<h2 id="c19"><span class="small">CHAPTER XIX</span> <br/>THE FIRE-BIRD</h2>
<p>Strange as it may seem, it was at this
very hour that Petite Jeanne received one
of the most unusual thrills of her not uneventful
life. She and Madame Bihari were back in
Chicago. The Ballet Russe, too, was in that
city. And to Jeanne who, as you may know,
was one of the finest of gypsy dancers, anything
like the Ballet Russe was a call which,
if need be, would draw from her purse the last
silver coin.</p>
<p>“The Ballet Russe!” she exclaimed to Madame.
“We must go. And ah yes, tonight we
must go! This is the last performance.”</p>
<p>“Impossible, my pretty one,” Madame said
with slow regret. “I have promised to say
farewell to our good friends of Bohemia. They
are leaving tomorrow for their native land.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_190">[190]</div>
<p>“But you, my child, you must go. Put on
your bright gown of a thousand beads and
your purple cape with the white fox collar, and
go. Surely no one, not even the Fire-Bird, shall
outshine my Petite Jeanne.”</p>
<p>So Jeanne went alone. She secured a seat
at the side of the gallery where she might look
almost directly down upon the dancers. And
was that an hour of pure joy for Jeanne! Not
for months had she witnessed anything half
so charming. The lights were so bright, the
costumes so beautiful, the dancers so light-footed
and droll, and the music so entrancing
that she at times believed herself transported
to another world.</p>
<p>The first piece was a bit of exquisite nonsense.
But when the time came for that entrancing
story, “The Fire-Bird,” to be told in
pantomime, music and dancing, Jeanne sat entranced.
Once before, as a small child, she
had seen this in Paris. Now it came to her as
a thing of renewed and eternal beauty.</p>
<p>As the lights of the great Auditorium went
dark and the orchestra took up an entrancing
strain, Jeanne saw at the back of the stage a
tree that seemed all aglow with light. And
before this tree, dancing like some enchanted
fairy, was a creature that, in that uncertain
light, seemed half maiden, half bird.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_191">[191]</div>
<p>“The Fire-Bird!” Jeanne’s lips formed the
words they did not speak.</p>
<p>Soon the beautiful, glimmering Fire-Bird began
to seem ill at ease. The shadow of a young
man appeared in the background.</p>
<p>“Prince Ivan,” Jeanne whispered.</p>
<p>The Prince pursued the Fire-Bird. Round
and round they danced. How light was the
step of the Fire-Bird! She seemed scarcely a
feather’s weight. How Jeanne envied her!</p>
<p>And yet there were those who would have
said, “Petite Jeanne is a more splendid
dancer.”</p>
<p>The Prince seized the Fire-Bird in his arms.
She struggled in vain to escape. She entreated
him. She attempted to charm and beguile him.
He released her only, in beautiful and fantastic
dance rhythm, to capture her again. At last,
on being given one of her shining feathers as
a charm against all evil, he granted her the
freedom she asked.</p>
<p>The Fire-Bird vanishes. Day begins to
dawn upon the stage. The music is low and enchanting.
Then a bevy of dancing girls
emerge from a castle gate. These are Princesses,
bewitched and enslaved by a wizard.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_192">[192]</div>
<p>As the thirteen Princesses danced upon the
stage, Jeanne received a momentary shock.
One of these, the third from their leader, had
about her an air of familiarity. Jeanne was a
dancer. She had learned to recognize other
dancers by their movements. But this one—</p>
<p>“Where have I seen her?” she whispered.</p>
<p>Closing her eyes, she attempted to call
forth upon the dimly lighted picture gallery of
memory some scene of other days, some open
air arena, some stage where this one had
danced.</p>
<p>“No, no!” She tapped her small foot. “It
will not come. And yet I <i>have</i> seen her!”</p>
<p>Then again she gave herself over to the
story unfolding so beautifully before her.</p>
<p>In the story played out for Jeanne, Prince
Ivan falls in love with the most beautiful of
the enchanted Princesses. There follows a
marvelous dance done by the maidens. Jeanne
as she watched had eyes for but one dancer,
the mysterious person she felt she should
know, but could not recall.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_193">[193]</div>
<p>Dawn comes. The enchanted ones disappear
through the gate of the castle. Prince
Ivan, in the abandon of love, follows. There
comes the unearthly din of gongs and bells. A
host of weird creatures come out to attack him.
They are powerless because of the magic
feather, gift of the Fire-Bird. Ivan is not
afraid.</p>
<p>Then comes the terrible wizard who, if he
could, would destroy Ivan with his very
breath.</p>
<p>For the time Jeanne forgot the mysterious
dancer who had once more appeared upon the
scene. Carried away by the story, Jeanne had
eyes only for the brave little Prince and the
terrible creature who seeks his destruction.
As the wizard approaches step by step, his
hand trembling with rage, his small hard foot
stamping the floor, Jeanne actually trembled
with fear. Then, as Prince Ivan waved the
magic feather and called upon the Fire-Bird to
aid him, when the splendid dancing Fire-Bird
appeared upon the scene, Jeanne wanted to
scream for joy.</p>
<p>Such enchantment passes rapidly. When at
last Ivan had triumphed and the wizard been
destroyed, Jeanne thought again of the mysterious
dancer who had, she was sure, played
some part in her past life.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_194">[194]</div>
<p>“If you please—” she spoke to her nearest
neighbor whose opera glass dangled idly from
a ribbon. “Just for one moment, may I borrow
it?”</p>
<p>“Certainly.” The lady smiled.</p>
<p>Strangely enough, as she put the glass to
her eyes, the little French girl found herself
all atremble. “Coming events cast their shadows
before them.” Scarcely had the glass been
focussed upon the mysterious dancer than her
hand dropped limply to her lap.</p>
<p>“It cannot be!” she murmured aloud. “But
yes! It is she! It can be no other. There is the
dark face. Even beneath her make-up one
feels it. There is the torn ear. I can’t be wrong.
It is the dark lady! It is the spy!”</p>
<p>Twenty seconds later the opera glasses were
in their owner’s hands. Jeanne had vanished.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_195">[195]</div>
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