<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Chapter Five </h2>
<p>Three days later saw us on the pretty waters of Lake Leman, in the bright
weather when Mont Blanc heaves his great bare shoulders of ice miles into
the blue sky, with no mist-cloak about him.</p>
<p>Sailing that lake in the cool morning, what a contrast to the champagne
houpla nights of Paris! And how docile was my pupil! He suffered me to
lead him through the Castle of Chillon like a new-born lamb, and even
would not play the little horses in the Kursaal at Geneva, although,
perhaps, that was because the stakes were not high enough to interest him.
He was nearly always silent, and, from the moment of our departure from
Paris, had fallen into dreamfulness, such as would come over myself at the
thought of the beautiful lady. It touched my heart to find how he was
ready with acquiescence to the slightest suggestion of mine, and, if it
had been the season, I am almost credulous that I could have conducted him
to Baireuth to hear Parsifal!</p>
<p>There were times when his mood of gentle sorrow was so like mine that I
wondered if he, too, knew a grey pongee skirt. I wondered over this so
much, and so marvellingly, also, because of the change in him, that at
last I asked him.</p>
<p>We had gone to Lucerne; it was clear moonlight, and we smoked on our
little balcony at the Schweitzerhof, puffing our small clouds in the
enormous face of the strangest panorama of the world, that august
disturbation of the earth by gods in battle, left to be a land of tragic
fables since before Pilate was there, and remaining the same after William
Tell was not. I sat looking up at the mountains, and he leaned on the
rail, looking down at the lake. Somewhere a woman was singing from
Pagliacci, and I slowly arrived at a consciousness that I had sighed aloud
once or twice, not so much sadly, as of longing to see that lady, and that
my companion had permitted similar sounds to escape him, but more
mournfully. It was then that I asked him, in earnestness, yet with the
manner of making a joke, if he did not think often of some one in North
America.</p>
<p>“Do you believe that could be, and I making the disturbance I did in
Paris?” he returned.</p>
<p>“Yes,” I told him, “if you are trying to forget her.”</p>
<p>“I should think it might look more as if I were trying to forget that I
wasn’t good enough for her and that she knew it!”</p>
<p>He spoke in a voice which he would have made full of ease—“off-hand,”
as they say; but he failed to do so.</p>
<p>“That was the case?” I pressed him, you see, but smilingly.</p>
<p>“Looks a good deal like it,” he replied, smoking much at once.</p>
<p>“So? But that is good for you, my friend!”</p>
<p>“Probably.” He paused, smoking still more, and then said, “It’s a benefit
I could get on just as well without.”</p>
<p>“She is in North America?”</p>
<p>“No; over here.”</p>
<p>“Ah! Then we will go where she is. That will be even better for you! Where
is she?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know. She asked me not to follow her. Somebody else is doing
that.”</p>
<p>The young man’s voice was steady, and his face, as usual, showed no
emotion, but I should have been an Italian for nothing had I not
understood quickly. So I waited for a little while, then spoke of old
Pilatus out there in the sky, and we went to bed very late, for it was out
last night in Lucerne.</p>
<p>Two days later we roared our way out of the gloomy St. Gotthard and wound
down the pass, out into the sunshine of Italy, into that broad plain of
mulberries where the silkworms weave to enrich the proud Milanese. Ah,
those Milanese! They are like the people of Turin, and look down upon us
of Naples; they find us only amusing, because our minds and movements are
too quick for them to understand. I have no respect for the Milanese,
except for three things: they have a cathedral, a picture, and a dead man.</p>
<p>We came to our hotel in the soft twilight, with the air so balmy one
wished to rise and float in it. This was the hour for the Cathedral;
therefore, leaving Leonardo and his fresco for the to-morrow, I conducted
my uncomplaining ward forth, and through that big arcade of which the
people are so proud, to the Duomo. Poor Jr. showed few signs of life as we
stood before that immenseness; he said patiently that it resembled the
postals, and followed me inside the portals with languor.</p>
<p>It was all grey hollowness in the vast place. The windows showed not any
colour nor light; the splendid pillars soared up into the air and
disappeared as if they mounted to heights of invisibility in the sky at
night. Very far away, at the other end of the church it seemed, one lamp
was burning, high over the transept. One could not see the chains of
support nor the roof above it; it seemed a great star, but so much all
alone. We walked down the long aisle to stand nearer to it, the darkness
growing deeper as we advanced. When we came almost beneath, both of us
gazing upward, my companion unwittingly stumbled against a lady who was
standing silently looking up at this light, and who had failed to notice
our approach. The contact was severe enough to dislodge from her hand her
folded parasol, for which I began to grope.</p>
<p>There was a hurried sentence of excusation from Poor Jr., followed by
moments of silence before she replied. Then I heard her voice in startled
exclamation:</p>
<p>“Rufus, it is never you?”</p>
<p>He called out, almost loudly,</p>
<p>“Alice!”</p>
<p>Then I knew that it was the second time I had lifted a parasol from the
ground for the lady of the grey pongee and did not see her face; but this
time I placed it in her own hand; for my head bore no shame upon it now.</p>
<p>In the surprise of encountering Poor Jr. I do not think she noticed that
she took the parasol or was conscious of my presence, and it was but too
secure that my young friend had forgotten that I lived. I think, in truth,
I should have forgotten it myself, if it had not been for the leaping of
my heart.</p>
<p>Ah, that foolish dream of mine had proven true: I knew her, I knew her,
unmistaking, without doubt or hesitancy—and in the dark! How should
I know at the mere sound of her voice? I think I knew before she spoke!</p>
<p>Poor Jr. had taken a step toward her as she fell back; I could only see
the two figures as two shadows upon shadow, while for them I had melted
altogether and was forgotten.</p>
<p>“You think I have followed you,” he cried, “but you have no right to think
it. It was an accident and you’ve got to believe me!”</p>
<p>“I believe you,” she answered gently. “Why should I not?”</p>
<p>“I suppose you want me to clear out again,” he went on, “and I will; but I
don’t see why.”</p>
<p>Her voice answered him out of the shadow: “It is only you who make a
reason why. I’d give anything to be friends with you; you’ve always known
that.”</p>
<p>“Why can’t we be?” he said, sharply and loudly. “I’ve changed a great
deal. I’m very sensible, and I’ll never bother you again—that other
way. Why shouldn’t I see a little of you?”</p>
<p>I heard her laugh then—happily, it seemed to me,—and I thought
I perceived her to extend her hand to him, and that he shook it briefly,
in his fashion, as if it had been the hand of a man and not that of the
beautiful lady.</p>
<p>“You know I should like nothing better in the world—since you tell
me what you do,” she answered.</p>
<p>“And the other man?” he asked her, with the same hinting of sharpness in
his tone. “Is that all settled?”</p>
<p>“Almost. Would you like me to tell you?”</p>
<p>“Only a little—please!”</p>
<p>His voice had dropped, and he spoke very quietly, which startlingly caused
me to realize what I was doing. I went out of hearing then, very softly.
Is it creible that I found myself trembling when I reached the twilit
piazza? It is true, and I knew that never, for one moment, since that
tragic, divine day of her pity, had I wholly despaired of beholding her
again; that in my most sorrowful time there had always been a little,
little morsel of certain knowledge that I should some day be near her once
more.</p>
<p>And now, so much was easily revealed to me: it was to see her that the
good Lambert R. Poor Jr., had come to Paris, preceding my patron; it was
he who had passed with her on the last day of my shame, and whom she had
addressed by his central name of Rufus, and it was to his hand that I had
restored her parasol.</p>
<p>I was to look upon her face at last—I knew it—and to speak
with her. Ah, yes, I did tremble! It was not because I feared she might
recognize her poor slave of the painted head-top, nor that Poor Jr. would
tell her. I knew him now too well to think he would do that, had I been
even that other of whom he had spoken, for he was a brave, good boy, that
Poor Jr. No, it was a trembling of another kind—something I do not
know how to explain to those who have not trembled in the same way; and I
came alone to my room in the hotel, still trembling a little and having
strange quickness of breathing in my chest.</p>
<p>I did not make any light; I did not wish it, for the precious darkness of
the Cathedral remained with me—magic darkness in which I beheld
floating clouds made of the dust of gold and vanishing melodies. Any
person who knows of these singular things comprehends how little of them
can be told; but to those people who do not know of them, it may appear
all great foolishness. Such people are either too young, and they must
wait, or too old—they have forgotten!</p>
<p>It was an hour afterward, and Poor Jr. had knocked twice at my door, when
I lighted the room and opened it to him. He came in, excitedly flushed,
and, instead of taking a chair, began to walk quickly up and down the
floor.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I forgot all about you, Ansolini,” he said, “but that girl I
ran into is a—a Miss Landry, whom I have known a long—”</p>
<p>I put my hand on his shoulder for a moment and said:</p>
<p>“I think I am not so dull, my friend!”</p>
<p>He made a blue flash at me with his eyes, then smiled and shook his head.</p>
<p>“Yes, you are right,” he answered, re-beginning his fast pace over the
carpet. “It was she that I meant in Lucerne—I don’t see why I should
not tell you. In Paris she said she didn’t want me to see her again until
I could be—friendly—the old way instead of something
considerably different, which I’d grown to be. Well, I’ve just told her
not only that I’d behave like a friend, but that I’d changed and felt like
one. Pretty much of a lie that was!” He laighed, without any amusement.
“But it was successful, and I suppose I can keep it up. At any rate we’re
going over to Venice with her and her mother to-morrow. Afterwards, we’ll
see them in Naples just before they sail.”</p>
<p>“To Venice with them!” I could not repress crying out.</p>
<p>“Yes; we join parties for two days,” he said, and stopped at a window and
looked out attentively at nothing before he went on: “It won’t be very
long, and I don’t suppose it will ever happen again. The other man is to
meet them in Rome. He’s a countryman of yours, and I believe—I
believe it’s—about—settled!”</p>
<p>He pronounced these last words in an even voice, but how slowly! Not more
slowly than the construction of my own response, which I heard myself
making:</p>
<p>“This countryman of mine—who is he?”</p>
<p>“One of your kind of Kentucky Colonels,” Poor Jr. laughed mournfully. At
first I did not understand; then it came to me that he had sometimes
previously spoken in that idiom of the nobles, and that it had been his
custom to address one of his Parisian followers, a vicomte, as “Colonel.”</p>
<p>“What is his name?”</p>
<p>“I can’t pronounce it, and I don’t know how to spell it,” he answered.
“And that doesn’t bring me to the verge of the grave! I can bear to forget
it, at least until we get to Naples!”</p>
<p>He turned and went to the door, saying, cheerfully: “Well, old
horse-thief” (such had come to be his name for me sometimes, and it was
pleasant to hear), “we must be dressing. They’re at this hotel, and we
dine with them to-night.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />