my uncle." "I see," said John. "Yes, it s all highly mys terious." 78 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Mysterious?" said Annunziata. "I should think so," asseverated he. "Cryptic, enigmatic, esoteric to the last degree. To begin with, how does the Signora Brandi, being an Aus trian, come by so characteristically un-Austrian a name? Is that mysterious? And in the next place, why does an Austrian Signora Brandi so far forget what is due to her nationality as to live, not in Austria, but in Lombardy? And as if that were not enough at Castel Sant Ales- sina? And as if that were not more than enough in the pavilion beyond the clock? Come, come! Mysterious !" "You are living in Lombardy, you are living at Castel Sant Alessina, yourself," said Annun ziata. "I hardly think so," said John. "You can scarcely with precision call this living this is rather what purists call sojourning. But even were it otherwise, there s all the difference in the world between my case and the Signora Brandi s. I am middle-aged and foolish, but she is as old PART SECOND 79 as your uncle. Don t you see the mysterious sig nificance of that coincidence? And I haven t a young woman visiting me. Who is the young woman? Is that a mystery? My sweet child, we tread among mysteries. We are at the centre of a coil of mysteries. Who is the young woman? And how consider well upon this how does it happen that the young woman speaks English? Mysterious, indeed!" He rose, and bowed, with ceremony. "But we burn daylight. I must not detain you longer. Suffer me to imprint upon your hand of velvet a token of my high regard." And taking Annunziata s frail little white hand, he bent low to kiss it; and though his blue eyes were full of laughter, I think that behind the laughter there was a great deal of real fondness and admiration. 80 MY FRIEND PROSPERO IV Half way down the long straight avenue of ilex- trees that led from the castle to the principal en trance of the garden, Annunziata, in her pale- grey pinafore (that was so like a peplum), with her hair waving about her shoulders, was curled up in the corner of a marble bench, gazing with great intentness at a white flower that lay in her lap. It was the warmest and the peacefulest mo ment of the afternoon. The sun shone steadily; not a leaf stirred, not a shadow wavered ; and the intermittent piping of a blackbird, somewhere in the green world overhead, seemed merely to give a kind of joyous rhythm to the silence. "Mercy upon me! Who ever saw so young a maiden so deeply lost in thought!" exclaimed a voice. Annunziata, her reverie thus disturbed, raised a pair of questioning eyes. PART SECOND 81 A lady was standing before her, smiling down upon her, a lady in a frock of lilac-coloured mus lin, with a white sunshade. Annunziata, who, when she liked, could be the very pink of formal politeness, rose, dropped a courtesy, and said: "Buon giorno, Signori- na." "Buon giorno," responded the smiling lady. "Buon giorno and a penny for your thoughts. But I m sure you could never, never tell what it was you were thinking so hard about." "Scusi," said Annunziata. "I was trying to think of the name of this flower." She stooped and picked up the flower, which had slipped from her lap to the ground when she rose. Then she held it at arm s length, for inspection. "Oh?" asked the lady, smiling at the flower, as she had smiled at its possessor. "Isn t it a nar cissus?" "Yes," said Annunziata. "It is a narcissus. But I was trying to think of its particular 82 MY FRIEND PROSPERO The lady looked as if she did not quite under stand. "Its particular name?" "It is a narcissus," explained Annunziata, "just as I am a girl. But it must also have its par ticular name, just as I have mine. It is a soul doing its Purgatory a very good soul. If you are very good, then, when you die, you do your Purgatory as a flower. But it is not such an easy Purgatory oh, no. For look: the flower is beautiful, but it is blind, and cannot see; and it is fragrant, but it cannot smell; and people ad mire it and praise it, but it is deaf, and cannot hear. It can only wait, wait, wait, and think of God. But it is a short Purgatory. A few days, and the flower will fade, and the soul will be re leased. I think this flower s name is Cecilia, it is so white." The smile in the lady s eyes had brightened, as she listened; and now she gave a little laugh, a little, light, musical, pleased and friendly laugh. "Yes," she said. "I have sometimes wondered myself whether flowers might not be the Purga- PART SECOND 83 tory of very good souls. I am glad to learn from you that it is true. And yes, I should think that this flower s name was sure to be Cecilia. Cecilia suits it perfectly. What, if one may ask, is your particular name?" "Mariannunziata," said its bearer, not to make two bites of a cherry. The lady s eyes grew round. "Dear me! A little short name like that?" she marvelled. "No," returned Annunziata, with dignity. "My name in full is longer. My name in full is Giu- liana Falconieri Maria Annunziata Casalone. Is that not long enough?" "Yes," the lady admitted, "that is just long enough." And she laughed again. "What is your name?" inquired Annunziata. "My name is Maria Dolores," the lady answered. "You see, we are both named Maria." "Of course," said Annunziata. "All Christians should be named Maria." "So they should," agreed the lady. "Do you ever tell people how old you are?" 84 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Yes," said Annunziata, "if they wish to know. Why not?" The smile in the lady s eyes shone brighter than ever. "Do you think you could be persuaded to tell me?" "With pleasure," said Annunziata. "I am eleven years and five months. And you?" "I am just twice as old. I am twenty-two years and ten months. So, when you are fifty, how old shall I be?" "No," said Annunziata, shaking her head. "That trick has been tried with me before. My friend Prospero has tried it with me. You hope I will say that you will be a hundred. But it is not so. When I am fifty, you will be sixty-one, going on sixty-two." Still again the lady laughed, apparently with great amusement. "What a little bundle of wisdom you are!" she exclaimed. "Yes. My friend Prospero also says that I am wise," answered Annunziata. "I like to see you PART SECOND 85 laugh," she mentioned, looking critically at the face above her. "You have beautiful teeth, they are so white and shining, and so small, and your lips are so red." "Oh," said the lady, laughing more merrily than ever. "Then you must be very entertaining, and I will laugh a great deal." Still looking critically at the lady s face, "Are you not," demanded Annunziata, "the person who. has come to visit the Signora Brandi?" "SignoraBrandi?" The lady considered. "Yes, I suppose I must be. At any rate, I am the per son who has come to visit Frau Brandt." "Frao Branta? We call her Signora Brandi here," said Annunziata. "Are you related to her?" "No," said the lady, who always seemed in clined to laugh, though Annunziata had no con sciousness of being very entertaining. "I am not related to her. I am only her friend." "She is an Austrian," said Annunziata. "This castle belongs to Austrians. Once upon a time, 86 MY FRIEND PROSPERO very long ago, before I was born, all this coun try belonged to Austrians. Are you, too, an Aus trian?" "Yes." The lady nodded. "I, too, am an Aus trian." "And yet," remarked Annunziata, "you speak Italian just as I do." "It is very good of you to say so," laughed the lady. "No it is the truth," said Annunziata. "But is it not good to tell the truth?" the lady asked. "No," said Annunziata. "It is only a duty." And again she shook her head, slowly, darkly, with an effect of philosophic melancholy. "That is very strange and very hard," she pointed out. "If you do not do that which is your duty, it is bad, and you are punished. But if you do do it, that is not good, it is only what you ought to do, and you are not rewarded." And she fetched her breath in the saddest of sad little sighs. Then, briskly recovering her cheerfulness, "And you speak English, besides," she said. PART SECOND 87 "Oh?" wondered the lady. "Are you a clair- voyante? How do you know that I speak Eng lish?" "My friend Prospero told me so," said Annun- ziata. "Your friend Prospero?" the lady repeated. "You quote your friend Prospero very often. Who is your friend Prospero?" "He is a signore," said Annunziata. "He has seen you, he has seen your form, in the garden and in the olive wood." "Oh," said the lady. "And I suppose he must have heard you speak English," Annunziata added. "He lives at the presbytery." "And where, by-the-bye, do you live?" asked the lady. "I live at the presbytery, too," said Annunzi ata. "I am the niece of the parroco. I am the orphan of his only brother. My friend Prospero lives with us as a boarder. He is English." "Indeed?" said the lady. "Prospero is a very odd name for an Englishman." 88 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Prospero is not his name," said Annunziata. "His name is Gian. That is English for Gio vanni." "But why, then," the lady puzzled, "do you call him Prospero?" "Prospero is a name I have given him," ex plained Annunziata. "One day I told his for tune. I can tell fortunes with olive-stones, with playing-cards, or from the lines of the hand. I will tell you yours, if you wish. Well, one day, I told Prospero s, and everything came out so prosperously for him, I have called him Prospero ever since. He will be rich, though he is poor ; and he will marry a dark woman, who will also be rich; and they will have many, many children, and live in peace to the end of their lives. But there!" Annunziata cried out suddenly, with ex citement, waving the hand that held her narcis sus. "There is my friend Prospero now, coming . in the gig." Down the avenue, sure enough, a gig was com ing, a sufficiently shabby, ancient gig, drawn, PART SECOND 89 however, at a very decent pace by a very de cent-looking horse, and driven by John Blanche- main. "Ciao, Prospero!" called Annunziata, as he passed. And John took off his hat, a modish Panama, and bowed and smiled to her and to the lady. And one adept in reading the meaning of smiles might have read three or four separate meanings in that smile of his. It seemed to say to An nunziata, "Ah, you rogue! So already you have waylaid her, and made her acquaintance." To the lady: "I congratulate you upon your compan ion. Isn t she a diverting little monkey?" To himself: "And I congratulate you, my dear, upon being clothed and in your right mind, and upon having a proper hat to make your bow with." And to the universe at large : "By Jove, she is good- looking. Standing there before that marble bench, in the cool green light, under the great ilexes, with her lilac frock arid her white sunshade, and Annunziata all in grey beside her, what a sub- 90 MY FRIEND PROSPERO ject for a painting, if only there were any paint ers who knew how to paint!" "He is going to a dinner at Roccadoro," said Annunziata, while John s back grew small and smaller in the distance. "Did you see, he had a portmanteau under the seat? He is going to a dinner of ceremony, and he will have his costume of ceremony in the portmanteau. I wonder what he will bring back with him for me. When he goes to Roccadoro he always brings something back for me. Last time it was a box of chocolate cigars. I should like to see him in his costume of ceremony. Wouldn t you?" But the lady merely laughed. And then, tak ing Annunziata s chin in her hand, she looked down into her big clear e} r es, and said, "I must be off now, to join Signora Brandi. But I can not leave without telling you how glad I am to have met you, and what pleasure I have derived from your conversation. I hope we shall meet often. Good-bye." "Good-bye, Signorina," said Annunziata, be- PART SECOND 91 coming formally polite again. "I shall always be at your service." And she dropped another courtesy. "If you will come to see me at the presbytery," she hospitably added, "I will show you my tame kid." "You are all that is most kind," responded the lady, and went off smiling toward the castle. Annunziata curled herself up in her old corner of the marble bench, and appeared to relapse into profound thought. V A curious little intimate inward glow, a sense, somewhere deep down in his consciousness, of ela tion and well-being, accompanied John all the way to Roccadoro, mingling with and sweetening whatever thoughts or perceptions occupied his immediate attention. This was a "soul-state" that he knew of old, and he had no difficulty in referring it to its cause. It was the glow and the elation which he was fortunate enough al- 92 MY FRIEND PROSPERO ways to experience when his eye had been fed with a fresh impression of beauty; and he knew that he owed it to-day to the glimpse he had had, in the cool light under the ilexes, of a slender figure in lilac and a tiny figure in grey, beside a soft-complexioned old marble bench in the midst of a shadowy, sunny, brown and green Italian garden. The drive to Roccadoro from Sant Alessina is a pleasant drive. The road follows for the most part the windings of the Rampio, so that you are seldom out of sight of its gleaming waters, and the brawl of it, now louder, now less loud, is perpetually in your ears. To right and left you have the tender pink of blossoming almonds, with sometimes the scarlet flame of a pomegranate ; and then the blue-grey hills, mantled in a kind of transparent cloth-of-gold, a gauze of gold, woven of haze and sunshine; and then, rosy white, with pale violet shadows, the snow-peaks, cut like cam eos upon the brilliant azure of the sky. And sometimes, of course, you rattle through a vil- PART SECOND 93 lage, with its crumbling, stained, and faded yel low-stuccoed houses, its dazzling white canvas awnings, its church and campanile, and its life that seems to pass entirely in the street: men in their shirt-sleeves, lounging, smoking, spitting (else the land were not Italy!), or perhaps play ing cards at a table under the leafless bush of the wine-shop ; women gossiping over their needlework, or, gathered in sociable knots, combing and bind ing up their sleek black hair; children sprawling in the kindly dirt; the priest, biretta on head, nose in breviary, drifting slowly upon some priest ly errand, and "getting through his office"; and the immemorial goatherd, bare-legged, in a tat tered sugar-loaf hat, followed by his flock, with their queer anxious faces, blowing upon his Pan s- pipes (shrill strains, in minor mode and plagal scale, a music older than Theocritus), or stopping, jealously watched by the customer s avid Italian eyes, to milk "per due centesimi" say, a far thing s worth into an outstretched, close-clutched jug. Sometimes the almond orchards give place 94 MY FRIEND PROSPERO to vineyards, or to maize fields, or to dusky groves of walnut, or to plantations of scrubby oak where lean black pigs forage for the delectable acorn. Sometimes the valley narrows to a ravine, and signs of cultivation disappear, and the voice of the Rampio swells to a roar, and you become aware, between the hills that rise gloomy and almost sheer beside you, of a great solitude: a solitude that is intensified rather than diminished by the sight of some lonely infinitely lonely grange, perched far aloft, at a height that seems out of reach of the world. What possible manner of human beings, you wonder, can inhabit there, and what possible dreary manner of existence can they lead? But even in the most solitary places you are welcomed and sped on by a chorus of bird-songs. The hill sides resound with bird-songs continuously for the whole seven miles, and continuously, at this sea son, for the whole four-and-twenty hours. Black birds, thrushes, blackcaps, goldfinches, chaffinches, sing from the first peep of dawn till the last trace of daylight has died out, and then the nightingales PART SECOND 95 begin and keep it up till dawn again. And every where the soft air is aromatic with a faint scent of rosemary, for rosemary grows everywhere un der the trees. And everywhere you have the pu rity and brilliancy and yet restraint of colour, and the crisp economy of line, which give the Italian landscape its look of having been designed by a conscious artist. In and through his enjoyment of all these pleas antnesses, John felt that agreeable glow which he owed to his glimpse of the woman in the garden ; and when at last he reached the Hotel Victoria, and, having dressed, found himself alone for a few moments with Lady Blanchemain, in the dim and cool sitting-room where she awaited her guests, he hastened to let her know that he shared her own opinion of the woman s charms. "Your beauty decidedly is a beauty," he de clared. "I wish you could have seen her as I saw her an hour ago, with a white sunshade, against a background of ilexes. It s a thousand pities that painting should be a forgotten art." 96 MY FRIEND PROSPERO But Lady Blanchemain (magnificent in purple velvet, with diamonds round her throat and in her hair) didn t seem interested. "Do you know," she said, "I made yesterday one of the most ridiculous blunders of my life. It s been preying upon my mind ever since. I generally have pretty trustworthy perceptions, and perhaps this is a symptom of failing powers. I told myself positively that you were an Eton and Balliol man. It never occurred to me till I was half way home that, as a Papist, you d be nothing of the sort." "No," said John; "I m afraid I m Edgbaston and Paris. The way her hair grows low about her brow, and swoops upward and backward in a sort of tidal wave, and breaks loose in little curling tendrils, it s absolutely lyrical. And the smile at the bottom of her eyes is exactly like silent music. And her mouth is a couplet in praise of love, with two red lips for rhymes. And her chin is a perfect epithalamium of a chin. And then her figure! And then her lilac frock! Oh, PART SECOND 97 it s a thousand thousand pities that painting should be a forgotten art." "What, the same lilac frock?" said Lady Blanchemain, absently. "Yet you certainly have the Eton voice," she mused. "And if I don t pay you the doubtful compliment of saying that you have the Balliol manner, you have at least a kind of subtilised reminiscence of it." "I must keep a guard upon myself," said John. 66 She s visiting an Austrian woman who lives in a remote wing of the castle, the pavilion beyond the clock, in fact, an Austrian woman of the exhilarating name of Brandi." "I m rather in luck for my dinner to-night," said Lady Blanchemain. "I ve got Agnes Scope, the niece of the Duke of Wexmouth. She ar rived here this morning with her aunt, Lady Louisa. Of course I m putting you next to her. As, besides being an extremely nice girl and an heiress, she s an ardent pervert to Romanism, well, a word to the wise." "Yes, I know her," said John. "We don t get 98 MY FRIEND PROSPERO on a bit. She moves on far too high a plane for a groundling like me. She s intellectual and earnest, and my ignorance and light-mindedness wound her to the quick. She ll end, as I ve told her to her face, by writing books, serious novels, probably, which she ll illuminate with beautiful irrelevant quotations from Browning and Cardinal Newman." "Bother," said Lady Blanchemain. "You re perverse." "Besides," said John, "she s engaged." "Engaged ?" faltered Lady Blanchemain. "Yes to an intellectual and earnest man, named Bernard Blake a grandson of the famous Blake of Cambridge." Lady Blanchemain fixed him with darkening eyes. "Are you sure?" she pleaded. "I saw it officially stated in the Morning Post" was John s relentless answer. "What a nuisance," said Lady Blanchemain, fanning. Her fan was of amber tortoise-shell, PART SECOND 99 with white ostrich feathers, and the end sticks bore her cypher and coronet in gold. "What a jolly fan," said John. "Well, well," said Lady Blanchemain, reconcil ing herself. Then, after an instant of pensive- ness, "So you re already laid low by her beauty. But you haven t found out yet who she is?" "Who who is?" said John, looking all at sea. "Tut. Don t tease. Your woman at the cas tle." "My woman at the castle appeared to leave you cold," he complained. "I arrived full of her, and you wouldn t listen." "So you re already in love with her?" said Lady Blanchemain. "No not yet," said he. "As yet I merely rec ognise in her admirable material for a painting, and regret that such material should go begging for the lack of a painter. But by this time to morrow who can tell?" "Have you found out who she is?" asked Lady Blanchemain. 100 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "No not yet," said he. "As yet I ve merely found out that she s visiting an Austrian Signora Brandi, who lives (I can t think why) in the pa vilion beyond the clock. But by this time to morrow !" His gesture spoke volumes of pro spective information. "She looked like a gentlewoman," reflected his friend. "For all the world," said he. "Yet, if she s an Austrian She paused and pondered. "Why? What s the difficulty?" said he. "To know whether she is foor/z," said Lady Blanchemain. "Among Austrians, unless you re born, you re impossible, you re nowhere. Brandi doesn t sound born, does it? We mustn t let you become enamoured of her if she isn t born." "Brandi sounds tremendously tmborn," assented John. "And if like visits like, Signora Brandi s visitor will probably be unborn too. But to me that would rather add an attraction, provided she s bred. I m not an Austrian. I m a Briton PART SECOND i : i J V . JO1 , and a democrat. I feel it is my destiny, if ever I am to become enamoured at all, to become enam oured of the daughter of a miller, of a rising miller, who has given his daughter advantages. Bred, not Born : or the Lady of the Mill that shall be the title of my humble heart-history. If this woman could prove to me that she was the daughter of a miller, I m not sure I shouldn t become enamoured of her on the spot. Well, I shall know to-morrow. By this time to-morrow I shall possess her entire dossier. It may interest you to learn that I am employing a detective to investigate her." "A detective? What do you mean?" said Lady Blanchemain. "A private detective, a female detective, whom, the next time you come to Sant Alessina, I ll in troduce to you," said John. "What on earth do you mean?" said Lady Blanchemain. "The most amusing, the most adorable little de tective unhung," said he. "People are all love .102 MY FRIEND PROSPERO and laughter whenever they look at her. She ll worm its inmost secrets from my sphinx s heart." "What pleasure can you take in practising upon a poor old woman who only by a sort of fluke isn t your grandmother?" said she. "Lady Louisa FitzStephen, Miss Scope," said her servant, opening the door. VI The nightingales sang him home, and the moon lighted him, the liquid moon of April and Italy. As he approached the castle, through the purple and silver garden, amid the mysterious sweet odours of the night, he glanced up vaguely at the pavilion beyond the clock. He glanced up vaguely, but next second he was no longer vague. There, on a low-hung balcony, not ten feet above him, full in the moonlight, stood a figure in white all in white, with a scarf of white lace thrown over her dark hair. The nightingales PART SECOND 103 sang and sobbed, the moon rained its amethys tine fire upon the earth, the earth gave forth its mysterious sweet night odours, and she stood there motionless, and breathed and gazed and listened. But at the sound of wheels in the avenue, she turned slightly, and looked down. Her face was fair and delicate and pure in the moonlight, and her eyes shone darkly bright. She turned, and looked down, and her eyes met John s. "Given the hour and the place, I wonder whether I ought to bow," he thought. Before he could make up his mind, however, his hand had automatically raised his hat. She inclined her head in acknowledgment, and something softly changed in her face. "She smiled!" he said, and caught his breath, with a kind of astonished exultancy. That soft change in her face came and went and came again through all his dreams. PART THIRD "Good morning, Prospero," said Annunziata. "Good morning, Wide-awake," responded John. He was in the octagonal room on the piano nobile of the castle, where his lost ladies of old years smiled on him from their frames. He had heard an approaching patter of feet on the pave ment of the room beyond; and then Annunziata s little grey figure, white face, and big grave eyes, had appeared, one picture the more, in the vast carved and gilded doorway. "I have been looking everywhere for you," she said, plaintive. "Poor sweetheart," he commiserated her. "And can t you find me?" "I couldn t," said Annunziata, bearing on the tense. "But I have found you now." "Oh? Have you? Where?" asked he. 104 PART THIRD 105 "WT&ref" cried she, with a disdainful movement. "But here, of course." "I wouldn t be too cocksure of that," he cau tioned her. "Here is a mighty evasive bird. For, suppose we were elsewhere, then there would be here, and here would be somewhere else." "No," said Annunziata, with resolution. "Where a person is, that is always here." "You speak as if a person carried his here with him, like his hat," said John. "Yes, that is how it is," said Annunziata, nod ding. "You have a remarkably solid little head, for all its curls, there s no confusing it," said he. "Well, have you your report, drawn up, signed, sealed, sworn to before a Commissioner for Oaths, and ready to be delivered?" "My report ?" questioned Annunziata, with a glance. "About the Form," said John. "I caught you yesterday red-handed in the fact of pump ing it." 106 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Yes," said Annunziata. "Her name is Maria Dolores." "A most becoming name," said he. "She is very nice," said Annunziata. "She looks very nice," said he. "She is twenty-two years and ten months old," continued his informant. "Fancy. As middle-aged as that," commented he. "Yes. She is an Austrian." "Ah." "And as I told you, she is visiting the Signora Brandi. Only, she calls her Frao Branta." "Frao Branta?" John turned the name on his tongue. "Branta? Branta?" What familiar German name, at the back of his memory, did it half evoke? Suddenly he had a flash. "Can you possibly mean Frau Brandt?" Annunziata gave a gesture of affirmation. "Yes, that is it," she said. "You sound it just as she did!" "I see," said John. "And Brandt, if there are PART THIRD 107 degrees of unbirth, is even more furiously unborn than Brandi." "Unborn ?" said Annunziata, frowning. "Not noble not of the aristocracy," John ex plained. "Very few people are noble," said Annunziata. "All the more reason, then, why you and I should be thankful that we are," said he. "You and I?" she expostulated, with a shrug of her little grey shoulders. "Mache! We are not noble." "Aren t we? How do you know?" asked John. "Anyhow," he impressively moralised, "we can try to be." "No," said she, with conclusiveness, with fatalism. "It is no good trying. Either you are noble or sim ple, God makes you so, you cannot help it. If I were noble, I should be a contessina. If you were noble, you would be a gransignore." "And my unassuming appearance assures you that I m not ?" said he, smiling. "If you were a gransignore," she instructed him, 108 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "you would never be such friends with me you would be too proud." John laughed. "You judge people by the company they keep. Well, I will apply the same principle of judgment to your gossip, Maria Dolores. By-the-bye," he broke off to inquire, "what is her Pagan name?" "Her Pagan name? What is that?" asked An- nunziata. "Maria Dolores, I take it, is her Christian name, come by in Holy Baptism," said John. "But I sup pose she will have a Pagan name, come by in the way of the flesh, to round it off with, just as, for in stance, a certain flame of mine, whose image, when I die, they ll find engraved upon my heart, has the Pagan name of Casalone." Annunziata looked up, surprised. "Casalone? That is my name," she said. "Yes," said John. "Yours will be the image." Annunziata gave her head a toss. "Maria Do lores did not tell me her Pagan name," she said. "At any rate," said he, "to judge by the company PART THIRD 109 she keeps, we may safely classify her as unborn. She is probably the daughter of a miller, of a miller (to judge also a little by the frocks she wears) in rather a large way of business, who (to judge finally by her cultivated voice, her knowledge of languages, and her generally distinguished air) has spared no expense in the matter of her education. I shouldn t wonder a bit if she could even play the piano." "No," agreed Annunziata, "that is very likely. But why" she tilted upward her inquisitive little profile "why should you think she is the daughter of a miller?" "Miller," said John, "I use as a generic term. Her father may be a lexicographer or a drysalter, a designer of dirigible balloons or a manufacturer of air-pumps ; he may even be a person of independent means, who lives in a big, new, stuccoed villa in the suburbs of Vienna, and devotes his leisure to the propagation of orchids: yet all the while a miller. By miller I mean a member of the Bourgeoisie: a man who, though he be well-to-do, well-educated, well-bred, does not bear coat-armour, and is there- 110 MY FRIEND PROSPERO fore to be regarded by those who do with their noses in the air, especially in Austria. Among Austrians, unless you bear coat-armour, you re impossible, you re nowhere. We mustn t let you become enamoured of her if she doesn t bear coat- armour." Annunziata s eyes, during this divagation, had wandered to the window, the tall window with its view of the terraced garden, where the mimosa bloomed and the blackcaps carolled. Now she turned them slowly upon John, and he saw from their expression that at last she was coming to what for her (as he had known all along) was the real preoccupation of the moment. They were im mensely serious, intensely concerned, and at the same time, in their farther recesses, you felt a kind of fluttering shyness, as if I dare not were hanging upon I would. "Tell me," she began, on a deep note, a deep coax ing note . . . Then I dare not got the better, and she held back . . . Then / would took his courage in both hands, and she plunged. "What PART THIRD 111 have you brought for me from Roccadoro?" And after one glance of half bashful, all impassioned supplication, she let her eyes drop, and stood be fore him suspensive, as one awaiting the word of destiny. John s "radiant blondeur," his yellow beard, pink face, and sea-blue eyes, lighted up, more radiant still, with subcutaneous laughter. "The shops were shut," he said. "I arrived after closing time." But something in his tone rendered this grim an nouncement nugatory. Annunziata drew a long breath, and looked up again. "You have brought me something, all the same," she declared with con viction; and eagerly, eyes gleaming, "What is it? What is it ?" she besought him. John laughed. "You are quite right," he said. "If one can t buy, beg, or borrow, in this world, one can generally steal." Annunziata drew away, regarded him with mis giving. "Oh, no ; you would never steal," she pro tested. H2 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I m not so sure for one I loved," said he. "What would you have liked me to bring you?" Annunziata thought. "I liked those chocolate cigars," she said, her face soft with reminiscence of delight. "Ah, but we mustn t have it ton jours perdrix," said John. "Do you, by any chance, like march pane ?" "Marchpane? I adore it," she answered, in an outburst of emotion. "You have your human weaknesses, after all," John laughed. "Well, I stole a pocketful of march pane." Annunziata drew away again, her little white forehead furrowed. "Stole?" she repeated, reluc tant to believe. "Yes," said he, brazenly, nodding his head. "Oh, that was very wrong," said Annunziata, sadly shaking hers. "No," said he. "Because, in the first place, it s a matter of proverbial wisdom that stolen marchpane s sweetest. And, in the next place, I stole it quite PART THIRD 113 openly, under the eye of the person it belonged to, and she made no effort to defend her property. See ing which, I even went so far as to explain to her wliy I was stealing it. There s a young limb o mis chief with a sweet tooth at Sant Alessina, I ex plained, who regularly levies blackmail upon me. I m stealing this for her. And then the lady I was stealing from told me I might steal as much as ever I thought good." "Oh-h-h," said Annunziata, a long-drawn Oh of relief. "Then you didn t steal it she gave it to you." "Well," said John, "if casuistry like that can ease your conscience if you feel that you can con scientiously receive it And he allowed his inflec tion to complete the sentence. "Give it to me," said Annunziata, holding out her hands, and dancing up and down in glee and in im patience. "Nenni-da," said John. "Not till after dinner. I m not going to be a party to the spoiling of a fair, young, healthy appetite." MY FRIEND PROSPERO Pain wrote itself upon Annunziata s brow. "Oh," she grieved, "must I wait till after dinner?" "Yes," said John. For a breathing-space she struggled. "Would it be bad of me," she asked, "if I begged for just a little now?" "Yes," said John, "bad and bootless. You d find me as unyielding as adamant." "Ah, well," sighed Annunziata, a deep and tremu lous sigh. "Then I will wait." And, like a true philosopher, she proceeded to oc cupy her mind with a fresh interest. She looked round the room, she looked out of the window. "Why do you stay here? It is much pleasanter in the garden," she remarked. "I came here to seek for consolation. To-day be gan for me with a tragic misadventure," John re plied. Annunziata s eyes grew big, compassionating him, and, at the same time, bespeaking a lively curi osity. "Poor Prospero," she gently murmured. "What was it?" on tip-toe she demanded. PART THIRD 115 "Well," he said, "when I rose, to go for mj morning swim, I made an elaborate toilet, because I hoped to meet a certain person whom, for rea sons connected with my dignity, I wished to im press. But it was love s labour lost. The certain person is an ornament of the uncertain sex, and didn t turn up. So, to console myself, I came here." Annunziata looked round the room again. "What is there here that can console you?" "These," said John. His hand swept the pic tured walls. "The paintings?" said she, following his gesture. "How can they console you?" "They re so well painted," said he, fondly studying the soft-coloured canvases. "Besides, these ladies are dead. I like dead ladies." Annunziata looked critically at the pictures, and then at him with solemn meaning. "They are very pretty but they are not dead," she pronounced in her deepest voice. "Not dead?" echoed John, astonished. "Aren t they?" 116 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "No," said she, with a slow shake of the head "Dear me," said he. "And, when they re alone here and no one s looking, do you think they come down from their frames and dance? It must be a sight worth seeing." "No," said Annunziata. "These are only their pictures. They cannot come down from their frames. But the ladies themselves are not dead. Some of them are still in Purgatory, perhaps. We should pray for them." She made, in parenthesis as it were, a pious sign of the cross. "Some are perhaps already in Heaven. We should ask their prayers. And others are perhaps in Hell," she pursued, inexorable theologian that she was. "But none of them is dead. No one is dead. There s no such thing as being dead." "But then," puzzled John, "what is it that peo ple mean when they talk of Death?" "I will tell you," said Annunziata, her eyes heavy with thought. "Listen, and I will tell you." She seated herself on the big round ottoman, and raised her face to his. "Have you ever been at a pantomime?" she asked. PART THIRD 117 "Yes," said John, wondering what could pos sibly be coming. "Have you been at the pantomime," she con tinued earnestly, "when there was what they call a transformation-scene?" "Yes," said John. "Well," said she, "last winter I was taken to the pantomime at Bergamo, and I saw a transforma tion-scene. You ask me, what is Death? It is exactly like a transformation-scene. At the panto mime the scene was just like the world. There were trees, and houses, and people, common people, like anyone. Then suddenly click! Oh, it was wonderful. Everything was changed. The trees had leaves of gold and silver, and the houses were like fairy palaces, and there were strange lights, red and blue, and there were great garlands of the most beautiful flowers, and the people were like angels, with gems and shining clothes. Well, you understand, at first we had only seen one side of the scene; then click! everything was turned round, and we saw the other side. That is like 118 MY FRIEND PROSPERO life and death. Always, while we are alive, we can see only one side of things. But there is the other side, the under side. Never, so long as we are alive, we can never, never see it. But when we die, click! It is a trans formation-scene. Everything is turned round, and we see the other side. Oh, it will be very different, it will be wonderful. That is what they call Death." It was John s turn to be grave. It was some time before he spoke. He looked down at her, with a kind of grave laughter in his eyes, admiring, consid ering. What could he say? . . . What he did say, at last, was simply, "Thank you, my dear." Annunziata jumped up. "Oh, come," she urged. "Let s go into the gar den. It is so much nicer there than here. There are lots of cockchafers. Besides" she held out as an additional inducement "we might meet Maria Do lores." "No," said John. "Though the cockchafers are a temptation, I will stop here. But go you to the gar den, by all means. And if you do meet Maria Do- PART THIRD 119 lores, tell her what you have just told me. I think she would like to hear it." "All right," consented Annunziata, moving toward the door. "I ll see you at dinner. You won t forget the marchpane ?" II John was in a state of mind that perplexed and rather annoyed him. Until the day before yester day, his detachment here at Sant Alessina from ordinary human society, the absence of people more or less of his own sort, had been one of the elements of his situation which he had positively, consciously, rejoiced in, had been an appreciable part of what he had summarised to Lady Blanchemain as "the whole blessed thing." He had his castle, his pict ures, his garden, he had the hills and valley, the birds, the flowers, the clouds, the sun, he had the Rampio, he had Annunziata, he even had Annun- ziata s uncle ; and with all this he had a sense of hav- 120 MY FRIEND PROSPERO ing stepped out of a world that he knew by heart, that he knew to satiety, a world that was stale and stuffy and thread-bare, with its gilt rubbed off and its colours tarnished, into a world where everything was fresh and undiscovered and full of savour, a great cool blue and green world that from minute to minute opened up new perspectives, made new promises, brought to pass new surprises. And this sense, in some strange way, included Time as well as space. It was as if he had entered a new region of Time, as if he had escaped from the moving current of Time into a stationary moment. Alone here, where modern things or thoughts had never pene trated, alone with the earth and the sky, the medi aeval castle, the dead ladies, with Annunziata, and the parroco, and the parroco s Masses and Benedic tions to-day, he would please himself by fancying, might be a yesterday of long ago that had somehow dropped out of the calendar and remained, a frag ment of the Past that had been forgotten and left over. The presence of a person of his own sort, a fellow-citizen of his own period, wearing its clothes, PART THIRD 121 speaking its speech, would have broken the charm, would have seemed as undesirable and as inappro priate as the introduction of an English meadow into the Italian landscape. Yet now such a person had come, and behold, her presence, so far from breaking the charm, merged with and intensified it, supplied indeed the one feature needed to perfect it. A person of his own sort? The expression is convenient. A fellow-citi zen, certainly, of his period, wearing its clothes, speaking its speech. But a person, happily, not of his own sex, a woman, a beautiful woman; and what her presence supplied to the poetry of Sant Alessina, making it complete, was, if you like, the Eternal Feminine. As supplied already by the painted women on the walls about him, this force had been static ; as supplied by a woman who lived and breathed, it became dynamic. That was all very well; if he could have let it rest at that, if he could have confined his interest in her, his feel ing about her, to the plane of pure aesthetics, he would have had nothing to complain of. But the 122 MY FRIEND PROSPERO mischief was that he couldn t. The thing that perplexed and annoyed him, and humiliated him too, in some measure, was a craving that had sprung up over-night, and was now strong and constant, to get into personal touch with her, to make her acquaintance, to talk with her; to find out a little what manner of soul she had, to estab lish some sort of human relation with her. It wasn t in the least as yet a sentimental craving; or, if it was, John at any rate didn t know it. In its essence, perhaps, it was little more than curi osity. But it was disturbing, upsetting, it destroyed the peace and the harmonious leisure of his day. It perplexed him, it was outside his habits, it was unreasonable. "Not unreasonable to think it might be fun to talk to a pretty woman," he discriminated, "but unreasonable to yearn to talk to her as if your life hung in the balance." And in some measure, too, it humiliated him: it was a confession of weakness, of insufficiency to himself, of dependence for his contentment upon another. He tried to stifle it; he tried to fix his PART THIRD 123 mind on subjects that would lead far from it. Every subject, all subjects, subjects the most dis crepant, seemed to possess one common property, that of leading straight back to it. Then he said, "Well, if you can t stifle it, yield to it. Go down into the garden hunt her up boldly engage her in conversation." Assurance was the note of the man; but when he pictured himself in the act of "boldly engaging her in conversation," his assur ance oozed away, and he was conscious of a thrice- humiliating shyness. Why? What was there in the woman that should turn a brave man shy ? However, the stars were working for him. That afternoon, coming home from a stroll among the olives, he met her face to face at the gate of the garden, whither she had arrived from the direction of the village. Having made his bow, which she accepted with a smile, he could do no less than open the gate for her; and as their ways must thence lie together, up the long ilex-shaded avenue to the castle, it would be an awkward affectation not to speak. And yet (he ground his teeth at 124 MY FRIEND PROSPERO having to admit it) his heart had begun to pound so violently (not from emotion, he told himself, from a mere ridiculous sort of nervous excitement: what was there in the woman that should excite a sane man like that?) he was afraid to trust his voice, lest it should quaver and betray him. But fortunately this pounding of the heart lasted only a few seconds. The short business of getting the gate open, and of closing it afterward, gave it time to pass. So that now, as they set forward toward the house, he was able to look her in the eye, and to observe, with impressiveness, that it was a fine day. She had accepted his bow with a smile, amiable and unembarrassed; and at this, in quite the most unembarrassed manner, smiling again, perhaps with just the faintest, just the gentlest shade of irony, and with just the slightest quizzical upward tremor of the eyebrows, "Isn t it a day rather typical of the land and season?" she inquired. It was the first step that had cost. John s assur ance was coming swiftly back. Her own air of per- PART THIRD 125 feet ease in the circumstances very likely accelerated it. "Yes," he answered her. "But surely that isn t a reason for begrudging it a word of praise?" By this he was lucky enough to provoke a laugh, a little light gay trill, sudden and brief, like three notes on a flute. "No," she admitted. "You are right. The day deserves the best we can say of it." "Her voice," thought John, availing himself of a phrase that had struck him in a book he had lately read, "her voice is like ivory and white velvet." And the touch, never so light, of a foreign accent with which she spoke, rendered her English piquant and pretty, gave to each syllable a crisp little clean-cut outline. They sauntered on for a minute or two in silence, with half the width of the road-way between them, the shaded road-way, where the earth showed purple through a thin green veil of mosses, and where irregular shafts of sunlight, here and there, turned purple and green to red and gold. The warm air, woven of garden-fragrances, hung round them palpable, like some infinitely subtile 126 MY FRIEND PROSPERO fabric. And of course blackbirds were calling, blackcaps and thrushes singing, in all the leafy gal leries overhead. A fine day indeed, mused John, and indeed worthy of the best that they could say. His nervousness, his excitement, had entirely left him, his assurance had come completely back ; and with it had come a curious deep satisfaction, a feeling that for the moment at any rate the world left noth ing to be wished for, that the cup of his desire was full. He didn t even, now that he might do so, wish to talk to her. To walk with her was enough, to enjoy her companionship in silence. Yes, that was it companionship. He caught at the word. "That is what I have been unconsciously needing all along. I flattered myself that I was luxuriating in the very absence of it. But man is a gregarious ani mal, and I was deceived." So he could refer the effect of her propinquity to the mere gregarious in stinct, not suspecting that a more powerful instinct was already awake. Anyhow, his sense of that pro pinquity, his consciousness of her, gracefully mov- . ing beside him in the sweet weather, while her sum- PART THIRD 127 mery garments fluttered, and some strange, faint, elusive perfume was shaken from them, filled him with a satisfaction that for the moment seemed ultimate. He had no wish to talk. Their progress side by side was a conversation without words. They were getting to know each other, they were breaking the ice. Each step they took was as good as a spoken sentence, was a mutual experience, draw ing them closer, helping to an understanding. They walked slowly, as by a tacit agreement. Silence, however, couldn t in the nature of things last for ever. It was she who presently broke it. "I owe you," she said, in her ivory voice, with her clean-cut enunciation, "a debt of thanks." And still again she smiled, as she looked over toward him, her dark eyes glowing, her dark hair richly drooping, in the shadow of a big hat of wine-col oured straw. John s eyes were at a loss. "Oh ?" he wondered. "For a pleasure given me by our friend Annun- ziata," she explained. "This morning she told me a most interesting parable about Death. And she 128 MY FRIEND PROSPERO mentioned that it was you who had suggested to her to tell it me." "Oh," said John, laughing, while the pink of his skin deepened a shade. "She mentioned that, did she ? I m glad if you don t feel that I took a good deal upon myself. But she had just told the same parable to me, and it seemed a pity it shouldn t have a larger audience." Then, after a few more paces taken again in silence, "What a marvellous little person she is, An- nunziata," said Maria Dolores. "She s to a marvellous degree the right product of her milieu," said John. Maria Dolores did not speak, but her eyes ques tioned, "Yes? How do you mean?" "I mean that she s a true child of the presbytery," he replied, "and at the same time a true child of this Italy, where Paganism has never perfectly died. She has been carefully instructed in her catechism, and she has fed upon pious legends, she has breathed an ecclesiastical atmosphere, until the things of the Church have become a part of her very bone. She PART THIRD 129 sees everything in relation to them, translates every thing in terms of them. But at the same time odd streaks of Paganism survive in her. They survive a little don t they ? in all Italians. Wherever she goes her eye reads omens. She will cast your fortune for you with olive-stones. The woods are peopled for her by fauns and dryads. When she takes her walks abroad, I ve no doubt, she catches glimpses of Proteus rising from the lake, and hears old Triton blow his wreathed horn." Maria Dolores looked interested. "Yes," she said, slowly, thoughtfully, and medi tated for an interval. By-and-by, "You know," she recommenced, "she s a sort of little person about whom one can t help feeling rather frightened." And her eyes looked to his for sympathetic under standing. But his were interrogative. "No? Why should one feel frightened about her?" "Oh," said Maria Dolores, with a movement, "it isn t exactly easy to tell why. One s fears are vague. But well, for one thing, she thinks so much about 130 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Death. Death and what comes after, they interest her so much. It doesn t seem natural, it makes one uneasy. And then she s so delicate-looking. Some times she s almost transparent. In every way she is too serious. She uses her mind too much, and her body too little. She ought to have more of the gaiety of childhood, she ought to have other children to romp with. She s too much like a disembodied spirit. It all Alarms one." John, as she spoke, frowned, pondering. When she had done, his frown cleared, he shook his head. "I don t think it need," he said. "Her delicacy, her frailness, have never struck me as indicating weakness, they seem simply the proper physical accompaniments of her crystalline little soul, she s made of a fine and delicate clay. She thinks about Death, it is true, but not in a morbid way, and that s a part of her ecclesiastical tradition ; and she thinks quite as much about life, she thinks about everything. I agree with you, it s a pity she has no other children. But she isn t by any means deficient in the instincts of childhood. She can enjoy a PART THIRD 131 chocolate cigar, for instance, as well as another ; and as for marchpane, I have her own word that she adores it." Maria Dolores gave another light trill of laugh ter. "Yes, I m aware of her passion for marchpane. She confided it to me this morning. And as, in reply to her questions, I admitted that I rather liked it myself, she very generously offered to bring me some this afternoon, which, to be sure, an hour ago, she did." She laughed again, and John laughed too. "All the same," she insisted, "I can t help that feeling of uneasiness about her. Sometimes, when I look at her, I can almost see her wings. What will be her future, if she grows up? One would rather not think of her as married to some poor Italian, and having to give herself to the prosaic sort of existence that would mean." "The sordid sort of existence," augmented John. "No, one would decidedly rather not. But she will never marry. She will enter religion. Her uncle 132 MY FRIEND PROSPERO has it all planned out. He destines her for the Servites." "Oh? The Servites the Mantellate? I am glad of that," exclaimed Maria Dolores. "It is a most beautiful order. They have an especial devotion to Our Lady of Sorrows." "Yes," said John, and remembered it was for Our Lady of Sorrows that she who spoke was named. Slow though their march had been, by this time they had come to the end of the avenue, and were in the wide circular sweep before the castle. They stopped here, and stood looking off, over the garden, with its sombre cypresses and bright beds of gera nium, down upon the valley, dim and luminous in a mist of gold. Great, heavy, fantastic-shaped clouds, pearl-white with pearl-grey shadows, piled themselves up against the scintillant dark blue of the sky. In and out among the rose-trees near at hand, where the sun was hottest, heavily flew, with a loud bourdonnement, the cockchafers promised by An- nunziata, big, blundering, clumsy, the scorn of PART THIRD 133 their light- winged and business-like competitors, the bees. Lizards lay immobile as lizards cast in bronze, only their little glittering, watchful pin-heads of eyes giving sign of life. And of course the blackcaps never for a moment left off singing. They stood side by side, within a yard of each other, in silent contemplation of these things, during I don t know how many long and, for John, deli cious seconds. Yes, he owned it to himself, it was delicious to feel her standing there beside him, in silent communion with him, contemplating the same things, enjoying the same pleasantnesses. Compan ionship companionship : it was what he had been unconsciously needing all along! ... At last she turned, and, withdrawing her eyes lingeringly from the landscape, looked into his, with a smile. She did not speak, but her smile said, just as ex plicitly as her lips could have done, "What a scene of beauty !" And John responded aloud, with fervour, "In deed, indeed it is." 134 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "And so romantic," she added. "It is like a scene out of some old high musical romance." "The most romantic scene I know," said he. "All my life I have thought so." "Oh?" said she, looking surprise. "Have you known it all your life ?" "Well, very nearly," said he, with half a laugh. "I saw it first when I was ten. Then for long years I lost it, and only recovered it, by accident, a month ago." Her face showed her interest. "Oh? How was that? How did it happen?" "When I was ten," John recounted, half laugh ing again, "I was travelling with my father, and, among the many places we visited, one seemed to me a very vision of romance made real. A vast and stately castle, in a garden, in a valley, with splendid halls and chambers, and countless beautiful pictures of women. All my life I remembered it, dreamed of it, longed to see it again. But I hadn t a notion where it was, save vaguely that it was somewhere in Italy; and, my poor father being dead, there was PART THIRD 135 no one I could ask. Then, wandering in these parts a month ago, I stumbled upon it, and recognised it. Though shrunken a good deal in size, to be sure, it was still recognisable, and as romantic as ever." Maria Dolores listened pensively. When he had reached his period, her eyes lighted up. "What a charming adventure," she said. "And so, for you, besides its general romance, the place has a personal one, all your own. I, too, have known it for long years, but only from photographs. I suppose I should never have seen the real thing, except for a friend of mine coming to live here." "I wonder," said John, "that the people who own it never live here." "The Prince of Zelt-Neuminster?" said she. "No, he doesn t like the Italian government. Since Lombardy passed from Austria to Italy, the family have entirely given up staying at Sant Ales- sina." "In those circumstances," said John, "practical- minded people, I should think, would get rid of the place." 136 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Oh," said she, laughing, "the Prince, in some ways, is practical-minded enough. He has this great collection of Italian paintings, which, by Ital ian law, he mayn t remove from Italian soil ; and if he were to get rid of Sant Alessina, where could he house them? In other ways, though, he is perhaps not so practical. He is one of those Utopians who believe that the present Kingdom of Italy must per force before long make shipwreck; and I think he holds on to Sant Alessina in the dream of coming here in triumph, and grandly celebrating that event." "I see," said John, nodding. "That is a beauti ful ideal." "Good-bye," said she, flashing a last quick smile into his eyes ; and she moved away, down a garden path, toward the pavilion beyond the clock. PART THIRD 137 III And now, I should have imagined, for a single ses sion (and that an initial one), he had had enough. I should have expected him to spend the remainder of his day, a full man, in thankful tranquillity, in agreeable retrospective rumination. But no. In dulgence, it soon appeared, had but whetted his appetite. After a quarter-hour of walking about the garden, during which his jumble of sensations and impressions, her soft-glowing eyes, her soft- drooping hair, under her wine-red hat; her slender figure, in its fluttering summery muslin, and the faint, faint perfume (like a faraway memory of rose-leaves) that hovered near her; her smile, and the curves, when she smiled, of her rose-red lips, and the gleam of her snow-white teeth ; her laugh, her voice, her ivory voice ; her pretty crisp-cut Eng lish ; her appreciation of Annunziata, her disquiet ing presentiments concerning her ; and his deep sat- 138 MY FRIEND PROSPERO isfaction in her propinquity, her "companionship" ; and the long shaded fragrant avenue, and the bird- songs, and the gentle weather, after a quarter- hour of anything but thankful tranquillity, a quarter-hour of unaccountable excitement and exal tation, during which his jumble of impressions and sensations settled themselves, from ebullition, into some sort of quiescence, he began to grow restlessly aware that, so far from having had enough, he had had just a sufficient taste to make him hunger keenly for more and more. It was ridiculous, but he couldn t help it. And as there seemed no manner of likelihood that his hunger would soon be fed, it was trying. At the best, he could not reasonably hope to see her again before to-morrow ; and even then ? What ghost of a reason had he to hope that even then he could renew their conversation? He had owed that to-day to the bare hazard of their ways lying together. To-morrow, very likely, at the best, he might get a bow and a smile. Very likely it might be days before he should again have anything approaching a real talk with her. And what a PART THIRD 139 new consideration, that struck a sudden terror to his soul what if her visit to Frau Brandt was to be a short one? What if, to-morrow even, she were to depart? "Her very ease in talking with me, a stranger, may quite well have been due to the fact that she knew she would never see me again," he argued. . . . So he was working himself into a fine state of despondency, and the world was rapidly being resolved into dust and ashes, when Heaven sent him a diversion. Nay, indeed, Heaven sent him two diversions. IV There was a sound of wheels on gravel, of horses hoofs on stone, and Lady Blanchemain s great high- swung barouche, rolling superbly forth from the avenue, drew up before the castle, Lady Blanche- main herself, big and soft and sumptuous in silks and laces, under a much-befurbelowed, much-be fringed, lavender-hued silk sunshade, occupying the seat of honour. John hastened across the garden, hat in hand, to welcome her. 140 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Jump in," she commanded, with a smile, and an imperious sweep of the arm. "I have come to take you for a drive." The footman (proud man) held open the door, and John jumped in. But just as the footman (with an air) had closed the door behind him, and before the coachman had touched up his horses, there came a rhythm of running footsteps, and the voice of Annunziata called, insistently, "Prospero! Prospero!" Then, all out of breath, her pale cheeks pink, her curls in disarray, Annunziata ar rived beside the carriage, and, nowise abashed by that magnificent equipage, nor by the magnificent old lady throning in it (nowise abashed, but, from the roundness of her eyes, a good deal surprised and vastly curious), she explained, gasping, "A tele gram," and held up to John a straw-coloured en velope. "Thank you," said he, taking it, and waving a friendly hand. "But you should not run so fast," he admonished her, with concern. Whereupon the carriage drove off, Annunziata PART THIRD 141 standing and watching, always round-eyed, till it was out of sight. "What an interesting-looking child," said Lady Blanchemain. "Yes," said John. "I should have liked to intro duce her to you." "Who is she?" asked the lady. "She s the private detective I told you of. She s my affinity. She s the young limb o mischief for whom I ravaged your stores of marchpane. She s the niece of the parroco." "Hum," said Lady Blanchemain. "Why does she call you what was it? Prospero?" "She s an optimist. She s a bird of good omen," answered John. "She s satisfied herself, by consult ing an oracle, that Fortune has favours up her sleeve for me. She encouragingly anticipates them by calling me Prospero before the fact." Lady Blanchemain softly laughed. "That s very nice of her, and very wise. Aren t you going to read your telegram ?" "I didn t know whether you d permit," said John. 142 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Oh pray," said she, with a gesture. The carriage by this time had left the garden, and the coachman had turned his horses heads northward, away from the lake, toward the Alps, where their snowy summits, attenuated by the sun and the distance and the blue air, looked like vapours rising into the sky. John tore open his envelope, read, frowned, and uttered a half-stifled ejaculation, something that sounded rather like "I say !" and vaguely like "By Jove !" "No bad news, I hope?" inquired the lady, sym pathetic, and trying to speak as if she didn t know what curiosity meant. "Excellent news, on the contrary," said John, "but a bolt from the blue." And he offered her the paper. "Am on my way to Rome," she read aloud. "Could I come to you for a day ? Winthorpe, Hotel Cavour, Milan." "Winthorpe?" She pursed her lips, as one tasting something. "I don t know the name. Who is he? What s his County?" she de- PART THIRD 143 manded, she, who carried the County Families in her head. John chuckled. "He hasn t got a County he s only an American," he said, pronouncing that genial British formula with intention. "Oh," sighed Lady Blanchemain, her expecta tions dashed ; and drawing in her skirts, she sank a little deeper into her corner. "He hasn t got a County," repeated John. "But he s far and away the greatest swell I know." "A swell? An American?" Lady Blanchemain pressed down her lips, and gave a movement to her shoulders. "An. aristocrat, a patrician," said John. "Fudge," said Lady Blanchemain. "Americans and Australians they re anything you like, but they re never that." John laughed. "I adore," he said, "our light and airy British way of tarring Americans and Aus tralians with the same brush, the descendants of transported convicts and the descendants of the Pil grim Fathers !" 144 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Is your Winthorpe man a descendant of the Pil grim Fathers?" asked Lady Blanchemain, drily. "Indeed he is," said John. "He s descended from ten separate individuals who made the first voyage in the Mayflower. And he holds, by-the-bye, intact, the lands that were ceded to his family by the In dians the year after. That ought to recommend him to your Ladyship, an unbroken tenure of nearly three hundred years." "Old acres," her ladyship admitted, cautiously, "always make for respectability." "Besides," John carelessly threw out, "he s a baronet." Lady Blanchemain sat up. "A baronet?" she said. "An American?" "Alas, yes," said John, "a mere American. And one of the earliest creations, by James the First, no less. His patent dates from 1612. But he doesn t use the title. He regards it, he pretends, as merged in a higher dignity." "What higher dignity?" asked the lady, frown ing. PART THIRD 145 "That of an American citizen, he says," chuckled John. "Brrr," she breathed, impatient. "And moreover," John gaily continued, "besides being descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, he s de scended in other lines from half the peerage of Sev enteenth Century England. And to top up with, if you please, he s descended from Alfred the Great. He s only an American, but he can show a clear de scent bang down from Alfred the Great ! I think the most exquisite, the most subtle and delicate pleas ure I have ever experienced has been to see English people, people of yesterday, cheerfully patronising him." "You ve enlarged my sphere of knowledge," said Lady Blanchemain, grimly. "I had never known that there was blood in America. Does this prodig ious personage talk through his nose?" "Worse luck, no," said John. "I wish he did a little just enough to smack of his soil, to possess local colour. No, he talks for all the world like you or me, which exposes him to compliments in Eng- 146 MY FRIEND PROSPERO land. An American? Really? our tactful people cry, when he avows his nationality. Upon my word, I should never have suspected it. "I suppose, with all the rest, he s rich?" asked Lady Blanchemain. "Immensely," assented John. "Speaking of Fortune and her favours, she s withheld none from him." "Then he s good-looking, too?" "He looks like a Man," said John. "Hum," said Lady Blanchemain, moving. "If I had received a wire from a creature of such propor tions, I ve a feeling I d answer it." "I ve a very similar feeling myself," laughed John. "When we turn back, if you think your coachman can be persuaded to stop at the tele graph office in the village, I ll give my feeling effect." "I think we might turn back now," said Lady Blanchemain. "It s getting rather gloomy here." She looked round, with a little shudder, and then gave the necessary order. The valley had narrowed PART THIRD 147 to what was scarcely more than a defile between two dark and rugged hillsides, pine-covered hillsides that shut out the sun, smiting the air with chill and shadow, and turning the Rampio, whose brawl seemed somehow to increase the chill, turning the sparkling, sportive Rampio to the colour of slate. "It puts one in mind of brigands," she said, with an other little shudder. But though the air was chilly, it was wonderfully, keenly fragrant with the incense of the pines. "Well," she asked, when they were facing home ward, "and your woman? What of her?" "Nothing," said John. "Or, anyhow, very lit tle." (It would be extremely pleasant, he felt suddenly, to talk of her; but at the same time he felt an extreme reluctance to let his pleasure be seen.) "But your private detective ?" said Lady Blanche- main. "Weren t her investigations fruitful?" "Not very," said he. "She learnt little beyond her name and age." "And what is her name?" asked the lady. 148 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Her name is Maria Dolores," answered John ( and he experienced a secret j oy , strange to him, in pronouncing it). "Maria Dolores?" said Lady Blanchemain (and he experienced a secret joy in hearing it). "Maria Dolores what ?" "My detective didn t discover her Pagan name," said John. "So that you are still in doubt whether she s the daughter of a miller?" Lady Blanchemain raised her eyebrows. "Oh, no : I think she s a miller s daughter safely enough," said he. "But she s an elaborately chis elled and highly polished one. Her voice is like ivory and white velvet; and to hear her speak English is a revelation of the hidden beauties of that language." "Hum," said Lady Blanchemain, eyeing him. "So you ve advanced to the point of talking with her?" "Well," answered John, weighing his words, "I don t know whether I can quite say that. But acci- PART THIRD 149 dent threw us together for a minute or two this af ternoon, and we could scarcely do less, in civility, than exchange the time of day." "And are you in love with her?" asked Lady Blanchemain. "I wonder," said he. "What do you think? Is it possible for a man to be in love with a woman he s seen only half a dozen times all told, and spoken with never longer than a minute or two at a stretch?" "Was it only a minute or two really?" asked Lady Blanchemain, wooing his confidence with a glance. "No," said John. "It was probably ten minutes, possibly fifteen. But they passed so quickly, it s really nearer the truth to describe them as one or two." Lady Blanchemain shifted her sunshade, and screwed herself half round, so as to face him, her soft old eyes full of smiling scrutiny and sus picion. "I never can tell whether or not you re serious," 150 MY FRIEND PROSPERO she complained. "If you are serious, well, a quand le mariage?" "The marriage?" cried John. "How could I marry her? Such a thing s out of all question." "Why?" asked she. "A miller s daughter!" said John. "Would you have me marry the daughter of a miller?" "You said yourself yesterday the lady re minded him. "Ah, yes," said he. "But night brings counsel." "If she s well-educated," said Lady Blanchemain, "if she s well-bred, what does it matter about her father? Though a nobody in Austria, where noth ing counts but quarterings, he s probably what we d call a gentleman in England. Suppose he s a barrister? Or the editor of a newspaper? Or " She paused, thoughtful-eyed, to think of re spectable professions. At last she gave up the effort. "Well, anything decent," she concluded, "so long as he had plenty of money." PART THIRD 151 "Ah," said John, sadly, and with perhaps mock humility. "If he had plenty of money, he d never consent to his daughter marrying a son of poverty like me." "Pooh! For a title?" cried Lady Blanchemain. "Besides, you have prospects. Isn t your name Prospero ?" "I have precious little faith in oracles," said John. "I advise you to have more," said Lady Blanche- main, with a smile that seemed occult. And now her carriage entered the village, and she put him down at the telegraph office. "Don t wait," said John. "The walk from here to the castle is nothing, and it would take you out of your way." "Well, good-bye, then," said she. "And culti vate more faith in oracles when they re auspi cious." Alone, she drew from some recondite fold of her many draperies a letter, an unsealed letter, which she opened, spread out, and proceeded to read. It 152 MY FRIEND PROSPERO was a long letter in her ladyship s own handsome, high-bred old-fashioned handwriting ; and it was ad dressed to Messrs. Farrow, Bernscot, and Tisdale, Solicitors, Lincoln s Inn Fields, London. She read it twice through, and at last (with a smile that seemed occult) restored it to its envelope. "Stop at the post-office," she said to her coachman, as they entered Roccadoro ; and to her footman, giving him the letter, "Have that registered, please." Annunziata lay in wait for John in the garden. She ran up, and seized him by the arm. Then, skip ping beside him, as he walked on, "Who was she? Where did she come from? Where did she take you? Whom was the telegram from?" she de manded in a breath, nestling her curls against his coat-sleeve. "Piano, piano" remonstrated John. "One ques tion at a time. Now, begin again." "Whom was the telegram from?" she obeyed, be ginning at the end. "Ah," said he, "the telegram was from my friend PART THIRD 153 Prospero. He s coming here to-morrow. We must ask your uncle whether he can give him a bed." "And the old lady?" pursued Annunziata. "Who was she?" "The old lady was my fairy godmother," said John, building better than he knew. PART FOURTH Pacing together backward and forward, as they talked, John and his friend Winthorpe presented a striking and perhaps interesting contrast. John was tall, but Winthorpe seemed a good deal taller though (trifles in these matters looming so large), had actual measurements been taken, I daresay half an inch would have covered the difference. John was lean and sinewy, but "rounded off" at the joints, and of a pliant carriage, so that it never occurred to you to think of him as thin. Winthorpe s spare fig ure, spare and angular, with its greater height, held unswervingly to the plane of the perpendicular, ap peared absolutely to be constructed of nothing but bone and tendon. John s head, with its yellow hair, its curly beard verging toward red, its pink skin, 154 PART FOURTH 155 and blue eyes full of laughter, might have served a painter as a model for the head of Mirth. Win- thorpe s, with brown hair cropped close, and show ing the white of the scalp ; clean-shaven, but of a steely tint where the razor had passed ; with a marked jaw-bone and a salient square chin; with a high- bridged determined nose, and a white forehead ris ing vertical over thick black eyebrows, and rather deep-set grey eyes, well, clap a steeple-crowned hat upon it, and you could have posed him for one of his own Puritan ancestors. The very clothes of the men carried on their unlikeness, John s loose blue flannels and red sailor s knot/ careless-seeming, but smart in their effect, and showing him careful in a fashion of his own ; Winthorpe s black tie and dark tweeds, as correct as Savile Row could turn them out, yet somehow, by the way he wore them, proclaiming him immediately a man who never gave two thoughts to his dress. If, however, Winthorpe s face was the face of a Puritan, it was the face of a Puritan with a sense of humour the lines about the mouth were clearly the footprints of smiles. It 156 MY FRIEND PROSPERO seemed the face of a sensitive Puritan, as well, and (maugre that high-bridged nose) of a gentle the light in his clear grey eyes was a kindly and gentle light. After all, Governor Bradford, as his writ ings show, though he tried hard, perhaps, not to let them show it was a Puritan with a sense of humour ; John Alden and Priscilla were surely sensi tive and gentle : and Winthorpe was descended from Governor Bradford, and from John Alden and Pris cilla. The two friends walked backward and for ward in the great open space before the castle, and talked. They had not met for nearly two years, and had plenty to talk about. II Seated at one of the open windows of the pavilion beyond the clock, Maria Dolores (in a pale green confection of I know not what airy, filmy tissue) looked down, and somewhat vaguely watched them, herself concealed by the netted curtain, which, ac- PART FOURTH 157 cording to Italian usage, was hung across the case ment, to mitigate the heat and shut out insects. She watched them at first vaguely, and only from time to time, for the rest going on with some needlework she had in her lap. But by-and-by she dropped her needlework altogether, and her watching became continuous and absorbed. "What a singular-looking man," she thought, studying Winthorpe. "What an ascetic-looking man. He looks like an early Christian martyr. He looks like a priest. I believe he is a priest. English priests," she remembered, "when they travel, often dress as laymen. Yes, he is a priest, and a terribly austere one I shouldn t like to go to him to con fession. But in spite of his austerity, he seems to be extraordinarily happy about something just at present. That light in his eyes, it is almost a light of estasy. It is a light I have never seen in any eyes, save those of priests and nuns." Winthorpe, while that "almost ecstatic" light shone in his eyes, had been speaking. 158 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Now, as he paused, John, with a glance of gay astonishment, halted, and turned so as to face him. John s lips moved, and it was perfectly plain that he was exclaiming, delightedly, "Really? Really?" Winthorpe joyously nodded: whereupon John held out both hands, got hold of his friend s, and, his pink face jubilant, shook them with tremendous heartiness. "The priest has received advancement he is probably to be made a bishop," inferred Maria Do lores; "and Signor Prospero is congratulating hiiro" The men resumed their walk ; but for quite a min ute John kept his hand on Winthorpe s shoulder, and again and again gently patted it, murmuring, "I am so glad, so immensely glad." Maria Dolores was quite sure that this was what he murmured, for, though no word could reach her, John s beaming face spoke louder than his voice. At last John let his hand drop, and, eyebrows raised a little, asked a question. PART FOURTH 159 "But how did it happen? But tell me all about it," was what he seemed to say. And Winthorpe (always with something of that ecstatic light in his eyes ) proceeded to answer. But it was a longish story, and lasted through half a dozen of their forward and backward ambulations. Apparently, furthermore, it was a story which, as it developed, became less and less agreeable to the mind of John ; for his face, at first all awake with interest, all aglow with pleasure, gradually sobered, gradually darkened, took on a frown, expressed dis sent, expressed disapprobation, till, finally, with an impatient movement, he interrupted, and began speaking rapidly, heatedly to protest, to remon strate. "Ah," thought Maria Dolores, "the priest is to be made a bishop, sure enough, but a missionary bishop. It isn t for nothing that he looks like an early Christian martyr. He is going to some out landish, savage part of the world, where he will be murdered by the natives, or die of fever or loneliness. He is a man who has listened to the Counsels of Per- 160 MY FRIEND PROSPERO fection. But his unascetic friend Prospero (one would say June remonstrating with December) can t bring himself to like it." John remonstrated, protested, argued. Win- thorpe, calmly, smilingly, restated his purpose and his motives. John pleaded, implored, appealed (so the watcher read his gesture) to earth, to Heaven. Winthorpe took his arm, and calmly, smilingly, tried to soothe, tried to convince him. John drew his arm free, and, employing it to add force and per suasiveness to his speech, renewed his arguments, pointed out how unnecessary, inhuman, impossible the whole thing was. "It s monstrous. It s against all nature. There s no reason in it. What does it rhyme with ? It s wilfully going out of your way to seek, to create, wretchedness. My mind simply re fuses to accept it." It was as if Maria Dolores could hear the words. But Winthorpe, calm and smiling, would not be moved. John shook his head, mut tered, shrugged his shoulders, threw up his hands, muttered again. "Was ever such pig-headed ob stinacy ! Was ever such arbitrary, voluntary blind- PART FOURTH 161 ness ! I give you up, for a perverse, a triple-pated madman !" And so, John muttering and frowning, Winthorpe serenely smiling, reiterating, they passed round the corner of the castle buildings, and were lost to Maria Dolores view. Ill That afternoon, seated on the moss, under a tall eucalyptus tree near to Frau Brandt s pavilion, Maria Dolores received a visit from Annunziata. Annunziata s pale little face was paler, her big grave eyes were graver, even than their wont. She nodded her head, slowly, portentously; and her glance was heavy with significance. Maria Dolores smiled. "What is the matter?" she cheerfully inquired. "Ah," sighed Annunziata, deeply, with another portentous head-shake, "I wish I knew." Maria Dolores laughed. "Sit down," she sug- 162 MY FRIEND PROSPERO gested, making room beside her on the moss, "and try to think." Annunziata sat down, curled herself up. "Some thing has happened to Prospero," she said, de pro- fundis. "Oh?" asked Maria Dolores. "What?" She seemed heartlessly cheerful, and even rather amused. "Ah," sighed Annunziata, "that is what I wish I knew. He has had a friend to pass the day with him." "Yes?" said Maria Dolores. "I expect I saw his friend walking with him this morning ?" "Gm," said Annunziata. "They have been walk ing about all day. His friend Prospero he calls him. But he doesn t look very prosperous. He looks like a slate-pencil. He is long and thin, and dark and cold, and hard, just like a slate-pencil. He would not stay the night, though we had a bed prepared for him. He is going to Rome, and Prospero has driven him to the railway station at Cortello. I hate him," wound up Annunziata, simply. PART FOURTH 163 "Mercy !" exclaimed Maria Dolores, opening her eyes. "Why do you hate him?" "Because he must have said or done something very unkind to Prospero," answered Annunziata. "Oh you should see him. He is so sad so sad and so angry. He keeps scowling, and shaking his head, and saying things in English, which I cannot under stand, but I am sure they are sad things and angry things. And he would not eat any dinner, no, not that much" (Annunziata measured off an inch on her finger), "he who always eats a great deal, eh, ma molto, molto" and, separating her hands, she measured off something like twenty inches in the air. Maria Dolores couldn t help laughing a little at this. But afterward she said, on a key consolatory, "Ah, well, he has gone away now, so let us hope your friend Prospero will promptly recover his accus tomed appetite." "Yes," said Annunziata, "I hope so. But oh, that old slate-pencil man, how I hate him ! I would like to Mih!" She clenched her little white fist, 164 MY FRIEND PROSPERO and shook it, threateningly, vehemently, while her eyes fiercely flashed. . . . Next instant, however, her mien entirely changed. Like a light extin guished, all the fierceness went out of her face, mak ing way for what seemed pain and terror. "There," she cried, pain and terror in her voice, "I have offended God. Oh, I am so sorry, so sorry. My sin, my sin, my sin," she murmured, bowing her head, and thrice striking her breast. "I take back every word I said. I do not hate him. I would not hurt him I would not even stick a pin in him if I had him at my mercy. No I would do anything I could to help him. I would give him anything I had that he could want. I would give him my coral rosary. I would give him" she hesitated, strug gled, and at last, drawing a deep breath, gritting her teeth, in supreme renunciation "yes, I would give him my tame kid," she forced herself to pro nounce, with a kind of desperate firmness. "But see," she wailed, her little white brow a mesh of pain ful wrinkles, "it is all no good. God is still angry. Oh, what shall I do ?" And, to the surprise and dis- PART FOURTH 165 tress of Maria Dolores, she burst into a sudden pas sion of tears, sobbing, sobbing, with that abandon ment of grief which only children know. "My dear, my dear," exclaimed Maria Dolores, drawing her to her. "My dearest, you mustn t cry like that. Dear little Annunziata. What is it? Why do you cry so, dear one? Answer me. Tell me." But Annunziata only buried her face in Maria Dolores sleeve, and moaned, while long, tremulous convulsions shook her frail little body. Maria Do lores put both arms about her, hugged her close, and laid her cheek upon her hair. "Darling Annunziata, don t cry. Why should you cry so, dearest? God is not angry with you. Why should you think that God is angry with you? God loves you, darling. Everyone loves you. There, there dearest don t cry. Sweet one, dear one." Transitions, with Annunziata, were sometimes in explicably rapid. All at once her sobbing ceased; she looked up, and smiled, smiled radiantly, from a 166 MY FRIEND PROSPERO face that was wet and glistening with tears. "Thanks be to God," she piously exulted ; "God is not angry any more." "Of course He isn t," said Maria Dolores, tight ening her hug, and touching Annunziata s curls lightly with her lips. "But He was never angry. What made you think that God was angry ?" Annunziata s big eyes widened. "Didn t you notice?" she asked, in a hushed voice, amazed. "No," wondered Maria Dolores. "What was there to notice ?" "He made them draw a cloud over the sun," An- nunziata whispered. "Didn t you notice that when I said I would like to when I said what I said about that friend of Prospero s just then they drew a cloud across the sun? That is a sign that God is angry. The sun, you know, is the window in Heaven through which God looks down on the world, and through which the light of Heaven shines on the world. And when the window is open, we feel happy and thankful, and wish to sing and laugh. But when we have done something to make God angry PART FOURTH 167 with us, then He sends angels to draw clouds over the window, so that we may be shut out of His sight, and the light of Heaven may be shut off from us. And then we are lonely and cold, and we could quarrel with anything, even with the pigs. God wishes to show us how bad it would be always to be shut off from His sight. But now they have drawn the cloud away, so God is not angry any more. I made a good act of contrition, and He has for given me." Maria Dolores smiled, but under her smile there was a look of seriousness, a look of concern. "My dear," she said smiling, and looking con cerned, "you should try to control your vivid little imagination. If every time a cloud crosses the sun, you are going to assume the responsibility for it, and to fancy that you have offended God, I m afraid you ll have rather an agitated life." "Oh, no; not every time," exclaimed Annun- ziata, and she was manifestly on the point of mak ing a fine distinction, when abruptly the current of her ideas was diverted. "Sh-h! There comes 168 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Prospero," she cried, starting up. "I can see the top of his white hat above the rhododendron bushes. He has driven his friend to Cortello, and come home. I must run away, or he will see that I ve been crying. Don t tell him," she begged, putting her finger on her lips ; and she set off run ning, toward the presbytery, just as John stepped forth from behind the long hedge of rhododen drons. IV John stepped forth from behind the rhododen drons, with a kind of devil-may-care, loose, aim less gait, the brim of his Panama pulled brigand- ishly down over one ear, his hands in the pockets of his coat, his head bent, his brow creased, his eyes sombre, every line and fibre of his person adver tising him the prey of morose disgust. But when he saw Maria Dolores, he hastily straightened up, unpocketed his hands, took off his hat (giving it PART FOURTH 169 a flap that set the brim at a less truculent angle), and smiled. And when, the instant after, he caught sight of the flying form of Annunziata, his smile turned into a glance of wonder. "What is the matter with Annunziata? Why is she running with all her legs like that?" he asked. Maria Dolores had the tiniest catch of laughter. "She is running away from you," she answered. "From me?" marvelled John. "Je suis done wn foudre de guerre? What on earth is she running away from me for?" Maria Dolores smiled mysteriously. "Ah," she said, "she asked me not to tell you. I am in the delicate position of confidante." "And therefore I hope you ll tell me with the less reluctance," said John, urbanely unprincipled. "A confidante always betrays her confidence to someone, that s the part of the game that makes it worth while." Maria Dolores smile deepened. "In that pale-green frock, on that bank of dark- l?0 MY FRIEND PROSPERO green moss, with her complexion and her hair, by Jove, how stunning she is," thought John, in a commotion. "Well," she said, "Annunziata ran away be cause she didn t want you to see that she d been crying." John raised his eyebrows, the blue eyes under them becoming expressive of dismay. "Crying?" he echoed. "The poor little kiddie. What had she been crying about?" "That is a long story, and involves some of her peculiar theological tenets," said Maria Dolores. "But, in a single word, about your friend." John s eyebrows descended to their normal level, and drew together. "Crying about my friend? What friend?" he puzzled. "Your friend the priest the man who has been passing the day here with you," explained Maria Dolores. John gave a start, threw back his head, and eyed her with astonishment. PART FOURTH 171 "That is extraordinary," he exclaimed. "What?" asked she, lightly glancing up. "That you should call him my friend the priest," said John, wagging a bewildered head. "Why? Isn t he a priest? He has all the air of one," said Maria Dolores. "No, he s an American millionaire," said John, succinctly. Maria Dolores moved in her place, and laughed. "Dear me," she said, "I did strike wide of the mark. An American millionaire should cultivate a less deceptive appearance. With that thin, shaven face of his, and that look of an early Christian martyr in his eyes, and the dark clothes he wears, wherever he goes he s sure to be mistaken for a priest." "Yes," said John, with a kind of grimness; "that s what s extraordinary. He comes of a long line of bigoted Protestants, he s a reincarnation of some of his stern old Puritan forebears, and you find that he looks like their pet abomination, a Romish priest. Well, you have a prophetic eye." 172 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Maria Dolores gazed up inquiringly. "A pro phetic eye?" she questioned. "I merely mean," said John, with thaumaturgic airiness, "that the man is on his way to Rome to study for the priesthood." And he gave a thauma turgic toss to his bearded chin. "Oh!" cried Maria Dolores, and leaned back against her eucalyptus tree, and laughed again. John, however, dejectedly sliook his head, and gloomed. "Laugh if you will," he said, "though it seems to me as far as possible from a laughing matter, and I think Annunziata chose the better part when she cried." "I beg your pardon," said Maria Dolores, per haps a trifle stiffly. "I was only laughing at the coincidence of my having supposed him to be a priest, and then learning that, though he isn t, he is going to become one. I was not laughing at the fact itself. Nor was it," she added, her stiffness leaving her, and a little glimmer of amusement taking its place, "that fact which made Annunziata cry." PART FOURTH 173 "I daresay not," responded John, "seeing that she couldn t possibly have known it. But it might well have done so. It s enough to bring tears to the eyes of a brazen image." He angrily jerked his shoulders. "What?" cried Maria Dolores, surprised, re- bukeful. "That a man is to become a holy priest?" "Oh, no," said John. "That fact alone, detached from special circumstances, might be a subject for rejoicing. But the fact that this particular man, in his special circumstances, is to become a priest well, I simply have no words to express my feeling." He threw out his arms, in a gesture of despair. "I m simply sick with rage and pity. I could gnash my teeth and rend my garments." "Mercy !" cried Maria Dolores, stirring. "What are the special circumstances ?" "Oh, it s a grisly history," said John. "It s a tale of the wanton, ruthless, needless, purposeless sacrifice of two lives. It s his old black icy Puritan blood. Winthorpe that s his name had for years 174 MY FRIEND PROSPERO been a freethinker, far too intellectual and enlight ened, and that sort of thing, you know, to believe any such old wives tale as the Christian religion. He and I used to have arguments, tremendous ones, in which, of course, neither in the least shook the other. Darwin and Spencer, with a dash of his na tive Emerson, were religion enough for him. Then this morning he arrived here, and said, * Congratu late me. A month ago I was received into the Church. " Maria Dolores looked up, animated, her dark eyes sparkling. "How splendid," she said. "Yes," agreed John, "so I thought. Congratu late me, he said. I should think I did congratulate him, with all my heart and soul. But then, natu rally, I asked him how it had happened, what had brought it to pass." "Yes ?" prompted Maria Dolores, as he paused. "Well," said John, his face hardening, "he there upon proceeded to tell me in his quiet way, with his cool voice (it s like smooth-flowing cold water), ab- PART FOURTH 175 solutely the most inhuman story I have ever had to keep my patience and listen to." "What was the story ?" asked Maria Dolores. "If you can credit such inhumanity, it was this," answered John. "It seems that he fell in love with a girl in Boston, where he lives. And what s more, and worse, the girl fell in love with him. So there they were, engaged. But she was a Catholic, and his state of unbelief was a cause of great grief to her. So she pleaded with him, and persuaded, till, merely to comfort her, and without the faintest sus picion that his scepticism could be weakened, he promised to give the Catholic position a thorough reconsideration, to read certain books, and to put himself under instruction with a priest: which he did. Which he did, if you please, with the result, to his own unutterable surprise, that one fine day he woke up and discovered that he d been convinced, that he believed." "Yes?" said Maria Dolores, eagerly. "Yes ? And then? And the girl?" "Ah," said John, with a groan, "the girl ! That s 176 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the pity of it. That s where his black old Puritan blood comes in. Blood? It isn t blood it s some fluid form of stone it s flint dissolved in vinegar. The girl ! Mind you, she loved him, they were en gaged to be married. Well, he went to her, and said, I have been converted. I believe in the Chris tian religion your religion. But I can t believe a thing like that, and go on living as I lived when I didn t believe it, go on living as if it weren t true, or didn t matter. It does matter it matters su premely it s the only thing in the world that mat ters. I can t believe it, and marry marry, and live in tranquil indifference to it. No, I must put aside the thought of marriage, the thought of personal happiness. I must sell all I have and give it to the poor, take up my cross and follow Him. I am going to Rome to study for the priesthood. Imagine/ groaned John, stretching out his hands, "imagine talking like that to a woman you are supposed to love, to a woman who loves you." And he wrath- fully ground his heel into the earth. Maria Dolores looked serious. PART FOURTH 177 "After all, he had to obey his conscience," she said. "After all, he was logical, he was consistent." "Oh, his conscience! Oh, consistency!" cried John, with an intolerant fling of the body. "At bot tom it s nothing better than common self-indulgence, as I took the liberty of telling him to his face. It s the ardour of the convert, acting upon that acid solution of flint which takes the place of blood in his veins, and causing sour puritanical impulses which (like any other voluptuary) he immediately gives way to. It s nothing better than unbridled passion. Conscience, indeed ! Where was his conscience when it came to her? Think of that poor girl that poor pale girl who loved him. Oh, Mother of Mercy !" He moved impatiently three steps to the left, three steps to the right, beating the palm of one hand with the back of the other. "What did she do? How did she take it?" asked Maria Dolores. "What she ought to have done," said John, be tween his teeth, "was to scratch his eyes out. What 178 MY FRIEND PROSPERO she did do, as he informed me with a seraphic coun tenance, was not merely to approve of everything he said, but to determine to do likewise. So, while he s on his way to Rome, to get himself tonsured and be- cassocked, she s scrubbing the floors of an Ursuline . convent, as a novice. And there are two lives spoiled." He shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, no, no," contended Maria Dolores, earnestly, shaking her head, "not spoiled. On the contrary. It is sad, in a way, if you like, but it is very beauti ful, it is heroic. Their love must have been a very beautiful love, that could lead them to such self- sacrifice. Two lives given to God." "Can t people give their lives to God without ceasing to live?" cried John. "If marriage is a sacrament, how can they better give their lives to God than by living sanely and sweetly in Christian marriage? But these people withdraw from life, renounce life, shirk and evade the life that God had prepared for them and was demanding of them. It s as bad as suicide. Besides, it implies such a totally perverted view of religion. Religion surely is given PART FOURTH 179 to us to help us to live, to show us how to live, to enable us to meet the difficulties, emergencies, re sponsibilities of life. But these people look upon their religion as a mandate to turn their backs on the responsibilities of life, and scuttle away. And as for love! Well, she no doubt did love, poor lady. But Winthorpe ! No. When a man loves he doesn t send his love into a convent, and go to Rome to get himself becassocked." He gave his head a nod of finality. "That, I fancy, is a question of temperament," said Maria Dolores. "Your friend has the ascetic temperament. And it does not by any means follow that he loves less because he resigns his love. What you call an inhuman story seems to me a wonderfully noble one. I saw your friend this morning, when he and you were walking together, and I said to myself, that man looks as if he had listened to the Counsels of Perfection. His vocation shines through him. I think you should reconcile yourself to his accept ing it." "Well," said John, on the tone of a man ready to 180 MY FRIEND PROSPERO change the subject, "I owe him at least one good mark. His account of his heart-state led me to ex amine my own, and I discovered that I am in love myself, which is a useful thing to know." "Oh?" said Maria Dolores, with a little effect of reserve. "Yes," said John, nothing daunted, "though un like his, mine is an unreciprocated flame, and un- avowed." "Ah?" said Maria Dolores, reserved indeed, but not without an undertone of sympathy. "Yes," said John, playing with fire, and finding therein a heady mixture of fearfulness and joy. "The woman I love doesn t dream I love her, and dreams still less of loving me, for which blessed circumstance may Heaven make me truly thank ful." The sentiment sounding unlikely, Maria Dolores raised doubtful eyes. They shone into John s; his drank their light ; and something violent happened in his bosom. "Oh ?" she said. PART FOURTH 181 "Yes," said he, thinking what adorable little hands she had, as they lay loosely clasped in her lap, thinking how warm they would be, and fragrant; thinking too what fun it was, this playing with fire, how perilous and exciting, and how egotistical he must seem to her, and how nothing on earth should prevent him from continuing the play. "Yes," he said, "it s a circumstance to be thankful for, be cause, like Winthorpe himself, though for different reasons, I m unable to contemplate marriage." His voice sank sorrowfully, and he made a sorrowful movement. "Oh ?" said Maria Dolores, her sympathy be coming more explicit. "Winthorpe s too beastly puritanical and I m too beastly poor," said he. "Oh," she murmured. Her eyes softened; her sympathy deepened to compassion. "She must certainly put me down as the most complacent egotist in two hemispheres, so to regale her with unsolicited information about myself," thought John ; "but surely it would need six hemi- 182 MY FRIEND PROSPERO spheres to produce another pair of eyes as beautiful as hers." "Yes," he said, "I should be looking up if I asked even a beggar maid to marry me." Maria Dolores beautiful eyes became thoughtful as well as compassionate. "But men who are poor work and earn money," she said, on the tone that young women adopt when the spirit moves them to preach to young men. And when the spirit does move them to that, things may be looked upon as having advanced an appre ciable distance, the ball may be looked upon as rolling. "So I ve heard," said John, his head in the clouds. "It must be dull business." Maria Dolores dimly smiled. "Do you do no work ?" she asked. "I ve never had time," said John. "I ve been too busy enjoying life." "Oh," said Maria Dolores, with the intonation of reproach. "Yes," said he, "enjoying the Humour, the Romance, the Beauty of it, and combine the PART FOURTH 183 three together, make a chord of em, you get the Divinity. Or, to take a lower plane, the world s a stage, and life s the drama. I could never leave off watching and listening long enough to do any work." "But do you not wish to play a part in the drama, to be one of the actors?" asked his gentle homilist. "Have you no ambition?" "Not an atom," he easily confessed. "The part of spectator seems to me by far the pleasantest. To sit in the stalls and watch the incredible jumble- show, the reason-defying topsey-turveydom of it, the gorgeous, squalid, tearful, and mirthful pa geantry, the reckless inconsequences, the flagrant impossibilities ; to watch the Devil ramping up and down like a hungry lion, and to hear the young-eyed cherubins choiring from the skies : what better enter tainment could the heart of man desire ?" "But are we here merely to be entertained?" she sweetly preached, while John s blue eyes somewhat mischievously laughed, and he felt it hard that he couldn t stop her rose-red mouth with kisses. 184 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Aren t we here to be, as the old-fashioned phrase goes, of use in the world ? Besides, now that you are in love, surely you will never sit down weakly, and say, I am too poor to marry, and so give up your love, like your friend Winthorpe indeed, but for ignoble instead of noble motives. Surely you will set to work with determination, and earn money, and make it possible to marry. Or else your love must be a very poor affair." And her adorable little hands, as they lay ("like white lilies," thought John ) upon the pale-green fabric of her gown, un clasped themselves, opened wide for an instant, showing the faint pink of their palms, then lightly again interlaced their fingers. He laughed. "You are delicious," he said to her fervently, in silence. "My love is all right," he said aloud. "I love her as much as it is humanly possible to love. I love her with passion, with tenderness; with worship, with longing ; I love her with wonder ; I love her with sighs, with laughter. I love her with all I have and with all I am. And I owe one to Win thorpe for having unwittingly opened my eyes to PART FOURTH 185 my condition. But earning money? I ve a notion it s difficult. What could I do ?" "Have you no profession ?" she asked. "Not the ghost of one," said he, with nonchalance. "But is there no profession that appeals to you for which you feel that you might have a taste?" Her dark eyes were very earnest. "Not the ghost of one," said he, dissembling his amusement. "Professions don t they all more or less involve sitting shut up in stuffy offices, among pigeon-holes full of dusty and futile papers, doing tiresome tasks for the greater glory of other people, like a slave in the hold of a galley ? No, if I m to work, I must work at something that will keep me above decks something that will keep me out of doors, in touch with the air and the earth. I might become an agricultural labourer, but that s not very munificently paid; or a farmer, but that would require perhaps more capital than I could command, and anyhow the profits are uncertain. I ve an uncle who s a bit of a farmer, and year in, year out, I believe he makes a loss. Well, what s 186 MY FRIEND PROSPERO left? . . . Ah, a gardener. I don t think I should half mind being a gardener." Maria Dolores looked as if she weren t sure whether or not to take him seriously. "A gardener? That s not very munificently paid either, is it?" she suggested, trying her ground. "Alas, I fear not," sighed John. Then he made a grave face. "But would you have me entirely mercenary ? Money isn t everything here below." Maria Dolores smiled. She saw that for the mo ment at least he was not to be taken seriously. "True," she agreed, "though it ran in my mind that to earn money, so that you might marry, was your only motive for going to work at all." "I had forgotten that," said the light-minded fel low. "I was thinking of occupations that would keep one in touch with the earth. A gardener s oc cupation keeps him constantly in the charmingest possible sort of touch with her, and the most inti mate." "Do they call the earth her in English?" asked Maria Dolores. "I thought they said it." PART FOURTH 187 "I m afraid, for the greater part, they do," an swered John. "But it s barbarous of them, it s un- filial. Our brown old mother, fancy begrudging her the credit of her sex. Our brown and green old mother ; our kindly, bounteous mother ; our radiant, our queenly mother, old, and yet perennially, radi antly young. Look at her now," he cried, circling the garden with his arm, and pointing to the farther landscape, "look at her, shining in her robes of pearl and gold, shining and smiling, one would say a bride arrayed for the altar. Such is her infinite variety. Her infinite variety, her infinite abun dance, the fragrance and the sweetness of her, oh, I could fall upon my face and worship her, like a Pagan of Eld. The earth and all that grows and lives upon her, the blossoming tree, the singing bird, I could build temples to her." "And the crawling snake?" put in Maria Dolores, a gleam at the bottom of her eyes. "The crawling snake," quickly retorted John, "serves a most useful purpose. He establishes the 188 MY FRIEND PROSPERO raison d etre of man. Man and his heel are here to crush the serpent s head." Maria Dolores leaned back, softly laughing. "Your infatuation for the earth is so great," she said, "mightn t your ladylove, if she suspected it, be jealous?" "No," said John, "it is the earth that might be jealous, for, until I saw my ladylove, she was the undivided mistress of my heart. For the rest, my ladylove enjoys, upon this point, my entire confi dence. I have kept nothing from her." "That is well," approved Maria Dolores. "And the sky and the sea," still softly laughing, she asked, "have they no place in your affections ?" "The sky is her tiring-maiden, and I love the sky for that," said John. " Tis the sky that clothes her in her many-coloured raiment, and holds the light whereby her beauty is made manifest. And the sea is a jewel that she bears upon her bosom, a magical jewel, whence, with the sky s aid, she draws the soft rain that is her scent and her cosmetic. Fragrant the fertile earth after soft showers. Do you know, PART FOURTH 189 I could almost forgive the dour and detestable Mil ton everything for the sake of those seven words. They show that in the sense of smell he had at least one attribute of humanity." Maria Dolores dark eyes were quizzical. "The dour and detestable Milton?" she exclaimed. "Poor Milton! What has he done to merit such anathema ?" "It isn t what he has done, but what he was" said John. "That he was dour nobody will deny, dour and sour and inhuman. Ask those unfortunate, long-suffering daughters of his, if you doubt it. They could tell you stories. But he was worse. He was a scribe and a pharisee, a pragmatical, self- righteous, canting old scribe and pharisee. And he was worse still, and still worse yet. He was what seems to me to-day the worstest thing unhung he was a Puritan. Like Winthorpe s, his blood was black and icy and vinegarish. Like Winthorpe But there. I mustn t abuse Winthorpe any more, and I must try to forgive Milton. Milton wrote seven good words, and Winthorpe unwittingly opened a lover s eyes to his condition." 190 MY FRIEND PROSPERO He paused, and smiled down upon her, and his newly opened (and very blue) blue eyes said much. Her eyes were dreaming on the landscape, where it shone in pearl and gold. However, as she gave no sign of finding his conversation wearisome, he took heart, and continued. "For when he told me how he had put his love away, never again to see her, and how at that mo ment she would be scrubbing floors (or taking the discipline, perhaps?) in a convent of Ursulines, sud denly, and without any action of the will on my part, there rose before me the vision of a certain woman ; a woman I knew a little, admired immensely, very much liked, but didn t for an instant suppose I was seriously in love with. And involuntarily, with the vision of her before me, I asked myself whether, mutatis mutandis, I could have done as he had, and in a flash I saw that I could not, that not for the wealth of Ormus and of Ind could I or would I give her up, if once I had her. So, by that token, and by the uncommon wrath with which his tale inflamed me," John, with a rhetorical flourish, perorated, "I PART FOURTH 191 discovered that I loved." And again his eyes said much. Hers were still on the prospect. "Yet if you only know her a little, how can you love her?" she asked, in a musing voice. "Did I say I only know her a little?" asked John. "I know her a great deal. I know her through and through. I know that she is pure gold, pure crys tal ; that she is made of all music, all light, all sweet ness, and of all shadow and silence and mystery too, as women should be. I know that earth holds naught above her. I do not care to employ superlatives, so, to put it in the form of an understatement, I know that she is simply and absolutely perfect. If you could see her ! If you could see her eyes, her deep- glowing, witty, humorous, mischievous, innocent eyes, with the soul that burns in them, the passion that sleeps. If you could see the black soft masses of her hair, and her white brow, and the pale-rose of her cheeks, and the red-rose of her lovely smiling mouth. If you could see her figure, slender and strong, and the grace and pride of her carriage, 192 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the carriage of an imperial princess. If you could see her hands, they lie in her lap like languid lilies. And her voice, tis the colour of her mouth and the glow of her eyes made audible. And if you could whisper to yourself her melodious and thrice adora ble name. I know her a great deal. When I said that I only knew her a little, I meant it in the sense that she only knows me a little, which after all, alas, for practical purposes comes to the same thing." He had spoken with emphasis, with fervour, his pink face animated and full of intention. Maria Dolores kept her soft-glowing eyes resolutely away from him, but I think the soul that burned in them (if not the passion that slept) was vaguely troubled. Qui parle d amour how does the French proverb run? Did she vaguely feel perhaps that the seas they were sailing were perilous? Anyhow, as John saw with a sinking heart, she was at the point of put ting an end to their present conjunction, she was preparing to rise. He would have given worlds to offer a helping hand, but (however rich in worlds) PART FOURTH 193 he was, for the occasion, poor in courage. When love comes in at the door, assurance as like as not will fly out of the window. So she rose unaided. "Let us hope," she said, giving him a glance in which he perceived an under-gleam as of not un friendly mockery, "that she will soon come to know you better." "Heaven forbid," cried he, with a fine simulation of alarm. "It is upon her ignorance of my true character that I base such faint hopes as I possess of some day winning her esteem." Maria Dolores laughed, nodded, and lightly moved away. "My son," said John to himself, "you steered precious close to the wind. You had best be care ful." And then he was conscious of a sudden change in things. The garden smiled about him, the valley below laughed in the breeze, the blackcaps sang, the many windows of the castle glistened in the sun ; but their beauty and their pleasantness had departed, had retired with her into the long, low, white-walled, 194 MY FRIEND PROSPERO red-roofed pavilion. He was conscious of a sudden change in things, and of a sudden acute and bitter depression within himself. "These are great larks," he said; "great larks while they last, but what s the good of them in the end? What do they lead to? What s the good of coquetting with blisses that can t be yours?" And he breathed a prodigious sigh. "When shall I see her again?" he asked, and thereupon was seized by his old terror his terror of yesterday, though it seemed to him a terror he had known all his life lest he should never see her again. "She s only a visitor. What s to prevent her leaving this very night?" The imagination was intolerable. He entered the castle court, and climbed the staircase of honour, and rambled through the long suites of great empty rooms, empty of everything save the memory of the past and the portraits of the dead, there, if he might, for a time at least, to lose himself and to forget her. PART FOURTH 195 "Who is the young man you have been talking with so long?" asked Frau Brandt, as Maria Dolores came into her sitting-room, a vast, square, bare room, with a marble floor and a painted ceiling, with Venetian blinds to shelter it from the sun, and a bitter-sweet smell, as of rosemary or I know not what other aromatic herb, upon its cool air. "Oh? You saw us?" said Maria Dolores, an swering question with question. "Him I have seen many times every day for a week at least," said Frau Brandt. "But I never be fore saw you talking with him. Who is he?" She was a small, brown, square-built, black-haired, homely-featured old woman, in a big, round starched white cap and a flowing black silk gown. She sat in an uncushioned oaken arm-chair by the window, with some white knitting in her bony, blunt- fingered brown hands, and tortoise-shell-rimmed 196 MY FRIEND PROSPERO spectacles on her nose. But the spectacles couldn t hide the goodness or the soundness or the sweetness that looked forth from her motherly old honest brown eyes. "He is a young man who lives en pension at the presbytery," said Maria Dolores, "a young Eng lishman." "So ?" said Frau Brandt. "What is his name ?" "I don t know," said Maria Dolores, with disen gagement real or feigned. "His Christian name, I believe, is John." "But his family name?" persisted Frau Brandt. "It is probably Brown, Jones, or Robinson," said Maria Dolores. "Or it may even be Black, Smith, or Johnson. Most Englishmen are named one or the other." "So?" said Frau Brandt. "But is it prudent or seemly for you to talk familiarly with a young man whose name is unknown to you ?" "Why not?" asked Maria Dolores, raising her eyebrows, as if surprised. "He seems a very harm less young man. I don t think he will eat me. And PART FOURTH 19? he is English, and I like English people. And he is intelligent, his conversation amuses me. And he has nice easy, impetuous manners, so different from the formality and restraint of Austrian young men. What can his name matter?" "But" Frau Brandt looked up impressively over her spectacles, and her voice was charged with gravity, for she was about to ask a question to the Teutonic mind of quite supreme importance "but is he noble?" It was to her what nay, more than what the question, "Is he respectable?" would have been to an Englishwoman. Maria Dolores laughed. "Oh, no," she said. "At least I have every reason to believe not, and I devoutly hope not. He belongs I expect to what they call in England the middle class. He has an uncle who is a farmer." Frau Brandt s good old brown eyes showed her profoundly shocked, and expressed profound repre hension. "But you were speaking with him familiarly you were speaking with him almost as an equal," she 198 MY FRIEND PROSPERO pronounced in bated accents, in accents of conster nation. Again Maria Dolores laughed. "True," she assented gaily, "and that is exactly what I couldn t do if he were noble. Then I should have to remember our respective positions. But where the difference of rank is so great, one can talk familiarly without fear. Ca n engage a rien." Frau Brandt nodded her head, for full half a min ute, with many meanings ; she nodded it now up and down, and now shook it sidewise. "I do not like it," she said, at last. "Your brother would not like it. It is not becoming. Well, thanks be to Heaven, he is only English." "Oh, of course," agreed Maria Dolores, "if he were Austrian, it would be entirely different." "But is it fair to the young man himself?" pur sued Frau Brandt. "Is he aware that he is hoba- nobbing with a Serene Highness? You treat him as an equal. What if he should fall in love with you?" PART FOURTH 199 "What indeed! But he won t," laughed Maria Dolores, possibly with a mental reservation. "Who can tell?" said Frau Brandt. "His eyes, when he looked at you, had an expression. But there is a greater danger still. You are both at the dangerous age. He is good-looking. What if your heart should become interested in him ?" "Oh, in that case," answered Maria Dolores, lightly, her chin a little in the air, "I should marry him if he asked me." "What !" cried Frau Brandt, half rising from her chair. "Yes," said Maria Dolores, cheerfully unexcited. "He is a man of breeding and education, even if he isn t noble. If I loved a man, I shouldn t give one thought to his birth. I m tired of all our Austrian insistence upon birth, upon birth and quarterings and precedencies. If ever I love, I shall love some one just for what he is, for what God has made him, and for nothing else. It wouldn t matter if his father were a cobbler if I loved him, I d marry 200 MY FRIEND PROSPERO him." Her chin higher in the air, she had every appearance of meaning what she said. Frau Brandt had sunken back in her chair, and was nodding her white-capped old head again. "Oh, my child, my child," she grieved. "Will you never rid your fancy of these high-flown, un practical, romantic whimsies? It all comes of read ing poetry." She herself, good woman, read little but her prayers. "Oh, my dear true Heart," responded Maria Do lores, laughing. She crossed the room, and placed her hand affectionately upon Frau Brandt s shoul der. "My dearest old Nurse! Do not distress yourself. This is not yet a question of actu ality. Let us not cry before we are hurt." And she stooped, and kissed her nurse s brown old brow. But afterward she stood looking with great pen- siveness out of the window, stood so for a long while ; and I fancy there was a softer glow than ever in her soft-glowing eyes, and perhaps a livelier rose in her pale-rose cheeks. PART FOURTH 201 "What are you thinking so deeply about ?" Frau Brandt asked by-and-by. Maria Dolores woke with a little start, and turned from the window, and laughed again. "Oh, thinking about my cobbler s son, of course," she said. VI Annunziata, seeking him to announce that supper was ready, found John, seated in his chamber of dead ladies, his arms folded, his legs crossed, his eyes fixed, a frown upon his prone brow ; his spirit apparently rapt in a brown study. "Eh ! Prospero !" she called. Whereat he came to himself, glanced up, glanced round, changed his posture, and finally, rising, blew his preoccupations from him in a deep, deep sigh. "Oh, what a sigh !" marvelled Annunziata, mak ing big eyes. "What are you sighing so hard for?" John looked at her, and smiled. 202 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Sighing for my miller s daughter, my dear," he said. And, as he followed her to the presbytery, he sang softly to himself "It is the miller s daughter, And she is grown so dear, so dear, That I would be the jewel That trembles in her ear." PART FIFTH It was Sunday. It was early morning. It was rain ing, a fine quiet, determined rain, that blurred the lower reaches of the valley, and entirely hid the mountain-tops, so that one found it hard not to doubt a little whether they were still there. Near at hand the garden was as if a thin web of silver had been cast over it, pale and dim, where wet surfaces reflected the diffused daylight. And just across the Rampio, on the olive-clad hillside that rose abruptly from its brink, rather an interesting process was tak ing place, the fabrication of clouds, no less. The hillside, with its rondure of blue-grey foliage, would lie for a moment quite bare and clear ; then, at some high point, a mist would begin to form, would ap pear indeed to issue from the earth, as smoke from a 203 204 MY FRIEND PROSPERO subterranean fire, white smoke with pearly shadows ; would thicken and spread out ; would draw together and rise in an irregular spiral column, curling, swaying, poising, as if uncertain what to do next; and at last, all at once making up its mind (how like a younker or a prodigal), would go sailing away, straggling away, amorphous, on a puff of wind, leaving the hillside clear again ; till, presently, the process would recommence da capo. John and Annunziata, seated together on a mar ble bench in the shelter of the great cloister, with its faded frescoes, at the north-eastern extremity of the castle buildings, had been watching this element- play for some minutes in silence. But by-and-by Annunziata spoke. "What makes the cloud come out of the hill like that?" she asked, her eyes anxiously questioning his. "I have seen it happen many times, but I could never understand it. There cannot be a fire under neath?" "If you can t understand it, Mistress Wisdom," responded John, smiling on her, "you surely mustn t PART FIFTH 205 expect a featherpate like me to. Between ourselves, I don t believe anyone can really understand it, though there s a variety of the human species called scientists who might pretend they could. It s all a part of that great scheme of miracles by which God s world goes on, Nature, which nobody can really understand in the very least. All that the chaps called scientists can really do is to observe and more or less give names to the miracles. They can t explain em." "It is great pleasure to watch such things," said Annunziata. "It is a great blessing to be allowed to see a miracle performed with your own eyes." "So it is," agreed John. "And if you keep your eyes well open, there s not a minute of the livelong day when you mayn t see one." "It is very strange," said Annunziata, "but when the sun shines, then I love the sunny weather, and am glad that it does not rain. Yet when it does rain, then I find that I love the rain too, that I love it just as much as the sun, it is so fresh, it smells so good, the rain-drops are so pretty, and they make such a 206 MY FRIEND PROSPERO pretty sound where they fall, and the grey light is so pleasant." "Our loves," said John, "are always very strange. Love is the rummest miracle of them all. It is even more difficult to account for than the formation of clouds on the hillside." "We love the things that give us pleasure," said Annunziata. "And the people, sometimes, who give us pain," said John. "We love the people, first of all, who are re lated to us," said Annunziata, "and then the peo ple we see a great deal of just as I love, first of all, my uncle, and then you and Marcella the cook." "Who brings in the inevitable veal," said John. "Thank you, Honeymouth." He bowed and laughed, while Annunziata s grave eyes wondered what he was laughing at. "But it isn t everyone," he pointed out, "who has your solid and well-bal anced little head-piece. It isn t everyone who keeps his loves so neatly docketed, or so sanely submitted PART FIFTH 207 to the sway of reason. Some of us love first of all people who aren t related to us in the remotest de gree, and people we ve seen hardly anything of and know next to nothing about." Annunziata deprecatingly shook her head. "It is foolish to love people we know nothing about," she declared, in her deep voice, and looked a very sage delivering judgment. "True enough," said John. "But what would you have? Some of us are born to folly, as the sparks fly upward. You see, there s a mighty dif ference between love and love. There s the love which is affection, there s the love which is cupboard- love, and there s the love which is just simply love- love and nothing else. The first, as you have truly observed, has its roots in consanguinity or associa tion, the second in a lively hope of future comfits, and either is sufficiently explicable. But the third has its roots apparently in mere haphazard and causelessness, and isn t explicable by any means whatsoever, and yet is far and away the violentest of the three. It falls as the lightning from the clouds, 208 MY FRIEND PROSPERO and strikes whom it will. Though I mix my meta phors fearlessly, like a man, I trust, with your fem inine intuition, you follow me?" "No," said Annunziata, without compunction, her eyes on the distance. "I don t know what you mean." "Thank Heaven you don t, pray Heaven you never may," said her inconsequential friend. "For love-love is a plague. You meet a person, for exam ple, in a garden. You know nothing whatever about her, not even her name, though you fear it may be Schmidt. You meet her not more than half a dozen times all told. And suddenly one morning you wake up to discover that she has become to you the person of first importance in the world. She is practically a total stranger to you, she s of a differ ent nationality, a different rank, yet she s infinitely the most precious and important person in the world. When you re absent from her you can do nothing but think of her, gloating with throes of aromatic pain over the memory of your last meeting with her, longing with soul-hunger for your next. The mer- PART FIFTH 209 est flutter of her gown, modulation of her voice, glance of her eye, will throw your heart into a palpi tation. You look in the direction of the house that she inhabits, and you feel the emotions of a Peri looking at the gate of Eden. And it gives you the strangest sort of strange joy to talk about her, though of course you take pains to talk about her in veiled terms, obliquely, so that your listener shan t guess whom you are talking about. In short, she is the be-all and the end-all of your existence, and you don t even know her name, though you fear it may be Schmidt." He lolled back at ease on the marble bench, and twirled his yellow-red moustaches, fancy free. "But you do know her name," said Annunziata, simply, in her deepest voice, holding him with a gaze, lucent and serious, that seemed almost re proachful. "Her name is Maria Dolores." The thing was tolerably unexpected. What won der if it put my hero out of countenance ? His atti tude grew rigid, his pink skin three shades pinker; his blue eyes stared at her, startled. So for a sec- 210 MY FRIEND PROSPERO ond ; then he relaxed, and laughed, laughed long and heartily, perhaps a little despitefully too, at his own expense. . . . But he must try, if he might, to repair the mischief. "My poor child," he said, resting his hand on her curls, and gently smoothing them. "You are what the French call an enfant terrible. You are what the English call a deuced sharp little pickle. And I must try, if I can, without actually lying, to per suade you that you are utterly mistaken, utterly and absolutely mistaken," he raised his voice, for greater convincingness, "and that her name is nothing distantly resembling the name that you have spoken, and that in fact her name is Mrs. Harris, and that in fine there is no such person, and that I was merely talking hypothetically, in abstractions ; I must draw a herring across the trail, I must raise a dust, and throw a lot of it into your amazingly clear-sighted little eyes. Now, is it definitely im pressed upon you that her name is not the thrice- adorable name you mentioned ?" "I thought it was," answered Annunziata. "I am PART FIFTH 211 sorry it is not." And then she dismissed the sub ject. "See, it is raining harder. See how the rain comes down in long strings of beads, see how it is like a network of long strings of glass beads falling through the air. When the rain comes down like that, it means that after the rain stops it will be very hot. To-morrow it will be very hot." The bell in the clock-tower tolled out seven sol emn strokes ; then the lighter-toned and nimbler- tongued bell of the church began to ring. "Come," peremptorily said Annunziata, jumping up. "Mass." She held out her hand, took John s, and, like a mother, led the meek and unquestioning young man to his duties. 212 MY FRIEND PROSPERO II Of course there are no such heretical inventions as pews in the parish church of Sant Alessina. You sit upon orthodox rush-bottomed chairs, you kneel upon orthodox bare stones. But at the epistle side of the altar, at an elevation of perhaps a yard from the pavement, there is a recess in the wall, enclosed by a marble balustrade, and hung with faded red curtains, which looks, I m afraid, a good deal like a private box at a theatre, and is in fact the tribune reserved for the masters of the castle. (In former days those masters were the Sforzas. So, from this tribune, the members of that race of iron and blood, of fierceness and of guile, have assisted at the mys tical sacrifice of the Lamb of God!) Heretofore, during John s residence at the presbytery, the trib une had stood vacant. To-day it was occupied by Maria Dolores and Frau Brandt. Maria Dolores, instead of wearing a hat, had adopted the ancient PART FIFTH 213 and beautiful use of draping a long veil of black lace over her dark hair. John knelt in the middle of the church, in the thick of the ragged, dirty, unsavoury villagers. When Mass was over, he returned to the cloisters, and there, face to face, he met the lady of his dreams. She graciously inclined her head. "Good morning," she said, smiling, in a voice that seemed to him full of morning freshness. "Good morning," he responded, wondering whether she could hear the tremor of his heart. "Though, in honest truth, it s rather a bad morning, isn t it?" he submitted, posing his head at an angle, dubious and reflective, that seemed to raise the ques tion to a level of philosophic import. "Oh, with these cloisters, one shouldn t complain," said she, glancing indicatively round. "One can still be out of doors, and yet not get the wetting one deserves. And the view is so fine, and these faded old frescoes are so droll." "Yes," said he, his wits, for the instant, in a state 214 MY FRIEND PROSPERO of suspended animation. "The view is fine, the fres coes are droll." She looked as if she were thinking about some thing. "Don t you find it," she asked, after a moment, with the slightest bepuzzled drawing together of her eyebrows, "a trifle unpleasant, hearing Mass from where you do?" John looked blank. "Unpleasant? No. Why ?" he asked. "I should think it might be disagreeable to be hemmed in and elbowed by those extraordinarily ragged and dirty people," she explained. "It s a pity they shouldn t clean themselves up a little be fore coming to church." "Ah, yes," he assented, "a little cleaning up wouldn t hurt them; that s very certain. But," he set forth, in extenuation, "it s not the custom of the country, and the fact that it isn t has its good sig nificance, as well as its bad. It s one of the many signs of how genuinely democratic and popular the Church is in Italy, as it ought to be everywhere. PART FIFTH 215 It is here essentially the Church of the people, the Church of the poor. It is the one place where the poorest man, in all his rags, and with the soil of his work upon him, feels perfectly at ease, per fectly at home, perfectly equal to the richest. It is the one place where a reeking market-woman, with her basket on her arm, will feel at liberty to take her place beside the great lady, in her furs and velvets, and even to ask her, with a nudge, to move up and make room. That is as it should be, isn t it?" "No doubt, no doubt," agreed Maria Dolores, beginning to pace backward and forward over the lichen-stained marble pavement (stained as by the hand of an artist, in wavy veins of yellow or pale- green, with here and there little rosettes of scarlet), while John kept beside her. "All the same, I should not like to kneel quite in the very heart of the crowd, as you do." "You are a delicate and sensitive woman," he re minded her. "I am a man, and a moderately tough one. However, I must admit that until rather re- 216 MY FRIEND PROSPERO cently I had exactly your feeling. But I got a lesson." He broke off, and gave a vague little laugh, vaguely rueful, as at a not altogether pleas ant reminiscence. "What was the lesson ?" she asked. "Well," said he, "if you care to know, it was this. The first time that I attended Mass here, desiring to avoid the people, I sought out a far corner of the church, behind a pillar, where there was no one. But as soon as I had got myself well established there, up hobbled a deformed and lame old man, and plumped himself down beside me, so close that our coat-sleeves touched. I think he was the most repulsive-looking old man I have ever seen ; he was certainly the dirti est, the grimiest, and his rags were extravagantly foul. I will spare you a more circumstantial por trait. And all through Mass I was sick with disgust and sore with resentment. Why should he come and rub his coat-sleeve against mine, when there was room in plenty for him elsewhere ? The next time I went to church, I chose a different corner, as remote as might be from my former one; but again, no PART FIFTH 217 sooner was I well installed, than, lo and behold, the same unspeakable old man limped up and knelt with me, cheek by jowl. And so, if you can believe it, the next time, and so the next. It didn t matter where I placed myself, there he was sure to place himself too. You will suppose that, apart from my annoyance, I was vastly perplexed. Why should he pursue me so? Who was he? What was he after? And for enlightenment I addressed myself to Annunziata. Who is the hideous old man who always kneels be side me? I asked her. She had not noticed anyone kneeling beside me, she said ; she had noticed, on the contrary, that I always knelt alone, at a distance. Well, said I, keep your eyes open to-day, and you will see the man I mean. So we went to Mass, and sure enough, no sooner had I found a secluded place, than my old friend appeared and joined me, dirtier and more hideous and if possible more deformed than ever." "Yes?" said Maria Dolores, with interest, as he paused. "When we came out of church, I asked Annun- 218 MY FRIEND PROSPERO ziata who he was," continued John. "And she said that though she had kept her eyes open, according to my injunction, she had failed to see anyone kneel ing beside me that, on the contrary, she had seen me," he concluded, with an insouciance that was plainly assumed for its dramatic value, "kneeling alone, at a distance from everyone." Maria Dolores face was white. She frowned her mystification. "What!" she exclaimed, in a half- frightened voice. "That is precisely the ejaculation that fell from my own lips at the time," said John. "Then I gave her a minute description of the old man, in all his ugliness. And then she administered my lesson to me." "Yes? What was it?" questioned Maria Dolores, her interest acute. "Speaking in that oracular vein of hers, her eyes very big, her face very grave, she assured me that my horrible old man had no objective existence. She informed me cheerfully and calmly that he was an PART FIFTH 219 image of my own soul, as it appeared, corrupted and aged and deformed by the sins of a lifetime, to God and to the Saints. And she added that he was sent to punish me for my pride in thinking myself differ ent to the common people, and in seeking to hold my self aloof. Since then," John brought his anecdote to a term, "I have always knelt in the body of the church, and I have never again seen my Doppel- ganger." Maria Dolores was silent for a little. They had come to the southern end of the cloisters, where the buttresses of the castle-walls, all shaggy-mantled in a green over-growth of creepers, fall precipitously away, down the steep face of a natural cliff. They stopped here, and stood looking off. The rain had held up, though the valley was still misty with its vapours. Whiffs of velvety air, warm and sweet, blew in their faces, lightly stirred the dark hair about her brow, and, catching the flowery edge of her black lace mantilla, set it fluttering. "That is a very good story," she said, by-and- by, with a sober glance, behind which there was the 220 MY FRIEND PROSPERO glint of laughter. "In view of it, however, I sup pose there will be no use in my delivering a message I came charged with for you from my friend Frau Brandt." "Oh?" questioned John. "What message?" "Frau Brandt has received from the owner of the castle the privilege of hearing Mass from the trib une; and she wished me to invite you in her name hereafter to hear Mass from there with us. But I suppose, in view of your lesson, that is an invitation which you will decline?" The glint of laughter shone brighter in her eyes, and her mouth had a tiny pucker, amiably derisive. John looked at her, his blue eyes bold. "That is an invitation which I am terribly tempted to accept," he said, in a voice of unconcealed emotion, of patent meaning; and beneath his bold gaze, her dark eyes dropped, while I think a blush faintly swept her cheeks. "And first of all," he added, "pray express to Frau Brandt my grateful thanks for it and let me thank you also for your kindness in conveying it. If, in spite of my tempta- PART FIFTH 221 tion, I don t accept it, that will be for a very special reason, and one quite unconnected with my lesson. Maria Dolores probably knew her danger. She turned, and began to walk backward, toward the point where you can pass from the cloisters, through the great porte-cochere, into the garden, and so on to the pavilion beyond the clock. She probably knew her danger ; but she was human, but she was a woman. Besides, she had reached the porte-cochere, and thus commanded a clear means of escape. So, coming to a standstill here, "What is the very spe cial reason?" she asked, in a low voice, keeping her eyes from his. His were bolder than ever. Infinite admiration of her burned in them, infinite delight in her, desire for her; at the same time a kind of angry hopelessness darkened them, and a kind of bitter amusement, as of one amused at his own sad plight. "I wish I were rich," he exclaimed, irritably, be tween his teeth. "Oh ? Is that the very special reason ?" asked she, with two notes of laughter. 222 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "No," said he, "but it has a connection with it. You see, I m in love." "Yes," said she. "I remember your telling me so." "Well, I wish I were rich," said he. "Then I might pluck up courage to ask the woman I love to be my wife." "Money isn t everything here below," said she. "I have your own word for that." "What else counts," said he, "when you wish to ask a woman to marry you ?" "Oh, many things," said she. "Difference of rank, for example." "That wouldn t count with me," said the demo cratic fellow, handsomely. "I shouldn t give two thoughts to differences of rank." Maria Dolores smiled at her secret reflections, I suppose. "But poverty puts it out of all question," John moodily went on. "I couldn t ask a woman to come and share with me an income of sixpence a week. Especially as I have grounds for believing that she s PART FIFTH 223 in rather affluent circumstances herself. Oh, I wish I were rich!" He repeated this aspiration in a groan. "Poor, poor young man," she commiserated him, while her eyes, which she held perseveringly averted, were soft with sympathy and gay with mirth. "When do you begin your gardening?" "Oh, don t mock me," he cried, with an imploring gesture. "You know, joking apart, that it s child s play for a man of my age, with no profession and no special talent, to fancy he can turn to, and earn money. I might, if I made supernatural exertions, and if Fortune went out of her way to favour me, add a maximum of another sixpence to my weekly budget. No, there s never a hope for me on sea or land. I must e en bear it, though I cannot grin withal." "Ah, well," said Maria Dolores, to comfort him, "these attacks, I have read, are often as short as they are sharp. Let us trust you ll soon rally from this one. How long have they generally lasted in the past?" 224 MY FRIEND PROSPERO John s face grew dark with upbraiding; the sea-blue of his eyes, the gold of his hair and beard, the pink of his complexion visibly grew dark. "You are so needlessly unkind," he said, "that you don t deserve to hear the true answer to your question." She studied the half-obliterated fresco on the wall beside her. "All the same," said he, "you shall hear it. If falling in love were my habit, no doubt I shouldn t take it so hard. But the simple truth, though I am thirty years old, is that I have never before felt so much as a heart-flutter for any woman. And, since you cite your reading, / have read that a fire which may merely singe the surface of green wood, will en tirely consume the dry." She continued to study the ancient painting. Her fingers were playing with the ends of her lace veil. "Besides," he went on, "if I had been in love a dozen times, it wouldn t signify. For I should have PART FIFTH 225 been in love with ordinary usual human women. They re the only sort I ever met till I met her. She s of a totally different order as distinct from them as ... What shall I say? Oh, as unlike them as starfire is unlike dull clay. Starfire star- fire the wonderful, high, white-burning starfire of her spirit, that s the thing that strikes you most in her. It shines through her. It shines in her eyes, it shines in her hair, her adorable, soft, dark, warm and fragrant hair; it shines in her very voice; it shines in every word she utters, even in the un- kindest." "Dear me, what an alarmingly refulgent person you depict," laughed Maria Dolores, her eyes still on the wall. "I have no gift for word-painting," said John; "though I doubt if the words are yet invented that could fitly paint my lady. She grows in beauty day by day. It s a literal fact every fresh time I see her, she is perceptibly more lovely than the last, more love-compelling in her loveliness. But tis a thing unpaintable, indescribable, as indescribable as 226 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the perfume of a rose. Oh, why haven t I five thou sand a year?" "You harp so persistently upon your desire for money," suggested Maria Dolores, "one might infer she was a commodity, to be bought and sold. You begin at the wrong end. What good would five or fifty thousand a year do you, if you had not begun by winning her love?" "No, I begin at the proper end, worse luck," John answered, gloomily. "For, without a decent in come, I have no right even to try to win her love." "And that being so," questioned Maria Dolores, "I hope you conscientiously avoid her society, or, when you meet, make yourself consistently disagree able to her?" "There s no need for such precautions," John re plied. "There s no fear for her. She regards me as a casual and passing acquaintance. So I make my self no more disagreeable than I am by nature. And if I avoided her society (which I am far from do ing), it would be not for her sake, but for my own. For, though her society is to me a kind of anticipa- PART FIFTH 227 tion of the joys of Heaven, yet when I leave it and find myself alone, the reaction is dreary in the super lative degree; and the fear, which perpetually haunts me (for I know nothing of her plans), lest I shall never see her again, is agonising as a foretaste of Heaven s antipode. Oh, I love her!" He took, involuntarily I daresay, a step in her direction. She retreated under the vaulting of the porte-cochere. "You seem," she commented, "to be getting a good deal of emotional experience, which doubtless some day you will find of value. Why not, instead of gardener, embark as novelist or poet? Here is material you could then turn to account." "Ah, there you are," he complained, piteously, "mocking me again. Ah, well, if you must have your laugh, have it, and welcome. A man can learn to take the bitter with the sweet." "To spare you that discomfort," said she, moving deeper into the archway, while John s face fell, "I will bid you good-bye. I am to report, then, that you decline my friend s invitation with thanks?" 228 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "With my most grateful thanks," he was able in tensively to rejoin, in spite of his dismay at the im minence of her departure. "And for a very special reason?" she harked back, now, suddenly, for the first time since they had touched thin ice, giving him a glance. It was the fleetingest of fleeting glances, it was merry and ironic, but there was something in it which brought a flame to his blue eyes. "For the very special reason," he answered, with vehemence, "that I fear the presence near me of He held his breath for a second, the flame in his eyes enveloping her ; then, with an abrupt change of tone and mien, he ended, " of Frau Brandt might dis tract my attention from the sermon." She laughed, and said, "Good-bye." "Good-bye," said John. And when she was half way through the tunnel-like passage, "I suppose you know you are leaving me to a day as barren as the Desert of Sahara ?" he called after her. "Oh, who can tell what a day may bring forth?" called she, but without looking back. PART FIFTH 229 For a long while John s faculties were kept busy, trying to determine whether that was a promise, a menace, or a mere word in the air. Ill "Rain before seven, clear before eleven," is as true, or as untrue, in Lombardy as it is in other parts of the world. The rain had held up, and now, in that spirited phrase of Corvo s, "here came my lord the Sun," splendidly putting the clouds to flight, or chaining them, transfigured, to his chariot-wheels; clothing the high snow-peaks in a roseate glory (that seemed somehow, I don t know why, to accent their solitude and their remoteness) ; flooding the valley with ethereal amber; turning the swollen Rampio to a river of fire : while the nearer hillsides, the olive woods, the trees in the castle garden, glis tened with a million million crystals, and the petals of the flowers were crystal-tipped ; while the breath of the earth rose in long streamers of luminous in- 230 MY FRIEND PROSPERO cense, and the sky gleamed with every tender, every brilliant, tint of blue, from the blue of pale forget- menots to the blue of larkspur. John, contemplating this spectacle (and think ing of Maria Dolores? revolving still her cryptic valediction?), all at once, as his eye rested on the shimmer at the valley s end which he knew to be the lake, lifted up his hand and clapped his brow. "By Jove," he muttered, "if I wasn t within an ace of clean forgetting !" The sight of the lake had for tunately put him in mind that he was engaged to-day to lunch with Lady Blanchemain at Rocca- doro. He found her ladyship, in a frock all concentric whirls of crisp white ruffles, vigorously wielding a fan, and complaining of the heat. (Indeed, as An- nunziata had predicted, it had grown markedly warmer.) "I shall fly away, if this continues; I shall fly straight to town, and set my house in order for the season. When do you come?" she asked, smiling on him from her benign old eyes. "I don t come," answered John. "I rather like PART FIFTH 231 town in autumn and winter, when it s too dark to see its ugliness, but save me from it in the clear light of summer." "Fudge," said Lady Blanchemain. "London s the most beautiful capital in Europe it s grandi ose. And it s the only place where there are any people." "Yes," said John, "but, as at Nice and Homburg, too many of them are English. And there s a liberal scattering, I ve heard, of Jews?" "Oh, Jews are all right when they aren t Jewy," said Lady Blanchemain, with magnanim ity. "I know some very nice ones. I was rather hoping you would be a feature of my Sunday afternoons." "I m not a society man," said John. "I ve no aptitude myself for patronising or toadying, and I don t particularly enjoy being patronised or toad ied to." "Is that the beginning and end of social life in England?" Lady Blanchemain inquired, delicately sarcastic. 232 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "As I have seen it, yes," asseverated John. "The beginning, end, and middle of social life in Eng land, as in Crim-Tartary, is worship of the longest pigtail, a fetichism sometimes grosser, sometimes subtler, sometimes deliberate, often unconscious and instinctive. Everyone you meet is aware that his pigtail is either longer or shorter than yours, and accordingly, more or less subtly, grossly, uncon sciously or deliberately, swaggers or bends the knee. It s a state of things I ve tried in vain to find divert ing." "It s a state of things you ll find prevailing pretty well in all places where the human species breeds," said Lady Blanchemain. "The only differ ence will be a question of what constitutes the pig tail. And are you, then, remaining at Sant Ales- sina?" "For the present," answered John. "Until ?" she questioned. "Oh, well, until she sends me away, or leaves her self," said he, "and so my fool s paradise achieves its inevitable end." PART FIFTH 233 Lady Blanchemain laughed a long, quiet laugh of amused contentment. "Come in to luncheon," she said, putting her soft white hand upon his arm, "and tell me all about it." And when they were established at her table, a round table, gay with flowers, in a window at the far end of the cool, terazza-paved, stucco-columned dining-room of the Hotel Victoria, "Why do you call it a fool s paradise ?" she asked. "Well, you see, I m in love," said he. "You really are?" she doubted, with sprightli- ness, looking gleeful. "All too really," he assured her, in a sinking voice. "What an old witch I was," mused she, with satis faction. "Accept my heart-felt felicitations." She beamed upon him. "I should prefer your condolences," said he, in a voice from the depths. "Allans done! Cheer up," laughed she, dallying with her bliss. "Men have died, and worms have eaten them, but not for love." 234 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I wonder," said John. "That is a statement, it seems to me, which would be the better for some proving." "At all events," said she, "you, for one, are not dead yet." "No," admitted he ; "though I could almost wish I was." "Do you mean to say she has definitely rejected you ?" she demanded, alarmed. "Fortune has spared her that necessity," said John. "I haven t asked her, and I never shall. I haven t any money." "Pooh! Is that all?" scoffed her ladyship, re lieved. "You have prospects." "Remote ones the remoter the better. I won t count on dead men s shoes," said John. "What is it your little fortune-teller at the castle calls you?" asked Lady Blanchemain, shrewdly, her dark old eyebrows up. "She calls me lucus a non lucendo" was John s quick riposte ; and the lady laughed. But in a moment she pulled a straight face. "I PART FIFTH 235 seriously counsel you to have more faith," she said. "Go home and ask her to marry you; and if she accepts, you ll see. Money will come. Besides, your rank and your prospective rank are assets which you err in not adding to the balance. Go home, and propose to her." " Twould do no good," said John, dejectedly. "She regards me with imperturbable indifference. I ve made the fieriest avowals to her, and she s never turned a hair." Lady Blanchemain looked bewildered. "You ve made avowals ?" she falteringly echoed. "I should rather think so," John affirmed. "In direct ones, of course, and I hope inoffensive, but fiery as live coals. In the third person, you know. I ve given her two and two; she has, you may be sure, enough skill in mathematics to put em to gether." "And she never turned a hair?" the lady mar velled. "She jeered at me, she mocked me, she laughed and rode away," said he. 236 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "She s probably in love with you," said Lady Blanchemain. "If a woman will listen, if a woman will laugh ! If you don t propose to her now, hav ing ensnared her young affections, you ll be some thing worse than the wicked nobleman of song and story." "Oh, well," John responded, conciliatory, "I dare say some of these days a proposal will slip out when I least intend it. So I shall have done the honour able thing and I m sure I can trust her to play fair and say me nay." Lady Blanchemain slowly shook her head. "I m glad you re not my lover," she devoutly murmured, plying her fan. "Oh, but I am," cried John, with a bow, and an admiring flash of the eyes. Her soft old face lighted up ; then it took on an expression of resolution, and she set her strong old jaws. "In that case," she remarked, "you will have the less reluctance in granting a favour I m about to ask you." "What s the favour?" said John, in a tone of readiness. PART FIFTH 237 "I want you to buy a pig in a poke," said she. "Oh?" questioned he. "Yes," said she. "I want you to make me a promise blindfold. I want you to promise in the dark that you will do something. What it is that you re to do you re not to know till the time comes. Will you promise?" "Dearest lady," said the trustful young man, "I m perfectly confident that you would never ask me to do anything that I couldn t do with profit to myself. Buy a pig in a poke? From you, without a moment s hesitation. Of course I prom ise." "Bravo, bravo," applauded Lady Blanchemain, glowing at her easy triumph. "In a few days you ll receive a letter. That will tell you what it is you re pledged to. And now, to reward you, come with me to my sitting-room, and I will make you a little present." When they had reached her sitting-room (dim and cool, with its half -drawn blinds and the straw- coloured linen covers of its furniture), she put into 238 MY FRIEND PROSPERO his hands a small case of shagreen, small and hard, and at the edges white with age. "Go to the window and see what s in it," she said. And obeying, "By Jove, what a stunner !" he ex claimed. The case contained a ring, a light circle of gold, set with a ruby, surrounded by a row of dia monds, for my part, I think the most beautiful ruby I have ever seen. It was as big as a hazel-nut, or almost ; it was cut, with innumerable facets, in the shape of a heart; and it quivered and burned, and flowed and rippled, liquidly, with the purest, limpid- est red fire. " Tis the spirit of a rose, distilled and crystal lised," said Lady Blanchemain. " Tis a drop of liquid light," said John. "But why do you give it to me ? I can t wear it. I don t think I ought to accept it." "Nobody asks you to wear it," said Lady Blanchemain. "It s a woman s ring, of course. But as for accepting it, you need have no scruples. It s an old Blanchemain gem, that was in the family PART FIFTH 239 a hundred years before I came into it. It s properly an heirloom, and you re the heir. I give it to you for a purpose. Should you ever become engaged, I desire you to place it upon the finger of the ad venturous woman." IV Under a gnarled old olive, by the river s brim, An- nunziata sat on the turf, head bowed, so that her curls fell in a tangle all about her cheeks, and gazed fixedly into the green waters, the laughing, dancing, purling waters, green, and, where the sun reached them, shot with seams and cleavages of light, like fluorspar. In the sun-flecked, shadow-dappled grass near by, violets tried to hide themselves, but were betrayed by their truant sweetness. The waters purled, a light breeze rustled the olive-leaves, and birds were singing loud and wild, as birds will after rain. Maria Dolores, coming down the path that fol lowed the river s windings, stood for a minute, and 240 MY FRIEND PROSPERO watched her small friend without speaking. But at last she called out, "Ciao, Annunziata. Are you dreaming dreams and seeing visions?" Annunziata started and looked up. "Sh-h!" she whispered, with an admonitory gesture. She stole a wary glance roundabout, and then spoke as one fearful of being overheard. "I was listening to the music of Divopan," she said. Maria Dolores, who had come closer, appeared at a loss. "The music of what?" she questioned. "Sh-h," whispered Annunziata. "I would not dare to say it aloud. The music of Divopan." "Divopan?" Maria Dolores puzzled, compliantly guarding her tone. "What is that ?" "Divo Pan," said Annunziata, dividing the word in two, and always with an air of excessive caution. But Maria Dolores helplessly shook her head. "I m afraid I don t understand. What is Divo Pan?" "Don t you know what a divo is?" asked Annun ziata, her clear grey eyes surprised. PART FIFTH 241 "Oh, a divo?" said Maria Dolores, getting a glimmer of light. "Ah, yes, a divo is a saint, I think?" "Not exactly," Annunziata discriminated, "but something like one. The saints, you see, are always very good, and divi are sometimes bad. But they are powerful, like saints. They can do anything they wish. Divo Pan is the divo who makes all the music that you hear out of doors, the music of the wind and the water and the bird-songs. But you must be careful never to praise his music aloud, lest Divo Apolione should hear you. He is the divo that makes all the music you hear on instruments on harps and violins and pianos. He is very jealous of Divo Pan, and if he hears you praising him, will do something to you. You know what he did to King Mida, don t you?" "What did he do?" asked Maria Dolores. Annunziata stole another wary glance about. "Once upon a time," she recounted, always in her lowest voice, "many years ago, hundreds of years ago, the King of this country was named 242 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Mida. And he loved very much the music of Divo Pan. He loved to sit by the river here, and to listen to the music of the water, and of the leaves, and of the birds. I love to do it too, and I think he was quite right. But one day, in his house, there came a musician with a harp, and began to play to him. And the King listened for a while, and then he told the musician to stop. Your music is very good, he said, but now I am going into the fields and by the river, where I can hear a music I like better. But the musician with the harp was really Divo Apol- lone himself, disguised. And this made him very angry and jealous. And to punish King Mida he changed his ears to long hairy ears, like an ass s. So, if you love the music of Divo Pan, you must be very careful not to let Divo Apollone hear you praise it, or he will do something to you." And to drive home this application of her theme, she held up a warning finger. Maria Dolores had listened, smiling. Now she gave a gay little laugh, and then for a moment PART FIFTH 243 mused. "That is a very curious bit of history," she said, in the end. "How ever did it come to your knowledge?" Annunziata shrugged. "Oh," she answered, "everybody knows that. I have known it for years. My grandmother who lived in Milan told it to me. Doesn t the water look cool and pleasant?" was her abrupt digression, as she returned her gaze to the Rampio. "When it is hot like this, I should like to lie down in the water, and go to sleep. Wouldn t you?" "I m not so sure," said Maria Dolores. "I should rather fear I might be drowned." "Oh, but that wouldn t hurt," said Annunziata, with security. "To be drowned in such beautiful green water, among all those beams of light, would be nice." "Perhaps you are not aware," said Maria Do lores, "that when people are drowned they die ?" "Oh, yes, I know that," said Annunziata. "But" - she raised calm pellucid eyes "wouldn t you like to die?" 244 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Certainly not," said Maria Dolores, a shadow on her face. "I would," said Annunziata, stoutly. "It must be lovely to die." "Hush," Maria Dolores rebuked her, frowning. "You must not say such things." "Why not say them, if you think them?" asked Annunziata. "You mustn t think them, either," said Maria Dolores. "Oh, I can t help thinking them," said Annun ziata, with a movement. "It surely must be lovely to die and go to Heaven. If I were perfectly sure I should go to Heaven, I would shut my eyes and die now. But I should probably have to wait some time in Purgatory. And, of course, I might go to Hell." Maria Dolores face was full of trouble. "You must not talk like that," she said. "You must not. It is wicked of you." "Then, if I am wicked, I should go to Hell?" inquired Annunziata, looking alertly up. PART FIFTH 245 Maria Dolores looked about her, looked across the river, down the valley, as one in distress scan ning the prospect for aid. "Of course you would not," she said. "My dear child, can t we find some thing else to talk of?" "Do you think I shall have a very long and hard Purgatory?" asked Annunziata. Maria Dolores threw a despairing glance at the horizon. "No, no, dear," she answered, uneasily. "You will have a very short and gentle one. Anyhow, you ll not have to consider that for years to come. Now shall we change the subject?" "Well," said Annunziata, with an air of delibera tion, "if you are perfectly sure I shall not go to Hell, and that my Purgatory will not be long and hard, I think I will do what I said. I will lie down in the water and go to sleep, and the water will drown me, and I shall die." Maria Dolores face was terrified. "Annun ziata !" she cried. "You don t know what you are saying. You are cruel. You won t do anything of 246 MY FRIEND PROSPERO the sort. You must give me your solemn word of honour that you won t do anything of the sort. It would be a most dreadful sin. Come. Come with me now, away from here, away from the sight of the river. You must never come here alone again. Give me your hand, and come away." Annunziata got up, gave her hand, and moved off at Maria Dolores side, toward the castle. "Of course," she said, "if I want to die, I don t need to lie down in the water. I can die at any moment I wish, by just shutting my eyes, and holding my breath, and telling my heart seven times to stop beating. Heart, stop beating ; heart, stop beating ; that way, seven times." "For the love of Mercy," wailed poor Maria Dolores, almost writhing in her misery. . . . Then, suddenly, she breathed a deep sigh of relief, and fervently exclaimed, "Thank God." John was advancing toward them, down the rugged path way. "Do please come and help me with this perverse and maddening child," she called to him, in Eng- PART FIFTH 247 lish. "She s frightening me half out of my wits by threatening to die. She even threatened to drown herself in the Rampio." "Children of her complexion can t die," said John, in Italian (and Annunziata pricked up her ears). "They can only turn into monkeys, and then they have to live in the forests of Africa, where it is always dark, and all the men and women are negro savages, and all the other animals ( except the mosquitoes and the snakes) are lions and tigers. Besides, if Annunziata were to turn into a monkey, she couldn t have the sugared chestnuts that some body or other has brought her from Roccadoro. On the chest of drawers in my room there has mys teriously appeared a box of sugared chestnuts. I thought they were for her, but they re not, unless she will promise never to turn into a mon- key." Annunziata s eyes had clouded. "Of course I won t turn into a monkey," she said, in accents at once of disillusion and disdain. "I did not know there was any such danger. I should hate 248 MY FRIEND PROSPERO to be a monkey." Then her eyes brightened again. "May I go and get them now?" she asked, wistful and impatient. "Yes," said John ; "be off with you." And she went running lightly up the hill. He turned to Maria Dolores. Her face (clear- cut, with its dark hair, against the red background of her sunshade) was white and drawn with pain. But she smiled, rather wanly, as her gaze met his, and said, in a weak voice, "Oh, I am so glad you came. I can t tell you how she was frighten ing me." And all at once her eyes filled with tears. I needn t say whether John was moved, whether it was his impulse to take her in his arms and dry her tears with kisses. He did actually, on that impulse, give a perceptible start toward her, but then he restrained himself. "The child ought to be whipped," he broke out angrily. "You must not take her prattle so seriously." "But she was so serious," said Maria Dolores. "Oh, when she threatened to lie down in the river, PART FIFTH 249 and let herself be drowned !" Her voice failed her, as at the inexpressible. "No fear of that," said John. "The first touch of the cold water (and icy-cold it is, a glacier- stream, you know) would bring her to her senses. But come! You must not think of it any more. You have had a bad shock, but no bones are broken, and now you must try to banish it all from your mind." "What an unaccountable child she is," said Maria Dolores. "Surely it is unnatural and alarm ing for a child to have her head so teeming with strange freaks and fancies. Oh, I pray God to grant that nothing may happen to her." "The most serious evil that s likely to happen to her for the present," said John, "will be an indiges tion of marrons glaces." Maria Dolores tears had gone now. She smiled. But afterward she looked grave again. "Oh, I wish I could get the dread of something happening to her out of my heart. I wish she wasn t so pale and fragile-looking," she said. Then there came a 250 MY FRIEND PROSPERO gleam in her eyes. "But you were going for a walk, and I am detaining you." "The object of my walk has been accomplished," said John. "Oh?" questioned she. "I was walking in the hope, on the chance, that I might meet you," he hardily explained. "It s such an age since I ve seen you. Are you making for the garden ? I pray you to be kind, and let me go with you. I ve been an exile and a wanderer I ve been to Roccadoro." She had rebegun her ascension of the hill. The path was steep, as well as rugged. Sometimes John had to help her over a hard bit. The touch of her hand, soft and warm, and firm too, in his ; the sense of her closeness; the faint fragrance of her gar ments, of her hair, these things, you may be sure, went to his head, went to his heart. The garden lay in a white blaze of sunshine, that seemed almost material, like an incandescent fluid; but the en trance to the avenue was dark and inviting. "Let us," he proposed, "go and sit on a marble bench PART FIFTH 251 under the glossy leaves of the ilexes, in the deep, cool shade ; and let s play that it s a thousand years ago, and that you re a Queen (white Queen Blanche, like a queen of lilies), and that I m your minstrel- man." "What song will you sing me?" asked she gaily, as they took their places on the marble bench. It was semicircular, with a high carved back (carved with the armorials of the Sforzas), and of course it was lichen-stained, grey and blue and green, yellow and scarlet. " White Queen Blanche, like a queen of lilies, Fairer and dearer than dearest and fairest, To hear me sing, if it her sweet will is, Sing, minstrel-man, of thy love, an thou darest," trolled John, in his light barytone, to a tune, I im agine, improvised for the occasion. "But if it s a thousand years ago," he laughed, "that song smacks too much perhaps of actuality, and I had best choose another." 252 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Maria Dolores joined in his laugh. "I did not know you sang," she said. "Let me hear the other." "A song," reflected he, "that I could sing with a good deal of feeling and conviction, would be Give her but the least excuse to love me. " Maria Dolores all at once looked sober. "Oughtn t you to be careful," she said, "to give her no excuse at all to love you, if you are really re solved never to ask her to be your wife?" "That is exactly what I have given her," an swered John, "no excuse at all. I should sing in a spirit purely academic, my song would be the ut terance of a pious but hopeless longing, of the moth s desire for the star." "But she, I suppose, isn t a star," objected Maria Dolores. "She s probably just a weak human woman. You may have given her excuses without meaning to." There was the slightest quaver in her voice. John caught his breath; he turned upon her al most violently. But she was facing away from PART FIFTH 253 him, down the avenue, so that he could not get her eyes. "In that case," she said, "wouldn t you owe her something?" "I should owe myself a lifetime s penance with the discipline," John on a solemn tone replied, hun grily looking at her cheek, at the little tendrils of dark hair about her brow. "God knows what I should owe to her." "You would owe it to her," said Maria Dolores, always facing away, "to tell her your love straight forwardly, and to ask her to marry you." John thrilled, John ached. His blue eyes burned upon her. "What else do you think I dream of, night and day? But how could I, with honour? You know my poverty," he groaned. "But if she has enough, more than enough, for two ?" softly urged Maria Dolores. "Ah, that s the worst of it," cried he. "If we were equals in penury, if she had nothing, then I might honourably ask her, and we could live on herbs together in a garret, and I could keep her 254 MY FRIEND PROSPERO respect and my own. Oh, garret-paradise! But to marry a woman who is rich, to live in luxury with her, and to try to look unconscious while she pays the bills, she would despise me, I should abhor my self." "Why should she despise you?" asked Maria Do lores. "The possession of wealth is a mere accident. If people are married and love each other, I can t see that it matters an atom whether their money be longed in the first place to the man or to the woman, it would belong henceforward to them both equally." "That is a very generous way of looking at it, but it is a woman s way. No decent man could ac cept it," said John. "Up to a certain point," said Maria Dolores, slowly, "I understand your scruples. I understand that a poor man might feel that he would not like to make the advances, if the woman he loved was rich. But suppose the woman loved him, and knew that he loved her, and knew that it was only his poverty which held him back, then she PART FIFTH 255 might make the advances. .She might put aside her pride, and go half way to meet him, and to remove his difficulties and embarrassments. If, after that, he still did not ask her, I think his scruples would have become mere vanity, I think it would show that he cared more for his mere vanity than for her happiness." Her voice died out. John could see that her lip quivered a little. His throat was dry. The pulses were pounding in his temples. His brain was all a confusion. He hardly knew what had befallen him, he hardly knew what she had said. He only knew that there was a great ball of fire in his breast, and that the pain of it was half an immeasurable joy. "God forgive me," the absurd and exaggerated stickler for the dignity of his sex wildly cried. "God knows how I love her, how I care for her hap piness. But to go to her empty-handed, but to put myself in the position of being kept by a w r oman, God knows how impossible it is." Maria Dolores stood up, still looking away from him. 256 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Well, let us hope," she said, changing her tone to one of unconcerned detachment, "that we have been discussing baseless suppositions. Let us hope that her heart is quite untouched. And for both your sakes," she concluded, her head in the air, "let us hope that you and she will never meet again. Good-bye." She gave him a curt little nod, and walked lightly, rapidly up the avenue. John s brain was all a confusion. He looked after her helplessly. He only knew there was a great ball of fire in his breast, and that the pain of it was now unmixed. Maria Dolores tripped into Frau Brandt s sitting- room, merrily singing a snatch of song. " Garde z vous d etre severe Quand on vous parle d amour," she carolled. Then she stopped singing, and blithely laughed. PART FIFTH 257 Frau Brandt raised her good brown face from her knitting, and her good brown eyes looked anxiously upward, slantwise over her tortoise-shell-rimmed spectacles. "What is the matter now?" she asked. "What has happened to vex you now?" "To vex me!" cried Maria Dolores, in apparent astonishment. "Wasn t I singing aloud from sheer exuberance of high spirits ?" "No," said Frau Brandt, with a very positive shake of her white-capped head. "You were sing ing to conceal your low spirits. What has hap pened?" "Ah, well, then, if you know so much and must know all," said Maria Dolores, "I ve just proposed to the man I m in love with, and been sent about my business." "What do you mean ?" asked Frau Brandt, phleg matic. "What nonsense is this ?" "I mean my cobbler s son," Maria Dolores an swered. "I, a Princess of the Empire, humbly of fered him, a cobbler s son, my hand, heart, and for- 258 MY FRIEND PROSPERO tune, and the graceless man rejected them with scorn." "That is a likely story," said Frau Brandt, wag ging her chin. Her blunt brown fingers returned to their occupation. "I see your Serene Highness of fering her hand." "At all events, will you kindly tell Josephine to pack our boxes. To-morrow we ll be flitting," her Serene Highness in a casual way announced. "What say you?" cried Frau Brandt, dropping her knitting into her lap. "Yes to Mischenau, to my brother," the Princess pursued. "Of course you ll have to come with us, poor dear. You can t let me travel alone with Josephine." "No," said Frau Brandt. "I will go with you." "And you can remain for my wedding," Maria Dolores added. "I am going home to meet my brother s wishes, and to marry my second-cousin, the high and mighty Maximilian, Prince of Zelt-Zelt." "Herr Gott!" said Frau Brandt, glancing with devotion at the ceiling. PART FIFTH 259 VI John, wild-eyed, was still where she had left him, in the avenue, savouring and resayouring his woe. "If only," he brooded, "she were of one s own rank in the world, then her wealth might perhaps not be such an absolutely hopeless impediment as it is. But to marry, as they say, beneath one, and to marry money into the bargain, that would be a little too much like the fortune-hunter of tradition." He still sat where she had left him, on the marble bench, disconsolate, when the parroco approached hur riedly, from the direction of the house. "Signore," the parroco began, out of breath, "I offer a thousand excuses for venturing to disturb you, but my niece has suddenly fallen ill. I am go ing to the village to telephone for a doctor. My cook is away, for her Sunday afternoon. Might I pray you to have the extreme kindness to stay with the child till I return? I don t know what is the 260 MY FRIEND PROSPERO matter, but she fainted, and now is delirious, and, I m afraid, very ill indeed." "Good Heavens," gasped John, forgetting every thing else. "Of course, of course." And he set off hotfoot for the presbytery. PART SIXTH I would rather not dwell upon the details of Annun- ziata s illness. By the mercy of Providence, she got well in the end; but in the meantime those details were sufficiently painful. John, for example, found it more than painful to hear her cry out piteously, as she often would in her delirium, that she did not wish to be turned into a monkey ; he hung his head and groaned, and cursed the malinspired moment which had given that chimaera birth. However, he had his compensations. Maria Dolores, whom he had thought never to see again, he saw every day. "Let us hope that you and she may never meet again." In his despairing heart the words became a re frain. But an hour later the news of trouble at the presbytery had travelled to the pavilion, 261 262 MY FRIEND PROSPERO and she flew straight to Annunziata s bedside. Ever since (postponing those threatened nup tials at Mischenau) she had shared with John, and the parroco, and Marcella the cook, the labours of nurse. And though it was arranged that the men, turn and turn about, should watch by night, and the women by day, John, by coming early and leaving late, contrived to make a good part of his vigil and of hers coincident. And the strange result is that now, looking backward upon that period of pain and dread, when from minute to minute no one knew what awful change the next minute might bring, looking backward, and seeing again the small bare room, cell-like, with its whitewashed walls, its iron cot, its crucifix, its narrow window (through which wide miles of valley shone), and then the little white face and the brown curls tossing on the pillow, and the woman of his love sitting near to him, in the inti macy of a common care and common duties, the strange result is that John feels a glow in his heart, as at the memory of a period of joy. "Oh, do not let them turn me into a monkey. Oh, PART SIXTH 263 Holy Mother, I am so afraid. Oh, do not let them," Annunziata cried, shuddering, and shrinking deeper into bed, toward the wall. John hung his head and wrung his hands. "My God, my God," he groaned. "You should not blame yourself," Maria Dolores said in a low voice, while she bathed the child s fore head, and fanned her face. "Your intention was good, you could not foresee what has happened, and it may be for the best, after all, it may strengthen her will to live, which is the great thing, the doctor says." She had spoken English, but Annunziata s next outcry was like a response. "Oh, to live, to live I want to live, to live. Oh, let me live." But at other times her wandering thoughts took quite a different turn. Gazing solemnly up into Maria Dolores face, she said, "He does not even know her name, though he fears it may be Smitti. I thought it was Maria Dolores, but he fears it may be Smitti." 264 MY FRIEND PROSPERO John looked out of the window, pretending not to hear, and praying, I expect, that Maria Dolores eyes might be blinded and her counsel darkened. At the same time ( Heaven having sent me a laugh ing hero) I won t vouch that his shoulders didn t shake a little. II Apropos of their ignorance of each other s patro nymics . . . One afternoon Maria Dolores was tak ing the air at the open door of the presbytery, when, to a mighty clattering of horses hoofs, a big high- swung barouche came sweeping into the court-yard, described a bold half circle, and abruptly drew up before her. In the barouche sat a big old lady, a big soft, humorous-eyed old lady, in cool crepe-de- chine, cream-coloured, with beautiful white hair, a very gay light straw bonnet, and a much befurbe- lowed lavender-hued sunshade. Coachman and foot man, bolt upright, stared straight before them, as PART SIXTH 265 rigid as if their liveries were of papier-mache. The horses, with a full sense of what they owed to ap pearances, fierily champed their bits, tossed their manes, and pawed the paving-stones. The old lady smiled upon Maria Dolores with a look of great friendliness and interest, softly bowed, and wished her, in a fine, warm, old high-bred voice, "Good af ternoon." Maria Dolores (feeling an instant liking, as well as curiosity and admiration) smiled in her turn, and responded, "Good afternoon." "You enjoy a fine view from here," the old lady remarked, ducking her sunshade in the direction of the valley. "A beautiful view," agreed Maria Dolores, fol lowing the sunshade with her eyes. Those of the stranger had a gleam. "But don t you think, if the unvarnished truth may be whis pered, that it s becoming the merest trifle too hot?" she suggested. Maria Dolores lightly laughed. "I think it is decidedly too hot," she said. 266 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I m glad to find we re of the same opinion," de clared the old lady, fanning herself. "You can positively see the heat, vibrating there in the dis tance. We children of the North should fly such weather. For my part, I m off to-morrow for Eng land, where I can shiver through the summer com fortably in my chimney-corner." Maria Dolores laughed out again. "So I ve driven over from Roccadoro," the new comer continued, "to have a farewell look at a young man of my acquaintance who s staying here. I dare say you may know him. He has blue eyes and a red beard, a flattering manner and a pretty wit, and his name is Blanchemain." "Oh?" said Maria Dolores, her eyebrows going up. "Is that his name ? You mean the young Eng lishman who lives with the parroco ?" The old lady s eyebrows, which were thick and dark, went up too. "Is it possible you didn t know his name ?" was her surprised ejaculation. Then she said, "I wonder whether he is anywhere about?" PART SIXTH 267 "I fancy he s asleep," said Maria Dolores. "Asleep? At this hour?" The dark eyebrows frowned their protest. "That sounds like a sad slugabed." Maria Dolores looked serious. "He was up all night. We have a child ill here, and he was up all night, watching." The stranger s grey eyes filled with concern and sympathy. "I hope, I m sure, it s not that pretty little girl, the niece of the parroco ?" she said. "Unhappily, it is," said Maria Dolores. "She has been very ill indeed." "I am extremely sorry to hear it, extremely sorry," the old lady declared, with feeling. "If I can be of any sort of use if I can send anything or in any way help " Her eyes completed the offer. "Oh, thank you, thank you," replied Maria Do lores. "You are most kind, but I don t think there is anything anyone can do. Besides, she is on the mend now, we hope. The doctor says the worst is probably over." 268 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Well, thank God for that," exclaimed the vis itor, with a will. She considered for a moment, and then reverted to the previous question. "So you did not know that my vivid young friend s name was Blanchemain ?" "No," said Maria Dolores. "It is a good name there s none better in Eng land," averred the old lady with a nod of emphasis that set the wheat-ears in her bonnet quivering. "Oh ?" said Maria Dolores, looking politely in terested. "He s the nephew and heir of Lord Blanchemain of Ventmere," her instructress went on. "That is one of our most ancient peerages." "Really?" said Maria Dolores. (What else did she say in her heart ? Where now was her cobbler s son?) "And I m glad to be able to add that I m his sort of connection I m the widow of the late Lord Blanchemain." The lady paused ; then, with that smile of hers which we know, that smile which went as an advance-guard to disarm resentment, "Peo- PART SIXTH 269 pie of my age are allowed to be inquisitive," she premised. "I have introduced myself to you won t you introduce yourself to me ?" "My name is Maria Dolores of Zelt-Neuminster," answered the person questioned, also smiling. The widow of the late Lord Blanchemain in wardly gasped, but she was quick to suppress all outward symptoms of that circumstance. The daughter of Eve in her gasped, but the practised old Englishwoman of the world affably and imper- turbably pronounced, with a gracious movement of the head, "Ah, indeed? You are then, of course, a relation of the Prince ?" "I am the Prince s sister," said Maria Dolores. And, as if an explanation of her presence was in order, she added, "I am here visiting my old nurse and governess, to whom my brother has given a pavilion of the castle, for her home." Lady Blanchemain fanned herself. "A miller s daughter!" she thought, with a silent laugh at John s expense and her own. "I am very glad to have made your acquaintance," she said, "and I 270 MY FRIEND PROSPERO hope this may not be our last meeting. I m afraid I ought now to be hastening back to Roccadoro. I wonder whether you will have the kindness, when you see him, to convey my parting benediction to Mr. Blanchemain. Oh, no, I would not let him be wakened, not for worlds. Thank you. Good bye." And, with a great effect of majesty and impor tance, like a conscious thing, her carriage rolled away. Ill "My romance is over, my April dream is ended," said the Princess, with an air, perhaps a feint, of listless melancholy, to Frau Brandt. "What mean you?" asked Frau Brandt, un moved. "My cobbler s son has disappeared has van ished in a blaze of glory," her Serene Highness ex plained, and laughed. PART SIXTH 271 "I don t understand," said Frau Brandt. "He has not left Sant Alessina ?" "No, but he isn t a cobbler s son at all he s merely been masquerading as one his name is not Brown, Jones, or Robinson his name is the high- sounding name of Blanchemain, and he s heir to an English peerage." "Ah, so? He is then noble?" Frau Brandt in ferred, raising her eyes, with satisfaction. "As noble as need be. An English peer is mar riageable. So here s adieu to my cottage in the air." "Here s good riddance to it," said Frau Brandt. That evening, at the hour of sunset, Maria Do lores met John in the garden. "You had a visitor this afternoon," she an nounced. "A most inspiritingly young old lady, as soft and white as a powder-puff, in a carriage that was like a coach-and-four. Lady Blanchemain. She is leaving to-morrow for England. She desired me to give you her farewell blessing." "It will be doubly precious to me by reason of the 272 MY FRIEND PROSPERO medium through which it comes," said John, with his courtliest obeisance. There was a little pause, during which she looked at the western sky. But presently, "Why did you tell me you had an uncle who was a farmer?" she asked, beginning slowly to pace down the path way. "Did I tell you that ? I suppose I had a boastful fit upon me," John replied. "But it very much misled me," said Maria Do lores. "Oh, it s perfectly true," said John. "You are the heir to a peerage," said Maria Do lores. John had a gesture. "There you are," he said; "and my uncle, the peer, spends much of his time and most of his money breeding sheep and growing turnips. If that isn t a farmer, I should like to know what is." "I hope you displayed less reticence regarding your station in the world to that woman you were in love with," said she. PART SIXTH 273 "That woman I was in love with?" John caught her up. "That woman I am in love with, please." "Oh? Are you still in love with her?" Maria Dolores wondered. "It is so long since you have spoken of her, I thought your heart was healed." "If I have not spoken of her, it has been because I was under the impression that you had tacitly forbidden me to do so," John informed her. "So I had," she admitted. "But I find that there is such a thing as being too well obeyed." She brought out her last words, after the briefest possible suspension, hurriedly, in a voice that quailed a little, as if in terror of its own audacity. John, with tingling pulses, turned upon her. But she, according to her habit at such times, refused him her eyes. He could see, though, that her eye lashes trembled. "Oh," he cried, "I love her so much, I need her so, I suppose I shall end by doing the dishonourable thing." "Did you ever tell her that you were Lord Blanchemain s heir?" she asked. 274 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I never thought of it. Why should I?" said John. "When you were bemoaning your poverty, as an obstacle to marriage, you might have remembered that your birth counted for something. With us Austrians, for example, birth counts for almost everything, for infinitely more than money." "I think," said John, as one impersonally gen eralising, "that a fortune-hunter with a tuft is the least admirable variety of that animal. I wish you could see what beautiful little rose-white ears she has, and the lovely way in which her dark hair droops about them." "How long ago was it," mused she, "that love first made people fancy they saw beauties which had no real existence?" "Oh, the moment you see a thing, it acquires real existence," John returned. "The act of seeing is an act of creation. The thing you see has real exist ence on your retina and in your mind, if nowhere else, and that is the realest sort of real exist- PART SIXTH 275 "Then she must thank you as the creator of her rose-white ears," laughed Maria Dolores. "I won der whether that sunset has any real existence, and whether it is really as splendid as it seems." The west had become a vast sea of gold, a pure and placid sea of many-tinted gold, bounded and intersected and broken into innumerable wide bays and narrow inlets by great cloud-promontories, pur ple and rose and umber. Directly opposite, just above the crest-line of the hills, hung the nearly full moon, pale as a mere phantom of itself. And from somewhere in the boscage at the garden s end came a lool-lool-lool-lioo-lio, deep and long-drawn, liquid and complaining, which one knew to be the prelim inary piping-up of Philomel. "If some things," said John, "derive their beauty from the eye of the beholder, the beauty of other things is determined by the presence or absence of the person you long to share all beautiful visions with. The sky, the clouds, the whole air and earth, this evening, seem to me beauty in its ultimate per fection." 276 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Maria Dolores softly laughed, softly, softly. And for a long time, by the marble balustrade that guarded this particular terrace of the garden, they stood in silence. The western gold burned to red, and more sombre red; the cloud-promontories gloomed purpler ; the pale moon kindled, and shone like ice afire, with its intense cold brilliancy ; the olive woods against the sky lay black ; a score of night ingales, near and far, were calling and sobbing and exulting; and two human spirits yearned with the mystery of love. "My income," said John, all at once, brusquely coming to earth, "is exactly six hundred pounds a year. I suppose two people could live on that, though I m dashed if I see how. Of course we couldn t live in England, where that infernal future peerage would put us under a thousand obligations ; but I daresay we might find a garret here in Italy. The question is, would she be willing, or have I any right to ask her, to marry me, on the condition of leaving her own money untouched, and living with me on mine?" PART SIXTH 277 "Apropos of future peerages and things," said Maria Dolores, "do you happen to know whether she has any rank of her own to keep up ?" "I don t care twopence about her rank," said John. "Do you happen to know her name?" she asked. "I know what I wish her name was," John promptly answered. "I wish to Heaven it was Blanchemain." Maria Dolores gazed, pensive, at the moon. "He does not even know her name," she remarked, on a key of meditation, "though he fears," she sadly shook her head, "he fears it may be Smitti." "Oh, I say !" cried John, wincing, with a kind of sorry giggle; and I don t know whether he looked or felt the more sheepish. His face showed every signal of humiliation, he tugged nervously at his beard, but his eyes, in spite of him, his very blue blue eyes were full of vexed amusement. The bell in the clock-tower struck eight. "There it is your hour for going to Annun- ziata," said Maria Dolores. 278 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "You have not answered my question?" said John. "I will think about it," said she. IV Annunziata s delirium had passed, but in spite of all their efforts to persuade her not to talk, talk she would. "This is the month of May, isn t it?" she asked, next morning. "Yes, dear one," said Maria Dolores, whose watch it was. "And that is the month of Mary. San Luca ought to hurry up and make me well, so that I can keep flowers on the Lady Altar." "Then if you wish to get well quickly," said Maria Dolores, "you must try not to talk, nor even to think, if you can help it. You know the doctor does not want you to talk." "All right. I won t talk. A going clock may be PART SIXTH 279 always wrong, but a stopped clock is right twice a day. So stop your tongue, and avoid folly. My uncle told me that. He never talks." "And now shall you and I imitate his example?" proposed Maria Dolores. Her lips, compressed, were plainly the gaolers of a laugh. "Yes," said Annunziata. "But I can t help thinking of those poor flowers. All May flowers are born to be put on the Lady Altar. Those poor flowers are missing what they were born for. They must be very sad." "This afternoon, every afternoon," Maria Do lores promised, "I will put flowers on the Lady Altar. Now see if you can t shut your eyes, and rest for a little while." "I once found a toad on the Lady Altar. What do you think he was there for?" asked Annun ziata. "I can t think, I m sure," said Maria Dolores. "Well, when I first saw him I was angry, and I was going to get a broom and sweep him away. But then I thought it must be very hard to be a toad, 80 MY FRIEND PROSPERO and that you can t help being a toad if you are born one, and I thought that perhaps that toad was there praying that he might be changed from a toad to something else. So I didn t sweep him away. Have you ever heard of the little Mass of Corruption that lay in a garden?" "No," said Maria Dolores. "Well," said Annunziata, "once upon a time a little Mass of Corruption lay in a garden. But it did not know it was a Mass of Corruption, and it did not wish to be a Mass of Corruption, and it never did any harm or wished any harm to anyone, but just lay there all day long, and thought how beautiful the sky was, and how good and warm the sun, and how sweet the flowers were and the bird- songs, and thanked God with all its heart for having given it such a lovely place to lie in. Yet all the while, you know, it couldn t help being what it was, a little Mass of Corruption. And at the close of the day some people who were walking in the gar den saw it, and cried out, Oh, what a horrible little Mass of Corruption, and they called the gardener, PART SIXTH 281 and had it buried in the earth. But the little Mass of Corruption, when it heard that it was a little Mass of Corruption, felt very, very sad, and it made a supplication to Our Lady. I do not wish to be a Mass of Corruption, it said. Queen of Heaven, pray for me, that I may be purified, and made clean, and not be a Mass of Corruption any longer, and that I may then go back to the garden, out of this dark earth. So Our Lady prayed for it, and it was cleansed with water and purified, and what do you think the Little Mass of Cor ruption became? It became a rose a red rose in that very garden, just where they had buried it. From which we see But I don t quite re member what we see from it," she broke off, the pain of baffled effort on her brow. "My uncle could tell you that." Afterward, for a few minutes, she was silent, lying quite still, with her eyes on the ceiling. "Why do sunny lands produce dark people, and dark lands light people?" she asked all at once. . 282 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Ah, don t begin to talk again, dear," Maria Do lores pleaded. "The doctor will be coming soon now, and he will be angry if he finds that I have let you talk." "Oh, I will tell him that it isn t your fault," said Annunziata. "I will tell him that you didn t let me, but that I talked because it is so hard to lie here and think, think, think, and not be allowed to say what you are thinking. Prospero asked me that question about sunny lands a long time ago. I ve been thinking and thinking, but I can t think it out. Have you a great deal of money? Are you very rich?" "Darling, won t you please not talk any more?" Maria Dolores implored her. "I ll stop pretty soon," said Annunziata. "I think you are very rich. I think, in spite of his say ing her name is not Maria Dolores, that you are the dark woman whom Prospero is to marry. He is to marry a dark woman who will be very rich. But then he will also be very rich himself. Is Austria a sunny land? England must be a dark land, for PART SIXTH 283 Prospero is light. Let me see your left hand, please, and I will tell you whether you are to marry a light man." "Hush," said Maria Dolores, trying not to laugh. "That shall be some other time." "Wouldn t you like to marry Prospero? I would," said Annunziata. "I think I hear the wheels of the doctor s gig," said Maria Dolores. "Now we shall both be scolded." "But of course, if you do marry him, I can t," Annunziata pursued, undaunted by this menace. "A man isn t allowed to have two wives, unless he is a king. He may have two sisters or two daugh ters, but not two wives or two mothers. There was once a king named Salomone who had a thousand wives, but even he had only one mother, I think. I hope you will live at Sant Alessina after your mar riage. Will you ?" Maria Dolores bit her lip and vouchsafed no an swer; and again for a minute or two Annunziata lay silent. But presently, "Have you ever waked 284 MY FRIEND PROSPERO up in the middle of the night, and felt terribly frightened?" she asked. "Yes, dear, sometimes. I suppose everyone has," said Maria Dolores. "Well, do you know why people feel so fright ened when they wake like that?" pursued the child. "No," said Maria Dolores. "I do," said Annunziata. "The middle of the night is the Devil s Noon. Nobody is awake in the middle of the night except wicked people, like thieves or roysterers, or people who are suffering. All people who are good, and who are well and happy, are sound asleep. So it is the time the Devil likes best, and he and all his evil spirits come to the earth to enjoy the great pleasure of seeing people wicked or suffering. And that is why we feel so frightened when we wake. The air all round us is full of evil spirits, though we can t see them, and they are watching us, to run and tell the Devil if we do anything wicked or suffer any pain. But it is foolish of us to feel frightened, because our PART SIXTH 285 Guardian Angels are always there too, and they are a hundred times stronger than the evil spirits. Angels, you know, are very big, very much bigger than men. Some of them are as tall as moun tains, but even the quite small ones are as tall as trees." "This time I really do hear wheels," said Maria Dolores, with an accent of thanksgiving. And she rose to meet the doctor. John sat in his room, absorbed in contemplation of a tiny lace-edged pocket-handkerchief. He spread it out upon his knee, and laughed. He crumpled it up in his palm, and pressed it to his face, and drank deep of its faint perfume, faint, but powerfully provocative of visions and emotions. He had found it during the night on the floor of the sickroom, and had captured and borne it away like a treasure. He spread it out on his knee again, and was again about 286 MY FRIEND PROSPERO to laugh at its small size and gauzy texture, when his eye was caught by something in its corner. He held it nearer to the window. The thing that had caught his eye was a cypher surmounted by a crown, embroidered so minutely as almost to call for a mag- nifying-glass. But without a glass he could see that the cypher was composed of the initials M and D, and that the crown was not a coronet, but a closed crown, of the pattern worn by mediatised princes. "What on earth can be the meaning of this ?" he wondered, frowning, and breathing quick. But he was stopped from further speculation for the moment by a knock at the door. The postman entered with two letters, for one of which, as it was registered, John had to sign. When he had tipped the postman and was alone again, he put his regis tered letter on the dressing-table (with a view to disciplining curiosity and exercising patience, possi bly) and turned his attention to the other. In a handsome, high old hand, that somehow reminded him of the writer s voice, it ran as follows : PART SIXTH 287 "DEAR JOHN : "I was heart-broken not to see you when I drove over to say good-bye this afternoon, but chance favoured me at least to the extent of letting me see your miller s daughter, and you may believe that I was glad of an opportunity to inspect her at close quarters. My dear boy, she is no more a miller s daughter than you are. Her beauty there s race in it. Her manner and carriage, her voice, accent, her way of dressing (I d give a sovereign for the name of her dressmaker), the fineness of her skin, her hair, everything there s race in em all, race and consciousness of race, pride, dignity, distinc tion. These things don t come to pass in a genera tion. I m surprised at your lack of perspicacity. And those blue eyes of yours look so sharp, too. But perhaps your wish was father to your thought. You felt (well, and so to some extent did I) that it would be more romantic. She s probably a very great swell indeed, and I expect the Frau What s- her-name she s staying with will turn out to be her old governess or nurse or something. When those 288 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Austrians can show quarterings (of course you must bar recent creations they re generally named Cohen) they can show them to some effect. They think nothing of thirty-two. All of which, au fond, rather rejoices me, for if she really had been a miller s daughter, it would have seemed a good deal like throwing yourself away, and who knows what your rusty, crusty old Uncle B. might have said? I ve long had a rod in pickle for him, and t other day I applied it. Attendez. "Don t forget the pig you purchased so gal lantly and confidingly. I would not to the marriage of true minds admit impediments your pig will gobble em up. You should by this have received a communication from my solicitors. Remember, you have pledged your sacred promise. There must be no question of trying to shirk or burke it. Re member that I am quite outrageously rich. I have no children of my own, and no very near relatives (and my distant ones are intensely disagreeable), and I can t help looking upon the heir of the Blanchemains as a kind of spiritual son. In your PART SIXTH 289 position there s no such thing as having too much money. Take all that comes, and never mind the quarter whence. They re Plymouth Brethren, and send me tracts. "Good-bye now till August, if not before. For of course in August you must come to me at Fring. Will you bring your bride? When and where the wedding? I suppose they ll want it in Austria. Beware of long engagements or of too short ones. The autumn s the time, the only pretty ring-time. You see, you ll need some months for the prepara tion of your trousseau. I love a man to be smart. Well, good-bye. I was so sorry about that child s illness, but thankful to hear she was mending. "Yours affectionately, "LINDA BLANCHEMAIN." And his registered letter, when at last he opened it, ran thus : "DEAR SIR: Pursuant to instructions received from our client Lady Blanchemain, we beg to hand 290 MY FRIEND PROSPERO you herewith our cheque for Seven hundred and fifty pounds (750 stg.), and to request the favour of your receipt for the same, together with the ad dress of your bankers, that we may pay in quarterly a like sum to your account, it being her ladyship s intention, immediately upon her return to England, to effect a settlement upon yourself and heirs of 100,000 funded in Bk. of Eng. stock. "We are further to have the pleasure to inform you that by the terms of a will just prepared by us, and to be executed by Lady Blanchemain at the earliest possible date, you are constituted her residu ary legatee. "With compliments and respectful congratula tions, "We have the honour, dear Sir, to be, "Your obedient servants, "FARROW, BERNSCOT, AND TISDALE." And then there came another tap at the door, and it was the postman who had returned, with a third letter which, like the true Italian postman that he PART SIXTH 291 was, he had forgotten, and I fancy, if it hadn t been for that tip still warm in his pocket, the easy going fellow would have allowed it to stand over till to-morrow. He made, at any rate, a great virtue of having discovered it and of having retraced his steps. The letter was written in black, angular, uncom promising characters, that looked rather like sabre- thrusts and bayonets. It read : "DEAR JACK : I have received the enclosure from Linda Lady Blanchemain. She is an exceedingly impertinent and meddlesome old woman. But she is right about the allowance. I don t know why I never thought of it myself. I don t know why you never suggested it. I extremely regret it. As next in succession, you are certainly entitled to an annuity from the estate. I have to-day remitted 500 to your bankers, and am instructing my agents to pay in a like amount quarterly. "I hope I shall soon be seeing you at Ventmere. We are having a grand lambing season, but there s 292 MY FRIEND PROSPERO a nasty spread of swine-fever, and the whole coun try s papered with handbills. I got a goodish bit of hunting down at Wilsborough during the winter. Now there s nothing to do but play golf. I never could find any fun in shooting rooks. "Your affectionate uncle, "B. of V." And the enclosure : "Linda Lady Blanchemain presents her compli ments to Lord Blanchemain of Ventmere, and begs to apprise him that she has lately had the pleasure of meeting his lordship s nephew John, and has dis covered to her amazement that his lordship makes him no allowance. This situation, for the heir to the barony of Blanchemain, is of course absurd, and must, Lady Blanchemain is sure, be due entirely to an oversight on his lordship s part. She ventures, therefore, with all respect, to bring it to his notice." So ! Here sat a young man with plenty to think about; a young man, whose income, yesterday a bare six hundred, had sprung up over night to PART SIXTH 293 something near six thousand. Six thousand a year isn t opulence, if you like, but a young man possess ing it can hardly look upon himself as quite empty- handed, either. This young man, however, had other things as well to think of. What of that em broidered kerchief? What of those shrewd suspi cions of Lady Blanchemain s ? What of his miller s daughter? And there was another thing still. What of his proud old honest Spartan of an unimaginative uncle? He thought of him, and "Oh, the poor old boy," he cried. "Not for ten times the money would I have had the dear old woman write to him like that. How hard it must have hit him." "M, D, and a princely crown," he reflected. "I wish I had an Almanach de Gotha." 294 MY FRIEND PROSPERO VI "Who was it said of someone that he dearly loved a lord?" Maria Dolores, her chin in the air, asked of Frau Brandt. "I do not know," Frau Brandt replied, knit ting. "Well, at least, you know whether it would be possible for a man and wife to live luxurious ly on sixpence a week. Would it?" pursued her tease. "You are well aware that it would not," said Frau Brandt. "How about six hundred pounds a year?" "Six hundred pounds ?" Frau Brandt com puted. "That would be six thousand florins, no? It would depend upon their station in the world." "Well, suppose their station were about my sta tion and my lord s ?" PART SIXTH 295 "You," said Frau Brandt, with a chuckle of con tentment, swaying her white-bonneted head. "You would need twice that for your dress alone." "One could dress more simply," said Maria Do lores. "No," said Frau Brandt, her good eyes beaming, "you must always dress in the very finest that can be had." "But then," Maria Dolores asked with wistful- ness, "what am I to do ? For six hundred pounds is the total of his income." "You have, unless I am mistaken, an income of your own," Frau Brandt remarked. "Yes but he won t let me use it," said Maria Dolores. "He? Who?" demanded Frau Brandt, bridling. "Who is there that dares to say let or not let to you?" "My future husband," said Maria Dolores. "He has peculiar ideas of honour. He does not like the notion of marrying a woman who is richer than him self. So he will marry me only on the condition 296 MY FRIEND PROSPERO that I send my own fortune to be dropped in the middle of the sea." "What nonsense is this?" said Frau Brandt, com posed. "No, it is the truth," said Maria Dolores, "the true truth. He is too proud to live in luxury at his wife s expense." "I like a man making conditions, when it is a question of marrying you" said Frau Brandt, with scorn. "So do I," said Maria Dolores, with heartiness. "Well, at any rate, I am glad to see that he is not after you for your money," Frau Brandt re flected. "I suppose we shall have to dress in sackcloth and dine on lentils," said Maria Dolores. "Of course you will tell him to take his conditions to the Old One," said Frau Brandt. "It is out of the question for you to change the manner of your life." "I feel indeed as if it were," admitted Maria Do lores. "But if he insists?" PART SIXTH 297 "Then tell him to go to the Old One himself," was Frau Brandt s blunt advice. Maria Dolores laughed. "It seems like an im passe" she said. "Who is to break the news to my brother?" "We will wait until there is some news to break," the old woman amiably grumbled. Again at the sunset hour Maria Dolores met him in the garden. He was seated on one of their mar ble benches, amongst marble columns (rose-tinted by the western light, and casting long purple shad ows), in a vine-embowered pergola. He was leaning forward, legs crossed, brow wrinkled, as one deep in thought. But of course at the sound of her foot step he jumped up. "What mighty problem were you revolving?" she asked. "You looked like Rembrandt s philosophe en meditation." "I was revolving the problem of human love," he answered. "I was mutilating Browning. 6 Was it something said, Something done. 298 MY FRIEND PROSPERO Was it touch of hand, Turn of head? 9 I was also thinking about you. I was wondering whether it would be my cruel destiny not to see you this evening, and thinking of the first time I ever saw you." "Oh," said she, lightly, "that morning among the olives, when you gathered the windflowers for me?" "No," said he. "That was the second time." "Indeed?" said she, surprised. She sat down on the marble bench. John stood before her. "Yes," said he. "The first time was the day be fore. You were crossing the garden you were bending over the sun-dial and I spied upon you from a window of the piano nobile. Lady Blanche- main was there with me, and she made a pre diction." "What did she predict?" asked Maria Dolores, unsuspicious. "She predicted that I would fall" But he PART SIXTH 299 dropped his sentence in the middle. "She predicted what has happened." "Oh," murmured Maria Dolores, and looked at the horizon. By-and-by, "That morning among the olives was the first time that I saw you when you dashed like a paladin to my assistance. I feel that I have never sufficiently thanked you." "A paladin oddly panoplied," said John. "Tell me honestly, weren t you in two minds whether or not to reward me with largesse? You had silver in your hand." Maria Dolores laughed. I think she coloured a little. "Perhaps I was, for half a second," she confessed. "But your grand manner soon put me in one mind." John also laughed. He took a turn backward and forward. "I have waked in the dead of night, and grown hot and cold to remember the figure of fun I was." "No," said Maria Dolores, to console him. "You weren t a figure of fun. Your costume had the air 300 MY FRIEND PROSPERO of being an impromptu, but," she laughed, "your native dignity shone through." "Thank you," said John, bowing. "The next time I saw you was that same afternoon. You were with Annunziata in the avenue. I carried my vision of you, like a melody, all the way to Roccadoro and all the way home again." "I had just made Annunziata s acquaintance," said Maria Dolores. "You had a white sunshade and a lilac frock," said John. "The next time was that night in the moonlight. You were all in white, with a scarf of white lace over your hair. You threw me a white rose from your balcony and I have carried that rose with me ever since." "I threw you a white rose?" doubted Maria Do lores, looking up, at fault. "Yes," said John. "Have you forgotten it?" "I certainly have," said she, with emphasis. "You threw me a smile that was like a white rose," said he. She laughed. PART SIXTH 301 "I think I just distantly acknowledged your bow," she said. "Well, some people s distant acknowledgments are like white roses," said he. "I hope, at least, you remember what a glorious night it was, and how the nightingales were singing?" "Yes," said she. "I remember that." "I have a fancy," he declared, "that it will be a more glorious night still to-night, and that the nightingales will sing better than they have ever sung before." Maria Dolores did not speak. "Do you happen," John asked, after a long silence, while they gazed at the deepening colours in the west, "do you happen to possess such a thing as a copy of the Almanach de Gotha ?" "Yes," said she. "Really? I wonder whether you will lend it to me?" "I am sorry it is in Vienna." And after an in stant s pause, she ventured, "What, if it isn t indis creet to inquire, do you wish to look up ?" 302 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I wish to look up a lady a dream lady a lady who walks in beauty like the night of cloudless climes and whose pocket-handkerchiefs are em broidered with the initials M. D., in a cypher, under a princely crown." "I should think," said Maria Dolores, consider ing, "that she would probably be a member of one of the mediatised princely houses. But if you have nothing more than her initials to go by, you would find it difficult to trace her in the Almanach de Gotha." "No doubt," said John. "But to a man of spirit a difficulty is a challenge." "Do you make a practice," asked she, "of appro priating people s handkerchiefs ?" "Certain people s yes," unblushing, he prompt ly owned. "M. D. under a princely crown, I think you said?" she mused. "It occurs to me that Maria Dolores of Zelt-Neuminster s pocket-handkerchiefs might be so embroidered." "Ah?" said John. "Zelt-Neuminster? That PART SIXTH 303 would be a daughter of the man who owns this castle?" "No, she is a sister of the man who owns this castle." "I understand," said John. "I wonder that the sister of the man who owns this castle never comes here to see how fine it is." "She has been here quite recently," said Maria Dolores. "She has been here visiting her foster- mother, who lives in the pavilion beyond the clock. She came to make a sort of retreat to think some thing over." "Yes ?" questioned he. "Her brother is very anxious to marry her off. He is anxious that she should marry her second cousin, the Prince of Zelt-Zelt. She came here to make up her mind." "Has she made it up ?" he asked. "I am not sure," said she. "Yet you seem to be deep in her confidence," said he. "Yes but she is not quite sure herself." 304 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "Oh ? said John. "She is one of those foolish women who dream of marriage as a high romance." "Wise men," said John, "dream of it as the high est." She shook her head. "A marriage with her cousin would be an end to all romance forever. She was thinking a little while ago, I believe, of marrying a plain commoner, the nephew of a farmer. That would have been indeed romantic. Now, I hear, she is considering a future member of your English House of Lords." "Wouldn t even that be rather romantic if a step down constitutes romance?" John suggested. "Oh, a British peer is scarcely a step down," she returned. "Besides, there are people who don t care what is the expression? twopence about rank." "When I said that," John explained, "I had no inkling that her rank was so exalted." "Did you think she was the daughter of a cob bler?" Maria Dolores quickly, with some haughti ness, inquired. PART SIXTH 305 "I thought she was a daughter of the stars," John answered. "And you feared her name was Smitti," she said, haughtiness dissolving in mirth. "I will never tell you what she feared that yours was." "See," said John, "how they are hanging the heavens with banners. It must be in honour of some great impending event." Yesterday the west had been a sea. To-day it was a city, a vast grey and violet city, with palaces and battlemented towers, and countless airy spires and pinnacles ; and here, there, everywhere, its walls were gay with gold and crimson, as with drooping banners. " Tis a city en fete," said John. " Tis the city where marriages are made. They must have one in hand." "Hark," said she, putting up a finger. "There are your nightingales beginning." But the raised finger reminded him of something. "Have you a rooted objection to rings?" he asked. "Why?" asked she. 306 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I notice that you don t wear any." "Oh, sometimes I wear many," she said. "Then one has moods in which one leaves them off." "I have a ring in my pocket which I think be longs to you," said he. "Really ? I don t know that any of my rings are missing." "Here it is," said he. He produced the little old shagreen case he had received from Lady Blanche- main, opened, and offered it. "It is a singularly beautiful ring," said she, her eyes admiring. "But it doesn t belong to me." "I think it does," said he. "May I try it on your finger?" She put forth her right hand. "No your left hand, please," he said. He dropped upon one knee before her, and when the delicate white hand was surrendered, I imagine he made of getting the ring upon the alliance finger a longer business by a good deal than was necessary. "There," he said in the end, "you see. It looks as if it had grown there. Of course it belongs to you." PART SIXTH 307 He still held her hand, warm and firm and velvet- soft. I think in another second he would have touched it with his lips. But she drew it away. She gazed into the depths of the heart-shaped ruby, tremulous with liquid light, and smiled as at secret thoughts. "But I don t see," said John, getting to his feet, "how any man can ask a Princess of the House of Zelt to marry him and live on six hundred pounds a year." "She would have to modify her habits a good deal, that is very certain," said Maria Dolores. "She would have to modify them utterly," said John. "Six hundred a year is poverty even for a single man. For a married couple it would be beg gary. She would have to live like the wife of a petty employe. She would have to travel second class and stay at fourth-rate hotels. She would have to turn her old dresses and trim her own bon nets. She would have to do without a maid. And all this means that she would have virtually to re nounce her caste, to give up the society of her 308 MY FRIEND PROSPERO equals, who demand a certain scale of appearances, and to live among pariahs or to live in isolation. Don t you think a man would be a monster of selfish ness to exact such sacrifices ?" "Oh, some men have excessively far-fetched and morbid notions of honour," said she. "Do you think the Princess, with all this brought to her attention, would ever dream of consent- ing?" "Women in love are weak they will consent to almost anything," said she, her dark eyes smiling for an instant into his. Why didn t he take her in his arms? Hope de ferred maketh the heart sick, but to defer the con summation of a joy assured (observes the Persian poet) giveth the heart a peculiar sweet excite ment. "Well," said John. "I m glad to think she is weak ; but I ll never ask my wife to consent to any thing so unpleasant. A Princess and a future peer ess, living on six hundred pounds a year! It s un heard of." PART SIXTH 309 She looked at him, puzzled, incredulous. "Oh ? Can you possibly mean that you will take back your condition ?" "Yes," said he, humbly. "Who am I to make conditions ?" "You will let her spend as much of her own money as she likes ?" she wondered, wide-eyed. "As a lover of thrift, I shall deprecate extrava gance," said John. "But as a submissive husband, I shall let her do in all things as her fancy dictates." "Well," marvelled she, "here is a surprise here is a volte-face indeed." And she looked at the city in the sky, and ap peared to turn things over. John was mysteriously chuckling. "Haven t you your opinion," he asked, "of men who eat their words and put their scruples in their pockets ?" "I don t understand," said she, looking wild. "There is, of course, some joke." "There is a joke, indeed," said he; "the joke is that I m ten times richer than I told you I was." 310 MY FRIEND PROSPERO She started back, and fixed him with a glance. "Then all that about your being poor was only humbug?" There was reproach in her voice, I m not sure there wasn t disappointment. "No," said he, "it was the exact and literal truth. But I have come into a modest competency over night." "I don t understand," said she. "My own part in the story is a sufficiently in glorious one," said he. "I m the benefactee. Lady Blanchemain and my uncle have put their heads to gether, and endowed me. I feel rather small at let ting them, but it enables me to look my affianced boldly in the money-eye." "Oh? You are affianced? Already?" she asked gaily. "No not unless you are," gaily answered John. She looked down at her ring. PART SIXTH 311 VII The quiet-coloured end of evening smiled fainter, fainter. The aerial city, its cloud-capped towers and gorgeous palaces, had crumbled into ruins, and stars twinkled among their shattered and darkened walls. The moon burned icily above the eastern hills. The nightingales (or John was no true prophet) sang better than they had ever sung be fore, while bats, hither, thither, flew in startling zig-zags, as if waltzing to the music. And all the air was sweet with the breath of dew-wet roses. The clock struck eight. "There you must go," said Maria Dolores. "Go? Where to?" asked John, feigning vague ness. "This is no subject for jest," said she, feigning severity. "I can t go yet I can t leave you yet," said he. "Besides, it is an education in aesthetics to watch the 312 MY FRIEND PROSPERO moonlight on these marble columns, and the pale shadows of the vine-leaves." "Well, then," said she, "stay you here and pur sue your education. I will go in your place. For Marcella Cuciniera must be relieved." She rose, and moved toward the darkling front of the castle. "Hang education. I ll go with you," said John, following. "I shall only stop a moment, to see how she is," said Maria Dolores. "Then I must hurry home, to get my packing begun." "Your packing?" faltered John. "To-morrow morning Frau Brandt and I are leaving for Austria for Schloss Mischenau, where my brother lives." "Good Lord," said John. "Ah, well, I suppose it is what they would call the proper course," he ad mitted with gloomy resignation. "But think how dreadfully you ll be missed by Annunziata." "Annunziata is so much better, I can easily be spared," said Maria Dolores; "and anyhow tis PART SIXTH 313 needs must. I think you will probably soon re ceive a letter from my brother asking you to visit him. Mischenau is a place worth seeing, in its northern style. And, in his northern style, my brother is a man worth meeting. I counsel you to go." "I shall certainly go," said John. "I shall linger here at Sant Alessina like a soul in durance, count ing the hours till my release. I shall be particularly glad to meet your brother, as I have matters of im portance to arrange with him." "Until then," said she, smiling, "I think we must do with those matters of importance" her voice quavered on the word "what is it that the Pope sometimes does with Cardinals ?" "Yes," moodily consented John, "I suppose we must. But oh me, what a dreary, blank, stale, and unprofitable desolation this garden will be come, and at every turn the ghost of some past joy!" Annunziata looked up with eyes that seemed om niscient. 314 MY FRIEND PROSPERO "I was thinking about you," she greeted them. "About which of us?" asked John. "About both of you. I always now, since a long while, think of you both together. I think Maria Dolores is the dark woman whom Prospero is to marry." John laughed. Maria Dolores looked out of the window. "And I was thinking," Annunziata went on, "how strange it was that if you hadn t both at the same time just happened to come to Sant Alessina, you might have lived and died and never have known each other." "Perish that thought," laughed John. "But I have sometimes thought it myself." "And then," Annunziata rounded out her tale, "I thought that perhaps you had not just happened that probably you had been led." "That is a thing I haven t a doubt of," John with energy affirmed. "You look as if you were very glad about some thing both of you," said Annunziata, those om- PART SIXTH 315 niscient eyes of hers studying their faces. "What is it that you are both so glad of?" "We are so glad to find you feeling so well," an swered Maria Dolores. But Annunziata shook her head, as one who knew better. "No that is not the only thing. You are glad of something else besides." "There s no taking you in," said John. "But we are under bonds to treat that Something Else as the Pope sometimes treats Princes of the Church." "He gives them red hats," said Annunziata. "I shall give this thing a crown of myrtle," said John. "You sometimes say things that sound as if they hadn t any sense," Annunziata informed him, with patient indulgence, nodding at the ceiling. Maria Dolores leaned over the bed, and kissed Annunziata s brow. "Good night, carina," she murmured. Annunziata put up her little white arms, and en circled Maria Dolores neck. Then she kissed her four times on the brow, on the chin, on the left 316 MY FRIEND PROSPERO cheek, on the right. "That is a cross of kisses," she explained. "It is the way my mother used to kiss me. It means may the four Angels of Peace, Grace, Holiness, and Wisdom watch over your sleep." But early next morning, John being still on duty, Maria Dolores came back, booted and spurred for her journey, in tailor-made tweeds, with a little felt toque and a veil: a costume of which Annunziata s eyes were quick to catch the suggestion. "Why are you dressed like that ?" she asked, un easily. "I never saw you dressed like that before. You look as if you were going away somewhere." "I have got to go away I have got to go to my home, in Austria. I have come to bid you good bye," Maria Dolores answered. Annunziata s eyes were dark with pain. "Oh," she said, in a voice of deep dismay. "We shan t be separated long, though," Maria Dolores promised. "I have asked your uncle to lend you to me. As soon as you are strong enough to travel, you are coming to Austria to pay me a long visit. Then I will come back with you to Sant Ales- PART SIXTH 317 sina. And then well, wherever I go you will al ways go with me. For of course I can never live happily again without you." "One moment, please," put in John. "Here is a small difficulty. I can never live happily without her, either. I also have asked her uncle to lend her to me. And wherever / go, she is always to go with me. How are we to adjust our rival claims?" Annunziata s eyes lighted up. "Oh, that will be easy enough," she pointed out. "You will have to go everywhere together." THE END ^eton JHerrttnan Author of "The Sowers," etc. BARLASCH OF THE GUARD r JL HE story is set in those desperate days when the ebbing tide of Napoleon s fortunes swept Europe with desolation. Barlasch "Papa Barlasch of the Guard, Italy, Egypt, the Dan ube " a veteran in the Little Corporal s service is the dominant figure of the story. Quar tered on a distinguished family in the historic town of Dantzig, he gives his life to the romance of Desiree, the daughter of the family, and Louis d Arragon, whose cousin she has married and parted with at the church door. Louis s search with Barlasch for the missing Charles gives an unforgettable picture of the terrible retreat from Russia ; and as a companion picture there is the heroic defence of Dantzig by Rapp and his little army of sick and starving. At the last Bar lasch, learning of the death of Charles, plans and executes the escape of Desiree from the beleaguered town to join Louis. Illustrated by the Kinneys. $1.50 & Co. Conan Bople Author of "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes THE ADVENTURES OF GERARD STORIES of the remarkable adventures of a Brigadier in Napoleon s army. In Etienne Ge rard, Conan Doyle has added to his already famous gallery of characters one worthy to stand beside the notable Sherlock Holmes. Many and thrill ing are Gerard s adventures, as related by himself, for he takes part in nearly every one of Napoleon s campaigns. In Venice he has an interesting romantic escapade which causes him the loss of an ear. 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Wollen. $1.50 , fillips & Co* legman Author of " A Gentleman of France " THE LONG NIGHT r (jrENEVA in the early days of the 1 7th century; a ruffling young theologue new to the city ; a beautiful and innocent girl, suspected of witch craft ; a crafty scholar and metaphysician seeking to give over the city into the hands of the Savoy ards ; a stern and powerful syndic whom the scholar beguiles to betray his office by promises of an elixir which shall save him from his fatal illness ; a brutal soldier of fortune ; these are the elements of which Weyman has composed the most brilliant and thrilling of his romances. Claude Mercier, the student, seeing the plot in which the girl he loves is involved, yet helpless to divulge it, finds at last his opportunity when the treacherous men of Savoy are admitted within Geneva s walls, and in a night of whirlwind fight ing saves the city by his courage and address. 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There are plots and counterplots half- mockery, half-earnest beneath which the reader is tantalized by glimpses of the genuine mystery surrounding the real queen s disappearance. Thus far the story differs from other novels only in the quaintly romantic atmosphere of mod ern chivalry. Its distinctive feature lies in the fact that in every chapter one of the characters relates an anecdote. Each anecdote is a short story of the liveliest and most amusing kind complete in itself yet each bears a vital relation to the main romance and its characters. The short stories are as unusual and striking as the novel of which they form a part. $1.50 & Co, Author of "Fables in Slang" IN BABEL r JL HESE are short stories, brief little hammer- stroke stories, just long enough to hit the nail upon the head. Mr. Ade^s " Babel " is Chicago, and the scenes of the stories are laid in familiar and unfamiliar quarters of that rushing Western metropolis. It is a book about the real joys and sorrows of real people, written in pure English by the great master of American slang, whose quaint philosophy and humor have ranked him among America s most character istic writers. The stories deal with the upper, the middle, and the under classes, and show in both pa thetic and humorous light the happenings in the fashionable circles upon the Lake front, as well as among the Irish and Italian emigrants in the squalid quarters of the city. $1.50 , Phillips & Co. 38ootl) Carfcington THE TWO VANREVELS r A DELICATE and fragrant romance of life in Indiana in the early forties, with a captivatingly sweet heroine, a hero that is brave and lovable, and a plot that leads the reader eagerly to the end. " In a world of disappointing books, here is one that has the true ring. It is by far the best thing Mr. Tarking- ton has done." New York Press. _ $1.50 THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA r A REMARKABLE novel in which politics, love, and journalism interweave to make a story strongly characteristic and American. "The book will be read and enjoyed as a product of cleverness as well as for its frequent and apparently faithful portrayal of certain phases of life in a field still fresh in fiction." Chicago Record. $1.50 MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE r JL HE daintiest romance ever penned by an American author. Love in periwig, silks and laces. Leather boxed $2.00 $1.25 Co. >tetoart Ctitoarti T CONJUROR S HOUSE r HOSE who have come to know and to love the great forests of the Northwest through Mr. White s splendid epic of lumbering life, "The Blazed Trail," will be delighted to follow the author still further into the wooded wilderness. Those who admire strong, daring, and cour ageous men, with strength and daring in love as well as in other things, will find in Ned Trent a brave yet tender character of almost lawless freedom they will not soon forget. The story is written in Mr. White s character istic vein. It deals with the old Hudson Bay Company, which holds power even to the death of free-traders who trespass upon its ground. Ned Trent is such a free-trader, and how he courts and wins gentle Virginia, the daughter of the Commander of the Post, defying the old man at the risk of his life, is the theme which makes, in Mr. White s hands, an exciting and yet charmingly sweet story. $1.25 THE BLAZED TRAIL r AN EPIC of the lumbering life in the great forests of the Northwest. A book of remark able freshness and strength. " The Blazed Trail is, in fact, a neiightful compound of passion and emotion, of effort and result, and is, in its entirety and detail, a first-rate novel." New York Sun. Eleven Editions in eleven months $1.50 & Co. f osepi) Conrati Author of " Lord Jim," Youth," etc. FALK r A.LL that magic of word-painting which has made Conrad s stories of the sea the wonder of the literary world is here turned to the showing forth of the hearts of men and women. " Falk," the first story, is the romance of a port-tyrant in the far East, who, in his love for a young girl, confesses that he has once been driven to canni balism. A more extraordinary study of human passions has never been put into print. " Amy Foster" tells of a strange and beautiful foreigner who, lost by shipwreck on an English country side, marries a girl there ; and of his tragic efforts to make himself a real member of the brutally clannish little community. " To-morrow" is the simple, pathetic, and touching story of an old man who waits for his runaway son to return to him, and is supported in his hopeless expectation by a brave and loving girl-neighbor. $1.50 & Co, Author of " Golden Fleece." THE MASTER ROGUE A. STUDY in the tyranny of wealth. James Galloway founds his fortune on a fraud. He ruins the man who has befriended him and steals away his business. Vast railroad operations next claim his attention. He becomes a bird of prey in the financial world. One by one he forsakes his principles ; he becomes a hypocrite, posing, even to himself. With the degeneration of his moral character come domestic troubles. His wife grows to despise him. One of his sons be comes a spendthrift ; the other a forger. His daughter, Helen, alone retains any affection for him. His attempts to force his family into the most exclusive circles subject him and them to mortifying rebuffs, for all his millions cannot over come the ill-repute of his name. At last, with his hundred millions won, his house the finest in America, his name a name to conjure with in the financial world, he realizes that the goal he has reached was not worth the race. Still he clings to his old ways, and dies in a fit of anger, haggling over his daughter s dowry. $1.50. & Co. SALLY OF MISSOURI r A STORY of Missouri life, presenting in a vivid, warm, realistic manner a primitive world, quite new to fiction readers. The novel is rich in poetry and romance. The strange tramp-boy, the dominant, tricky rich man of the town, the engaging Sally (who has the distinction of being a human being, as well as a heroine), the never-to-be-forgotten back woods children all these and others live in this love-story, and make it of unusual origin ality and interest. $1.50 Co* LD 21-95m 7, 37 961709 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY