<h2><SPAN name="III" id="III"></SPAN>III</h2>
<p>Stephen had meant to stop only one day in Paris,
and travel at night to Marseilles, where he would have
twelve or fifteen hours to wait before the sailing of
the ship on which he had engaged a cabin. But glancing
over a French paper while he breakfasted at the Westminster,
he saw that a slight accident had happened to the boat during
a storm on her return voyage from Algiers, and that she
would be delayed three days for repairs. This news made
Stephen decide to remain in Paris for those days, rather than
go on and wait at Marseilles, or take another ship. He did
not want to see any one he knew, but he thought it would be
pleasant to spend some hours picture-gazing at the Louvre,
and doing a few other things which one ought to do in Paris,
and seldom does.</p>
<p>That night he went to bed early and slept better than he
had slept for weeks. The next day he almost enjoyed, and
when evening came, felt desultory, even light-hearted.</p>
<p>Dining at his hotel, he overheard the people at the next
table say they were going to the Folies Bergères to see Victoria
Ray dance, and suddenly Stephen made up his mind that he
would go there too: for if life had been running its usual
course with him, he would certainly have gone to see Victoria
Ray in London. She had danced lately at the Palace Theatre
for a month or six weeks, and absorbed as he had been in
his own affairs, he had heard enough talk about this new
dancer to know that she had made what is called a "sensation."</p>
<p>The people at the next table were telling each other that
Victoria Ray's Paris engagement was only for three nights,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN></span>
something special, with huge pay, and that there was a "regular
scramble" for seats, as the girl had been such a success in
New York and London. The speakers, who were English
and provincial, had already taken places, but there did not
appear to be much hope that Stephen could get anything at
the last minute. The little spice of difficulty gave a fillip of
interest, however; and he remembered how the charming
child on the boat had said that she "liked doing difficult
things." He wondered what she was doing now; and as he
thought of her, white and ethereal in the night and in the
dawn-light, she seemed to him like the foam-flowers that had
blossomed for an instant on the crests of dark waves, through
which their vessel forged. "For a moment white, then gone
forever." The words glittered in his mind, and fascinated
him, calling up the image of the girl, pale against the night
and rainy sea. "For a moment white, then gone forever,"
he repeated, and asked himself whence came the line. From
Burns, he fancied; and thought it quaintly appropriate to
the fair child whose clear whiteness had thrown a gleam into
his life before she vanished.</p>
<p>All the seats for this second night of Victoria Ray's short
engagement were sold at the Folies Bergères, he found, from
the dearest to the cheapest: but there was standing room
still when Stephen arrived, and he squeezed himself in among
a group of light-hearted, long-haired students from the Latin
Quarter. He had an hour to wait before Victoria Ray would
dance, but there was some clever conjuring to be seen, a famous
singer of <i>chansons</i> to be heard, and other performances
which made the time pass well enough. Then, at last, it was
the new dancer's "turn."</p>
<p>The curtain remained down for several minutes, as some
scenic preparation was necessary before her first dance. Gay
French music was playing, and people chattered through it,
or laughed in high Parisian voices. A blue haze of smoke
hung suspended like a thin veil, and the air was close, scented<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span>
with tobacco and perfume. Stephen looked at his programme,
beginning to feel bored. His elbows were pressed against his
sides by the crowd. Miss Ray was down for two dances, the
Dance of the Statue and the Dance of the Shadow. The
atmosphere of the place depressed him. He doubted after
all, that he would care for the dancing. But as he began to
wish he had not come the curtain went up, to show the studio
of a sculptor, empty save for the artist's marble masterpieces.
Through a large skylight, and a high window at the back of
the stage, a red glow of sunset streamed into the bare room.
In the shadowy corners marble forms were grouped, but in the
centre, directly under the full flood of rose-coloured light, the
just finished statue of a girl stood on a raised platform. She
was looking up, and held a cup in one lifted hand, as if to
catch the red wine of sunset. Her draperies, confined by a
Greek ceinture under the young bust, fell from shoulder to
foot in long clear lines that seemed cut in gleaming stone.
The illusion was perfect. Even in that ruddy blaze the delicate,
draped form appeared to be of carved marble. It was
almost impossible to believe it that of a living woman, and
its grace of outline and pose was so perfect that Stephen, in
his love of beauty, dreaded the first movement which must
change, if not break, the tableau. He said to himself that
there was some faint resemblance between this chiselled loveliness
and the vivid charm of the pretty child he had met on
the boat. He could imagine that a statue for which she had
stood as model might look like this, though the features seemed
to his eye more regular than those of the girl.</p>
<p>As he gazed, the music, which had been rich and colourful,
fell into softer notes; and the rose-sunset faded to an opal
twilight, purple to blue, blue to the silver of moonlight, the
music changing as the light changed, until at last it was low
and slumberous as the drip-drip of a plashing fountain. Then,
into the dream of the music broke a sound like the distant
striking of a clock. It was midnight, and all the statues in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span>
the sculptor's bare, white studio began to wake at the magic
stroke which granted them a few hours of life.</p>
<p>There was just a shimmer of movement in the dim corners.
Marble limbs stirred, marble face turned slowly to gaze at
marble face; yet, as if they could be only half awakened in
the shadows where the life-giving draught of moonlight might
not flow, there was but the faintest flicker of white forms and
draperies. It was the just finished statue of the girl which
felt the full thrill of moonshine and midnight. She woke
rapturously, and drained the silver moon-wine in her cup
(the music told the story of her first thought and living heart-beat):
then down she stepped from the platform where the
sculptor's tools still lay, and began to dance for the other
statues who watched in the dusk, hushed back into stillness
under the new spell of her enchantments.</p>
<p>Stephen had never seen anything like that dance. Many
pretty <i>premières danseuses</i> he had admired and applauded,
charming and clever young women of France, of Russia, of
Italy, and Spain: and they had roused him and all London to
enthusiasm over dances eccentric, original, exquisite, or wild.
But never had there been anything like this. Stephen had
not known that a dance could move him as this did. He was
roused, even thrilled by its poetry, and the perfect beauty of
its poses, its poises. It must, he supposed, have been practised
patiently, perhaps for years, yet it produced the effect
of being entirely unstudied. At all events, there was nothing
in the ordinary sense "professional" about it. One would
say—not knowing the supreme art of supreme grace—that
a joyous child, born to the heritage of natural grace, might
dance thus by sheer inspiration, in ecstasy of life and worship
of the newly felt beauty of earth. Stephen did know
something of art, and the need of devotion to its study; yet he
found it hard to realize that this awakened marble loveliness
had gone through the same performance week after week,
month after month, in America and England. He preferred<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span>
rather to let himself fancy that he was dreaming the whole
thing; and he would gladly have dreamed on indefinitely,
forgetting the smoky atmosphere, forgetting the long-haired
students and all the incongruous surroundings. The gracious
dream gave him peace and pleasure such as he had not known
since the beginning of the Northmorland case.</p>
<p>Through the house there was a hush, unusual at the Folies
Bergères. People hardly knew what to make of the dances,
so different from any ever seen in a theatre of Paris. Stephen
was not alone in feeling the curious dream-spell woven by
music and perfection of beauty. But the light changed. The
moonlight slowly faded. Dancer and music faltered, in the
falling of the dark hour before dawn. The charm was waning.
Soft notes died, and quavered in apprehension. The
magic charm of the moon was breaking, had broken: a crash
of cymbals and the studio was dark. Then light began to
glimmer once more, but it was the chill light of dawn, and
growing from purple to blue, from blue to rosy day, it showed
the marble statues fast locked in marble sleep again. On the
platform stood the girl with uplifted arm, holding her cup,
now, to catch the wine of sunrise; and on the delicately
chiselled face was a faint smile which seemed to hide a secret.
When the first ray of yellow sunshine gilded the big skylight, a
door up-stage opened and the sculptor came in, wearing his
workman's blouse. He regarded his handiwork, as the curtain
came down.</p>
<p>When the music of the dream had ceased and suddenly became
ostentatiously puerile, the audience broke into a tumult
of applause. Women clapped their hands furiously and many
men shouted "brava, brava," hoping that the curtain might
rise once more on the picture; but it did not rise, and Stephen
was glad. The dream would have been vulgarized by
repetition.</p>
<p>For fully five minutes the orchestra played some gay tune
which every one there had heard a hundred times; but ab<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span>ruptly
it stopped, as if on a signal. For an instant there was
a silence of waiting and suspense, which roused interest and
piqued curiosity. Then there began a delicate symphony
which could mean nothing but spring in a forest, and on that
the curtain went up. The prophecy of the music was fulfilled,
for the scene was a woodland in April, with young leaves
a-flicker and blossoms in birth, the light song of the flutes and
violins being the song of birds in love. All the trees were
brocaded with dainty, gold-green lace, and daffodils sprouted
from the moss at their feet.</p>
<p>The birds sang more gaily, and out from behind a silver-trunked
beech tree danced a figure in spring green. Her
arms were full of flowers, which she scattered as she danced,
curtseying, mocking, beckoning the shadow that followed
her along the daisied grass. Her little feet were bare, and
flitted through the green folding of her draperies like white
night-moths fluttering among rose leaves. Her hair fell over
her shoulders, and curled below her waist. It was red hair
that glittered and waved, and she looked a radiant child of
sixteen. Victoria Ray the dancer, and the girl on the Channel
boat were one.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span></p>
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