H. R. H. the Princess
Aline of Hohenwald came into the life of Morton Carlton -- or
"Morney" Carlton, as men called him -- of New York city, when that
young gentleman's affairs and affections were best suited to receive her. Had
she made her appearance three years sooner or three years later, it is quite
probable that she would have passed on out of his life with no more recognition
from him than would have been expressed in a look of admiring curiosity.
But coming when she
did, when his time and heart were both unoccupied, she had an influence upon
young Mr. Carlton which led him into doing several wise and many foolish
things, and which remained with him always. Carlton had reached a point in his
life, and very early in his life, when he could afford to sit at ease and look
back with modest satisfaction to what he had forced himself to do, and forward
with pleasurable anticipations to whatsoever he might choose to do in the
future. The world had appreciated what he had done, and had put much to his
credit, and he was prepared to draw upon this grandly.
At the age of twenty he
had found himself his own master, with excellent family connections, but with
no family, his only relative being a bachelor uncle, who looked at life from
the point of view of the Union Club's windows, and who objected to his nephew's
leaving Harvard to take up the study of art in Paris. In that city (where at
Julian's he was nicknamed the junior Carlton, for the obvious reason that he
was the older of the two Carltons in the class, and because he was well
dressed) he had shown himself a harder worker than others who were less careful
of their appearance and of their manners. His work, of which he did not talk,
and his ambitions, of which he also did not talk, bore fruit early, and at twenty-six
he had become a portrait-painter of international reputation. Then the French
government purchased one of his paintings at an absurdly small figure, and
placed it in the Luxembourg, from whence it would in time depart to be buried
in the hall of some provincial city; and American millionaires, and English
Lord Mayors, members of Parliament, and members of the Institute, masters of
hounds in pink coats, and ambassadors in gold lace, and beautiful women of all
nationalities and conditions sat before his easel. And so when he returned to
New York he was welcomed with an enthusiasm which showed that his countrymen
had feared that atmosphere of the Old World had stolen him from them forever.
He was particularly silent, even at this date, about his work, and listened to
what others had to say of it with much awe, not unmixed with some amusement,
that it should be he who was capable of producing anything worthy of such
praise. We have been told what the mother duck felt when her ugly duckling
turned into a swan, but we have never considered how much the ugly duckling
must have marvelled also.
"Carlton is
probably the only living artist," a brother artist had said of him,
"who fails to appreciate how great his work is." And on this being
repeated to Carlton by a good-natured friend, he had replied cheerfully,
"Well, I'm sorry, but it is certainly better to be the only one who
doesn't appreciate it than to be the only one who does."
He had never understood
why such a responsibility had been intrusted to him. It was, as he expressed
it, not at all in his line, and young girls who sought to sit at the feet of
the master found him making love to them in the most charming manner in the
world, as though he were not entitled to all the rapturous admiration of their
very young hearts, but had to sue for it like any ordinary mortal. Carlton
always felt as though some day some one would surely come along and say:
"Look here, young man, this talent doesn't belong to you; it's mine. What
do you mean by pretending that such an idle good-natured youth as yourself is
entitled to such a gift of genius?" He felt that he was keeping it in
trust, as it were; that it had been changed at birth, and that the proper
guardian would eventually relieve him of his treasure.
Personally Carlton was
of the opinion that he should have been born in the active days of
knights-errant -- to have had nothing more serious to do than to ride abroad
with a blue ribbon fastened to the point of his lance, and with the spirit to
unhorse any one who objected to its color, or to the claims of superiority of
the noble lady who had tied it there. There was not, in his opinion, at the
present day any sufficiently pronounced method of declaring admiration for the
many lovely women this world contained. A proposal of marriage he considered to
be a mean and clumsy substitute for the older way, and was uncomplimentary to
the many other women left unasked, and marriage itself required much more
constancy than he could give. He had a most romantic and old-fashioned ideal of
women as a class, and from the age of fourteen had been a devotee of hundreds
of them as individuals; and though in that time his ideal had received several
severe shocks, he still believed that the "not impossible she"
existed somewhere, and his conscientious efforts to find out whether every
women he met might not be that one had led him not unnaturally into many
difficulties.
"The trouble with
me is," he said, "that I care too much to make Platonic friendship
possible, and don't care enough to marry any particular woman -- that is, of
course, supposing that any particular one would be so little particular as to
be willing to marry me. How embarrassing it would be, now," he argued,
"if, when you were turning away from the chancel after the ceremony, you
should look at one of the bridesmaids and see the woman whom you really should
have married! How distressing that would be! You couldn't very well stop and
say: `I am very sorry, my dear, but it seems I have made a mistake. That young
woman on the right has a most interesting and beautiful face. I am very much
afraid that she is the one.' It would be too late then; while now, in my free
state, I can continue my, search without any sense of responsibility."
"Why" -- he
would exclaim -- "I have walked miles to get a glimpse of a beautiful
woman in a suburban window, and time and time again when I have seen a face in
a passing brougham I have pursued it in a hansom, and learned where the owner
of the face lived, and spent weeks in finding some one to present me, only to
discover that she was self-conscious or uninteresting or engaged. Still I had
assured myself that she was not the one. I am very conscientious, and I
consider that it is my duty to go so far with every woman I meet as to be able
to learn whether she is or is not the one, and the sad result is that I am like
a man who follows the hounds but is never in at the death."
"Well," some
married woman would say, grimly, "I hope you will get your deserts some
day; and you will, too. Some day some girl will make you suffer for this."
"Oh, that's all
right," Carlton would answer, meekly. "Lots of women have made me
suffer, if that's what you think I need."
"Some day,"
the married woman would prophesy, "you will care for a woman so much that
you will have no eyes for any one else. That's the way it is when one is
married."
"Well, when that's
the way it is with me," Carlton would reply, "I certainly hope to get
married; but until it is, I think it is safer for all concerned that I should
not."
Then Carlton would go
to the club and complain bitterly to one of his friends.
"How unfair
married women are!" he would say. "The idea of thinking a man could
have no eyes but for one woman! Suppose I had never heard a note of music until
I was twenty-five years of age, and was then given my hearing. Do you suppose
my pleasure in music would make me lose my pleasure in everything else? Suppose
I met and married a girl at twenty-five. Is that going to make me forget all
the women I knew before I met her? I think not. As a matter of fact, I really
deserve a great deal of credit for remaining single, for I am naturally very
affectionate; but when I see what poor husbands my friends make, I prefer to
stay as I am until I am sure that I will make a better one. It is only fair to
the woman."
Carlton was sitting in
the club alone. He had that sense of superiority over his fellows and of
irresponsibility to the world about him that comes to a man when he knows that
his trunks are being packed and that his state-room is engaged. He was leaving
New York long before most of his friends could get away. He did not know just
where he was going, and preferred not to know. He wished to have a complete
holiday, and to see Europe as an idle tourist, and not as an artist with an eye
to his own improvement. He had plenty of time and money; he was sure to run
across friends in the big cities, and acquaintances he could make or not, as he
pleased, en route. He was not sorry to go. His going would serve to put an end
to what gossip there might be of his engagement to numerous young women whose
admiration for him as an artist, he was beginning to fear, had taken on a more
personal tinge. "I wish," he said, gloomily, "I didn't like
people so well. It seems to cause them and me such a lot of trouble."
He sighed, and
stretched out his hand for a copy of one of the English illustrated papers. It
had a fresher interest to him because the next number of it that he would see
would be in the city in which it was printed. The paper in his hands was the
St. James Budget, and it contained much fashionable intelligence concerning the
preparations for a royal wedding which was soon to take place between members
of two of the reigning families of Europe. There was on one page a half-tone
reproduction of a photograph, which showed a group of young people belonging to
several of these reigning families, with their names and titles printed above
and below the picture. They were princesses, archdukes, or grand-dukes, and
they were dressed like young English men and women, and with no sign about them
of their possible military or social rank.
One of the young
princesses in the photograph was looking out of it and smiling in a tolerant,
amused way, as though she had thought of something which she could not wait to
enjoy until after the picture was taken. She was not posing consciously, as
were some of the others, but was sitting in a natural attitude, with one arm
over the back of her chair, and with her hands clasped before her. Her face was
full of a fine intelligence and humor, and though one of the other princesses
in the group was far more beautiful, this particular one had a much more
high-bred air, and there was something of a challenge in her smile that made
any one who looked at the picture smile also. Carlton studied the face for some
time, and mentally approved of its beauty; the others seemed in comparison
wooden and unindividual, but this one looked like a person he might have known,
and whom he would certainly have liked. He turned the page and surveyed the
features of the Oxford crew with lesser interest, and then turned the page
again and gazed critically and severely at the face of the princess with the high-bred
smile. He had hoped that he would find it less interesting at a second glance,
but it did not prove to be so.
"`The Princess
Aline of Hohenwald,'" he read. "She's probably engaged to one of
those Johnnies beside her, and the Grand-Duke of Hohenwald behind her must be
her brother." He put the paper down and went into luncheon, and diverted
himself by mixing a salad dressing; but after a few moments he stopped in the
midst of this employment, and told the waiter, with some unnecessary sharpness,
to bring him the last copy of the St. James Budget.
"Confound
it!" he added, to himself.
He opened the paper
with a touch of impatience and gazed long and earnestly at the face of the
Princess Aline, who continued to return his look with the same smile of amused
tolerance. Carlton noted every detail of her tailor-made gown, of her high
mannish collar, of her tie, and even the rings on her hand. There was nothing
about her of which he could fairly disapprove. He wondered why it was that she
could not have been born an approachable New York girl instead of a princess of
a little German duchy, hedged in throughout her single life, and to be traded
off eventually in marriage with as much consideration as though she were a
princess of a real kingdom.
"She looks jolly
too," he mused, in an injured tone; "and so very clever; and of
course she has a beautiful complexion. All those German girls have. Your Royal
Highness is more than pretty," he said, bowing his head gravely. "You
look as a princess should look. I am sure it was one of your ancestors who
discovered the dried pea under a dozen mattresses." He closed the paper,
and sat for a moment with a perplexed smile of consideration.
"Waiter," he exclaimed, suddenly, "send a messenger-boy to Brentano's
for a copy of the St. James Budget, and bring me the Almanach de Gotha from the
library. It is a little fat red book on the table near the window." Then
Carlton opened the paper again and propped it up against a carafe, and
continued his critical survey of the Princess Aline. He seized the Almanach,
when it came, with some eagerness.
"Hohenwald (Maison
de Grasse)," he read, and in small type below it:
"1. Ligne cadette
(régnante) grand-ducale: Hohenwald et de Grasse.
"Guillaume-Albert-Frederick-Charles-Louis,
Grand-Duc de Hohenwald et de Grasse, etc., etc., etc."
"That's the
brother, right enough," muttered Carlton.
And under the heading
"Sœurs" he read:
"4. Psse Aline. --
Victoria-Beatrix-Louise-Helene, Alt. Gr.-Duc. Neé à Grasse, Juin, 1872."
"Twenty-two years
old," exclaimed Carlton. "What a perfect age! I could not have
invented a better one." He looked from the book to the face before him.
"Now, my dear young lady," he said, "I know all about you. You
live at Grasse, and you are connected, to judge by your names, with all the
English royalties; and very pretty names they are, too -- Aline, Helene,
Victoria, Beatrix. You must be much more English than you are German; and I
suppose you live in a little old castle, and your brother has a standing army
of twelve men, and some day you are to marry a Russian Grand-Duke, or whoever
your brother's Prime Minister if he has a Prime Minister-decides is best for
the politics of your little toy kingdom. Ah! to think," exclaimed Carlton,
softly, "that such a lovely and glorious creature as that should be
sacrificed for so insignificant a thing as the peace of Europe when she might
make some young man happy?"
He carried a copy of
the paper to his room, and cut the picture of the group out of the page and
pasted it carefully on a stiff piece of card-board. Then he placed it on his
dressing-table, in front of a photograph of a young woman in a large silver
frame-which was a sign, had the young woman but known it, that her reign for
the time being was over.
Nolan, the young Irishman
who "did for" Carlton, knew better than to move it when he found it
there. He had learned to study his master since he had joined him in London,
and understood that one photograph in the silver frame was entitled to more
consideration than three others on the writing-desk or half a dozen on the
mantel-piece. Nolan had seen them come and go; he had watched them rise and
fall; he had carried notes to them, and books and flowers; and had helped to
dispose them from the silver frame and move them on by degrees down the line,
until they went ingloriously into the big brass bowl on the side table. Nolan
approved highly of this last choice. He did not know which one of the three in
the group it might be; but they were all pretty, and their social standing was
certainly distinguished.
Guido, the Italian
model who ruled over the studio, and Nolan were busily packing when Carlton
entered. He always said that Guido represented him in his professional and
Nolan in his social capacity. Guido cleaned the brushes and purchased the
artists' materials; Nolan cleaned his riding-boots and bought his theatre and
railroad tickets.
"Guido," said
Carlton, "there are two sketches I made in Germany last year, one of the
Prime Minister, and one of Ludwig the actor; get them out for me, will you, and
pack them for shipping. Nolan," he went on, "here is a telegram to
send."
Nolan would not have
read a letter, but he looked upon telegrams as public documents, the reading of
them as part of his perquisites. This one was addressed to Oscar Von Holtz,
First Secretary, German Embassy, Washington, D.C., and the message read:
"Please telegraph
me full title and address Princess Aline of Hohenwald. Where would a letter
reach her?
"MORTON CARLTON."
The next morning Nolan
carried to the express office a box containing two oil-paintings on small
canvases. They were addressed to the man in London who attended to the shipping
and forwarding of Carlton's pictures in that town.
There was a tremendous
crowd on the New York. She sailed at the obliging hour of eleven in the
morning, and many people, in consequence, whose affection would not have stood
in the way of their breakfast, made it a point to appear and to say goodbye.
Carlton, for his part, did not notice them; he knew by experience that the
attractive-looking people always leave a steamer when the whistle blows, and
that the next most attractive-looking, who remain on board, are ill all the way
over. A man that he knew seized him by the arm as he was entering his cabin,
and asked if he were crossing or just seeing people off.
"Well, then, I
want to introduce you to Miss Morris and her aunt, Mrs. Downs; they are going
over, and I should be glad if you would be nice to them. But you know her, I
guess?" he asked, over his shoulder, as Carlton pushed his way after him
down the deck.
"I know who she
is," he said.
Miss Edith Morris was
surrounded by a treble circle of admiring friends, and seemed to be holding her
own. They all stopped when Carlton came up, and looked at him rather closely, and
those whom he knew seemed to mark the fact by a particularly hearty greeting.
The man who had brought him up acted as though he had successfully accomplished
a somewhat difficult and creditable feat. Carlton bowed himself away, leaving
Miss Morris to her friends, and saying that she would probably have to see him
later, whether she wished it or not. He then went to meet the aunt, who
received him kindly, for there were very few people on the passenger list, and
she was glad they were to have his company. Before he left she introduced him
to a young man named Abbey, who was hovering around her most anxiously, and
whose interest, she seemed to think it necessary to explain, was due to the
fact that he was engaged to Miss Morris. Mr. Abbey left the steamer when the
whistle blew, and Carlton looked after him gratefully. He always enjoyed
meeting attractive girls who were engaged, as it left him no choice in the
matter, and excused him from finding out whether or not that particular young
woman was the one.
Mrs. Downs and her
niece proved to be experienced sailors, and faced the heavy sea that met the
New York outside of Sandy Hook with unconcern. Carlton joined them, and they
stood together leaning with their backs to the rail, and trying to fit the
people who flitted past them to the names on the passenger list.
"The young lady in
the sailor suit," said Miss Morris, gazing at the top of the smoke-stack,
"is Miss Kitty Flood, of Grand Rapids. This is her first voyage, and she
thinks a steamer is something like a yacht, and dresses for the part
accordingly. She does not know that it is merely a moving hotel."
"I am
afraid," said Carlton, "to judge from her agitation, that hers is
going to be what the professionals call a`dressing-room' part. Why is it,"
he asked, "that the girls on a steamer who wear gold anchors and the men
in yachting-caps are always the first to disappear? That man with the
sombrero," he went on, "is James M. Pollock, United States Consul to
Mauritius; he is going out to his post. I know he is the consul, because he
comes from Fort Worth, Texas, and is therefore admirably fitted to speak either
French or the native language of the island."
"Oh, we don't send
consuls to Mauritius," laughed Miss Morris. "Mauritius is one of
those places from which you buy stamps, but no one really lives or goes
there."
"Where are you
going, may I ask?" inquired Carlton.
Miss Morris said that
they were making their way to Constantinople and Athens, and then to Rome; that
as they had not had the time to take the southern route, they purposed to
journey across the Continent direct from Paris to the Turkish capital by the
Orient Express.
"We shall be a few
days in London, and in Paris only long enough for some clothes," she
replied.
"The
trousseau," thought Carlton. "Weeks is what she should have
said."
The three sat together
at the captain's table, and as the sea continued rough, saw little of either
the captain or his other guests, and were thrown much upon the society of each
other. They had innumerable friends and interests in common; and Mrs. Downs,
who had been everywhere, and for long seasons at a time, proved as alive as her
niece, and Carlton conceived a great liking for her. She seemed to be just and
kindly minded, and, owing to her age, to combine the wider judgment of a man
with the sympathetic interest of a woman. Sometimes they sat together in a row
and read, and gossiped over what they read, or struggled up the deck as it rose
and fell and buffeted with the wind; and later they gathered in a corner of the
saloon and ate late suppers of Carlton's devising, or drank tea in the
captain's cabin, which he had thrown open to them. They had started knowing
much about one another, and this and the necessary proximity of the ship
hastened their acquaintance.
The sea grew calmer the
third day out, and the sun came forth and showed the decks as clean as
bread-boards. Miss Morris and Carlton seated themselves on the huge iron
riding-bits in the bow, and with their elbows on the rail looked down at the
whirling blue water, and rejoiced silently in the steady rush of the great
vessel, and in the uncertain warmth of the March sun. Carlton was sitting to
leeward of Miss Morris, with a pipe between his teeth. He was warm, and at
peace with the world. He had found his new acquaintance more than entertaining.
She was even friendly, and treated him as though he were much her junior, as is
the habit of young women lately married or who are about to be married. Carlton
did not resent it; on the contrary, it made him more at his ease with her, and
as she herself chose to treat him as a youth, he permitted himself to be as
foolish as he pleased.
"I don't know why
it is," he complained, peering over the rail, "but whenever I look
over the side to watch the waves a man in a greasy cap always sticks his head
out of a hole below me and scatters a barrelful of ashes or potato peelings all
over the ocean. It spoils the effect for one. Next time he does it I am going
to knock out the ashes of my pipe on the back of his neck." Miss Morris
did not consider this worthy of comment, and there was a long lazy pause.
"You haven't told
us where you go after London," she said; and then, without waiting for him
to reply, she asked, "Is it your professional or your social side that you
are treating to a trip this time?"
"Who told you
that?" asked Carlton, smiling.
"Oh, I don't know.
Some man. He said you were a Jekyll and Hyde. Which is Jekyll? You see, I only
know your professional side."
"You must try to
find out for yourself by deduction," he said, "as you picked out the
other passengers. I am going to Grasse," he continued. "It's the
capital of Hohenwald. Do you know it?"
"Yes," she
said; "we were there once for a few days. We went to see the pictures. I
suppose you know that the old Duke, the father of the present one, ruined
himself almost by buying pictures for the Grasse gallery. We were there at a
bad time, though, when the palace was closed to visitors, and the gallery too.
I suppose that is what is taking you there?"
"No," Carlton
said, shaking his head. "No, it is not the pictures. I am going to
Grasse," he said, gravely, "to see the young woman with whom I am in
love."
Miss Morris looked up
in some surprise, and smiled consciously, with a natural feminine interest in
an affair of love, and one which was a secret as well.
"Oh," she
said, "I beg your pardon; we -- I had not heard of it."
"No, it is not a
thing one could announce exactly," said Carlton; "it is rather in an
embryo state as yet -- in fact, I have not met the young lady so far, but I
mean to meet her. That's why I am going abroad."
Miss Morris looked at
him sharply to see if he were smiling, but he was, on the contrary, gazing
sentimentally at the horizon-line, and puffing meditatively on his pipe. He was
apparently in earnest, and waiting for her to make some comment.
"How very
interesting!" was all she could think to say.
"Yes, when you
know the details, it is,----very interesting," he answered. "She is
the Princess Aline of Hohenwald," he explained, bowing his head as though
he were making the two young ladies known to one another. "She has several
other names, six in all, and her age is twenty-two. That is all I know about
her. I saw her picture in an illustrated paper just before I sailed, and I made
up my mind I would meet her, and here I am. If she is not in Grasse, I intend
to follow her to wherever she may be." He waved his pipe at the ocean
before him, and recited, with mock seriousness:
`Across the hills and far away, Beyond their utmost purple rim, And deep
into the dying day, The happy Princess followed him.' "Only in this case, you see," said Carlton, "I
am following the happy Princess."
"No; but
seriously, though," said Miss Morris, "what is it you mean? Are you
going to paint her portrait?"
"I never thought
of that," exclaimed Carlton. "I don't know but what your idea is a
good one. Miss Morris, that's a great idea." He shook his head
approvingly. "I did not do wrong to confide in you," he said.
"It was perhaps taking a liberty; but as you have not considered it as
such, I am glad I spoke."
"But you don't
really mean to tell me," exclaimed the girl, facing about, and nodding her
head at him, "that you are going abroad after a woman whom you have never
seen, and because you like a picture of her in a paper?"
"I do," said
Carlton. "Because I like her picture, and because she is a Princess."
"Well, upon my
word," said Miss Morris, gazing at him with evident admiration,
"that's what my younger brother would call a distinctly sporting
proposition. Only I don't see," she added, "what her being a Princess
has to do with it."
"You don't?"
laughed Carlton, easily. That's the best part of it -- that's the plot. The
beauty of being in love with a Princess, Miss Morris," he said, "lies
in the fact that you can't marry her; that you can love her deeply and forever,
and nobody will ever come to you and ask your intentions, or hint that after
such a display of affection you ought to do something. Now, with a girl who is
not a Princess, even if she understands the situation herself, and wouldn't
marry you to save her life, still there is always some one -- a father, or a
mother, or one of your friends -- who makes it his business to interfere, and
talks about it, and bothers you both. But with a Princess, you see, that is all
eliminated. You can't marry a Princess, because they won't let you. A Princess
has got to marry a real royal chap, and so you are perfectly ineligible and
free to sigh for her, and make pretty speeches to her, and see her as often as
you can, and revel in your devotion and unrequited affection."
Miss Morris regarded
him doubtfully. She did not wish to prove herself too credulous. "And you
honestly want me, Mr. Carlton, to believe that you are going abroad just for
this?"
"You see,"
Carlton answered her, "if you only knew me better you would have no doubt
on the subject at all. It isn't the thing some men would do, I admit, but it is
exactly what any one who knows me would expect of me. I should describe it,
having had acquaintance with the young man for some time, as being eminently
characteristic. And besides, think what a good story it makes! Every other man
who goes abroad this summer will try to tell about his travels when he gets
back to New York, and, as usual, no one will listen to him. But they will have
to listen to me. `You've been across since I saw you last. What did you do?'
they'll ask, politely. And then, instead of simply telling them that I have
been in Paris or London, I can say, `Oh, I've been chasing around the globe
after the Princess Aline of Hohenwald.' That sounds interesting, doesn't it?
When you come to think of it," Carlton continued, meditatively, "it
is not so very remarkable. Men go all the way to Cuba and Mexico, and even to
India, after orchids, after a nasty flower that grows in an absurd way on the
top of a tree. Why shouldn't a young man go as far as Germany after a beautiful
Princess, who walks on the ground, and who can talk and think and feel? She is
much more worth while than an orchid."
Miss Morris laughed
indulgently. "Well, I didn't know such devotion existed at this end of the
century," she said; "it's quite nice and encouraging. I hope you will
succeed, I am sure. I only wish we were going to be near enough to see how you
get on. I have never been a confidante when there was a real Princess
concerned," she said; "it makes it so much more amusing. May one ask
what your plans are?"
Carlton doubted if he
had any plans as yet. "I have to reach the ground first," he said,
"and after that I must reconnoitre. I may possibly adopt your idea, and
ask to paint her portrait, only I dislike confusing my social and professional
sides. As a matter of fact, though," he said, after a pause, laughing
guiltily, "I have done a little of that already. I prepared her, as it
were, for my coming. I sent her studies of two pictures I made last winter in
Berlin. One of the Prime Minister, and one of Ludwig, the tragedian at the
Court Theatre. I sent them to her through my London agent, so that she would
think they had come from some one of her English friends, and I told the dealer
not to let any one know who had forwarded them. My idea was that it might help
me, perhaps, if she knew something about me before I appeared in person. It was
a sort of letter of introduction written by myself."
"Well,
really," expostulated Miss Morris, you certainly woo in a royal way. Are
you in the habit of giving away your pictures to any one whose photograph you
happen to like? That seems to me to be giving new lamps for old to a degree. I
must see if I haven't some of my sister's photographs in my trunk. She is
considered very beautiful."
"Well, you wait
until you see this particular portrait, and -- you will understand it
better," said Carlton.
The steamer reached
Southampton early in the afternoon, and Carlton secured a special compartment
on the express to London for Mrs. Downs and her niece and himself, with one
adjoining for their maid and Nolan. It was a beautiful day, and Carlton sat
with his eyes fixed upon the passing fields and villages, exclaiming with
pleasure from time to time at the white roads and the feathery trees and
hedges, and the red roofs of the inns and square towers of the village
churches.
"Hedges are better
than barbed-wire fences, aren't they?" he said. "You see that girl
picking wild flowers from one of them? She looks just as though she were posing
for a picture for an illustrated paper. She couldn't pick flowers from a
barbed-wire fence, could she? And there would probably be a tramp along the
road somewhere to frighten her; and see -- the chap in knickerbockers farther
down the road leaning on the stile. I am sure he is waiting for her; and here
comes a coach," he ran on. "Don't the red wheels look well against
the hedges? It's a pretty little country, England, isn't it? -- like a private
park or a model village. I am glad to get back to it -- I am glad to see the
three-and-six signs with the little slanting dash between the shillings and
pennies. Yes, even the steam-rollers and the man with the red flag in front are
welcome."
"I suppose,"
said Mrs. Downs, "it's because one has been so long on the ocean that the
ride to London seems so interesting. It always pays me for the entire trip.
Yes," she said, with a sigh, "in spite of the patent-medicine signs
they have taken to putting up all along the road. It seems a pity they should adopt
our bad habits instead of our good ones."
"They are a bit
slow at adopting anything," commented Carlton. "Did you know, Mrs.
Downs, that electric lights are still as scarce in London as they are in
Timbuctoo? Why, I saw an electric-light plant put up in a Western town in three
days once; there were over a hundred burners in one saloon, and the engineer
who put them up told me in confidence that -- "
What the chief engineer
told him in confidence was never disclosed, for at that moment Miss Morris
interrupted him with a sudden sharp exclamation.
"Oh, Mr.
Carlton," she exclaimed, breathlessly, "listen to this!" She had
been reading one of the dozen papers which Carlton had purchased at the
station, and was now shaking one of them at him, with her eyes fixed on the
open page.
"My dear
Edith," remonstrated her aunt, Mr. Carlton was telling us -- "
"Yes, I
know," exclaimed Miss Morris, laughing, "but this interests him much
more than electric lights. "Who do you think is in London?" she
cried, raising her eyes to his, and pausing for proper dramatic effect.
"The Princess Aline of Hohenwald!"
"No?" shouted
Carlton.
"Yes," Miss
Morris answered, mocking his tone. "Listen. `The Queen's Drawing-room' --
em -- e -- m -- `on her right was the Princess of Wales' -- em -- m. Oh, I
can't find it -- no -- yes, here it is. `Next to her stood the Princess Aline
of Hohenwald. She wore a dress of white silk, with train of silver brocade
trimmed with fur. Ornaments -- emeralds and diamonds; orders -- Victoria and
Albert, jubilee Commemoration Medal, Coburg and Gotha, and Hohenwald and
Grasse.'"
"By Jove!"
cried Carlton, excitedly. "I say, is that really there? Let me see it,
please, for myself."
Miss Morris handed him
the paper, with her finger on the paragraph, and picking up another, began a
search down its columns.
"You are
right," exclaimed Carlton, solemnly; "it's she, sure enough. And here
I've been within two hours of her and didn't know it?"
Miss Morris gave
another triumphant cry, as though she had discovered a vein of gold.
"Yes, and here she
is again," she said, in the Gentlewoman: `The Queen's dress was of black,
as usual, but relieved by a few violet ribbons in the bonnet; and Princess
Beatrice, who sat by her mother's side, showed but little trace of the anxiety
caused by Princess Ena's accident. Princess Aline, on the front seat, in a
light brown jacket and a becoming bonnet, gave the necessary touch to a picture
which Londoners would be glad to look upon more often.'"
Carlton sat staring
forward, with his hands on his knees, and with his eyes open wide from
excitement. He presented so unusual an appearance of bewilderment and delight
that Mrs. Downs looked at him and at her niece for some explanation. "The
young lady seems to interest you," said she, tentatively.
"She is the most
charming creature in the world, Mrs. Downs," cried Carlton, it and I was
going all the way to Grasse to see her, and now it turns out that she is here
in England, within a few miles of us." He turned and waved his hands at
the passing landscape. "Every minute brings us nearer together."
And you didn't feel it
in the air!" mocked Miss Morris, laughing. "You are a pretty poor
sort of a man to let a girl tell you where to find the woman you love."
Carlton did not answer,
but stared at her very seriously and frowned intently. "Now I have got to
begin all over again and readjust things," he said. "We might have
guessed she would be in London, on account of this royal wedding. It is a great
pity it isn't later in the season, when there would be more things going on and
more chances of meeting her. Now they will all be interested in themselves,
and, being extremely exclusive, no one who isn't a cousin to the bridegroom or
an Emperor would have any chance at all. Still, I can see her! I can look at
her, and that's something."
"It is better than
a photograph, anyway," said Miss Morris.
"They will be
either at Buckingham Palace or at Windsor, or they will stop at Brown's,"
said Carlton. "All royalties go to Brown's. I don't know why, unless it is
because it is so expensive; or maybe it is expensive because royalties go
there; but, in any event, if they are not at the palace, that is where they
will be, and that is where I shall have to go too."
When the train drew up
at Victoria Station, Carlton directed Nolan to take his things to Brown's
Hotel, but not to unload them until he had arrived. Then he drove with the
ladies to Cox's, and saw them settled there. He promised to return at once to
dine, and to tell them what he had discovered in his absence. "You've got
to help me in this, Miss Morris," he said, nervously. "I am beginning
to feel that I am not worthy of her."
"Oh yes, you
are!" she said, laughing; "but don't forget that `it's not the lover
who comes to woo, but the lover's way of wooing,' and that `faint heart' -- and
the rest of it."
"Yes, I
know," said Carlton, doubtfully; but it's a bit sudden, isn't it?"
"Oh, I am ashamed
of you! You are frightened."
"No, not
frightened, exactly," said the painter. "I think it's just natural
emotion."
As Carlton turned into
Albemarle Street he noticed a red carpet stretching from the doorway of Brown's
Hotel out across the sidewalk to a carriage, and a bareheaded man bustling
about apparently assisting several gentlemen to get into it. This and another
carriage and Nolan's four-wheeler blocked the way; but without waiting for them
to move up, Carlton leaned out of his hansom and called the bareheaded man to
its side.
"Is the Duke of
Hohenwald stopping at your hotel?" he asked. The bareheaded man answered
that he was.
"All right,
Nolan," cried Carlton. "They can take in the trunks."
Hearing this, the
bareheaded man hastened to help Carlton to alight. "That was the Duke who
just drove off, sir; and those," he said, pointing to three muffled
figures who were stepping into a second carriage, " are his sisters, the
Princesses."
Carlton stopped midway,
with one foot on the step and the other in the air.
"The deuce they
are!" he exclaimed; and which is -- " he began, eagerly, and then
remembering himself, dropped back on the cushions of the hansom.
He broke into the
little dining-room at Cox's in so excited a state that two dignified old
gentlemen who were eating there sat open-mouthed in astonished disapproval.
Mrs. Downs and Miss Morris had just come down stairs.
"I have seen
her!" Carlton cried, ecstatically; "only half an hour in the town,
and I've seen her already!"
"No, really?"
exclaimed Miss Morris. "And how did she look? Is she as beautiful as you
expected?"
"Well, I can't
tell yet," Carlton answered.
There were three of
them, and they were all muffled up, and which one of the three she was I don't
know. She wasn't labelled, as in the picture, but she was there, and I saw her.
The woman I love was one of that three, and I have engaged rooms at the hotel,
and this very night the same roof shelters us both."
"The course of
true love certainly runs smoothly with you," said Miss Morris, as they
seated themselves at the table. "What is your next move? What do you mean
to do now?"
"The rest is very
simple," said Carlton. "To-morrow morning I will go to the Row; I
will be sure to find some one there who knows all about them -- where they are
going, and who they are seeing, and what engagements they may have. Then it
will only be a matter of looking up some friend in the Household or in one of
the embassies who can present me."
"Oh," said
Miss Morris, in the tone of keenest disappointment, "but that is such a
commonplace ending! You started out so romantically. Couldn't you manage to
meet her in a less conventional way?"
"I am afraid
not," said Carlton. "You see, I want to meet her very much, and to
meet her very soon, and the quickest way of meeting her, whether it's romantic
or not, isn't a bit too quick for me. There will be romance enough after I am
presented, if I have my way."
But Carlton was not to
have his way; for he had overlooked the fact that it requires as many to make
an introduction as a bargain, and he had left the Duke of Hohenwald out of his
considerations. He met many people he knew in the Row the next morning; they
asked him to lunch, and brought their horses up to the rail, and he patted the
horses' heads, and led the conversation around to the royal wedding, and
through it to the Hohenwalds. He learned that they had attended a reception at
the German Embassy on the previous night, and it was one of the secretaries of
that embassy who informed him of their intended departure that morning on the
eleven o'clock train to Paris.
"To Paris!"
cried Carlton, in consternation. "What! all of them?"
"Yes, all of them,
of course. Why?" asked the young German. But Carlton was already dodging
across the tan-bark to Piccadilly and waving his stick at a hansom.
Nolan met him at the
door of Brown's Hotel with an anxious countenance.
"Their Royal
Highnesses have gone, sir," he said. "But I've packed your trunks and
sent them to the station. Shall I follow them sir?"
"Yes," said
Carlton. "Follow the trunks and follow the Hohenwalds. I will come over on
the Club train at four. Meet me at the station, and tell me to what hotel they
have gone. Wait; if I miss you, you can find me at the Hotel Continental; but if
they go straight on through Paris, you go with them, and telegraph me here and
to the Continental. Telegraph at every station, so I can keep track of you.
Have you enough money?"
"I have, sir --
enough for a long trip, sir."
"Well, you'll need
it," said Carlton, grimly. This is going to be a long trip. It is twenty
minutes to eleven now; you will have to hurry. Have you paid my bill
here?"
"I have,
sir," said Nolan.
"Then get off, and
don't lose sight of those people again."
Carlton attended to
several matters of business, and then lunched with Mrs. Downs and her niece. He
had grown to like them very much, and was sorry to lose sight of them, but
consoled himself by thinking he would see them a few days at least in Paris. He
judged that he would be there for some time, as he did not think the Princess
Aline and her sisters would pass through that city without stopping to visit
the shops on the Rue de la Paix.
"All women are not
princesses," he argued, but all princesses are women."
"We will be in
Paris on Wednesday," Mrs. Downs told him. "The Orient Express leaves
there twice a week, on Mondays and Thursdays, and we have taken an apartment
for next Thursday, and will go right on to Constantinople."
"But I thought you
said you had to buy a lot of clothes there?" Carlton expostulated.
Mrs. Downs said that
they would do that on their way home.
Nolan met Carlton at
the station, and told him that he had followed the Hohenwalds to the Hotel
Meurice. "There is the Duke, sir, and the three Princesses," Nolan
said, "and there are two German gentlemen acting as equerries, and an
English captain, a sort of A.D.C. to the Duke, and two elderly ladies, and
eight servants. They travel very simple, sir, and their people are in undress
livery. Brown and red, sir."
Carlton pretended not
to listen to this. He had begun to doubt but that Nolan's zeal would lead him
into some indiscretion, and would end disastrously to himself. He spent the
evening alone in front of the Cafe de la Paix, pleasantly occupied in watching
the life and movement of that great meeting of the highways. It did not seem
possible that he had ever been away. It was as though he had picked up a book
and opened it at the page and place at which he had left off reading it a moment
before. There was the same type, the same plot, and the same characters, who
were doing the same characteristic things. Even the waiter who tipped out his
coffee knew him; and he knew, or felt as though he knew, half of those who
passed, or who shared with him the half of the sidewalk. The women at the next
table considered the slim, good-looking young American with friendly curiosity,
and the men with them discussed him in French, until a well-known Parisian
recognized Carlton in passing, and hailed him joyously in the same language, at
which the women laughed and the men looked sheepishly conscious.
On the following
morning Carlton took up his post in the open court of the Meurice, with his
coffee and the Figaro to excuse his loitering there. He had not been occupied
with these over-long before Nolan approached him, in some excitement, with the
information that their Royal Highnesses -- as he delighted to call them -- were
at that moment "coming down the lift."
Carlton could hear
their voices, and wished to step around the corner and see them; it was for
this chance he had been waiting; but he could not afford to act in so
undignified a manner before Nolan, so he merely crossed his legs nervously, and
told the servant to go back to the rooms.
"Confound
him!" he said; "I wish he would let me conduct my own affairs in my
own way. If I don't stop him, he'll carry the Princess Aline off by force and
send me word where he has hidden her."
The Hohenwalds had
evidently departed for a day's outing, as up to five o'clock they had not
returned; and Carlton, after loitering all the afternoon, gave up waiting for
them, and went out to dine at Laurent's, in the Champs Elysees. He had finished
his dinner, and was leaning luxuriously forward, with his elbows on the table,
and knocking the cigar ashes into his coffee-cup. He was pleasantly content.
The trees hung heavy with leaves over his head, a fountain played and
overflowed at his elbow, and the lamps of the fiacres passing and repassing on
the Avenue of the Champs Elysees shone like giant fire-flies through the
foliage. The touch of the gravel beneath his feet emphasized the free,
out-of-door charm of the place, and the faces of the others around him looked
more than usually cheerful in the light of the candles flickering under the
clouded shades. His mind had gone back to his earlier student days in Paris,
when life always looked as it did now in the brief half-hour of satisfaction
which followed a cold bath or a good dinner, and he had forgotten himself and
his surroundings. It was the voices of the people at the table behind him that
brought him back to the present moment. A man was talking; he spoke in English,
with an accent.
"I should like to
go again through the Luxembourg," he said; "but you need not be bound
by what I do."
"I think it would
be pleasanter if we all keep together," said a girl's voice, quietly. She
also spoke in English, and with the same accent.
The people whose voices
had interrupted him were sitting and standing around a long table, which the
waiters had made large enough for their party by placing three of the smaller
ones side by side; they had finished their dinner, and the women, who sat with
their backs towards Carlton, were pulling on their gloves.
"Which is it to
be, then?" said the gentleman, smiling. "The pictures or the
dressmakers?"
The girl who had first
spoken turned to the one next to her.
"Which would you
rather do, Aline?" she asked.
Carlton moved so
suddenly that the men behind him looked at him curiously; but he turned,
nevertheless, in his chair and faced them, and in order to excuse his doing so
beckoned to one of the waiters. He was within two feet of the girl who had been
called "Aline." She raised her head to speak, and saw Carlton staring
open-eyed at her. She glanced at him for an instant, as if to assure herself
that she did not know him, and then, turning to her brother, smiled in the same
tolerant, amused way in which she had so often smiled upon Carlton from the
picture.
"I am afraid I had
rather go to the Bon March," she said.
One of the waiters
stepped in between them, and Carlton asked him for his bill; but when it came
he left it lying on the plate, and sat staring out into the night between the
candles, puffing sharply on his cigar, and recalling to his memory his first
sight of the Princess Aline of Hohenwald.
That night, as he
turned into bed, he gave a comfortable sigh of content. "I am glad she
chose the dressmakers instead of the pictures," he said.
Mrs. Downs and Miss
Morris arrived in Paris on Wednesday, and expressed their anxiety to have
Carlton lunch with them, and to hear him tell of the progress of his
love-affair. There was not much to tell; the Hohenwalds had come and gone from
the hotel as freely as any other tourists in Paris, but the very lack of
ceremony about their movements was in itself a difficulty. The manner of
acquaintance he could make in the court of the Hotel Meurice with one of the
men over a cup of coffee or a glass of bock would be as readily discontinued as
begun, and for his purpose it would have been much better if the Hohenwalds had
been living in state with a visitors' book and a chamberlain.
On Wednesday evening
Carlton took the ladies to the opera, where the Hohenwalds occupied a box
immediately opposite them. Carlton pretended to be surprised at this fact, but
Mrs. Downs doubted his sincerity.
"I saw Nolan
talking to their courier today," she said, "and I fancy he asked a
few leading questions."
"Well, he didn't
learn much if he did," he said. "The fellow only talks German."
"Ah, then he has
been asking questions!" said Miss Morris.
"Well, he does it
on his own responsibility," said Carlton, "for I told him to have
nothing to do with servants. He has too much zeal, has Nolan; I'm afraid of
him."
"If you were only
half as interested as he is," said Miss Morris, "you would have known
her long ago."
"Long ago?"
exclaimed Carlton. "I only saw her four days since."
"She is certainly
very beautiful," said Miss Morris, looking across the auditorium.
"But she isn't
there," said Carlton.
That's the eldest
sister; the two other sisters went out on the coach this morning to Versailles,
and were too tired to come tonight. At least, so Nolan says. He seems to have
established a friendship for their English maid, but whether it's on my account
or his own I don't know. I doubt his unselfishness."
"How disappointing
of her!" said Miss Morris. And after you had selected a box just across
the way, too. It is such a pity to waste it on us." Carlton smiled, and looked
up at her impudently, as though he meant to say something; but remembering that
she was engaged to be married, changed his mind, and lowered his eyes to his
programme.
"Why didn't you
say it?" asked Miss Morris, calmly, turning her glass to the stage.
"Wasn't it pretty?"
"No," said
Carlton -- " not pretty enough."
The ladies left the
hotel the next day to take the Orient Express, which left Paris at six o'clock.
They had bidden Carlton goodbye at four the same afternoon, and as he had come
to their rooms for that purpose, they were in consequence a little surprised to
see him at the station, running wildly along the platform, followed by Nolan
and a porter. He came into their compartment after the train had started, and
shook his head sadly at them from the door.
"Well, what do you
think of this?" he said. "You can't get rid of me, you see. I'm going
with you."
"Going with
us?" asked Mrs. Downs. "How far?"
Carlton laughed, and,
coming inside, dropped onto the cushions with a sigh. "I don't know,"
he said, dejectedly. "All the way, I'm afraid. That is, I mean, I'm very
glad I am to have your society for a few days more; but really I didn't bargain
for this."
"You don't mean to
tell me that they are on this train?" said Miss Morris.
"They are,"
said Carlton. "They have a car to themselves at the rear. They only made
up their minds to go this morning, and they nearly succeeded in giving me the
slip again; but it seems that their English maid stopped Nolan in the hall to
bid him good-bye, and so he found out their plans. They are going direct to
Constantinople, and then to Athens. They had meant to stay in Paris two weeks
longer, it seems, but they changed their minds last night. It was a very close
shave for me. I only got back to the hotel in time to hear from the concierge
that Nolan had flown with all of my things, and left word for me to follow.
Just fancy! Suppose I had missed the train, and had had to chase him clear
across the continent of Europe with not even a razor -- "
"I am glad,"
said Miss Morris, that Nolan has not taken a fancy to me. I doubt if I could
resist such impetuosity."
The Orient Express, in
which Carlton and the mistress of his heart and fancy were speeding towards the
horizon's utmost purple rim, was made up of six cars, one dining-car with a
smoking-apartment attached, and five sleeping-cars, including the one reserved
for the Duke of Hohenwald and his suite. These cars were lightly built, and
rocked in consequence, and the dust raised by the rapid movement of the train swept
through cracks and open windows, and sprinkled the passengers with a fine and
irritating coating of soot and earth. There was one servant to the entire
twenty-two passengers. He spoke eight languages, and never slept; but as his
services were in demand by several people in as many different cars at the same
moment he satisfied no one, and the complaint-box in the smoking-car was
stuffed full to the slot in consequence before they had crossed the borders of
France.
Carlton and Miss Morris
went out upon one of the platforms and sat down upon a tool-box. "It's
isn't as comfortable here as in an observation-car at home," said Carlton,
"but it's just as noisy."
He pointed out to her
from time to time the peasants gathering twigs, and the blue-bloused gendarmes
guarding the woods and the fences skirting them. "Nothing is allowed to go
to waste in this country," he said. "It looks as though they went
over it once a month with a lawn-mower and a pruning-knife. I believe they
number the the trees as we number the houses."
"And did you
notice the great fortifications covered with grass?" she said. "We
have passed such a lot of them."
Carlton nodded.
"And did you
notice that they all faced only one way?"
Carlton laughed, and
nodded again. "Towards Germany," he said.
By the next day they
had left the tall poplars and white roads behind them, and were crossing the
land of low shiny black helmets and brass spikes. They had come into a country
of low mountains and black forests, with old fortified castles topping the
hills, and with red-roofed villages scattered around the base.
"How very military
it all is!" Mrs. Downs said. "Even the men at the lonely little
stations in the forests wear uniforms; and do you notice how each of them rolls
up his red flag and holds it like a sword, and salutes the train as it
passes?"
They spent the hour
during which the train shifted from one station in Vienna to the other driving
about in an open carriage, and stopped for a few moments in front of a cafe to
drink beer and to feel solid earth under them again, returning to the train
with a feeling which was almost that of getting back to their own rooms. Then
they came to great steppes covered with long thick grass, and flooded in places
with little lakes of broken ice; great horned cattle stood knee-deep in this
grass, and at the villages and way-stations were people wearing sheepskin
jackets and waistcoats covered with silver buttons. In one place there was a
wedding procession waiting for the train to pass, with the friends of the bride
and groom in their best clothes, the women with silver breastplates, and boots
to their knees. It seemed hardly possible that only two days before they had
seen another wedding party in the Champs Elysees, where the men wore evening
dress, and the women were bareheaded and with long trains. In forty-eight hours
they had passed through republics, principalities, empires, and kingdoms, and
from spring to winter. It was like walking rapidly over a painted panorama of
Europe.
On the second evening
Carlton went off into the smoking-car alone. The Duke of Hohenwald and two of
his friends had finished a late supper, and were seated in the apartment
adjoining it. The Duke was a young man with a heavy beard and eyeglasses. He
was looking over an illustrated catalogue of the Salon, and as Carlton dropped
on the sofa opposite the Duke raised his head and looked at him curiously, and
then turned over several pages of the catalogue and studied one of them, and
then back at Carlton, as though he were comparing him with something on the
page before him. Carlton was looking out at the night, but he could follow what
was going forward, as it was reflected in the glass of the car window. He saw
the Duke hand the catalogue to one of the equerries, who raised his eyebrows and
nodded his head in assent. Carlton wondered what this might mean, until he
remembered that there was a portrait of himself by a French artist in the
Salon, and concluded it had been reproduced in the catalogue. He could think of
nothing else which would explain the interest the two men showed in him. On the
morning following he sent Nolan out to purchase a catalogue at the first
station at which they stopped, and found that his guess was a correct one. A
portrait of himself had been reproduced in black and white, with his name below
it.
"Well, they know
who I am now," he said to Miss Morris, "even, if they don't know me.
That honor is still in store for them."
"I wish they did
not lock themselves up so tightly," said Miss Morris. "I want to see
her very much. Cannot we walk up and down the platform at the next station? She
may be at the window."
"Of course,"
said Carlton. "You could have seen her at Buda-Pesth if you had spoken of
it. She was walking up and down then. The next time the train stops we will
prowl up and down and feast our eyes upon her."
But Miss Morris had her
wish gratified without that exertion. The Hohenwalds were served in the
dining-car after the other passengers had finished, and were in consequence
only to be seen when they passed by the doors of the other compartments. But
this same morning, after luncheon, the three Princesses, instead of returning
to their own car, seated themselves in the compartment adjoining the
dining-car, while the men of their party lit their cigars and sat in a circle
around them.
"I was wondering
how long they could stand three men smoking in one of the boxes they call
cars," said Mrs. Downs. She was seated between Miss Morris and Carlton,
directly opposite the Hohenwalds, and so near them that she had to speak in a
whisper. To avoid doing this Miss Morris asked Carlton for a pencil, and
scribbled with it in the novel she held on her lap. Then she passed them both
back to him, and said, aloud: "Have you read this? It has such a pretty dedication."
The dedication read, "Which is Aline?" And Carlton, taking the pencil
in his turn, made a rapid sketch of her on the fly-leaf, and wrote beneath it:
"This is she. Do you wonder I travelled four thousand miles to see
her?"
Miss Morris took the
book again, and glanced at the sketch, and then at the three Princesses, and
nodded her head. "It is very beautiful," she said, gravely, looking
out at the passing landscape.
"Well, not
beautiful exactly," answered Carlton, surveying the hills critically,
"but certainly very attractive. It is worth travelling a long way to see,
and I should think one would grow very fond of it."
Miss Morris tore the
fly-leaf out of the book, and slipped it between the pages. "May I keep
it?" she said. Carlton nodded. "And will you sign it?" she
asked, smiling. Carlton shrugged his shoulders, and laughed. "If you wish
it," he answered.
The Princess wore a
gray cheviot travelling dress, as did her sisters, and a gray Alpine hat. She
was leaning back, talking to the English captain who accompanied them, and
laughing. Carlton thought he had never seen a woman who appealed so strongly to
every taste of which he was possessed. She seemed so sure of herself, so alert,
and yet so gracious, so easily entertained, and yet, when she turned her eyes
towards the strange, dismal landscape, so seriously intent upon its sad beauty.
The English captain dropped his head, and with the pretence of pulling at his
mustache, covered his mouth as he spoke to her. When he had finished he gazed
consciously at the roof of the car, and she kept her eyes fixed steadily at the
object towards which they had turned when he had ceased speaking, and then,
after a decent pause, turned her eyes, as Carlton knew she would, towards him.
"He was telling
her who I am," he thought, "and about the picture in the
catalogue."
In a few moments she
turned to her sister and spoke to her, pointing out at something in the
scenery, and the same pantomime was repeated, and again with the third sister.
"Did you see those
girls talking about you, Mr. Carlton?" Miss Morris asked, after they had
left the car.
Carlton said it looked
as though they were.
"Of course they
were," said Miss Morris.
That Englishman told
the Princess Aline something about you, and then she told her sister, and she
told the eldest one. It would be nice if they inherit their father's interest
in painting, wouldn't it?"
"I would rather
have it degenerate into an interest in painters myself," said Carlton.
Miss Morris discovered,
after she had returned to her own car, that she had left the novel where she
had been sitting, and Carlton sent Nolan back for it. It had slipped to the
floor, and the fly-leaf upon which Carlton had sketched the Princess Aline was
lying face down beside it. Nolan picked up the leaf, and saw the picture, and
read the inscription below: "This is she. Do you wonder I travelled four
thousand miles to see her?"
He handed the book to
Miss Morris, and was backing out of the compartment, when she stopped him.
"There was a loose
page in this, Nolan," she said. "It's gone; did you see it?"
"A loose page,
miss?" said Nolan, with some concern. "Oh, yes, miss; I was going to
tell you; there was a scrap of paper blew away when I was passing between the
carriages. Was it something you wanted, miss?"
"Something I
wanted!" exclaimed Miss Morris, in dismay.
Carlton laughed easily.
"It is just as well I didn't sign it, after all," he said. "I
don't want to proclaim my devotion to any Hungarian gypsy who happens to read
English."
You must draw me another,
as a souvenir," Miss Morris said.
Nolan continued on
through the length of the car until he had reached the one occupied by the
Hohenwalds, where he waited on the platform until the English maidservant saw
him and came to the door of the carriage.
What hotel are your
people going to stop at in Constantinople?" Nolan asked.
"The
Grande-Bretagne, I think," she answered.
"That's
right," said Nolan, approvingly. That's the one we are going to. I thought
I would come and tell you about it. And, by-the-way," he said,
"here's a picture somebody's made of your Princess Aline. She dropped it,
and I picked it up. You had better give it back to her. Well," he added,
politely, "I'm glad you are coming to our hotel in Constantinople; it's
pleasant having some one to talk to who can speak your own tongue."
The girl returned to
the car, and left Nolan alone upon the platform. He exhaled a long breath of
suppressed excitement, and then gazed around nervously upon the empty
landscape.
"I fancy that's
going to hurry things up a bit," he murmured, with an anxious smile;
"he'd never get along at all if it wasn't for me.
For reasons possibly
best understood by the German ambassador, the state of the Hohenwalds at
Constantinople differed greatly from that which had obtained at the French
capital. They no longer came and went as they wished, or wandered through the
show-places of the city like ordinary tourists. There was, on the contrary, not
only a change in their manner towards others, but there was an insistence on
their part of a difference in the attitude of others towards themselves. This
showed itself in the reserving of the half of the hotel for their use, and in
the haughty bearing of the equerries, who appeared unexpectedly in magnificent
uniforms. The visitors' book was covered with the autographs of all of the
important people in the Turkish capital, and the Sultan's carriages stood
constantly before the door of the hotel, awaiting their pleasure, until they
became as familiar a sight as the street dogs, or as cabs in a hansom-cab rank.
And in following out
the programme which had been laid down for her, the Princess Aline became even
less accessible to Carlton than before, and he grew desperate and despondent.
"If the worst
comes," he said to Miss Morris, "I shall tell Nolan to give an alarm
of fire some night, and then I will run in and rescue her before they find out
there is no fire. Or he might frighten the horses some day, and give me a
chance to stop them. We might even wait until we reach Greece, and have her
carried off by brigands, who would only give her up to me."
"There are no more
brigands in Greece," said Miss Morris; "and besides, why do you
suppose they would only give her up to you?"
"Because they
would be imitation brigands," said Carlton, "and would be paid to
give her up to no one else."
"Oh, you plan very
well," scoffed Miss Morris, "but you don't do anything."
Carlton was saved the
necessity of doing anything that same morning, when the English captain in
attendance on the Duke sent his card to Carlton's room. He came, he explained,
to present the Prince's compliments, and would it be convenient for Mr. Carlton
to meet the Duke that afternoon? Mr. Carlton suppressed an unseemly desire to
shout, and said, after a moment's consideration, that it would. He then took
the English captain down stairs to the smoking-room, and rewarded him for his
agreeable message.
The Duke received
Carlton in the afternoon, and greeted him most cordially, and with as much ease
of manner as it is possible for a man to possess who has never enjoyed the
benefits of meeting other men on an equal footing. He expressed his pleasure in
knowing an artist with whose work he was so familiar, and congratulated himself
on the happy accident which had brought them both to the same hotel.
"I have more than
a natural interest in meeting you," said the Prince, "and for a
reason which you may or may not know. I thought possibly you could help me
somewhat. I have within the past few days come into the possession of two of
your paintings; they are studies, rather, but to me they are even more
desirable than the finished work; and I am not correct in saying that they have
come to me exactly, but to my sister, the Princess Aline."
Carlton could not
withhold a certain start of surprise. He had not expected that his gift would
so soon have arrived, but his face showed only polite attention.
"The studies were
delivered to us in London," continued the Duke. "They are of Ludwig the
tragedian, and of the German Prime Minister, two most valuable works, and
especially interesting to us. They came without any note or message which would
inform us who had sent them, and when my people made inquiries, the dealer
refused to tell them from whom they had come. He had been ordered to forward
them to Grasse, but, on learning of our presence in London, sent them direct to
our hotel there. Of course it is embarrassing to have so valuable a present
from an anonymous friend, especially so for my sister, to whom they were
addressed, and I thought that, besides the pleasure of meeting one of whose
genius I am so warm an admirer, I might also learn something which would enable
me to discover who our friend may be." He paused, but as Carlton said nothing,
continued: "As it is now, I do not feel that I can accept the pictures;
and yet I know no one to whom they can be returned, unless I send them to the
dealer."
"It sounds very
mysterious," said Carlton smiling; "and I am afraid I cannot help
you. What work I did in Germany was sold in Berlin before I left, and in a year
may have changed hands several times. The studies of which you speak are
unimportant, and merely studies, and could pass from hand to hand without much
record having been kept of them; but personally I am not able to give you any
information which would assist you in tracing them."
"Yes," said
the Duke. "Well, then, I shall keep them until I can learn more; and if we
can learn nothing, I shall return them to the dealer."
Carlton met Miss Morris
that afternoon in a state of great excitement. "It's come!" he cried
-- "it's come! I am to meet her this week. I have met her brother, and he
has asked me to dine with them on Thursday night; that's the day before they
leave for Athens; and he particularly mentioned that his sisters would be at
the dinner, and that it would be a pleasure to present me. It seems that the
eldest paints, and all of them love art for art's sake, as their father taught
them to do; and, for all we know, he may make me court painter, and I shall
spend the rest of my life at Grasse painting portraits of the Princess Aline,
at the age of twenty-two, and at all future ages. And if he does give me a
commission to paint her, I can tell you now in confidence that that picture
will require more sittings than any other picture ever painted by man. Her hair
will have turned white by the time it is finished, and the gown she started to
pose in will have become forty years behind the fashion!"
On the morning
following, Carlton and Mrs. Downs and her niece, with all the tourists in
Constantinople, were placed in open carriages by their dragomans, and driven in
a long procession to the Seraglio to see the Sultan's treasures. Those of them
who had waited two weeks for this chance looked aggrieved at the more fortunate
who had come at the eleventh hour on the last night's steamer, and seemed to
think these latter had attained the privilege without sufficient effort. The
ministers of the different legations -- as is the harmless custom of such
gentlemen -- had impressed every one for whom they had obtained permission to
see the treasures with the great importance of the service rendered, and had
succeeded in making every one feel either especially honored or especially
uncomfortable at having given them so much trouble. This sense of obligation,
and the fact that the dragomans had assured the tourists that they were for the
time being the guests of the Sultan, awed and depressed most of the visitors to
such an extent that their manner in the long procession of carriages suggested
a funeral cortege, with the Hohenwalds in front, escorted by Beys and Pashas,
as chief mourners. The procession halted at the palace, and the guests of the
Sultan were received by numerous effendis in single-button frock-coats and
freshly ironed fezzes, who served them with glasses of water, and a huge bowl
of some sweet stuff, of which every one was supposed to take a spoonful. There
was at first a general fear among the Cook's tourists that there would not be
enough of this to go round, which was succeeded by a greater anxiety lest they
should be served twice. Some of the tourists put the sweet stuff in their
mouths direct and licked the spoon, and others dropped it off the spoon into
the glass of water, and stirred it about and sipped at it, and no one knew who
had done the right thing, not even those who happened to have done it. Carlton
and Miss Morris went out on to the terrace while this ceremony was going
forward, and looked out over the great panorama of waters, with the Sea of
Marmora on one side, the Golden Horn on the other, and the Bosporus at their
feet. The sun was shining mildly, and the waters were stirred by great and
little vessels; before them on the opposite bank rose the dark green cypresses
which marked the grim cemetery of England's dead, and behind them were the
great turtle-backed mosques and pencil-like minarets of the two cities, and
close at hand the mosaic walls and beautiful gardens of Constantine.
"Your friends the
Hohenwalds don't seem to know you this morning," she said.
"Oh yes; he spoke
to me as we left the hotel," Carlton answered. "But they are on
parade at present. There are a lot of their countrymen among the
tourists."
"I feel rather
sorry for them," Miss Morris said, looking at the group with an amused
smile. "Etiquette cuts them off from so much innocent amusement. Now, you
are a gentleman, and the Duke presumably is, and why should you not go over and
say, `Your Highness, I wish you would present me to your sister, whom I am to
meet at dinner to-morrow night. I admire her very much,' and then you could
point out the historical features to her, and show her where they have finished
off a blue and green tiled wall with a rusty tin roof, and make pretty speeches
to her. It wouldn't hurt her, and it would do you a lot of good. The simplest
way is always the best way, it seems to me."
"Oh yes, of
course," said Carlton. "Suppose he came over here and said: `Carlton,
I wish you would present me to your young American friend. I admire her very
much,' I would probably say: `Do you? Well, you will have to wait until she
expresses some desire to meet you.' No; etiquette is all right in itself, only
some people don't know its laws, and that is the one instance to my mind where
ignorance of the law is no excuse.
Carlton left Miss
Morris talking with the Secretary of the American Legation, and went to look
for Mrs. Downs. When he returned he found that the young Secretary had
apparently asked and obtained permission to present the Duke's equerries and
some of his diplomatic confreres, who were standing now about her in an
attentive semicircle, and pointing out the different palaces and points of
interest. Carlton was somewhat disturbed at the sight, and reproached himself
with not having presented any one to her before. He was sure now that she must
have had a dull time of it; but he wished, nevertheless, that if she was to
meet other men, the Secretary had allowed him to act as master of ceremonies.
"I suppose you
know," that gentleman was saying as Carlton came up, "that when you
pass by Abydos, on the way to Athens, you will see where Leander swam the
Hellespont to meet Hero. That little white light-house is called Leander in
honor of him. It makes rather an interesting contrast-- does it not? -- to
think of that chap swimming along in the dark, and then to find that his
monument to-day is a lighthouse, with revolving lamps and electric appliances,
and with ocean tramps and bridges and men-of-war around it. We have improved in
our mechanism since then," he said, with an air, "but I am afraid the
men of to-day don't do that sort of thing for the women of to-day."
"Then it is the
men who have deteriorated," said one of the equerries, bowing to Miss
Morris; "it is certainly not the women."
The two Americans
looked at Miss Morris to see how she received this, but she smiled
good-naturedly.
"I know a man who
did more than that for a woman," said Carlton, innocently. "He
crossed an ocean and several countries to meet her, and he hasn't met her yet."
Miss Morris looked at
him and laughed, in the safety that no one understood him but herself.
"But he ran no
danger," she answered.
"He didn't, didn't
he?" said Carlton, looking at her closely and laughing. "I think he
was in very great danger all the time."
"Shocking!"
said Miss Morris, reprovingly; "and in her very presence, too." She
knitted her brows and frowned at him. "I really believe if you were in
prison you would make pretty speeches to the jailer's daughter."
"Yes," said
Carlton, boldly, "or even to a woman who was a prisoner herself."
"I don't know what
you mean," she said, turning away from him to the others. "How far
was it that Leander swam?" she asked.
The English captain
pointed out two spots on either bank, and said that the shores of Abydos were a
little over that distance apart.
"As far as
that?" said Miss Morris. "How much he must have cared for her!"
She turned to Carlton for an answer.
"I beg your
pardon," he said. He was measuring the distance between the two points
with his eyes.
"I said how much
he must have cared for her! You wouldn't swim that far for a girl."
"For a girl!"
laughed Carlton, quickly. I was just thinking I would do it for fifty
dollars."
The English captain
gave a hasty glance at the distance he had pointed out, and then turned to
Carlton. "I'll take you," he said, seriously. "I'll bet you
twenty pounds you can't do it." There was an easy laugh at Carlton's
expense, but he only shook his head and smiled.
"Leave him alone,
captain," said the American Secretary. "It seems to me I remember a
story of Mr. Carlton's swimming out from Navesink to meet an ocean liner. It
was about three miles, and the ocean was rather rough, and when they slowed up
he asked them if it was raining in London when they left. They thought he was
mad."
"Is that true,
Carlton?" asked the Englishman.
"Something like
it," said the American, except that I didn't ask them if it was raining in
London. I asked them for a drink, and it was they who were mad. They thought I
was drowning, and slowed up to lower a boat, and when they found out I was just
swimming around they were naturally angry.
"Well, I'm glad
you didn't bet with me," said the captain, with a relieved laugh.
That evening, as the
Englishman was leaving the smoking-room, and after he had bidden Carlton
good-night, he turned back and said: "I didn't like to ask you before
those men this morning, but there was something about your swimming adventure I
wanted to know: Did you get that drink?"
I did," said
Carlton -- "in a bottle. They nearly broke my shoulder."
As Carlton came into
the breakfast-room on the morning of the day he was to meet the Princess Aline
at dinner, Miss Morris was there alone, and he sat down at the same table,
opposite to her. She looked at him critically, and smiled with evident
amusement.
"`To-day,'"
she quoted, solemnly, "`the birthday of my life has come.'"
Carlton poured out his
coffee, with a shake of his head, and frowned. "Oh, you can laugh,"
he said, "but I didn't sleep at all last night. I lay awake making
speeches to her. I know they are going to put me between the wrong
sisters," he complained, "or next to one of those old ladies-in-waiting,
or whatever they are."
How are you going to
begin?" said Miss Morris. "Will you tell her you have followed her
from London -- or from New York, rather -- that you are young Lochinvar, who
came out of the West, and -- "
"I don't
know," said Carlton, meditatively, "just how I shall begin; but I
know the curtain is going to rise promptly at eight o'clock -- about the time
the soup comes on, I think. I don't see how she can help but be impressed a
little bit. It isn't every day a man hurries around the globe on account of a
girl's photograph; and she is beautiful, isn't she?"
Miss Morris nodded her
head encouragingly.
"Do you know,
sometimes," said Carlton, glancing over his shoulders to see if the
waiters were out of hearing, "I fancy she has noticed me. Once or twice I
have turned my head in her direction without meaning to, and found her looking
-- well, looking my way, at least. Don't you think that is a good sign?"
he asked, eagerly.
"It depends on
what you call a `good sign,`" said Miss Morris, judicially. "It is a
sign you're good to look at, if that's what you want. But you probably know
that already, and it's nothing to your credit. It certainly isn't a sign that a
person cares for you because she prefers to look at your profile rather than at
what the dragomans are trying to show her."
Carlton drew himself up
stiffly. "If you knew your Alice better," he said, with severity,
"you would understand that it is not polite to make personal remarks. I
ask you, as my confidante, if you think she has noticed me, and you make fun of
my looks! That's not the part of a confidante."
"Noticed
you!" laughed Miss Morris, scornfully. "How could she help it? You
are always in the way. You are at the door whenever they go out or come in, and
when we are visiting mosques and palaces you are invariably looking at her
instead of the tombs and things, with a wistful far-away look, as though you
saw a vision. The first time you did it, after you had turned away I saw her
feel to see if her hair was all right. You quite embarrassed her."
"I didn't -- I
don't!" stammered Carlton, indignantly!" I wouldn't be so rude. Oh, I
see I'll have to get another confidante; you are most unsympathetic and
unkind."
But Miss Morris showed
her sympathy later in the day, when Carlton needed it sorely; for the dinner
towards which he had looked with such pleasurable anticipations and lover-like
misgivings did not take place. The Sultan, so the equerry informed him, had,
with Oriental unexpectedness, invited the Duke to dine that night at the
Palace, and the Duke, much to his expressed regret, had been forced to accept
what was in the nature of a command. He sent word by his equerry, however, that
the dinner to Mr. Carlton was only a pleasure deferred, and that at Athens,
where he understood Carlton was also going, he hoped to have the pleasure of
entertaining him and making him known to his sisters.
"He is a selfish
young egoist," said Carlton to Mrs. Downs. "As if I cared whether he
was at the dinner or not! Why couldn't he have fixed it so I might have dined
with his sisters alone? We would never have missed him. I'll never meet her
now. I know it; I feel it. Fate is against me. Now I will have to follow them
on to Athens, and something will turn up there to keep me away from her. You'll
see; you'll see. I wonder where they go from Athens?"
The Hohenwalds departed
the next morning, and as their party had engaged all the state-rooms in the
little Italian steamer, Carlton was forced to wait over for the next. He was
very gloomy over his disappointment, and Miss Morris did her best to amuse him.
She and her aunt were never idle now, and spent the last few days of their stay
in Constantinople in the bazars or in excursions up and down the river.
"These are my last
days of freedom," Miss Morris said to him once, "and I mean to make
the most of them. After this there will be no more travelling for me. And I
love it so!" she added, wistfully.
Carlton made no
comment, but he felt a certain contemptuous pity for the young man in America
who had required such a sacrifice. "She is too nice a girl to let him know
she is making a sacrifice," he thought, "or giving up anything for
him, but she won't forget it." And Carlton again commended himself for not
having asked any woman to make any sacrifices for him.
They left Constantinople
for Athens one moonlight night, three days after the Hohenwalds had taken their
departure, and as the evening and the air were warm, they remained upon the
upper deck until the boat had entered the Dardanelles. There were few
passengers, and Mrs. Downs went below early, leaving Miss Morris and Carlton
hanging over the rail, and looking down upon a band of Hungarian gypsies, who
were playing the weird music of their country on the deck beneath them. The low
receding hills lay close on either hand, and ran back so sharply from the
narrow waterway that they seemed to shut in the boat from the world beyond. The
moonlight showed a little mud fort or a thatched cottage on the bank
fantastically, as through a mist, and from time to time as they sped forward
they saw the camp-fire of a sentry, and his shadow as he passed between it and
them, or stopped to cover it with wood. The night was so still that they could
hear the waves in the steamer's wake washing up over the stones on either
shore, and the muffled beat of the engines echoed back from either side of the
valley through which they passed. There was a great lantern hanging midway from
the mast, and shining down upon the lower deck. It showed a group of Greeks,
Turks, and Armenians, in strange costumes, sleeping, huddled together in
picturesque confusion over the bare boards, or wide-awake and voluble, smoking
and chatting together in happy company. The music of the tizanes rose in notes
of passionate ecstasy and sharp, unexpected bursts of melody. It ceased and
be-an again, as though the musicians were feeling their way, and then burst out
once more into shrill defiance. It stirred Carlton with a strange turbulent
unrest. From the banks the night wind brought soft odors of fresh earth and of
heavy foliage.
"The music of
different countries," Carlton said at last, "means many different
things. But it seems to me that the music of Hungary is the music of
love."
Miss Morris crossed her
arms comfortably on the rail, and he heard her laugh softly. "Oh no, it is
not," she said, undisturbed. "It is a passionate, gusty, heady sort
of love, if you like, but it's no more like the real thing than burgundy is
like clear, cold, good water. It's not the real thing at all."
"I beg your
pardon," said Carlton, meekly.
"Of course I don't
know anything about it." He had been waked out of the spell which the
night and the tizanes had placed upon him as completely as though some one had
shaken him sharply by the shoulder. "I bow," he said, "to your
superior knowledge. I know nothing about it."
"No; you are quite
right. I don't believe you do know anything about it," said the girl,
"or you wouldn't have made such a comparison."
"Do you know, Miss
Morris," said Carlton, seriously, "that I believe I'm not able to
care for a woman as other men do -- at least as some men do; it's just lacking
in me, and always will be lacking. It's like an ear for music; if you haven't
got it, if it isn't born in you, you'll never have it. It's not a thing you can
cultivate, and I feel that it's not only a misfortune, but a fault. Now I
honestly believe that I care more for the Princess Aline, whom I have never
met, than many other men could care for her if they knew her well; but what
they feel would last, and I have doubts from past experience that what I feel
would. I don't doubt it while it exists, but it never does exist long, and so I
am afraid it is going to be with me to the end of the chapter." He paused
for a moment, but the girl did not answer. "I am speaking in earnest
now," he added, with a rueful laugh.
"I see you
are," she replied, briefly. She seemed to be considering his condition as
he had described it to her, and he did not interrupt her. From below them came
the notes of the waltz the gypsies played. It was full of the undercurrent of
sadness that a waltz should have, and filled out what Carlton said as the music
from the orchestra in a theatre heightens the effect without interrupting the
words of the actor on the stage.
"It is strange,"
said Miss Morris. "I should have thought you were a man who would care
very much and in just the right way. But I don't believe really -- I'm sorry,
but I don't believe you do know what love means at all."
"Oh, it isn't as
bad as that," said Carlton. "I think I know what it is, and what it
means to other people, but I can't feel it myself. The best idea I ever got of
it -- the thing that made it clear to me -- was a line in a play. It seemed to
express it better than any of the love-poems I ever read. It was in
Shenandoah."
Miss Morris laughed.
"I beg your
pardon," said Carlton.
"I beg
yours," she said. "It was only the incongruity that struck me. It
seemed so odd to be quoting Shenandoah here in the Dardanelles, with these
queer people below us and ancient Troy on one hand -- it took me by surprise,
that's all. Please go on. What was it impressed you?"
"Well, the hero in
the play," said Carlton, is an officer in the Northern army, and he is
lying wounded in a house near the Shenandoah Valley. The girl he loves lives in
this house, and is nursing him; but she doesn't love him, because she
sympathizes with the South. At least she says she doesn't love him. Both armies
are forming in the valley below to begin the battle, and he sees his own
regiment hurrying past to join them, So he gets up and staggers out on the
stage, which is set to show the yard in front of the farm-house, and he calls
for his horse to follow his men. Then the girl runs out and begs him not to go;
and he asks why, what does it matter to her whether he goes or not? And she
says, `But I cannot let you go; you may be killed.' And he says again, `What is
that to you?' And she says: `It is everything to me. I love you.' And he makes
a grab at her with his wounded arm, and at that instant both armies open fire
in the valley below, and the whole earth and sky seem to open and shut, and the
house rocks. The girl rushes at him and crowds up against his breast, and
cries: `What is that? Oh, what is that?' and he holds her tight to him and laughs,
and says: `That? That's only a battle -- you love me.'"
Miss Morris looked
steadfastly over the side of the boat at the waters rushing by beneath, smiling
to herself. Then she turned her face towards Carlton, and nodded her head at
him. "I think," she said, dryly, "that you have a fair idea of
what it means; a rough working-plan at least -- enough to begin on."
"I said that I
knew what it meant to others. I am complaining that I cannot feel it
myself."
"That will come in
time, no doubt," she said, encouragingly, with the air of a connoisseur;
"and let me tell you," she added, "that it will be all the
better for the woman that you have doubted yourself so long."
"You think
so?" said Carlton, eagerly.
Miss Morris laughed at
his earnestness, and left him to go below to ask her aunt to join them, but
Mrs. Downs preferred to read in the saloon, and Miss Morris returned alone. She
had taken off her Eton jacket and pulled on a heavy blue football sweater, and
over this a reefer. The jersey clung to her and showed the lines of her figure,
and emphasized the freedom and grace with which she made every movement. She
looked, as she walked at his side with her hands in the pockets of her coat and
with a flat sailor hat on her head, like a tall, handsome boy; but when they
stopped and stood where the light fell full on her hair and the exquisite
coloring of her skin, Carlton thought her face had never seemed so delicate or
fair as it did then, rising from the collar of the rough jersey, and contrasted
with the hat and coat of a man's attire. They paced the deck for an hour later,
until every one else had left it, and at midnight were still loath to give up
the beautiful night and the charm of their strange surroundings. There were
long silent places in their talk, during which Carlton tramped beside her with
his head half turned, looking at her and noting with an artist's eye the free
light step, the erect carriage, and the unconscious beauty of her face. The
captain of the steamer joined them after midnight, and falling into step,
pointed out to Miss Morris where great cities had stood, where others lay
buried, and where beyond the hills were the almost inaccessible monasteries of
the Greek Church. The moonlight turned the banks into shadowy substances, in
which the ghosts of former days seemed to make a part; and spurred by the young
girl's interest, the Italian, to entertain her, called up all the legends of
mythology and the stories of Roman explorers and Turkish conquerors.
"I turn in
now," he said, after Miss Morris had left them. "A most charming
young lady. Is it not so?" he added, waving his cigarette in a gesture
which expressed the ineffectiveness of the adjective.
"Yes, very,"
said Carlton. "Good-night, sir."
He turned, and leaned
with both elbows on the rail, and looked out at the misty banks, puffing at his
cigar. Then he dropped it hissing into the water, and, stifling a yawn, looked
up and down the length of the deserted deck. It seemed particularly bare and
empty.
What a pity she's
engaged!" Carlton said. "She loses so much by it."
They steamed slowly
into the harbor of the Piræus at an early hour the next morning, with a
flotilla of small boats filled with shrieking porters and hotel-runners at the
sides. These men tossed their painters to the crew, and crawled up them like a
boarding crew of pirates, running wildly about the deck, and laying violent
hands on any piece of baggage they saw unclaimed. The passengers' trunks had
been thrown out in a heap on the deck, and Nolan and Carlton were clambering
over them, looking for their own effects, while Miss Morris stood below, as far
out of the confusion as she could place herself, and pointed out the different
pieces that belonged to her. As she stood there one of the hotel-runners, a
burly, greasy Levantine in pursuit of a possible victim, shouldered her
intentionally and roughly out of the way. He shoved her so sharply that she
lost her balance and fell back against the rail. Carlton saw what had happened,
and made a flying leap from the top of the pile of trunks, landing beside her,
and in time to seize the escaping offender by the collar. He jerked him back
off his feet.
"How dare you --
" he began.
But he did not finish.
He felt the tips of Miss Morris's fingers laid upon his shoulder, and her voice
saying, in an annoyed tone: "Don't; please don't." And, to his
surprise, his fingers lost their grip on the man's shirt, his arms dropped at
his side, and his blood began to flow calmly again through his veins. Carlton
was aware that he had a very quick temper. He was always engaging in street
rows, as he called them, with men who he thought had imposed on him or on some
one else, and though he was always ashamed of himself later, his temper had
never been satisfied without a blow or an apology. Women had also touched him
before, and possibly with a greater familiarity; but these had stirred him, not
quieted him; and men who had laid detaining hands on him had had them beaten
down for their pains. But this girl had merely touched him gently, and he had
been made helpless. It was most perplexing; and while the custom-house
officials were passing his luggage, he found himself rubbing his arm curiously,
as though it were numb, and looking down at it with an amused smile. He did not
comment on the incident, although he smiled at the recollection of his prompt
obedience several times during the day. But as he was stepping into the cab to
drive to Athens, he saw the offending ruffian pass, dripping with water, and
muttering bitter curses. When he saw Carlton he disappeared instantly in the
crowd. Carlton stepped over to where Nolan sat beside the driver on the box.
"Nolan," he said, in a low voice, "isn't that the fellow who --
"
"Yes, sir,"
said Nolan, touching his hat gravely. "He was pulling a valise one way, and
the gentleman that owned it, sir, was pulling it the other, and the gentleman
let go sudden, and the Italian went over backwards off the pier."
Carlton smiled grimly
with secret satisfaction.
"Nolan," he
said, "you're not telling the truth. You did it yourself." Nolan
touched his cap and coughed consciously. There had been no detaining fingers on
Nolan's arm.
You are coming now,
Miss Morris," exclaimed Carlton from the front of the carriage in which
they were moving along the sunny road to Athens, "into a land where one
restores his lost illusions. Anybody who wishes to get back his belief in
beautiful things should come here to do it, just as he would go to a German
sanitarium to build up his nerves or his appetite. You have only to drink in
the atmosphere and you are cured. I know no better antidote than Athens for a
siege of cable-cars and muddy asphalt pavements and a course of Robert Elsmeres
and the Heavenly Twins. Wait until you see the statues of the young athletes in
the Museum," he cried, enthusiastically, "and get a glimpse of the
blue sky back of Mount Hymettus, and the moonlight some evening on the
Acropolis, and you'll be convinced that nothing counts for much in this world
but health and straight limbs, and tall marble pillars, and eyes trained to see
only what is beautiful. Give people a love for beauty and a respect for health,
Miss Morris, and the result is going to be, what they once had here, the best
art and the greatest writers and satirists and poets. The same audience that
applauded Euripides and Sophocles in the open theatre used to cross the road
the same day to applaud the athletes who ran naked in the Olympian games, and
gave them as great honor. I came here once on a walking tour with a chap who
wasn't making as much of himself as he should have done, and he went away a
changed man, and became a personage in the world, and you would never guess
what it was that did it. He saw a statue of one of the Greek gods in the Museum
which showed certain muscles that he couldn't find in his own body, and he told
me he was going to train down until they did show; and he stopped drinking and
loafing to do it, and took to exercising and working; and by the time the
muscles showed out clear and strong he was so keen over life that he wanted to
make the most of it, and, as I said, he has done it. That's what a respect for
his own body did for him."
The carriage stopped at
the hotel on one side of the public square of Athens, with the palace and its
gardens blocking one end, and yellow houses with red roofs, and gay awnings
over the cafes, surrounding it. It was a bright sunny day, and the city was
clean and cool and pretty.
"Breakfast?"
exclaimed Miss Morris, in answer to Carlton's inquiry; "yes, I suppose so,
but I won't feel safe until I have my feet on that rock." She was standing
on the steps of the hotel, looking up with expectant, eager eyes at the great
Acropolis above the city.
"It has been there
for a long time now," suggested Carlton, "and I think you can risk
its being there for a half- hour longer."
"Well," she
said, reluctantly, "but I don't wish to lose this chance. There might be
an earthquake, for instance."
"We are likely to
see them this morning," said Carlton, as he left the hotel with the ladies
and drove towards the Acropolis. "Nolan has been interviewing the English
maid, and she tells him they spend the greater part of their time up there on
the rock. They are living very simply here, as they did in Paris; that is, for
the present. On Wednesday the King gives a dinner and a reception in their
honor."
"When does your
dinner come off asked Miss Morris.
"Never," said
Carlton, grimly.
"One of the
reasons why I like to come back to Athens so much," said Mrs. Downs,
"is because there are so few other tourists here to spoil the local color
for you, and there are almost as few guides as tourists, so that you can wander
around undisturbed and discover things for yourself. They don't label every
fallen column, and place fences around the temples. They seem to put you on
your good behavior. Then I always like to go to a place where you are as much
of a curiosity to the people as they are to you. It seems to excuse your staring
about you."
"A
curiosity!" exclaimed Carlton; "I should say so! The last time I was
here I tried to wear a pair of knickerbockers around the city, and the people
stared so that I had to go back to the hotel and change them. I shouldn't have
minded it so much in any other country, but I thought men who wore Jaeger
underclothing and women's petticoats for a national costume might have excused
so slight an eccentricity as knickerbockers. They had no right to throw the
first stone."
The rock upon which the
temples of the Acropolis are built is more of a hill than a rock. It is much
steeper upon one side than the other, with a sheer fall a hundred yards broad;
on the opposite side there are the rooms of the Hospital of Aesculapius and the
theatres of Dionysus and Herodes Atticus. The top of the rock holds the
Parthenon and the other smaller temples, or what yet remains of them, and its
surface is littered with broken marble and stones and pieces of rock. The top
is so closely built over that the few tourists who visit it can imagine
themselves its sole occupants for a half-hour at a time. When Carlton and his
friends arrived, the place appeared quite deserted. They left the carriage at
the base of the rock, and climbed up to the entrance on foot.
"Now, before I go
on to the Parthenon," said Miss Morris, "I want to walk around the
sides, and see what is there. I shall begin with that theatre to the left, and
I warn you that I mean to take my time about it. So you people who have been
here before can run along by yourselves, but I mean to enjoy it leisurely. I am
safe by myself here, am I not?" she asked.
"As safe as though
you were in the Metropolitan Museum," said Carlton, as he and Mrs. Downs
followed Miss Morris along the side of the hill towards the ruined theatre of
Herodes, and stood at its top, looking down into the basin below. From their
feet ran a great semicircle of marble seats, descending tier below tier to a
marble pavement, and facing a great ruined wall of pillars and arches which in
the past had formed the background for the actors. From the height on which
they stood above the city they could see the green country stretching out for
miles on every side and swimming in the warm sunlight, the dark groves of
myrtle on the hills, the silver ribbon of the inland water, and the dark blue Ægean
Sea. The bleating of sheep and the tinkling of the bells came up to them from
the pastures below, and they imagined they could hear the shepherds piping to
their flocks from one little hill-top to another.
"The country is
not much changed," said Carlton, "And when you stand where we are
now, you can imagine that you see the procession winding its way over the road
to the Eleusinian Mysteries, with the gilded chariots, and the children
carrying garlands, and the priestesses leading the bulls for the
sacrifice."
What can we imagine is
going on here?" said Miss Morris, pointing with her parasol to the theatre
below.
"Oh, this is much
later," said Carlton. "This was built by the Romans. They used to act
and to hold their public meetings here. This corresponds to the top row of our
gallery, and you can imagine that you are looking down on the bent backs of
hundreds of bald-headed men in white robes, listening to the speakers strutting
about below there."
"I wonder how much
they could hear from this height?" said Mrs. Downs.
"Well, they had
that big wall for a sounding-board, and the air is so soft here that their
voices should have carried easily, and I believe they wore masks with
mouth-pieces, that conveyed the sound like a fireman's trumpet. If you like, I
will run down there and call up to you, and you can hear how it sounded. I will
speak in my natural voice first, and if that doesn't reach you, wave your
parasol, and I will try it a little louder."
"Oh, do!" said
Miss Morris. "It will be very good of you. I should like to hear a real
speech in the theatre of Herodes," she said, as she seated herself on the
edge of the marble crater.
"I'll have to
speak in English," said Carlton, as he disappeared; "my Greek isn't
good enough to carry that far."
Mrs. Downs seated
herself beside her niece, and Carlton began scrambling down the side of the
amphitheatre. The marble benches were broken in parts, and where they were
perfect were covered with a fine layer of moss as smooth and soft as green
velvet, so that Carlton, when he was not laboriously feeling for his next
foothold with the toe of his boot, was engaged in picking spring flowers from
the beds of moss and sticking them, for safe-keeping, in his button-hole. He was
several minutes in making the descent, and so busily occupied in doing it that
he did not look up until he had reached the level of the ground, and jumped
lightly from the first row of seats to the stage, covered with moss, which lay
like a heavy rug over the marble pavement. When he did look up he saw a tableau
that made his heart, which was beating quickly from the exertion of the
descent, stand still with consternation. The Hohenwalds had, in his short
absence, descended from the entrance of the Acropolis, and had stopped on their
way to the road below to look into the cool green and white basin of the
theatre. At the moment Carlton looked up the Duke was standing in front of Mrs.
Downs and Miss Morris, and all of the men had their hats off. Then, in pantomime,
and silhouetted against the blue sky behind them, Carlton saw the Princesses
advance beside their brother, and Mrs. Downs and her niece courtesied three
times, and then the whole party faced about in a line and looked down at him.
The meaning of the tableau was only too plain.
"Good
heavens!" gasped Carlton. "Everybody's getting introduced to
everybody else, and I've missed the whole thing! If they think I'm going to
stay down here and amuse them, and miss all the fun myself, they are greatly
mistaken." He made a mad rush for the front first row of seats; but there
was a cry of remonstrance from above, and, looking up, he saw all of the men
waving him back.
"Speech!"
cried the young English Captain, applauding loudly, as though welcoming an
actor on his first entrance. "Hats off!" he cried. "Down in
front! Speech!"
"Confound that
ass!" said Carlton, dropping back to the marble pavement again, and gazing
impotently up at the row of figures outlined against the sky. "I must look
like a bear in the bear-pit at the Zoo," he growled. "They'll be
throwing buns to me next." He could see the two elder sisters talking to
Mrs. Downs, who was evidently explaining his purpose in going down to the stage
of the theatre, and he could see the Princess Aline bending forward, with both
hands on her parasol, and smiling. The captain made a trumpet of his hands, and
asked why be didn't begin.
"Hello! how are
you?" Carlton called back, waving his hat at him in some embarrassment.
"I wonder if I look as much like a fool as I feel?" he muttered.
"What did you say?
We can't hear you," answered the captain.
"Louder!
louder!" called the equerries. Carlton swore at them under his breath, and
turned and gazed round the hole in which he was penned in order to make them
believe that he had given up the idea of making a speech, or had ever intended
doing so. He tried to think of something clever to shout back at them, and
rejected "Ye men of Athens" as being too flippant, and Friends,
Countrymen, Romans," as requiring too much effort. When he looked up again
the Hohenwalds were moving on their way, and as he started once more to scale
the side of the theatre the Duke waved his hand at him in farewell, and gave
another hand to his sisters, who disappeared with him behind the edge of the
upper row of seats. Carlton turned at once and dropped into one of the marble
chairs and bowed his head. When he did reach the top Miss Morris held out a
sympathetic hand to him and shook her head sadly, but he could see that she was
pressing her lips tightly together to keep from smiling.
"Oh, it's all very
funny for you," he said, refusing her hand. "I don't believe you are
in love with anybody. You don't know what it means."
They revisited the rock
on the next day and on the day after, and then left Athens for an inland
excursion to stay overnight. Miss Morris returned from it with the sense of
having done her duty once, and by so doing having earned the right to act as
she pleased in the future. What she best pleased to do was to wander about over
the broad top of the Acropolis, with no serious intent of studying its
historical values, but rather, as she explained it, for the simple satisfaction
of feeling that she was there. She liked to stand on the edge of the low wall
along its top and look out over the picture of sea and plain and mountains that
lay below her. The sun shone brightly, and the wind swept by them as though
they were on the bridge of an ocean steamer, and there was the added
invigorating sense of pleasure that comes to us when we stand on a great
height. Carlton was sitting at her feet, shielded from the wind by a fallen
column, and gazing up at her with critical approval.
"You look like a
sort of a `Winged Victory' up there," he said, "with the wind blowing
your skirts about and your hair coming down."
"I don't remember
that the `Winged Victory' has any hair to blow about," suggested Miss
Morris.
"I'd like to paint
you," continued Carlton, "just as you are standing now, only I would
put you in a Greek dress; and you could stand a Greek dress better than almost
any one I know. I would paint you with your head up and one hand shielding your
eyes, and the other pressed against your breast. It would be stunning." He
spoke enthusiastically, but in quite an impersonal tone, as though he were
discussing the posing of a model.
Miss Morris jumped down
from the low wall on which she had been standing, and said, simply, "Of
course I should like to have you paint me very much."
Mrs. Downs looked up
with interest to see if Mr. Carlton was serious.
"When?" said
Carlton, vaguely. "Oh, I don't know. Of course this is entirely too nice
to last, and you will be going home soon, and then when I do get back to the
States you will -- you will have other things to do."
"Yes,"
repeated Miss Morris, "I shall have something else to do besides gazing
out at the Ægean Sea." She raised her head and looked across the rock for
a moment with some interest. Her eyes, which had grown wistful, lighted again
with amusement. "Here are your friends," she said, smiling.
"No!"
exclaimed Carlton, scrambling to his feet.
"Yes," said
Miss Morris. "The Duke has seen us, and is coming over here."
When Carlton had gained
his feet and turned to look, his friends had separated in different directions,
and were strolling about alone or in pairs among the great columns of the
Parthenon. But the Duke came directly towards them, and seated himself on a low
block of marble in front of the two ladies. After a word or two about the
beauties of the place, he asked if they would go to the reception which the
King gave to him on the day following. They answered that they should like to
come very much, and the Prince expressed his satisfaction, and said that he
would see that the chamberlain sent them invitations. "And you, Mr.
Carlton, you will come also, I hope. I wish you to be presented to my sisters.
They are only amateurs in art, but they are great admirers of your work, and
they have rebuked me for not having already presented you. We were all
disappointed," he continued, courteously, "at not having you to dine
with us that night in Constantinople, but now I trust I shall see something of
you here. You must tell us what we are to admire."
"That is very
easy," said Carlton. "Everything."
"You are quite
right," said the Prince, bowing to the ladies as he moved away. It is all
very beautiful."
"Well, now you
certainly will meet her," said Miss Morris.
"Oh no, I
won't," said Carlton, with resignation. "I have had two chances and
lost them, and I'll miss this one too."
"Well, there is a
chance you shouldn't miss," said Miss Morris, pointing and nodding her
head. "There she is now, and all alone. She's sketching, isn't she, or
taking notes? What is she doing?"
Carlton looked eagerly
in the direction Miss Morris had signified, and saw the Princess Aline sitting
at some distance from them, with a book on her lap. She glanced up from this
now and again to look at something ahead of her, and was apparently deeply
absorbed in her occupation.
"There is your
opportunity," said Mrs. Downs; "and we are going back to the hotel.
Shall we see you at luncheon?"
"Yes," said
Carlton, "unless I get a position as drawing-master; in that case I shall
be here teaching the three amateurs in art. Do you think I can do it?" he
asked Miss Morris.
"Decidedly,"
she answered. "I have found you a most educational young person."
They went away
together, and Carlton moved cautiously towards the spot where the Princess was
sitting. He made a long and roundabout detour as he did so, in order to keep
himself behind her. He did not mean to come so near that she would see him, but
he took a certain satisfaction in looking at her when she was alone, though her
loneliness was only a matter of the moment, and though he knew that her people
were within a hundred yards of her. He was in consequence somewhat annoyed and
surprised to see another young man dodging in and out among the pillars of the
Parthenon immediately ahead of him, and to find that this young man also had
his attention centred on the young girl, who sat unconsciously sketching in the
foreground.
"Now what the
devil can he want?" muttered Carlton, his imagination taking alarm at
once. "If it would only prove to be some one who meant harm to her,"
he thought -- "a brigand, or a beggar, who might be obligingly insolent,
or even a tipsy man, what a chance it would afford for heroic action!"
With this hope he moved
forward quickly but silently, hoping that the stranger might prove even to be
an anarchist with a grudge against royalty. And as he advanced he had the
satisfaction of seeing the Princess glance over her shoulder, and, observing
the man, rise and walk quickly away towards the edge of the rock. There she
seated herself with her face towards the city, and with her back firmly set
against her pursuer.
" He is annoying
her!" exclaimed Carlton, delightedly, as he hurried forward. "It
looks as though my chance had come at last." But as he approached the
stranger he saw, to his great disappointment, that he had nothing more serious
to deal with than one of the international army of amateur photographers, who
had been stalking the Princess as a hunter follows an elk, or as he would have
stalked a race-horse or a prominent politician, or a Lord Mayor's show,
everything being fish that came within the focus of his camera. A helpless
statue and an equally helpless young girl were both good subjects and at his
mercy. He was bending over, with an anxious expression of countenance, and
focussing his camera on the back of the Princess Aline, when Carlton approached
from the rear. As the young man put his finger on the button of the camera,
Carlton jogged his arm with his elbow, and pushed the enthusiastic tourist to
one side.
"say,"
exclaimed that individual, "look where you're going, will you? You spoiled
that plate."
"I'll spoil your
camera if you annoy that young lady any longer," said Carlton, in a low
voice.
The photographer was
rapidly rewinding his roll, and the fire of pursuit was still in his eye.
"She's a
Princess," he explained, in an excited whisper.
"Well," said
Carlton, "even a Princess is entitled to some consideration.
Besides," he said, in a more amicable tone, "you haven't a permit to
photograph on the Acropolis. You know you haven't." Carlton was quite sure
of this, because there were no such permits.
The amateur looked up
in some dismay. I didn't know you had to have them," he said. "Where
can I get one?"
"The King may give
you one," said Carlton. "He lives at the palace. If they catch you up
here without a license, they will confiscate your camera and lock you up. You
had better vanish before they see you."
"Thank you. I
will," said the tourist, anxiously.
"Now,"
thought Carlton, smiling pleasantly, "when he goes to the palace with that
box and asks for a permit, they'll think he is either a dynamiter or a crank,
and before they are through with him his interest in photography will have
sustained a severe shock."
As Carlton turned from
watching the rapid flight of the photographer, he observed that the Princess
had remarked it also, as she had no doubt been a witness of what had passed,
even if she had not overheard all that had been said. She rose from her enforced
position of refuge with a look of relief, and came directly towards Carlton
along the rough path that led through the debris on the top of the Acropolis.
Carlton had thought, as he watched her sitting on the wall, with her chin
resting on her hand, that she would make a beautiful companion picture to the
one he had wished to paint of Miss Morris -- the one girl standing upright,
looking fearlessly out to sea, on the top of the low wall, with the wind
blowing her skirts about her, and her hair tumbled in the breeze, and the other
seated, bending intently forward, as though watching for the return of a long-
delayed vessel; a beautifully sad face, fine and delicate and noble, the face
of a girl on the figure of a woman. And when she rose he made no effort to move
away, or, indeed, to pretend not to have seen her, but stood looking at her as
though he had the right to do so, and as though she must know he had that
right. As she came towards him the Princess Aline did not stop, nor even
shorten her steps; but as she passed opposite to him she bowed her thanks with
a sweet impersonal smile and a dropping of the eyes, and continued steadily on
her way.
Carlton stood for some
short time looking after her, with his hat still at his side. She seemed
farther from him at that moment than she had ever been before, although she had
for the first time recognized him. But he knew that it was only as a human
being that she had recognized him. He put on his hat, and sat down on a rock
with his elbows on his knees, and filled his pipe.
"If that had been
any other girl," he thought, "I would have gone up to her and said,
`Was that man annoying you?' and she would have said, `Yes; thank you,' or
something; and I would have walked along with her until we had come up to her friends,
and she would have told them I had been of some slight service to her, and they
would have introduced us, and all would have gone well. But because she is a
Princess she cannot be approached in that way. At least she does not think so,
and I have to act as she has been told I should act, and not as I think I
should. After all, she is only a very beautiful girl, and she must be very
tired of her cousins and grandmothers, and of not being allowed to see any one
else. These royalties make a very picturesque show for the rest of us, but
indeed it seems rather hard on them. A hundred years from now there will be no
more kings and queens, and the writers of that day will envy us, just as the
writers of this day envy the men who wrote of chivalry and tournaments, and
they will have to choose their heroes from bank presidents, and their heroines
from lady lawyers and girl politicians and type-writers. What a stupid world it
will be then!"
The next day brought
the reception to the Hohenwalds; and Carlton, entering the reading-room of the
hotel on the same afternoon, found Miss Morris and her aunt there together
taking tea. They both looked at him with expressions of such genuine
commiseration that he stopped just as he was going to seat himself and eyed
them defiantly.
"Don't tell
me," he exclaimed, "that this has fallen through too!"
Miss Morris nodded her
head silently.
Carlton dropped into
the chair beside them, and folded his arms with a frown of grim resignation.
"What is it?" he asked. Have they postponed the reception?"
"No," Miss
Morris said; "but the Princess Aline will not be there."
Of course not,"
said Carlton, calmly, "of course not. May I ask why? I knew that she
wouldn't be there, but I may possibly be allowed to express some
curiosity."
"She turned her
ankle on one of the loose stones on the Acropolis this afternoon," said
Miss Morris, "and sprained it so badly that they had to carry her --
"
"Who carried
her?" Carlton demanded, fiercely.
"Some of her
servants."
"Of course, of
course!" cried Carlton.
That's the way it
always will be. I was there the whole afternoon, and I didn't see her. I wasn't
there to help her. It's Fate, that's what it is -- Fate! There's no use in my
trying to fight against Fate. Still," he added, anxiously, with a sudden
access of hope, "she may be well by this evening."
"I hardly think
she will," said Miss Morris, "but we will trust so."
The King's palace and
gardens stretch along one end of the public park, and are but just across the
street from the hotel where the Hohenwalds and the Americans were staying. As
the hotel was the first building on the left of the square, Carlton could see
from his windows the illuminations, and the guards of honor, and the carriages
arriving and departing, and the citizens of Athens crowding the parks and
peering through the iron rails into the King's garden. It was a warm night, and
lighted grandly by a full moon that showed the Acropolis in silhouette against
the sky, and gave a strangely theatrical look to the yellow house fronts and
red roofs of the town. Every window in the broad front of the palace was
illuminated, and through the open doors came the sound of music, and one
without could see rows of tall servants in the King's blue and white livery,
and the men of his guard in their white petticoats and black and white jackets
and red caps. Carlton pulled a light coat over his evening dress, and, with an
agitation he could hardly explain, walked across the street and entered the
palace. The line of royalties had broken by the time he reached the ballroom,
and the not over-severe etiquette of the Greek court left him free, after a bow
to those who still waited to receive it, to move about as he pleased. His most
earnest desire was to learn whether or not the Princess Aline was present, and
with that end he clutched the English adjutant as that gentleman was hurrying
past him, and asked eagerly if the Princess had recovered from her accident.
"No," said
the officer; "she's able to walk about, but not to stand, and sit out a
dinner, and dance, and all this sort of thing. Too bad, wasn't it?"
"Yes," said
Carlton, "very bad." He released his hand from the other's arm, and
dropped back among the men grouped about the doorway. His disappointment was
very keen. Indeed, he had not known how much this meeting with the Princess had
meant to him until he experienced this disappointment, which was succeeded by a
wish to find Miss Morris, and have her sympathize and laugh with him. He became
conscious, as he searched with growing impatience the faces of those passing
and repassing before him, of how much the habit of going to Miss Morris for
sympathy in his unlucky love-affair had grown of late upon him. He wondered
what he would have done in his travels without her, and whether he should have
had the interest to carry on his pursuit had she not been there to urge him on,
and to mock at him when he grew fainthearted.
But when he finally did
discover her he stood quite still, and for an instant doubted if it were she.
The girl he saw seemed to be a more beautiful sister of the Miss Morris he knew
-- a taller, fairer, and more radiant personage; and he feared that it was not
she, until he remembered that this was the first time he had ever seen her with
her hair dressed high upon her head, and in the more distinguished accessories
of a décolleté gown and train. Miss Morris had her hand on the arm of one of
the equerries, who was battling good-naturedly with the crowd, and trying to
draw her away from two persistent youths in diplomatic uniform who were
laughing and pressing forward in close pursuit on the other side. Carlton
approached her with a certain feeling of diffidence, which was most unusual to
him, and asked if she were dancing.
"Mr. Carlton shall
decide for me," Miss Morris said, dropping the equerry's arm and standing
beside the American. "I have promised all of these gentlemen," she
explained, "to dance with them, and now they won't agree as to which is to
dance first. They've wasted half this waltz already in discussing it, and they
make it much more difficult by saying that no matter how I decide, they will
fight duels with the one I choose, which is most unpleasant for me.
"Most unpleasant
for the gentleman you choose, too," suggested Carlton.
"So,"
continued Miss Morris, "I have decided to leave it to you."
"Well, if I am to
arbitrate between the powers," said Carlton, with a glance at the three
uniforms, "my decision is that as they insist on fighting duels in any
event, you had better dance with me until they have settled it between them,
and then the survivor can have the next dance."
"That's a very
good idea," said Miss Morris; and taking Carlton's arm, she bowed to the
three men and drew away.
"Mr.
Carlton," said the equerry, with a bow," has added another argument
in favor of maintaining standing armies, and of not submitting questions to
arbitration."
"Let's get out of
this," said Carlton. "You don't want to dance, do you? Let us go
where it's cool."
He led her down the
stairs, and out on to the terrace. They did not speak again until they had left
it, and were walking under the trees in the Queen's garden. He had noticed as
they made their way through the crowd how the men and women turned to look at
her and made way for her, and how utterly unconscious she was of their doing so,
with that unconsciousness which comes from familiarity with such
discrimination, and Carlton himself held his head a little higher with the
pride and pleasure the thought gave him that he was in such friendly sympathy
with so beautiful a creature. He stopped before a low stone bench that stood on
the edge of the path, surrounded by a screen of tropical trees, and guarded by
a marble statue. They were in deep shadow themselves, but the moonlight fell on
the path at their feet, and through the trees on the other side of the path
they could see the open terrace of the palace, with the dancers moving in and
out of the lighted windows. The splash of a fountain came from some short
distance behind them, and from time to time they heard the strains of a regimental
band alternating with the softer strains of a waltz played by a group of
Hungarian musicians. For a moment neither of them spoke, but sat watching the
white dresses of the women and the uniforms of the men moving in and out among
the trees, lighted by the lanterns hanging from the branches, and the white
mist of the moon.
"Do you
know," said Carlton, "I'm rather afraid of you to-night!" He
paused, and watched her for a little time as she sat upright, with her hands
folded on her lap.
"You are so very
resplendent and queenly and altogether different," he added. The girl
moved her bare shoulders slightly and leaned back against the bench.
"The Princess did
not come," she said.
"No," Carlton
answered, with a sudden twinge of conscience at having forgotten that fact.
"That's one of the reasons I took you away from those men," he
explained. "I wanted you to sympathize with me."
Miss Morris did not
answer him at once. She did not seem to be in a sympathetic mood. Her manner
suggested rather that she was tired and troubled.
"I need sympathy
myself to-night," she said. "We received a letter after dinner that
brought bad news for us. We must go home at once."
"Bad news!"
exclaimed Carlton, with much concern. "From home?"
"Yes, from
home," she replied; "but there is nothing wrong there; it is only bad
news for us. My sister has decided to be married in June instead of July, and
that cuts us out of a month on the Continent. That's all. We shall have to
leave immediately -- tomorrow. It seems that Mr. Abbey is able to go away
sooner than he had hoped, and they are to be married on the first."
"Mr. Abbey!"
exclaimed Carlton, catching at the name. "But your sister isn't going to
marry him, is she?"
Miss Morris turned her
head in some surprise. "Yes -- why not?" she said.
"But I say!"
cried Carlton, "I thought your aunt told me that you were going to marry
Abbey; she told me so that day on the steamer when he came to see you
off."
"I marry him -- my
aunt told you -- impossible!" said Miss Morris, smiling. "She
probably said that `her niece' was going to marry him; she meant my sister.
They had been engaged some time."
"Then who are you
going to marry?" stammered Carlton.
"I am not going to
marry any one," said Miss Morris.
Carlton stared at her
blankly in amazement. Well, that's most absurd!" he exclaimed.
He recognized instantly
that the expression was hardly adequate, but he could not readjust his mind so
suddenly to the new idea, and he remained looking at her with many confused
memories rushing through his brain. A dozen questions were on his tongue. He
remembered afterwards how he had noticed a servant trimming the candle in one
of the orange-colored lanterns, and that he had watched him as he disappeared
among the palms.
The silence lasted for
so long a time that it had taken on a significance in itself which Carlton
recognized. He pulled himself up with a short laugh. "Well," he
remonstrated, mirthlessly, "I don't think you've treated me very
well."
"How, not treated
you very well?" Miss Morris asked, settling herself more easily. She had
been sitting during the pause which followed Carlton's discovery with a certain
rigidity, as if she was on a strain of attention. But her tone was now as
friendly as always, and held its customary suggestion of amusement. Carlton
took his tone from it, although his mind was still busily occupied with
incidents and words of hers that she had spoken in their past intercourse.
"Not fair in
letting me think you were engaged," he said. "I've wasted so much time:
I'm not half civil enough to engaged girls," he explained.
"You've been quite
civil enough to us," said Miss Morris, "as a courier, philosopher,
and friend. I'm very sorry we have to part company."
"Part
company!" exclaimed Carlton, in sudden alarm. "But, I say, we mustn't
do that."
"But we must, you
see," said Miss Morris. "We must go back for the wedding, and you
will have to follow the Princess Aline."
"Yes, of
course," Carlton heard his own voice say. "I had forgotten the
Princess Aline." But he was not thinking of what he was saying, nor of the
Princess Aline. He was thinking of the many hours Miss Morris and he had been
together, of the way she had looked at certain times, and of how he had caught
himself watching her at others; how he had pictured the absent Mr. Abbey
travelling with her later over the same route, and without a chaperon, sitting
close at her side or holding her hand, and telling her just how pretty she was
whenever he wished to do so, and without any fear of the consequences. He
remembered how ready she had been to understand what he was going to say before
he had finished saying it, and how she had always made him show the best of
himself, and had caused, him to leave unsaid many things that became common and
unworthy when considered in the light of her judgment. He recalled how
impatient he had been when she was late at dinner, and how cross he was
throughout one whole day when she had kept her room. He felt with a sudden
shock of delightful fear that he had grown to depend upon her, that she was the
best companion he had ever known; and he remembered moments when they had been
alone together at the table, or in some old palace, or during a long walk, when
they had seemed to have the whole world entirely to themselves, and how he had
consoled himself at such times with the thought that no matter how long she
might be Abbey's wife, there had been these moments in her life which were his,
with which Abbey had had nothing to do.
Carlton turned and
looked at her with strange wide-open eyes, as though he saw her for the first
time. He felt so sure of himself and of his love for her that the happiness of
it made him tremble, and the thought that if he spoke she might answer him in
the old, friendly, mocking tone of good-fellowship filled him with alarm. At
that moment it seemed to Carlton that the most natural thing in the world for
them to do would be to go back again together over the road they had come,
seeing everything in the new light of his love for her, and so travel on and on
for ever over the world, learning to love each other more and more each
succeeding day, and leaving the rest of the universe to move along without
them.
He leaned forward with
his arm along the back of the bench, and bent his face towards hers. Her hand lay
at her side, and his own closed over it, but the shock that the touch of her
fingers gave him stopped and confused the words upon his tongue. He looked
strangely at her, and could not find the speech he needed.
Miss Morris gave his
hand a firm, friendly little pressure and drew her own away, as if he had taken
hers only in an exuberance of good feeling.
"You have been
very nice to us," she said, with an effort to make her tone sound kindly
and approving. "And we -- "
"You mustn't go; I
can't let you go," said Carlton, hoarsely. There was no mistaking his tone
or his earnestness now. "If you go," he went on, breathlessly,
"I must go with you."
The girl moved
restlessly; she leaned forward, and drew in her breath with a slight, nervous
tremor. Then she turned and faced him, almost as though she were afraid of him
or of herself, and they sat so for an instant in silence. The air seemed to
have grown close and heavy, and Carlton saw her dimly. In the silence he heard
the splash of the fountain behind them, and the rustling of the leaves in the
night wind, and the low, sighing murmur of a waltz.
He raised his head to
listen, and she saw in the moonlight that he was smiling. It was as though he
wished to delay any answer she might make to his last words.
That is the
waltz," he said, still speaking in a whisper, "that the gypsies
played that night -- " He stopped, and Miss Morris answered him by bending
her head slowly in assent. It seemed to be an effort for her to even make that
slight gesture.
"You don't
remember it," said Carlton. "It meant nothing to you. I mean that
night on the steamer when I told you what love meant to other people. What a
fool I was!" he said, with an uncertain laugh.
"Yes, I remember
it," she said -- "last Thursday night, on the steamer."
"Thursday
night!" exclaimed Carlton, indignantly. "Wednesday night, Tuesday
night, how should I know what night of the week it was? It was the night of my
life to me. That night I knew that I loved you as I had never hoped to care for
any one in this world. When I told you that I did not know what love meant I
felt all the time that I was lying. I knew that I loved you, and that I could
never love any one else, and that I had never loved any one before; and if I
had thought then you could care for me, your engagement or your promises would
never have stopped my telling you so. You said that night that I would learn to
love all the better, and more truly, for having doubted myself so long, and,
oh, Edith," he cried, taking both her hands and holding them close in his
own, "I cannot let you go now! I love you so! Don't laugh at me; don't
mock at me. All the rest of my life depends on you."
And then Miss Morris
laughed softly, just as he had begged her not to do, but her laughter was so
full of happiness, and came so gently and sweetly, and spoke so truly of
content, that though he let go of her hands with one of his, it was only that
he might draw her to him, until her face touched his, and she felt the strength
of his arm as he held her against his breast.
The Hohenwalds occupied
the suite of rooms on the first floor of the hotel, with the privilege of using
the broad balcony that reached out from it over the front entrance. And at the
time when Mrs. Downs and Edith Morris and Carlton drove up to the hotel from
the ball, the Princess Aline was leaning over the balcony and watching the
lights go out in the upper part of the house, and the moonlight as it fell on
the trees and statues in the public park below. Her foot was still in bandages,
and she was wrapped in a long cloak to keep her from the cold. Inside of the
open windows that led out on to the balcony her sisters were taking off their
ornaments, and discussing the incidents of the night just over.
The Princess Aline,
unnoticed by those below, saw Carlton help Mrs. Downs to alight from the
carriage, and then give his hand to another muffled figure that followed her;
and while Mrs. Downs was ascending the steps, and before the second muffled
figure had left the shadow of the carriage and stepped into the moonlight, the
Princess Aline saw Carlton draw her suddenly back and kiss her lightly on the
check, and heard a protesting gasp, and saw Miss Morris pull her cloak over her
head and run up the steps. Then she saw Carlton shake hands with them, and
stand for a moment after they had disappeared, gazing up at the moon and
fumbling in the pockets of his coat. He drew out a cigar-case and leisurely
selected a cigar, and with much apparent content lighted it, and then, with his
head, thrown back and his chest expanded, as though he were challenging the
world, he strolled across the street and disappeared among the shadows of the
deserted park.
The Princess walked
back to one of the open windows, and stood there leaning against the side.
"That young Mr. Carlton, the artist," she said to her sisters,
"is engaged to that beautiful American girl we met the other day."
"Really!"
said the elder sister. "I thought it was probable. Who told you?"
"I saw him kiss
her good-night," said the Princess, stepping into the window, "as
they got out of their carriage just now."
The Princess Aline
stood for a moment looking thoughtfully at the floor, and then walked across
the room to a little writing-desk. She unlocked a drawer in this and took from
it two slips of paper, which she folded in her hand. Then she returned slowly
across the room, and stepped out again on to the balcony.
One of the pieces of
paper held the picture Carlton had drawn of her, and under which he had
written: "This is she. Do you wonder I travelled four thousand miles to
see her?" And the other was the picture of Carlton himself, which she had
cut out of the catalogue of the Salon.
From the edge of the
balcony where the Princess stood she could see the glimmer of Carlton's white
linen and the red glow of his cigar as he strode proudly up and down the path
of the public park, like a sentry keeping watch. She folded the pieces of paper
together and tore them slowly into tiny fragments, and let them fall through
her fingers into the street below. Then she returned again to the room, and
stood looking at her sisters.
"Do you
know," she said, "I think I am a little tired of travelling so much.
I want to go back to Grasse." She put her hand to her, forehead and held
it there for a moment. "I think I am a little homesick," said the
Princess Aline.
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art without a fault or a deficiency, we cannot see how it could possibly be
improved. -- N. Y. Sun. The simplicity, purity, and quaintness of these stories
set them apart in a niche of distinction where they have no rivals. -- Literary
World, Boston. Nowhere are there to be found such faithful, delicately drawn,
sympathetic, tenderly humorous pictures. -- N. Y. Tribute. The charm of Miss
Wilkins's stories is in her intimate acquaintance and comprehension of humble
life, and the sweet human interest she feels and makes her readers partake of,
in the simple, common, homely people she draws. -- Springfield Republican.
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