<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII </h2>
<p>The round moon was white and at its smallest, high overhead, when I
stepped out of the phaeton in which Miss Elizabeth sent me back to Madame
Brossard’s; midnight was twanging from a rusty old clock indoors as
I crossed the fragrant courtyard to my pavilion; but a lamp still burned
in the salon of the “Grande Suite,” a light to my mind more
suggestive of the patient watcher than of the scholar at his tome.</p>
<p>When my own lamp was extinguished, I set my door ajar, moved my bed out
from the wall to catch whatever breeze might stir, “composed myself
for the night,” as it used to be written, and lay looking out upon
the quiet garden where a thin white haze was rising. If, in taking this
coign of vantage, I had any subtler purpose than to seek a draught against
the warmth of the night, it did not fail of its reward, for just as I had
begun to drowse, the gallery steps creaked as if beneath some immoderate
weight, and the noble form of Keredec emerged upon my field of vision.
From the absence of the sound of footsteps I supposed him to be either
barefooted or in his stockings. His visible costume consisted of a
sleeping jacket tucked into a pair of trousers, while his tousled hair and
beard and generally tossed and rumpled look were those of a man who had
been lying down temporarily.</p>
<p>I heard him sigh—like one sighing for sleep—as he went
noiselessly across the garden and out through the archway to the road. At
that I sat straight up in bed to stare—and well I might, for here
was a miracle! He had lifted his arms above his head to stretch himself
comfortably, and he walked upright and at ease, whereas when I had last
seen him, the night before, he had been able to do little more than crawl,
bent far over and leaning painfully upon his friend. Never man beheld a
more astonishing recovery from a bad case of rheumatism!</p>
<p>After a long look down the road, he retraced his steps; and the moonlight,
striking across his great forehead as he came, revealed the furrows
ploughed there by an anxiety of which I guessed the cause. The creaking of
the wooden stairs and gallery and the whine of an old door announced that
he had returned to his vigil.</p>
<p>I had, perhaps, a quarter of an hour to consider this performance, when it
was repeated; now, however, he only glanced out into the road, retreating
hastily, and I saw that he was smiling, while the speed he maintained in
returning to his quarters was remarkable for one so newly convalescent.</p>
<p>The next moment Saffron came through the archway, ascended the steps in
turn—but slowly and carefully, as if fearful of waking his guardian—and
I heard his door closing, very gently. Long before his arrival, however, I
had been certain of his identity with the figure I had seen gazing up at
the terraces of Quesnay from the borders of the grove. Other questions
remained to bother me: Why had Keredec not prevented this night-roving,
and why, since he did permit it, should he conceal his knowledge of it
from Oliver? And what, oh, what wondrous specific had the mighty man found
for his disease?</p>
<p>Morning failed to clarify these mysteries; it brought, however, something
rare and rich and strange. I allude to the manner of Amedee’s
approach. The aged gossip-demoniac had to recognise the fact that he could
not keep out of my way for ever; there was nothing for it but to put as
good a face as possible upon a bad business, and get it over—and the
face he selected was a marvel; not less, and in no hasty sense of the
word.</p>
<p>It appeared at my door to announce that breakfast waited outside.</p>
<p>Primarily it displayed an expression of serenity, masterly in its
assumption that not the least, remotest, dreamiest shadow of danger could
possibly be conceived, by the most immoderately pessimistic and sinister
imagination, as even vaguely threatening. And for the rest, you have seen
a happy young mother teaching first steps to the first-born—that was
Amedee. Radiantly tender, aggressively solicitous, diffusing ineffable
sweetness on the air, wreathed in seraphic smiles, beaming caressingly,
and aglow with a sacred joy that I should be looking so well, he greeted
me in a voice of honey and bowed me to my repast with an unconcealed
fondness at once maternal and reverential.</p>
<p>I did not attempt to speak. I came out silently, uncannily fascinated, my
eyes fixed upon him, while he moved gently backward, cooing pleasant words
about the coffee, but just perceptibly keeping himself out of arm’s
reach until I had taken my seat. When I had done that, he leaned over the
table and began to set useless things nearer my plate with frankly
affectionate care. It chanced that in “making a long arm” to
reach something I did want, my hand (of which the fingers happened to be
closed) passed rather impatiently beneath his nose. The madonna expression
changed instantly to one of horror, he uttered a startled croak, and took
a surprisingly long skip backward, landing in the screen of honeysuckle
vines, which, he seemed to imagine, were some new form of hostility
attacking him treacherously from the rear. They sagged, but did not break
from their fastenings, and his behaviour, as he lay thus entangled, would
have contrasted unfavourably in dignity with the actions of a
panic-stricken hen in a hammock.</p>
<p>“And so conscience DOES make cowards of us all,” I said, with
no hope of being understood.</p>
<p>Recovering some measure of mental equilibrium at the same time that he
managed to find his feet, he burst into shrill laughter, to which he tried
in vain to impart a ring of debonair carelessness.</p>
<p>“Eh, I stumble!” he cried with hollow merriment. “I fall
about and faint with fatigue! Pah! But it is nothing: truly!”</p>
<p>“Fatigue!” I turned a bitter sneer upon him. “Fatigue!
And you just out of bed!”</p>
<p>His fat hands went up palm outward; his heroic laughter was checked as
with a sob; an expression of tragic incredulity shone from his eyes.
Patently he doubted the evidence of his own ears; could not believe that
such black ingratitude existed in the world. “Absalom, O my son
Absalom!” was his unuttered cry. His hands fell to his sides; his
chin sank wretchedly into its own folds; his shirt-bosom heaved and
crinkled; arrows of unspeakable injustice had entered the defenceless
breast.</p>
<p>“Just out of bed!” he repeated, with a pathos that would have
brought the judge of any court in France down from the bench to kiss him—“And
I had risen long, long before the dawn, in the cold and darkness of the
night, to prepare the sandwiches of monsieur!”</p>
<p>It was too much for me, or rather, he was. I stalked off to the woods in a
state of helpless indignation; mentally swearing that his day of
punishment at my hands was only deferred, not abandoned, yet secretly
fearing that this very oath might live for no purpose but to convict me of
perjury. His talents were lost in the country; he should have sought his
fortune in the metropolis. And his manner, as he summoned me that evening
to dinner, and indeed throughout the courses, partook of the subtle
condescension and careless assurance of one who has but faintly enjoyed
some too easy triumph.</p>
<p>I found this so irksome that I might have been goaded into an outbreak of
impotent fury, had my attention not been distracted by the curious turn of
the professor’s malady, which had renewed its painful assault upon
him. He came hobbling to table, leaning upon Saffren’s shoulder, and
made no reference to his singular improvement of the night before—nor
did I. His rheumatism was his own; he might do what he pleased with it!
There was no reason why he should confide the cause of its vagaries to me.</p>
<p>Table-talk ran its normal course; a great Pole’s philosophy
receiving flagellation at the hands of our incorrigible optimist. (“If
he could understand,” exclaimed Keredec, “that the individual
must be immortal before it is born, ha! then this babbler might have
writted some intelligence!”) On the surface everything was as usual
with our trio, with nothing to show any turbulence of under-currents,
unless it was a certain alertness in Oliver’s manner, a restrained
excitement, and the questioning restlessness of his eyes as they sought
mine from time to time. Whatever he wished to ask me, he was given no
opportunity, for the professor carried him off to work when our coffee was
finished. As they departed, the young man glanced back at me over his
shoulder, with that same earnest look of interrogation, but it went
unanswered by any token or gesture: for though I guessed that he wished to
know if Mrs. Harman had spoken of him to me, it seemed part of my bargain
with her to give him no sign that I understood.</p>
<p>A note lay beside my plate next morning, addressed in a writing strange to
me, one of dashing and vigorous character.</p>
<p>“In the pursuit of thrillingly scientific research,” it read,
“what with the tumult which possessed me, I forgot to mention the
bond that links us; I, too, am a painter, though as yet unhonoured and
unhung. It must be only because I lack a gentle hand to guide me. If I
might sit beside you as you paint! The hours pass on leaden wings at
Quesnay—I could shriek! Do not refuse me a few words of instruction,
either in the wildwood, whither I could support your shrinking steps, or,
from time to time, as you work in your studio, which (I glean from the
instructive Mr. Ferret) is at Les Trois Pigeons. At any hour, at any
moment, I will speed to you. I am, sir,</p>
<p>“Yours, if you will but breathe a ‘yes,’</p>
<h3> “ANNE ELLIOTT.” </h3>
<p>To this I returned a reply, as much in her own key as I could write it,
putting my refusal on the ground that I was not at present painting in the
studio. I added that I hoped her suit might prosper, regretting that I
could not be of greater assistance to that end, and concluded with the
suggestion that Madame Brossard might entertain an offer for lessons in
cooking.</p>
<p>The result of my attempt to echo her vivacity was discomfiting, and I was
allowed to perceive that epistolary jocularity was not thought to be my
line. It was Miss Elizabeth who gave me this instruction three days later,
on the way to Quesnay for “second breakfast.” Exercising
fairly shame-faced diplomacy, I had avoided dining at the chateau again,
but, by arrangement, she had driven over for me this morning in the
phaeton.</p>
<p>“Why are you writing silly notes to that child?” she demanded,
as soon as we were away from the inn.</p>
<p>“Was it silly?”</p>
<p>“You should know. Do you think that style of humour suitable for a
young girl?”</p>
<p>This bewildered me a little. “But there wasn’t anything
offensive—”</p>
<p>“No?” Miss Elizabeth lifted her eyebrows to a height of bland
inquiry. “She mightn’t think it rather—well, rough? Your
suggesting that she should take cooking lessons?”</p>
<p>“But SHE suggested she might take PAINTING lessons,” was my
feeble protest. “I only meant to show her I understood that she
wanted to get to the inn.”</p>
<p>“And why should she care to ‘get to the inn’?”</p>
<p>“She seemed interested in a young man who is staying there.
'Interested’ is the mildest word for it I can think of.”</p>
<p>“Pooh!” Such was Miss Ward’s enigmatic retort, and
though I begged an explanation I got none. Instead, she quickened the
horse’s gait and changed the subject.</p>
<p>At the chateau, having a mind to offer some sort of apology, I looked
anxiously about for the subject of our rather disquieting conversation,
but she was not to be seen until the party assembled at the table, set
under an awning on the terrace. Then, to my disappointment, I found no
opportunity to speak to her, for her seat was so placed as to make it
impossible, and she escaped into the house immediately upon the conclusion
of the repast, hurrying away too pointedly for any attempt to detain her—though,
as she passed, she sent me one glance of meek reproach which she was at
pains to make elaborately distinct.</p>
<p>Again taking me for her neighbour at the table, Miss Elizabeth talked to
me at intervals, apparently having nothing, just then, to make up to Mr.
Cresson Ingle, but not long after we rose she accompanied him upon some
excursion of an indefinite nature, which led her from my sight. Thus, the
others making off to cards indoors and what not, I was left to the perusal
of the eighteenth century facade of the chateau, one of the most competent
restorations in that part of France, and of the liveliest interest to the
student or practitioner of architecture.</p>
<p>Mrs. Harman had not appeared at all, having gone to call upon some one at
Dives, I was told, and a servant informing me (on inquiry) that Miss
Elliott had retired to her room, I was thrust upon my own devices indeed,
a condition already closely associated in my mind with this picturesque
spot. The likeliest of my devices—or, at least, the one I hit upon—was
in the nature of an unostentatious retreat.</p>
<p>I went home.</p>
<p>However, as the day was spoiled for work, I chose a roundabout way, in
fact the longest, and took the high-road to Dives, but neither the road
nor the town itself (when I passed through it) rewarded my vague hope that
I might meet Mrs. Harman, and I strode the long miles in considerable
disgruntlement, for it was largely in that hope that I had gone to
Quesnay. It put me in no merrier mood to find Miss Elizabeth’s
phaeton standing outside the inn in charge of a groom, for my vanity
encouraged the supposition that she had come out of a fear that my
unceremonious departure from Quesnay might have indicated that I was
“hurt,” or considered myself neglected; and I dreaded having
to make explanations.</p>
<p>My apprehensions were unfounded; it was not Miss Elizabeth who had come in
the phaeton, though a lady from Quesnay did prove to be the occupant—the
sole occupant—of the courtyard. At sight of her I halted stock-still
under the archway.</p>
<p>There she sat, a sketch-book on a green table beside her and a board in
her lap, brazenly painting—and a more blushless piece of assurance
than Miss Anne Elliott thus engaged these eyes have never beheld.</p>
<p>She was not so hardened that she did not affect a little timidity at sight
of me, looking away even more quickly than she looked up, while I walked
slowly over to her and took the garden chair beside her. That gave me a
view of her sketch, which was a violent little “lay-in” of
shrubbery, trees, and the sky-line of the inn. To my prodigious surprise
(and, naturally enough, with a degree of pleasure) I perceived that it was
not very bad, not bad at all, indeed. It displayed a sense of values, of
placing, and even, in a young and frantic way, of colour. Here was a young
woman of more than “accomplishments!”</p>
<p>“You see,” she said, squeezing one of the tiny tubes almost
dry, and continuing to paint with a fine effect of absorption, “I
HAD to show you that I was in the most ABYSMAL earnest. Will you take me
painting with, you?”</p>
<p>“I appreciate your seriousness,” I rejoined. “Has it
been rewarded?”</p>
<p>“How can I say? You haven’t told me whether or no I may follow
you to the wildwood.”</p>
<p>“I mean, have you caught another glimpse of Mr. Saffren?”</p>
<p>At that she showed a prettier colour in her cheeks than any in her
sketch-box, but gave no other sign of shame, nor even of being flustered,
cheerfully replying:</p>
<p>“That is far from the point. Do you grant my burning plea?”</p>
<p>“I understood I had offended you.”</p>
<p>“You did,” she said. “VICIOUSLY!”</p>
<p>“I am sorry,” I continued. “I wanted to ask you to
forgive me—”</p>
<p>I spoke seriously, and that seemed to strike her as odd or needing
explanation, for she levelled her blue eyes at me, and interrupted, with
something more like seriousness in her own voice than I had yet heard from
her:</p>
<p>“What made you think I was offended?”</p>
<p>“Your look of reproach when you left the table—”</p>
<p>“Nothing else?” she asked quickly.</p>
<p>“Yes; Miss Ward told me you were.”</p>
<p>“Yes; she drove over with you. That’s it!” she exclaimed
with vigour, and nodded her head as if some suspicion of hers had been
confirmed. “I thought so!”</p>
<p>“You thought she had told me?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Miss Elliott decidedly. “Thought that
Elizabeth wanted to have her cake and eat it too.”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand.”</p>
<p>“Then you’ll get no help from me,” she returned slowly,
a frown marking her pretty forehead. “But I was only playing
offended, and she knew it. I thought your note was THAT fetching!”</p>
<p>She continued to look thoughtful for a moment longer, then with a
resumption of her former manner—the pretence of an earnestness much
deeper than the real—“Will you take me painting with you?”
she said. “If it will convince you that I mean it, I’ll give
up my hopes of seeing that SUMPTUOUS Mr. Saffren and go back to Quesnay
now, before he comes home. He’s been out for a walk—a long
one, since it’s lasted ever since early this morning, so the waiter
told me. May I go with you? You CAN’T know how enervating it is up
there at the chateau—all except Mrs. Harman, and even she—”</p>
<p>“What about Mrs. Harman?” I asked, as she paused.</p>
<p>“I think she must be in love.”</p>
<p>“What!”</p>
<p>“I do think so,” said the girl. “She’s LIKE it, at
least.”</p>
<p>“But with whom?”</p>
<p>She laughed gaily. “I’m afraid she’s my rival!”</p>
<p>“Not with—” I began.</p>
<p>“Yes, with your beautiful and mad young friend.”</p>
<p>“But—oh, it’s preposterous!” I cried, profoundly
disturbed. “She couldn’t be! If you knew a great deal about
her—”</p>
<p>“I may know more than you think. My simplicity of appearance is
deceptive,” she mocked, beginning to set her sketch-box in order.
“You don’t realise that Mrs. Harman and I are quite HURLED
upon each other at Quesnay, being two ravishingly intelligent women
entirely surrounded by large bodies of elementals. She has told me a great
deal of herself since that first evening, and I know—well, I know
why she did not come back from Dives this afternoon, for instance.”</p>
<p>“WHY?” I fairly shouted.</p>
<p>She slid her sketch into a groove in the box, which she closed, and rose
to her feet before answering. Then she set her hat a little straighter
with a touch, looking so fixedly and with such grave interest over my
shoulder that I turned to follow her glance and encountered our
reflections in a window of the inn. Her own shed a light upon THAT
mystery, at all events.</p>
<p>“I might tell you some day,” she said indifferently, “if
I gained enough confidence in you through association in daily pursuits.”</p>
<p>“My dear young lady,” I cried with real exasperation, “I
am a working man, and this is a working summer for me!”</p>
<p>“Do you think I’d spoil it?” she urged gently.</p>
<p>“But I get up with the first daylight to paint,” I protested,
“and I paint all day—”</p>
<p>She moved a step nearer me and laid her hand warningly upon my sleeve,
checking the outburst.</p>
<p>I turned to see what she meant.</p>
<p>Oliver Saffren had come in from the road and was crossing to the gallery
steps. He lifted his hat and gave me a quick word of greeting as he
passed, and at the sight of his flushed and happy face my riddle was
solved for me. Amazing as the thing was, I had no doubt of the revelation.</p>
<p>“Ah,” I said to Miss Elliott when he had gone, “I won’t
have to take pupils to get the answer to my question, now!”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />