<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_TWENTY-FIVE" id="CHAPTER_TWENTY-FIVE"></SPAN><i>CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE</i></h2>
<p>When they went out into the patio again, David had lost a large part of
his buoyancy of spirits, as though in some subtle manner Connor had
overcast the triumph of the room; he left them with word that the
evening meal would soon be ready and hurried off calling orders to
Zacharias.</p>
<p>"Why did you do it?" she asked Connor as soon as they were alone.</p>
<p>"Because it made me mad to see a stargazer like that turning your head."</p>
<p>"But didn't you think the room was beautiful?"</p>
<p>"Sure. Like a riot in a florist's shop. But don't let this David take
you off guard with his rooms full of flowers and full of silence."</p>
<p>"Silence?"</p>
<p>"Haven't I told you about his Room of Silence? That's one of his queer
dodges. That room; you see? When anything bothers him he goes over and
sits down in there, because—do you know what he thinks sits with him?"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"God!"</p>
<p>She was between a smile and a gasp.</p>
<p>"Yep, that's David," grinned Connor. "Just plain nut."</p>
<p>"What's inside?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Maybe flowers."</p>
<p>"Let's find out."</p>
<p>He caught her arm quickly.</p>
<p>"Not in a thousand years!" He changed color at the thought and glanced
guiltily around. "That would be the smash of everything. Why, he turned
over the whole Garden of Eden to me. I can go anywhere, but not a step
inside that room. It's his Holy Ground, you see! Maybe it's where he
keeps his jack. And I've a hunch that he has a slough of it tucked away
somewhere."</p>
<p>She raised her hand as an idea came to her half way through this speech.</p>
<p>"Listen! I have an idea that the clew to all of David's mystery is in
that room!"</p>
<p>"Drop that idea, Ruth," he ordered gruffly. "You've seen David on one
rampage, but it's nothing to what would happen if you so much as peeked
into that place. When the servants pass that door they take off their
hats—watch 'em the next time you have a chance. You won't make a slip
about that room?"</p>
<p>"No." But she added: "I'd give my soul—for one look!"</p>
<p>Dinner that night under the stars with the whispering of the fountain
beside them was a ceremony which Connor never forgot. The moon rose late
and in the meantime the sky was heavy and dark with sheeted patchwork of
clouds, with the stars showing here and there. The wind blew in gusts.
A wave began with a whisper on the hill, came with a light rushing
across the patio, and then diminished quickly among the trees down the
terraces. Rough, iron-framed lanterns gave the light and showed the
arcade stepping away on either side and growing dim toward the entrance.
That uncertain illumination made the crude pillars seem to have only the
irregularity of vast antiquity, stable masses of stone. Where the circle
of lantern-light overlapped rose the fountain, a pale spray forever
dissolving in the upper shadow. Connor himself was more or less used to
these things, but he became newly aware of them as the girl sent quick,
eager glances here and there.</p>
<p>She had placed a single one of the great yellow blossoms in her hair and
it changed her shrewdly. It brought out the delicate coloring of her
skin, and to the darkness of her eyes it lent a tint of violet. Plainly
she enjoyed the scene with its newness. David, of course, was the spice
to everything, and his capitulation was complete; he kept the girl
always on an uneasy balance between happiness and laughter. And Connor
trembled for fear the mirth would show through. But each change of her
expression appeared to delight David more than the last.</p>
<p>Under his deft knife the choicest white meat came away from the breast
of a chicken and he heaped it at once on the plate of Ruth. Then he
dropped his chin upon his great brown fist and watched with silent
delight while she ate. It embarrassed her; but her flush had a tinge of
pleasure in it, as Connor very well knew.</p>
<p>"Look!" said David, speaking softly as though Ruth would not hear him.
"How pleasant it is, to be three together. When we were two, one talked
and the other grew weary—was it not so? But now we are complete. One
speaks, one listens, and the other judges. I have been alone. The
Garden of Eden has been to me a prison, at many times. And now there is
nothing wanting. And why? There were many men before. We were not
lacking in numbers. Yet there was an emptiness, and now comes one small
creature, as delicate as a colt of three months, this being of smiles
and curious glances, this small voice, this woman—and at once the gap
is filled. Is it not strange?"</p>
<p>He cast himself back in his chair, as though he wished to throw her into
perspective with her surroundings, and all the time he was staring as
though she were an image, a picture, and not a thing of flesh and blood.
Connor himself was on the verge of a smile, but when he saw the face of
Ruth Manning his mirth disappeared in a chill of terror. She was
struggling and struggling in vain against a rising tide of laughter,
laughter in the face of David Eden and his sensitive pride.</p>
<p>It came, it broke through all bonds, and now it was bubbling from her
lips. As one who awaits the falling of a blow, Connor glanced furtively
at the host, and again he was startled.</p>
<p>There was not a shade of evil temper in the face of David. He leaned
forward, indeed, with a surge of the great shoulders, but it was as one
who listens to an entrancing music. And when she ceased, abruptly, he
sighed.</p>
<p>"Speak to me," he commanded.</p>
<p>She murmured a faint reply.</p>
<p>"Again," said David, half closing his eyes. And Connor nodded a frantic
encouragement to her.</p>
<p>"But what shall I say?"</p>
<p>"For the meaning of what you say," said David, "I have no care, but only
for the sound. Have you heard dripping in a well, a sound like water
filling a bottle and never reaching the top? It keeps you listening for
an hour, perhaps, always a soft sound, but always rising toward a
climax? Or a drowsy day when the wind hardly moves and the whistling of
a bird comes now and then out of the trees, cool and contented? Or you
pass a meadow of flowers in the warm sun and hear the ground murmur of
the bees, and you think at once of the wax films of the honeycomb, and
the clear golden honey? All those things I heard and saw when you
spoke."</p>
<p>"Plain nut!" said Connor, framing the words with silent lips.</p>
<p>But though her eyes rested on him, apparently she did not see his face.
She looked back at Connor with a wistful little half-smile.</p>
<p>At once David cast out both his hands toward hers.</p>
<p>"Ah, you are strange, new, delightful!" He stopped abruptly. Then: "Does
it make you happy to hear me say these things?"</p>
<p>"Why do you ask me that?" she said curiously.</p>
<p>"Because it fills me with unspeakable happiness to say them. If I am
silent and only think then I am not so pleased. When I see Glani
standing on the hilltop I feel his speed in the slope of his muscles,
the flaunt of his tail, the pride of his head; but when I gallop him,
and the wind of his galloping strikes my face—ha, that is a joy! So it
is speaking with you. When I see you I say within: 'She is beautiful!'
But when I speak it aloud your lips tremble a little toward a smile,
your eyes darken with pleasure, and then my heart rises into my throat
and I wish to speak again and again and again to find new things to say,
to say old things in new words. So that I may watch the changes in your
face. Do you understand? But now you blush. Is that a sign of anger?"</p>
<p>"It is a sign that no other men have ever talked to me in this manner."</p>
<p>"Then other men are fools. What I say is true. I feel it ring in me,
that it is the truth. Benjamin, my brother, is it not so? Ha!"</p>
<p>She was raising the wine-cup; he checked her with his eager, extended
hand.</p>
<p>"See, Benjamin, how this mysterious thing is done, this raising of the
hand. <i>We</i> raise the cup to drink. An ugly thing—let it be done and
forgotten. But when <i>she</i> lifts the cup it is a thing to be remembered;
how her fingers curve and the weight of the cup presses into them, and
how her wrist droops."</p>
<p>She lowered the cup hastily and put her hand before her face.</p>
<p>"I see," said Connor dryly.</p>
<p>"Bah!" cried the master of the Garden. "You do not see. But you, Ruth,
are you angry? Are you shamed?"</p>
<p>He drew down her hands, frowning with intense anxiety. Her face was
crimson.</p>
<p>"No," she said faintly.</p>
<p>"He says that he sees, but he does not see," went on David. "He is
blind, this Benjamin of mine. I show him my noblest grove of the
eucalyptus trees, each tree as tall as a hill, as proud as a king, as
beautiful as a thought that springs up from the earth. I show him these
glorious trees. What does he say? 'You could build a whole town out of
that wood!' Bah! Is that seeing? No, he is blind! Such a man would give
you hard work to do. But I say to you, Ruth, that to be beautiful is to
be wise, and industrious, and good. Surely you are to me like the rising
of the sun—my heart leaps up! And you are like the coming of the night
making the world beautiful and mysterious. For behind your eyes and
behind your words, out of the sound of your voice and your glances, I
guess at new things, strange things, hidden things. Treasures which
cannot be held in the hands. Should you grow as old as Elijah, withered,
meager as a grasshopper, the treasures would still be there. I, who have
seen them, can never forget them!"</p>
<p>Once more she covered her eyes with her hand, and David started up from
his chair.</p>
<p>"What have I done?" he asked faintly of Connor. He hurried around the
table to her. "Look up! How have I harmed you?"</p>
<p>"I am only tired," she said.</p>
<p>"I am a fool! I should have known. Come!" said David.</p>
<p>He drew her from the chair and led her across the lawn, supporting her.
At her door: "May sleep be to you like the sound of running water,"
murmured David.</p>
<p>And when the door was closed he went hastily back to Connor.</p>
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