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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53197 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53197)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cynthia Steps Out, by Erick Berry
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Cynthia Steps Out
-
-Author: Erick Berry
-
-Release Date: October 2, 2016 [EBook #53197]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CYNTHIA STEPS OUT ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _Cynthia_
- STEPS OUT
-
- BY
- ERICK BERRY
-
-
- CHICAGO
-
- _The Goldsmith Publishing
- Company_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1937, BY
- THE GOLDSMITH PUBLISHING COMPANY
-
- Made in U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I ALWAYS TRUST YOUR LUCK 11
- _Shipboard_
-
- II CORNED BEEF HASH 42
- _Paris_
-
- III COLD-IN-THE-HEAD 69
- _Brittany_
-
- IV LITTLE MISS FIX-IT 99
- _Mont St. Michel_
-
- V THE CUCKOO 127
- _Basque Country_
-
- VI ROMANCE IN CARCASSONNE 158
- _Carcassonne_
-
- VII THE RACING SNAIL 190
- _Siena_
-
- VIII ALL IS NOT LOST 219
- _Venice_
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 1
-
-_Shipboard_
-
-ALWAYS TRUST YOUR LUCK
-
-
-“It must be fun to be an artist.” Stasia’s speech was somewhat impeded
-by the mouthful of pins she was trying not to swallow.
-
-“Fun?” Cynthia frowned, thinking. “Yes, I suppose it is. I wouldn’t
-know how to be anything else. Ouch! That was me you were pinning.” She
-braced herself with one arm against the bulkhead as the ship tipped at
-a slight angle. “Make that sleeve as short as you can.”
-
-Stasia took the last pin out of her mouth. “Slip off your blouse now,
-and I’ll baste it up for you. You’ll make a sweet pirate, if pirates
-ever were sweet.”
-
-Cynthia, free of the blouse, turned to experiment before the long
-mirror in the door, hesitating between the respective merits of a red
-bandana handkerchief over her black curls and the more sinister effect
-of a black scarf which could be continued down into a black mask with
-eyeholes.
-
-Stasia bit off her thread. “There, that’s ready. When will you break it
-to Miss Mitchall that she’s got to wear a costume tonight?”
-
-Cynthia giggled. “You ought to come along and help me. But I guess I’ll
-wait till the last minute and rush her into the idea.” She glanced
-toward the bed where a tall, witch’s cap, made of green cardboard from
-the ship’s barber shop, reposed beside a cape of green broadcloth,
-borrowed from Stasia, and a pair of Miss Mitchall’s own shoes, now
-adorned with huge buckles of cardboard and silver foil.
-
-“I’ll need some help with my wig,” said Stasia, “and then I think we’re
-all finished.” The wig was of bright orange yarn, loosely knitted into
-a tight fitting cap of coarse net which completely covered Stasia’s
-sleek bob.
-
-“It needs tightening at the back. Wait a moment.” Cynthia braced her
-feet. “Dash this boat, I hope she stops rolling before dinner or we
-shan’t have any dance. Do they always have a costume party every trip?”
-
-“Uh-huh. Always the second day before we get into Cherbourg, Paris,
-day after tomorrow. Aren’t you thrilled?”
-
-Cynthia, pinning the wig into a better fit, murmured a vague assent.
-But she didn’t feel at all thrilled. After eight days the ship was
-like another home in which she knew, by sight at least, almost every
-occupant. Paris was going to be new and strange. Oh yes, a grand new
-adventure, but sometimes she got scared at the thought of it. So big,
-with all the street signs and the menus in a different language and
-so much that was new to learn. What if she failed to make good on the
-job that had brought her over, the dozen covers for _Little Ones’
-Magazine_? Suppose she didn’t have the money to stay? Suppose she
-couldn’t make people understand her French, even though Stasia had been
-coaching her all week? Oh shut up, Cynthia!
-
-“Miss Mitchall’s the old girl I admire,” she said suddenly. “She’s got
-more courage! You know she’s returning practically without a job and
-without money and she’s fifty if she’s a day, though she looks sixty,
-poor darling. I don’t believe she’s got ten dollars beyond her fare to
-London.”
-
-“What was she doing in the States?” asked Stasia.
-
-Stasia hadn’t, Cynthia thought, much imagination, but perhaps that was
-because her father was president of the line. Look at this suite de
-luxe, the best in the ship. And if she had never earned her own living
-she couldn’t imagine what it was to be like Miss Mitchall.
-
-“Oh, she had some sort of a governess job. But she’s English you know,
-and she didn’t come in on the quota and so she had to go back home.
-She was with a Canadian family in Buffalo. They are paying her fare
-back, but that’s all. I wish ...” she stopped. She was going to say she
-wished she could help her.
-
-Stasia looked at her watch, the little platinum watch circled with
-diamonds. “It’s six my dear, and dinner’s at half past seven. If you’re
-going to get your roommate into her costume ...”
-
-“You’re right, you’re perfectly right.” Cynthia struggled into her wool
-dress, grabbed the black scarf, the buckled shoes, threw the blouse
-over her arm. “Here, give me a hand with the other stuff, will you?
-I’ll take the hat.”
-
-Cynthia’s small cabin was down, down, two steep flights below the
-cabins de luxe. Clean white corridors smelling of soap and sea and
-ship, doors shut and white, doors open and dark, doors open and
-lighted, a narrow corridor turning down to the left, two doors facing
-each other, the left one always closed. Cynthia often wondered about
-that door. She knew the cabin was occupied because the room steward
-went in and out but no one else ever did. The door to the right was
-Cynthia’s and Miss Mitchall’s.
-
-“Here we are. Thanks a lot. Can I help with make-up or anything?”
-Cynthia dumped her things on the bunk, turned on the lights.
-
-“No, thanks. The stewardess and Lilia will help if I want it.” Lilia
-was Stasia’s maid. Cynthia smiled. Think of having a maid to yourself!
-
-Stasia was gone. Cynthia hustled out of her dress again, turned on the
-hot water, whistled happily. This was going to be fun tonight. Like the
-old Art Academy days when everybody dressed up and the dances lasted
-till morning.
-
-Someone in the cabin across the corridor coughed, a man’s cough.
-Cynthia turned off the hot water and listened, caught herself staring
-with wide gray eyes at the wide gray eyes in the mirror over the wash
-basin.
-
-The night she had come on board that left hand door had been wide open
-and in the corridor there had been a suitcase, big and black, with lots
-of stickers on it. Cynthia hurrying along the hall with an arm full of
-last minute fruit and flowers and books, Chick and Judy and the others
-of the old Art School bunch at her heels, had tripped and fallen full
-length over that suitcase. When Chick had picked her up, unhurt, and
-brushed her off, she had noted the suitcase and a huge Ottawa Hotel
-paster on its side, bright with greens and blues and oranges. Chick had
-noticed it too. “A good poster design, that,” he had said.
-
-And Cynthia, thinking about Chick, sat down on the lower bunk and for
-three minutes was devastatingly and overwhelmingly homesick for New
-York and the studio, for Judy and Chick. Chick had, in this very room,
-standing on that very same rug, kissed her good-bye with his arms tight
-around her and wished her good luck and told her how rotten it was for
-him to have to stay behind like this. “Keep my ring on your finger and
-my face in your heart,” he had said.
-
-Cynthia twisted the pretty emerald, which had belonged to Chick’s
-mother, now so ill that he couldn’t get away for the trip they had
-planned together. It was a sweet ring. Cynthia’s eyes were getting
-teary when the dressing gong sounded. Goodness, was it as late as that!
-
-The pirate costume had long black trousers--full ones from Cynthia’s
-beach pyjamas. A wide sash of twisted red and green bristled with an
-arsenal of silver paper pistols and knives. The white blouse, with
-sleeves tacked very short, bore a black silk skull and crossbones over
-the heart. She was tying heavy thread on brass curtain rings to loop
-over her ears when Miss Mitchall pattered in, closing the door gently
-behind her.
-
-Miss Mitchall’s small sloping shoulders, claw-like hands and thin blond
-hair, now a dusty gray, were the characteristics of the story-book
-English governess, but her eyes gleamed brightly behind her spectacles
-and one felt that her spirit was unconquerable.
-
-“Oh my dear, how sweet you look,” she twittered.
-
-Cynthia hung an earring over one ear and patted it with a slim finger
-to see if it would swing free. In a minute she’d have to break the news
-to her roommate. But Miss Mitchall had news of her own.
-
-“I just heard a voice across the corridor, talking to the steward. It’s
-a man and he talks with a Canadian accent,” she whispered.
-
-They had both wondered about that room, for on this small ship everyone
-seemed to know everyone else, with that exception. Was he ill, perhaps,
-that he never came out, not even for meals? But there wasn’t time to
-discuss him now.
-
-“Hurry and get into your costume for the party,” directed Cynthia.
-
-“Costume? Oh yes.” Miss Mitchall was going to appreciate the small
-jest. “You mean my black dress.” She turned, bustling a little, to put
-her purse and book and scarf and sweater on the long couch beneath the
-porthole.
-
-“No, I don’t mean just the black dress,” stated Cynthia in what she
-hoped was a firm tone. “I mean your costume. Stasia Carruthers and I
-made one for you this afternoon. You’re going as a Green Witch. See
-here.” She took down the tall peaked hat, clapped it on the small gray
-head and turned her roommate to face the mirror. “Then the cape, like
-this.” She flung the long cape around the thin shoulders. “Of course we
-must make you up. A little powder on your nose, probably some rouge on
-your cheeks. But put on your black dress first. And hurry.”
-
-“Oh my dear, I couldn’t--I’m too old--what will people think?” Mildly
-clucking, continuing to protest, Miss Mitchall was shoved into her
-costume, into the shoes with the silver buckles, into the long green
-cape. Cynthia, against the other’s mild opposition, patted rouge on the
-pale cheeks, then flung a towel over the cape and shook half a box of
-white talcum powder on the gray hair.
-
-“But my dear,” beamed Miss Mitchall, “it ... it makes me look so ... so
-young.”
-
-Indeed it did. The contrast of green cloth against the white hair was
-dramatic. “Very successful,” purred Cynthia. “You’ll be the belle of
-the ball. And it’s not immoral to look young you know. Now sit down
-there and be good till I get this scarf tied. Or no, ring for the
-steward, we must get a broom to go with the witch.”
-
-By the time they hurried out of their cabin the echoes of the dinner
-gong had been dead for ten minutes. But the corridors were full of
-laughing groups: harlequins, monks, pierrots, Turkish ladies, Dutch
-girls and nondescript costumes that defied a label. For fear that the
-Green Witch might bolt back to the cabin, Cynthia kept close behind her
-but after a few minutes realized this was unnecessary. Their passage
-was a minor triumphal procession for everyone turned to look at them
-and made some delighted exclamation over the novel costumes. Cynthia
-was amused to note that Miss Mitchall’s sharp little chin went higher,
-her step became firmer as the approbation grew and by the time they
-reached the stairway to the dining saloon she walked like a princess
-approaching her throne.
-
-Cheers and a spatter of applause greeted their descent and three tables
-claimed their company but Cynthia looked around and made a quick
-decision. In a far corner sat Harvey O’Neill, as the Tin Woodman, and
-Johnnie Graham, in sackcloth and straw, presumably a scarecrow. Miss
-Mitchall needed what only an Irish tongue could supply. Cynthia steered
-toward the small table.
-
-“May I introduce the Green Witch of Greenwich Village?” sang Cynthia
-above the hubbub. “Did you know that Green Witches had special magic
-and charms, much stronger than black and white ones?”
-
-“Special charms, certainly,” agreed the Irishman. “Come and cast a
-spell on me, Miss Witch,” and he pulled out a chair for her. Cynthia
-took the one next to Johnnie.
-
-“Smart of you,” he whispered in her ear, “to give her a costume that
-went with her specs. It’s one of the best on the floor.”
-
-There was an almost continual pageant down the wide stairs. Stasia made
-her entrance alone and effectively in the long, slinky costume of a
-modern French doll. From the bright orange wig of knitted yarn, through
-the high bodice and long full skirt of brilliant reds and raw blues
-to the absurdly high heeled slippers of green satin and the painted
-circles on her cheeks beneath the wide lashed baby stare, she was
-perfect in every detail. Even to a price tag on her shoulder stating
-“twenty five francs.” She was followed by a Spanish señorita on the arm
-of a George Belchers, charlady, red nosed, apron-garbed, three dingy
-violets nodding in his bonnet as he stumbled apologetically, paused
-to mop up the steps before the señorita and dramatized the amusing
-entrance.
-
-How she hated to have this end, Cynthia thought. Paris, surely, wasn’t
-going to be half so much fun. And never to see any of these nice people
-again. ... Miss Mitchall for instance. It didn’t seem possible that you
-could get to know a person so well and then let them slip out of your
-life. Stasia was going to stay in Cherbourg for a week. Johnnie ...
-
-“Where do you go, Johnnie?” she asked.
-
-“Straight through Paris and down to Provence. I’m studying the poetry
-of Mistral, who, if you don’t happen to know, was the greatest poet of
-southern France. Why?”
-
-But she turned to O’Neill. “And you’re going to Ireland, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes. Better come along,” he suggested, “it’s a bit of heaven.”
-
-“Oh yes, there’s a song about that, isn’t there,” she laughed. Weren’t
-any of these people going to be in Paris? Suppose she couldn’t get
-in touch with the editor she had come to see? Suppose the job didn’t
-materialize? Suppose ... well, these were nice cheerful meditations to
-have in the middle of a party! She bet Miss Mitchall wasn’t harboring
-any such gloomy thoughts. Suddenly Cynthia wished there was some way,
-some nice, tactful, subtle manner in which she could help the little
-governess without her knowing it. But a loan was out of the question.
-Cynthia herself hadn’t much more than the price of a ticket home. And
-you don’t pick up purses in mid ocean.
-
-“I wish there was a Duchess on board, with a million pounds sterling
-and eighteen children, and that she would fall overboard and I could
-save her life,” was her fantastic thought. She must have said it out
-loud for Johnnie murmured, “Heaven help us!” and then glanced at the
-little governess. “Oh, you mean for Miss Mitchall. But why stop at
-eighteen when you’re wishing!”
-
-Cynthia spluttered into giggles and felt better. In fact she could
-scarcely eat her dinner for all that was going on around her. Bright
-balloons bumped her elbow, a rain of multicolored confetti sprinkled
-the table cloth and brilliant streamers of paper flying through the
-air, must be picked up and returned, lacing the dining saloon with
-carnival colors.
-
-After dinner there was a dance in the lounge. Cynthia had looked
-forward to it all day and the day before, but after a few waltzes and
-foxtrots it began, somehow, to fall flat. Everyone else seemed to
-be having a perfectly gorgeous time. Even little Miss Mitchall was
-plentifully supplied with partners but their enjoyment seemed only to
-increase Cynthia’s gloom as every step she made took her nearer to the
-time of leaving the ship, to the dreaded unknown.
-
-She knew what it was. She had done too little work for days. This
-wasn’t the first time that idleness had made her miserable, and it
-would be useless to explain this to her puzzled partners. Between
-dances she would slip off and dive below for her sketch pad. Drawing
-would bring the relief it always had brought and as for models, they
-were all about her. All she needed was her book to make a record, not
-just of the clever costumes around her, but of the movement and the
-groups that the dancers made. Why not get it? Left, for the moment,
-between dances without a partner, Cynthia decided that she would, and
-sped down to the cabin.
-
-As she came along the main corridor, deserted now since all of the room
-stewards were at their dinner, she heard a door banging, banging, with
-the slow swing of the ship and irritatedly wondered why no one had
-fastened it.
-
-Turning down the small corridor that led to her own cabin she noted
-that the swinging door was that opposite her own. If someone were ill
-in there, the door must be extremely annoying. She opened her own door,
-switched on the cabin light, found her sketch book and stepped out
-again. Again the door opposite slammed back. The cabin light was on.
-She tapped gently on the doorframe. Perhaps the occupant was too ill to
-get up. But no one answered.
-
-Cynthia put her hand on the knob to close it, but the door was partly
-wedged by a suitcase which had slid against it--the suitcase which she
-recognized as the same she had tripped over when she first came on
-board. Or was it the same? There was that Mexican Airways label, and
-next to it a circular yellow paster which formed a pattern her mind
-had already recorded, but something was missing. She closed the door
-gently, shoved it to see that it was firmly latched, and hurried along
-the corridor. But as she ran up the stairway she remembered what was
-missing. The Ottawa label had been sponged off. There was a darker spot
-on the leather where it had been.
-
-At the entrance to the lounge, the color and light and music burst on
-her like a shower of thrown confetti. Figures whirled and swayed to the
-music, the room was a shifting patchwork of bright color. Even Miss
-Mitchall had been persuaded to dance and jigged round and round happily
-with a little Hungarian whose bent knees and extreme speed were relics
-of an older era.
-
-Cynthia passed behind the row of chairs at the end of the dance floor
-and skirted the room to where, in a remote corner behind an empty card
-table, she could be comfortably inconspicuous yet have a good view of
-the dancers. She leafed through her sketch book, found some blank
-pages and began to work.
-
-Between encores the couples paused, chatted, and applauded. That
-scarecrow with his whitened face and clay pipe ... Cynthia got it with
-a few strokes of the pencil. Then Miss Mitchall’s rapt expression as
-she gazed into her partner’s face, radiant, unconscious. Oh darn! The
-music had started again.
-
-Cynthia made a dozen rapid action sketches of the dancing couples (some
-of them so close to caricatures she wouldn’t have cared to have the
-models see them), yawned, and looked about her. Perhaps it would be
-more fun to go back to dancing.
-
-Most of the older people had drifted away and were talking at the
-further end of the room, or had gone in to the card tables. How
-different some of them looked in costume. She would scarcely have
-recognized Mrs. Moody, for instance, in the white hair and patches of
-a colonial belle. And the man with her ... Cynthia frowned, trying to
-place him. Oh yes, it was the hat that had put her off. He was the
-man in the golf cap who tramped the deck all day long ... “walking
-to Europe,” Johnnie Graham had said. But the middle aged man who sat
-alone, not far from Cynthia? Surely she had never seen him before,
-surely she would have remembered that beak-like nose, the hollow cut
-deeply on either side of it and the thin lipped mouth.
-
-She made a few strokes of her pencil on the blank page of her sketch
-book, then, noting how still her unconscious model sat, became absorbed
-in the portrait. Not a good face, but a strong one. The brows were
-as heavy as her pencil could etch, the graying hair at the temples
-disappeared beneath the tightly drawn edge of a stocking cap and the
-long chin dipped into a wide pierrot ruff. The costume was that of a
-harlequin and had probably been rented from the ship’s barber, who
-carried a stock of fancy costumes for these parties.
-
-Cynthia, absorbed in her sketch, worked rapidly. The claw-like hand
-that had reached up to pull away the ruff ... the long white scar just
-showing at the side of the chin, not an old scar, she thought, for it
-still showed pink at the edges. Her model sat quietly, unaware of the
-attention he was receiving.
-
-No, that chin wasn’t right. Cynthia flipped over another page and made
-a more detailed study of the lower part of the face. This was a type
-she could use, sometime, in an illustration. She wondered vaguely what
-the man did when he wasn’t on ship board. Then the music stopped.
-
-Perhaps it was that his attention had wandered from the dancers or
-perhaps it was a sudden sense of being watched, but the man turned
-quickly in his seat and sent such a glare of enmity at the astonished
-Cynthia that she started and dropped her book. When she emerged from
-groping beneath the table her model had disappeared. He must have moved
-very quickly for he was already slipping through the door. Cynthia
-shook herself. That man certainly didn’t like artists! But this was a
-good waltz, why not enjoy it.
-
-It was after midnight when she tiptoed into the cabin. Miss Mitchall
-was already asleep. Her tall green hat and the long cape were neatly
-disposed on the couch beneath the window. She was still asleep when
-Cynthia dressed silently next morning, when she left for breakfast.
-The dining saloon was almost deserted. Nearly everyone seemed to be
-sleeping late or breakfasting in bed.
-
-“My last day on shipboard,” thought Cynthia a little mournfully. What
-to do to stretch it out to its full length? She decided to spend the
-morning on deck, sketching; the afternoon in the lounge with a book,
-or perhaps a game of deck tennis with Stasia. But in the middle of
-the morning a thunder shower drove everyone indoors and Cynthia found
-Stasia and her father over coffee and toast in the lounge.
-
-“This is Dad’s second breakfast and my first,” announced Stasia. “Have
-some coffee, Cynthia?”
-
-Cynthia declined the coffee. “I was up with the larks, or at least
-the seagulls,” she said. “Do you mind if I sketch you while you eat?
-I’ve wanted to get you all week.” But what she really wanted was Mr.
-Carruthers with his rugged beak of a nose, his thin, slightly curling
-mouth. In fact she became so intent on her sketch that she forgot she
-was supposed to be drawing Stasia till the tall girl laughed:
-
-“Dad, she’s found you more beautiful than I am!”
-
-“What, what? That so?” Mr. Carruthers had been the ideal model,
-absolutely unconscious of Cynthia’s flying pencil. It seemed only fair,
-however, to show him the drawing when it was finished.
-
-“And this is my roommate. Look, Stasia, I got her last night when she
-was dancing with the Hungarian.”
-
-Stasia murmured, “wish I could draw like that.” Mr. Carruthers, too,
-seemed impressed. “Good work, young lady,” he nodded. But Cynthia
-felt he wouldn’t have much use for artists. He would have all the
-conventional ideas about them; temperament and talk and starving in
-garrets.
-
-Stasia was turning the leaves slowly, making here and there a comment,
-Mr. Carruthers looking over her shoulder till he stopped her with a
-large forefinger suddenly on one page.
-
-“Who is this? Where did you sketch him?” he asked.
-
-Cynthia leaned across the table. “Oh, that man? Isn’t it a wicked face?
-I wish you could have seen ...”
-
-But Mr. Carruthers was impatient. He took the book from Stasia. “Tell
-me about this. When did you sketch this? Last night? And what was this,
-part of the costume? Make-up?”
-
-“No,” Cynthia laughed, “it was a bad scar, a fairly new one for it was
-still pink and raw-looking. I think he had tried to cover it with that
-harlequin ruff, but when he grew warm he forgot about it, and pushed
-the ruff away from his face.”
-
-Mr. Carruthers had already pushed the little electric bell with an
-insistent finger. Before the hurrying steward had reached the table,
-Mr. Carruthers barked, “Ask Captain Wain if we can see him immediately,
-in his office, and tell the purser to join us there.” Then he turned to
-Cynthia, “I’d like you to come along and tell the Captain what you just
-told me. And may we borrow your sketch book for an hour or two?”
-
-Puzzled and excited, Cynthia followed Stasia and her father out of
-the lounge, down the corridor towards the captain’s office. Captain
-Wain was a plump little man with a ruddy complexion that had weathered
-many storms, white walrus whiskers, and a blue uniform with lots
-of glittering buttons. Behind him stood the purser whom Cynthia
-already knew, a lean, hatchet-faced man, with small sharp eyes and an
-apologetic manner.
-
-Mr. Carruthers held the door for the two girls, then closed it firmly
-behind him and plunged immediately into his subject.
-
-“It’s this matter of Goncourt,” he stated, and opened Cynthia’s
-sketchbook where his thumb had been keeping the place. “I want you two
-to see this.”
-
-The Captain leaned to look at the portrait of the man in the ruff, and
-passed it to the purser with no comment save a brief “Mmumph!”
-
-The purser examined it somewhat longer. “Miss Wanstead made this?” he
-asked.
-
-Cynthia, bewildered, explained when and where she had made the sketch,
-and questioned further, explained about the scar.
-
-“He really had such a scar? It wasn’t grease paint, or whatever it is
-you use on your face?”
-
-Cynthia shook her head. You didn’t put things like that in a sketch
-when you were making notes from real life. It was, she told them,
-exactly as she had drawn it. She didn’t have any reason to make it up.
-
-Mr. Carruthers sat down and waved the others to chairs. “Might we,” he
-suggested, “see Goncourt’s passport again?”
-
-Yes, the purser would bring it. He seemed glad to get away. Stasia,
-who had quietly watched all this now said, “Don’t you think it would
-be a good plan, Dad, if we told Cynthia what this was all about?”
-And, at her father’s nod of assent, explained: “Dad is owner of this
-steamship line, you see, and the night we sailed from New York the head
-of the Police Department came down to see us off. He had come, he said,
-especially to get track of a man with a scar on his face. It was then
-late in the evening, you see, and most of the passengers were on board,
-but the purser examined all passports for a man with a scar like that.
-It was said to be very conspicuous, and the men at the gate watched all
-other passengers who came in after that, but they decided that no such
-man was on board.”
-
-“He’s wanted by the police?” asked Cynthia, feeling very much like a
-murder-mystery tale.
-
-“Yes, for smuggling ... in ...”
-
-“Here is the passport.” The purser, returning, had a little blue book,
-not a dark red one, such as Cynthia’s, in his hand. He passed the book
-to the Captain who gave it a brief glance, grunted non-committally
-and shoved it towards Mr. Carruthers. Stasia’s father compared the
-photograph to the face in Cynthia’s sketch book, but as one was full
-face, the other in profile, little could be gained by the comparison.
-
-“Is this the man?” he asked Cynthia, indicating the passport photograph.
-
-Cynthia got up and came around the desk. Passport in hand she moved
-to the window for a better light. As she examined the picture she was
-aware of the silent tenseness behind her and suddenly had an idea of
-how important all this was, important to several people. Closing her
-eyes, she tried to remember more fully the face she had sketched, not
-from the side as she had drawn him, but as he had quickly turned to
-gaze at her, full face, under the dark frowning brows. Then she looked
-again at the picture in her hand. It was very like. Still ...
-
-“No, it’s not the same man.”
-
-There was a little stir in the room and Mr. Carruthers got up and came
-to stand beside her.
-
-“But it’s very like him.” Something teased at her brain. Like and not
-like ... like and not like ...
-
-“It might be a relation,” she hazarded dubiously. “This man,” she
-tapped the passport, “has had a broken nose at some time. We had a
-model with one at the Academy, so I recognized the peculiar shape.” It
-was not at all like the beaky feature she had sketched.
-
-Absently she gazed at the cover of the passport. “What cabin is this
-man in? The one with the passport.”
-
-“He’s in 376, Miss,” the purser answered.
-
-And Cynthia was in 374, right across the little corridor. The passport
-in her hand was Canadian, and Miss Mitchall had said ... “Look here,”
-Cynthia said suddenly, “could my roommate be called? I think she might
-be able to help us;” and added, “you can be sure she won’t talk.”
-
-The captain glanced dubiously at Stasia’s father. “The less people who
-know about this ...” then, at the other’s nodded gesture toward the
-purser, “ask her to come here,” he commanded gruffly.
-
-Miss Mitchall, slightly fluttering, was produced almost immediately.
-Cynthia didn’t try to explain the circumstances, just showed her the
-passport. “Did you ever see this man? I mean, does he look familiar?”
-
-Squinting near-sightedly, the little governess examined the picture,
-then passed it back with a shake of her head. “No, my dear. I’ve never
-seen him.”
-
-There was a sigh in the cabin. But Cynthia had not finished. That
-teasing idea of hers ... Miss Mitchall had once told her something that
-bore on this. ... “Then if not that man, someone very like him?”
-
-“Someone like him, surely. But not that man. Probably a twin brother. I
-was a twin myself.”
-
-So that was it. Cynthia’s memory had almost, but not quite, done the
-trick.
-
-“By Gad!” barked the Captain, “the woman has brains! Where did you see
-this man, madame?” His tone was weighty with respect.
-
-“In the cabin across from 374. Once the door was open as I passed and
-he was shaving, with the light full on his face. There was quite a scar
-on his cheek. He shut the door with a slam when he saw me.”
-
-Cynthia was still looking at the passport in her hand. “Was this man
-from Ottawa, the one you wanted?” she asked. Then gasped.
-
-It was almost as though she had sprung a mine, so laughably surprised
-were the faces about her. “How did you know that?” the Captain’s gruff
-tones held suspicion.
-
-But Cynthia had suddenly remembered the suitcase she had stumbled over
-the first day, and the dark patch that showed some label had been
-removed from it. “You see,” she explained further, “I’m accustomed to
-remembering the shapes and colors of things, perhaps more than most
-people do because that’s part of my job. I remembered an Ottawa paster
-on the suitcase because of a certain clever arrangement of colors,
-green and blue and orange.”
-
-Mr. Carruthers stopped her with a gesture. Stepping into the doorway he
-spoke a moment in a low voice to the steward outside then returned to
-the room. “Will you describe this label for us, or could you draw it?”
-
-“It’s something like this.” Cynthia took the pencil out of her pocket
-and made a little diagram on a blank page of her note book. “It had an
-orange moon and a tower, rather medieval, dark blue against it. Then
-there was a jiggley border of green, in this manner.”
-
-The steward with something in his hand, stood in the doorway. Mr.
-Carruthers rose and brought in a suitcase, not the black one, but a
-small, light-tan airplane case. He turned it around so that all might
-see the Ottawa label, exactly as Cynthia had sketched it.
-
-“We were in Ottawa a few weeks ago,” he explained, “and I remembered
-this label on our bag. You see,” he turned to Cynthia, “this man is
-wanted in Canada for jewel stealing. The police of Ottawa had wired the
-police of New York to watch for him on any boat leaving port within the
-next few days. I believe he has sailed on this line before, but we have
-to be awfully sure before we can make an arrest. The publicity, if the
-man were innocent, would be unpleasant for the steamship company.”
-
-“I’ll go and make the arrest myself.” The Captain departed, taking the
-purser with him.
-
-Stasia, who had been quiet as a mouse all this time, prodded her father
-with a finger. “Daddy, tell Cynthia the rest of it.”
-
-“Oh yes ... ah,” Mr. Carruthers cleared his throat. “A hum ... we are
-extremely grateful to you ladies, Miss Wanstead, and Miss Mitchall.
-It would have been awkward if he had escaped by our line. Of course
-you understand that there is a reward for information leading to his
-arrest. And I think we can say that the reward will be yours if this is
-Goncourt, as we now fully believe.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“And to think that it really was Goncourt and that he has been in that
-cabin all the week,” thrilled Miss Mitchall for the hundredth time.
-
-Cynthia grinned. “And to think of your suggesting the twin business, of
-your knowing it was a Canadian accent. That was really as important as
-the sketch. You see he got the scar in Ottawa, when he made a big haul
-of some jewels, about a year ago, and then he went to Quebec and did
-the same thing. But then he used the picture of a twin brother on his
-passport and covered the scar with a muffler when he came on board. I
-suppose he was afraid to go out of his cabin very much.”
-
-“How like a Wallace novel!”
-
-Cynthia went on folding things to put into her suitcase. In another
-minute she could close it, not to be opened again until she was in
-France. “I wonder,” she asked without turning, “if you would do me a
-great favor?”
-
-“Why of course my dear, what is it?”
-
-“Well, you see this reward business is rather a bother.” Cynthia didn’t
-say that Stasia had warned her it might be some weeks before the check
-got through. “I wonder if you would take some of my money now, as part
-of your share. If I have too much I’m liable to spend it on Paris hats
-and foolish things, you see. Perhaps a hundred now, and when the check
-comes I’ll send you the rest of your half.”
-
-For a moment Cynthia was afraid Miss Mitchall would see through her
-plan and refuse, but the little governess smiled and nodded. Yes, she
-knew how tempting Paris was if you had money. Yes, she’d be glad to
-take some of it now.
-
-Cynthia snapped off the light and hauled herself into the upper bunk.
-Paris tomorrow! But she wasn’t afraid of her luck any more. She’d
-proved it would stand by her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 2
-
-_Paris_
-
-CORNED BEEF HASH
-
-
-Steamship and steamer friends had been left behind. Paris was ahead,
-closer now with every minute, every hurrying second. The little French
-girl who had kept on her hat and gloves and had read, in silence, a
-paper covered copy of Anatole France all the way from Cherbourg, let
-down the window, leaned out to wave a beckoning hand, and shouted,
-“_Porteur! Porteur!_”
-
-Cynthia waited patiently, but as the other seemed in no haste to
-relinquish her place at the window, the American finally leaned over
-the French girl’s shoulder and beckoned in similar fashion. The long
-train slid gently to a stop and a score of stout little blue smocked
-men seemed to spring from the ground and began taking baggage from the
-open windows, loading it on wide straps over their sturdy shoulders.
-
-Cynthia captured the eye of number 972; a beady eye above a red nose
-and a moustache that would have graced a member of the Beggar’s Opera.
-She gulped, “Taxi!”--thank goodness, there was a word that meant the
-same in several languages, at which he grinned cheerfully and slung her
-heavy suitcase and her paint box in one huge paw. The other grasped her
-neighbor’s bags and the whole strange and unwieldy combination lumbered
-off down the platform. Was he gone for good? Better follow that French
-girl, Cynthia decided. She seemed unconcerned. Oh, one had to give up
-the ticket here, and there was the porter again. No more customs, that
-had all been cleared at the quay, earlier in the morning.
-
-The street met her with a blast of warm July air, a dazzle of summer
-sunlight and such a medley of strange noises: taxis hooting in a new,
-high key; shrill-pitched voices, mingled shouts and confusion, that she
-stood for a moment bewildered and lost. Horrid luck that no one she
-knew from the boat had been coming to Paris on this train!
-
-Then Cynthia saw that her bag and paint box had been piled into a
-taxi like a shiny black beetle and the blue smocked one waited for
-his _pourboire_. She tipped him ten francs. Was that too much, or too
-little? She had been warned that, in either case, he would glare, but
-this one smiled, muttered, “_Merci!_” and departed. The hotel address
-was written on a card and Cynthia had only to show that to the driver,
-hop in, and they were off.
-
-“Well!”
-
-“Well, so this is Paris!”
-
-“Well ...,” Cynthia giggled nervously. To be really here. To have
-arrived safely, all by herself. Well, that was something. “Paris!”
-
-She sighed, relaxed back against the cushions and closed her eyes for a
-moment. Oh, the taxi was stopping. Her eyes popped open. Just a little
-policeman in a toy soldier cape and a white stick with which he seemed,
-miraculously, to hold up this mad traffic. Off again. She shut her eyes
-once more. New smells, hot asphalt, violets, damp warm air, something
-cooking, other things. She just couldn’t keep her eyes shut.
-
-The car was running along gray cobbles between gray houses high and
-incredibly ancient. Tall, plane trees leaned out over gray walls that
-held in a silvery stream. The Seine! A little gay colored steamer, like
-a miniature ferry-boat, hooted and put off from a landing. Cynthia
-wanted to hug it all at once, to pinch herself to be sure she was here.
-How she wished Judy could see it, and Chick, dear Chick. This was to
-have been their honeymoon. He’d be over shortly, a few weeks at the
-most. And meanwhile there was work to be done; a language to learn,
-Nancy and Mrs. Brewster to see, and covers to be done for _Little One’s
-Magazine_.
-
-Was that, could that possibly be, Notre Dame over there to the left?
-And the Eiffel Tower clear ahead, misty against sunny sky? She had seen
-it as they came in on the train. Really Paris!
-
-“Not a motion picture!” chuckled Cynthia. And tomorrow she could go and
-see it all for herself.
-
-Then a second bridge, Place St. Michel. And a swift turn to the left
-into a narrow street where noises echoed back from the high stone
-houses to right and left. They drew up before a door and a boy, in a
-horizontal striped waistcoat and white shirt sleeves, came out from
-the hotel entrance. Here was her home in Paris.
-
-Inside, at the little brass-railed desk, they had a key for her room
-and a letter from Mrs. Brewster, who had made her reservation for her.
-There was a little cage-like elevator into which one squeezed, barely
-avoiding the folding doors, and then up, up, like a wobbly balloon. A
-hallway musty and dark, and at last a tall room with two high French
-windows opening on to a small balcony.
-
-“Yes, this will do nicely,” said Cynthia in her best French, and so
-moved into Paris.
-
-When the door closed, Cynthia sat down to catch her breath. So much had
-happened in the last half hour, she had seen so much that was new, and
-strange, and lovely. “I suppose there are people that live in Paris all
-the time and take it as a matter of course,” she told herself. “And, I
-suppose, I shall get to take it that way too, after a bit. But now it’s
-all rather frightening. I wonder if I can make myself understood, I
-wonder if I shall get lost, I wonder ... oh goodness, how shall I order
-meals? But perhaps menu French is the same everywhere.”
-
-Mrs. Brewster’s letter was reassuring. She seemed to think Cynthia
-would find everything very simple and easy. “But I am giving you the
-address of a little French girl, who speaks excellent English, she was
-a governess in London for some years. If you get lonely, or wish to
-improve your accent,” ha, _accent!_ “don’t hesitate to look her up.”
-Enclosed was also a note from Nancy.
-
-“Do come to Conquet,” she begged. “Mother and I are both painting here.
-It’s all pearly gray mists and long, empty beaches and sabots, and fish
-and steep streets and old houses. And you can find lots of children to
-pose for your covers.”
-
-It did sound fun. But Paris seemed quite enough adventure for the
-moment. And Cynthia’s purse was very flat. She must first see Mr.
-Culbert, who was over here now, and was the editor of the magazine for
-which she had a contract for a dozen covers, see if she couldn’t get an
-advance on the first order, and if he could put her in touch with a way
-to get models. Just at the moment she hadn’t the slightest idea how to
-go about getting one for the painting she must do.
-
-She sat down and wrote to Nancy, planning to mail the letter when she
-went out to dinner. Then leaning out on the little balcony, she watched
-the light fade in the street below, listening to the sounds of Paris
-echo up between the ancient, stained, backward sloping housefronts.
-
-What, she wondered, with a little pang of homesickness, were they doing
-now at home? Six o’clock ... but no, time was different. Was it three
-over there, or nine, now? The mental gymnastics made her head reel and
-she decided that she was hungry. But plenty of time yet. Cynthia hated
-to admit to herself that she dreaded that first meal alone, doubted her
-ability to order food, even to find her way home again, once she had
-set her foot off the hotel doorstep. It was after eight o’clock when
-she finally tore herself away from the window and summoned courage to
-go out for dinner. “You can’t starve till morning, idiot!” she told
-herself severely. “Just walk downstairs, and out the door. There must
-be lots of places to eat within the next two blocks. Why, France is a
-nation of cooks!”
-
-A short way up the Boule’ Miche’, she found a little place with pretty
-red-and-white checked table cloths on the iron topped tables, behind
-dusty box hedges in their wooden boxes. This was pleasantly removed
-from a small band that was playing lustily, and not too melodiously, on
-the street corner. Funny about those bands. She had passed three in the
-short distance from the hotel and another had begun playing beneath her
-window just as she went out.
-
-No one else seemed to be eating. Perhaps French people dined later
-than this. The menu was as much an enigma as she had expected. It was
-written in a flowing Spencerian hand, in dim violet ink on a limp and
-food-stained bit of paper. Hardly a word seemed legible, and none of it
-was intelligible. “Goodness,” murmured Cynthia, and looked about her.
-Could she get up and leave, and try another place? But the waiter had
-already placed a napkin beside her, fork and knife beside the napkin.
-Cynthia decided she hadn’t the moral courage to rise and depart. Well,
-here goes!
-
-“Bring me some of that, and that, and that,” she directed and pointed
-near the center of the page. The main body of a meal always came near
-the middle of the menu, didn’t it?
-
-The waiter, who wore a spotty black dinner jacket and a white apron,
-broke into a voluble explanation of some sort. Evidently they were out
-of this, would mademoiselle not prefer that? Mademoiselle nodded in
-agreement. Yes, anything. _Oui, oui, oui!_ The waiter departed on swift
-feet. Cynthia wondered what he would bring.
-
-What he brought was a strange piece of pink meat swimming in a
-cold bath of oil. This she poked about with a fork, wondering what
-particular portion of what animal it might be. It hardly seemed edible,
-and certainly though she was hungry, she was not yet hungry enough for
-that. After a long time the waiter seemed to appreciate that she had
-finished with that course, and brought her some hot boiled potatoes.
-These were more palatable. And bread helped too. Then came a small
-white something wrapped in tin foil, and served with a large salt
-shaker.
-
-But the foil proved to contain a small roll of really delicious cream
-cheese, and eaten with sugar, which came from the large salt shaker,
-and more of the crisp French bread. It served to round off the simple
-meal.
-
-“I suppose I have eaten,” thought Cynthia as she wandered home again.
-“I wish I weren’t still so hungry. At least that meal was cheap,
-and that’s important at the moment.” But she continued to think of
-hot beefsteaks, and hot muffins, and hot chicken pies, and what she
-wouldn’t do to a big plate of ham and eggs. ... Oh dear! But tomorrow
-she’d try another place. Perhaps that wasn’t a really good example of
-French cooking.
-
-As she strolled slowly back towards the hotel all the little bands
-were going full force. Cynthia noticed that people were beginning to
-dance, under the lights, on the hard cobbled pavements to the jiggling,
-monotonous tunes. She leaned for a while against the closed iron
-shutter of a shop, and watched the gay crowds gather. They seemed very
-happy. Was it some celebration, she wondered, or did French people
-always dance like this in the evening? The musicians beneath her
-window were in fine fettle, tootling, sawing, and bumping away at no
-particular tune, but just a sort of penny whistle noise with a strongly
-marked rhythm for the dancers.
-
-She sat in her window watching them till she got so sleepy she could
-no longer keep her eyes open, then deciding they’d probably keep it up
-pretty late, till ten or maybe eleven, crawled into bed. It had been a
-long day since Cherbourg that morning, and in spite of the band, which
-surely must stop before midnight, she thought she could sleep.
-
-But the monotonous, tuneless sound seemed to go round, and round, and
-round inside her head. She dreamed that she was waltzing rapidly with
-the _garçon_ of the striped waistcoat, with Madame in her black taffeta
-dress and wide gold chain, with the black cat of the restaurant. Then
-woke to hear the band still scraping, and bumping merrily. Foggily
-she struggled out of bed and closed first the heavy wooden shutters,
-then the window and went back to sleep with her head hot under the
-bedclothes. Twice she woke again at odd hours, but always that rhythm
-penetrated the darkness.
-
-Then she woke again. Surprisingly all was still. How blissful that
-was! She was sure the musicians had stopped only a short time ago,
-and waited tensely to see if they would start again. But there was no
-sound. Then rolling over with aching head she saw that light streamed
-from between the chinks of the shutters, and that her watch said seven
-o’clock.
-
-She opened her window, went back to bed and slept till nine. Then she
-wandered out to find breakfast. Only a gnawing hunger had made her get
-up at all.
-
-Strangely enough none of the restaurants seemed to be open. She peered
-in at two, between drawn net curtains, to see chairs piled on empty
-tables, and boys washing down the floors. Then rounding a corner
-Cynthia came full on the Seine, between its gray stone banks, and a
-gray stone bridge beyond which loomed, full in the summer sunlight, the
-twin towers of Notre Dame de Paris. Oh lovely!
-
-Along the embankment were the tiny stalls of the booksellers, all
-closed now. Didn’t Paris people go to work until noon, she wondered?
-
-Then at the end of the block, facing a small open square she saw a
-sign which read “_Café, Chocolat_.” Here, perhaps, she could get some
-sort of meal. Outdoors, under a gay striped awning she found a little
-wicker table with a red and white top, and wicker chairs. A big black
-cat with a white bib, and green eyes gave her welcome with purrs and
-ankle rubbings. This was going to be jolly. She stammered her desire
-for chocolate, and learned that “little breads,” and butter could also
-be procured, and that little breads were really crisp warm rolls.
-
-Notre Dame faced her, serene, solid, impregnable. When breakfast was
-over she’d go across and visit the church, and stroll along by the
-river. This must be the famous Left Bank, where all the artists and
-students lived.
-
-The cat rubbed, purring, about the table, and a small boy with eyes
-as softly dark as the cat’s fur, and clad in a diminutive smock of
-black, with a small black beret perched on his dark curls came out to
-stare solemnly at this stranger. Cynthia buttered a piece of roll, and
-offered it to him. With a shy, “_Merci!_” muttered in an oddly deep
-voice he took it, bolted it, and watched for the next mouthful. Cynthia
-grinned at him, ate a bit herself and gave him, thereafter, alternate
-bites. By the time two rolls were finished, and the big pitcher of hot
-chocolate was drained to the last sweet drop, the small boy had smiled
-also, had told her that his name was Nono, and that he lived here. Here
-at last was a friend. Tomorrow she’d bring a sketchbook to breakfast.
-
-When tomorrow came Nono appeared, along with his black cat, for more
-bits of warm roll. But this time he smiled immediately, crinkling
-his dark eyes with an amused and delightful welcome. When his father
-brought the chocolate, he said something in brief reproof, but Cynthia
-protested. “Let him stay,” she begged and displayed her sketchbook.
-
-The man grinned and nodded. He knew about artists, and explained to
-the boy that he must sit still for mademoiselle. Whereat Nono climbed
-into one of the café chairs, and grasping firm hold of the huge and
-somewhat reluctant cat, proceeded to demonstrate that he was born to be
-an artist’s model.
-
-Oh, this was glorious. Cynthia’s fingers flew to get it all down before
-it could dissolve, and when the cat finally went calmly to sleep, Nono
-continued to sit immovable, wide eyed, minutes on minutes. Cynthia got
-more and more thrilled. It was going to be a honey of a sketch. She
-wondered if, maybe, colors tomorrow. ...
-
-At last she nodded to the child. He laughed and stretched, and dumped
-the sleeping cat from his knees. Cynthia put two francs in his small
-hand. Was that, she wondered, too much, or too little? It was what her
-breakfast had cost her. Apparently, by his reception, it was all right.
-
-“Tomorrow?” she asked in French, and pointed toward the chair again.
-
-“_Oui, oui, Demain_,” agreed Nono. Then he must know that artists
-sometimes wanted one to pose again.
-
-That was on Sunday. Saturday had not been strikingly successful. For
-some reason, perhaps because it was Saturday, everything, banks and the
-Express Company, Mr. Culbert’s office and most of the museums Cynthia
-wished to visit, had been closed. Monday, of course, they would be open
-again, and she could get in touch with Mr. Culbert. Cynthia’s money was
-running low and she must ask for an advance on the first cover, and
-must find some way to get in touch with models to work from.
-
-But Monday was no better than Sunday, nor than Saturday had been.
-The band, for the third time, had played all night, and Cynthia had
-slept fitfully, hot and miserable in the closed, noisy room. She awoke
-feeling as though she could sleep for a week. Then she remembered Nono.
-Here at last was one bright spot in Paris. She hurried out to breakfast
-with her large sketch pad and her color box under her arm.
-
-Nono was waiting for her, and so was the black cat. Cynthia was
-ravenously hungry. A continental breakfast wasn’t enough food to last
-one through a day of sightseeing, and so far she had found no good
-place to eat. Hastily she drank her chocolate, shared a double order of
-rolls and butter with the somewhat greedy little Nono. She herself was
-anxious to get to work on this color sketch.
-
-Nono, complete with the large sleepy cat, clambered into his wicker
-chair. The sunlight reflected warm and yellow beneath his chin and his
-eyes were half closed, amusingly, in the glare. The black smock seemed
-almost a dark green in contrast to the cat’s soft fur, and beyond them
-was the red and white ruffle of the awning, a brilliant splash of warm
-color. Cynthia asked to have her little painting pail filled with
-water, sketched in the brief outline of her composition, and slashed
-happily into color. Once she said, mechanically “Rest!” and found that
-the boy understood. In a few minutes he returned to his place. The
-cat was a little different, but Cynthia had allowed for that, and now
-sketched him in and completed that part of the drawing all in one pose.
-
-The drawing was emerging with both charm and strength. Black, red and
-warm flesh tones accented with the green of the cat’s eyes, and one
-white paw lifted to rest against Nono’s black smock. This, thought
-Cynthia, was one of the nicest things she had ever done. Even fatigue
-and hunger seemed to have added to her ability since her senses seemed
-sharpened, nerves tautened by the past two days.
-
-She had decided to go that afternoon and find the little French girl
-Mrs. Brewster had recommended for language lessons. Her visit to the
-Express Company, and to the office where she had hoped to find Mr.
-Culbert were as unsuccessful as Saturday’s visits. Everything was still
-closed tight.
-
-Cynthia was beginning to worry. She had only a few hundred francs,
-about fifteen dollars, left in her purse and there was no telling how
-long this celebration might last. It puzzled her. She had asked Madame
-at the desk and had learned that it was the “Fourteenth of July,”
-whatever that was! But Friday had been the fourteenth. Surely they
-didn’t celebrate America’s Fourth of July over here, did they? Foggily
-she tried to connect it with Lafayette and the two Revolutions, but
-couldn’t make it out. Everywhere the little street bands continued to
-play and people continued to dance in the streets.
-
-Still pondering on this mystery she found the house on the Boulevard
-St. Michel that bore the address of the Mademoiselle Menard. Mrs.
-Brewster had explained that she lived on the fifth floor and that “in
-France the first floor is not the ground floor, nor the next, which is
-called the entresol. You have to go up two flights to get to the first
-floor and then begin to count from there!” They were long flights,
-too, and Cynthia had begun to feel a little faint by the time she
-reached the top. When she found Mr. Culbert, if she ever did, she would
-certainly beg him to take her out for a real dinner!
-
-Cynthia put her finger on the large white push button and a bell pealed
-somewhere way off inside. But no one answered it. After a bit she tried
-again, and then again. What should she do next? She already had visited
-Notre Dame, and knew the Cluny and Luxembourg Gardens, for the past two
-days, as well as the palm of her hand. Besides she still felt strangely
-faint. She leaned against the heavy stone balustrade and looked down.
-
-Suddenly up through the hallway, wafted from below came the most
-glorious and enchanting odor. Cynthia closed her eyes. It made her
-think of home, of a loaded dinner table with big plates of corned-beef
-hash, with an egg on top, slabs of bread and butter, and a thick slice
-of apple pie with cheese. Oh dear!
-
-Like a good little hound following the scent, Cynthia, hypnotized by
-that delicious smell, stepped down, step after step, to the floor
-below. Still that beckoning, delightful odor. Another flight. It was
-stronger now, over the banisters.
-
-“Heavens!” thought Cynthia. “How can I ever stand this?”
-
-Here was the door and she had tracked it to its lair. A door, heavy
-and thick and solid, like those above. It was open just a crack, which
-was why the lovely smell had wandered out. Cynthia leaned against the
-doorpost. There were tears of hunger and of homesickness in her eyes as
-she sniffed ... and sniffed. Onions in that hash, too! No calves head
-in cold oil here, no tough thin steaks that might, or might not, be
-horsemeat!
-
-Then the door opened with a _whoosh_ and Cynthia almost fell through it
-into the hall beyond.
-
-“_’Ello!_” said a cheery voice in French. Another girl, shorter than
-Cynthia but about her own age, with an amusing long nose, twinkly brown
-eyes, her hair covered by a chic little straw hat with a red quill, a
-white wool dress embroidered in red.
-
-The girl continued to chatter something in French. Cynthia looked as
-blank as a brick wall; she had been wrenched all too suddenly from
-that corned-beef-hash day-dream.
-
-“Say!” cried the girl suddenly. “You’re an American, too, aren’t you?”
-
-Cynthia could have hugged her, right then and there. Why she hadn’t
-heard a word of English for three whole days.
-
-“Oh, _yes!_” she almost shouted. “And oh, is that hash you are cooking?”
-
-The girl giggled, then sniffed appreciatively. “Does smell good,
-doesn’t it? Mother’s a swell cook. Look here ...” she opened the door
-that had half closed behind her. “Hey, Mums, have we got enough for a
-guest?” and before Cynthia could object, had shoved her ahead, down the
-hallway, into a wide room lit by late sunlight.
-
-“Take off your mittens and bonnet and shawl,” laughed the girl. “You’re
-invited to dinner ... that is if you can stay. Mums, this is Miss
-America, winner of all beauty prizes to date, isn’t she pretty? ...”
-Heavens how the girl did rattle on, thought the amused Cynthia. ... “I
-found her fainting on our doorstep and brought her in.”
-
-“Mums” was wide and comfortable looking in a huge white apron and
-carried a turning-spoon in her hand. She seemed unperturbed by her
-daughter’s nonsense.
-
-“My name’s Wanstead, Cynthia,” explained the owner of that name. “And
-I do hope you will forgive me. I sniffed your delicious cooking two
-flights up.”
-
-“Good grief, I must have left that door open again!” rattled the girl.
-“We’d just about lose our French lease if they sniff our cooking in the
-hall. Oh, I forgot, my name is Murchison. This is Mrs. Murchison, my
-honored parent. ... Listen I’ve got to run out with some letters for
-the post. Sit still and I’ll be back in a jiffy.”
-
-Cynthia was only too glad to sit. Normally she would have protested
-more strongly against their forced hospitality, but today, homesick and
-genuinely hungry and considerably worried about the future, she found
-this American household irresistible. Mrs. Murchison puttered into the
-room and out again murmuring absentmindedly: “Father loves corn-beef
-hash. ... Can’t get French cook to make it properly. ... Marie, our
-cook, gone home for the holidays ...” and still murmuring disappeared
-at last in the direction of the kitchen.
-
-Over the delicious dinner Cynthia heard the story of the mysterious
-holiday. “It’s the Jour de Bastille,” Alice explained to her, “in
-celebration of the destruction of that beastly prison. The French never
-have a half-holiday. They save it up and make four days of it. Father’s
-in the consular service and had to be home for tomorrow morning, but
-most Americans who live here plan to stay out of Paris during these
-four days, they’re so noisy. Our cook won’t be worth her salt for the
-next week, she’ll be so sleepy. If you ask me, you look half asleep.”
-
-“I’ve had one of those bands under my window for the past three
-nights,” apologized Cynthia. “Please, can I have some more hash?”
-
-“Save room for real American ice cream,” advised her hostess, and, when
-dinner was over, “I’m going to tuck you into bed right away, you poor
-thing. It’s only seven and you can sleep till ten or eleven. Then I’ll
-wake you to go home. Come on, my room is at the back, on the garden,
-you won’t hear a single drum or whistle or even a taxi horn.”
-
-Cynthia was too weary to utter more than a feeble protest. “It seems
-kind of funny to break into a stranger’s house, eat their hash and go
-to sleep in their bed,” she murmured as she slipped off her shoes.
-
-“Take off your dress. That’s right. I’ll just throw a blanket over you
-and open this window a little. Sleep _doucement!_”
-
-Cynthia started to call, “Don’t fail to wake me,” but must have been
-asleep before she could speak the words. At least when she awoke an
-apparent few minutes later the sentence still hung unuttered, in her
-mind. She stretched, blinked, fumbled for her thoughts, then glared at
-the window. It was full daylight!
-
-Frantically she bent to look at her watch. It had stopped. Then it
-_was_ next day? The little clock on the bureau said “eight o’clock” and
-then Alice, tousle headed, in bright pink candy-striped pyjamas peeped
-round the edge of the door.
-
-“Hello you! Gosh how you did sleep! Are you by any chance a descendant
-of the Sleeping Beauty? I phoned your hotel so they wouldn’t think you
-had got run over, and went in to sleep with Mother.”
-
-She pranced into the room and perched on the foot of the bed. “It’s a
-swell day. And things started to move again today. You’ll find your
-little editor chap, no doubt. Will you have your breakfast on a tray in
-here, milady, and go back to sleep again?”
-
-“Goodness no! Oh, I feel fine.” Cynthia swung her feet out of bed.
-
-It was nearly noon, however, when Cynthia sent her name to Mr. Culbert,
-the editor of _Little Ones’ Magazine_. He came out immediately, a plump
-little man with a round jolly face and held out both hands, beaming his
-welcome.
-
-“Such a shame you landed here in the middle of the holiday. I was down
-in the south of France with the owner of the magazine, but got back
-last night. Now, my dear child, about those covers of yours, I suppose
-you want to get right at them. About models ... that’s going to be a
-bit difficult. Children, you know. ...”
-
-“Not a bit difficult.” Cynthia’s eyes were dancing. “I’ve been
-working,” she said demurely.
-
-“What, not already? Well, you are a wonder! Oh, you’ve got something
-there? Come into the office, will you? This is just a borrowed place
-and I hate it. Drat these French chairs. I like a good old swivel chair
-I can lean back in. Shall be glad to get back to the States myself. Now
-let’s see. ...”
-
-He had chatted incessantly as he led the way into a room resembling
-more a window display of a decorator’s shop than an office. Cynthia
-perched on the corner of the elaborate inlaid desk and slipped the
-wrapper off her drawing, the one Nono, over her second breakfast, had
-finished posing for, just a half hour ago.
-
-“Here you are.” She knew it was good. Would he think so too? Gosh, he
-liked it! She could tell by his face.
-
-“Sa ... ay, that’s fine. My dear child, you have certainly surpassed
-anything you have done yet.” He set it on the floor, propped against
-the wall and leaned back to squint at it.
-
-It was nice to be praised and Cynthia felt herself getting warm and
-pink cheeked. Yes, she knew Nono had been her best effort ... to date.
-“There’ll be better ones, though,” she told the little editor. “I’m
-going to Brittany next week to join the Brewsters, and to paint. I’ll
-do you a Breton child for the issue after this one.”
-
-Mr. Culbert got up and took her arm. “Now we’ll go and get a check
-made out for this. I know you can always use money in Paris. And then
-how about a celebration dinner tonight, some place where they have
-marvelous French cooking?”
-
-Cynthia laughed. “I can do better than that, I’ve got an invitation for
-you, instead. We’re both invited to a really American meal. Please,
-_do_ you like corned beef hash?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 3
-
-_Brittany_
-
-COLD-IN-THE-HEAD
-
-
-Nancy’s rapid, fluent French gave directions to the small, sabot shod
-boy who dragged behind him a blue painted hand cart. Then she turned to
-bestow an additional hug on the waiting Cynthia.
-
-“Oh, but it is grand to see you. And how brown you will get here! Come
-along. François’ll bring your luggage in his perambulator.”
-
-Cynthia drew a deep whiff of the ocean scented air. “Ouff! ’S nice to
-get on solid ground again. I feel inches deep in train dirt and trolley
-dust. How sweet the air smells, Nancy.”
-
-“You’ll see the broad Atlantic in a moment or two, just over that way a
-few blocks. We have to walk about a half mile to the bathing beach, but
-it’s a beauty when you get there.”
-
-Cynthia gave a little skip of delight. “How’s your especially nice
-parent?” she asked.
-
-“She’s always lovely. At the moment she’s in a seventh heaven, having
-donned a disreputable paint-smeared smock, stuck an old straw hat on
-her head, and is painting ocean foam and wet rocks, laying the color
-on the canvas with a trowel! She’s awfully glad to be free of the
-illustration business for a time, if you ask me. But you’ll see her
-soon. She gets hungry and comes home to meals.” Nancy babbled on and
-Cynthia had a chance to see how brown and strong she looked, how much
-good the summer in this tiny provincial town was doing her.
-
-“We turn here, to the right. This, ladieeze and gen’lemen, is the main
-and principal street of Le Conquet, the most wester-r-r-n town in all
-France. Sweet, isn’t it, Cindy?”
-
-It was, Cynthia admitted, adorable. Old and gray and cobblepaved, with
-a tiny, one-pedestrian sidewalk along one wall, and with little two-
-and three-story houses of old, pearly-gray stone whose tiny windows
-opened intimately close to the street, as did the heavy wooden doors.
-Green lichened roofs sloped steeply, and there were red geraniums
-blooming in open windows between blowing red and green checked
-curtains, to give color to the mellow softness of the ancient stone.
-
-“Our American hero, Mr. Jones, used to put in here, they say,” remarked
-Nancy casually.
-
-“What Mr. Jones?” asked Cynthia, then at Nancy’s deepening dimple,
-always an index to her mood, suspected a trap. “Who was Mr. Jones?”
-
-“Why surely you remember John Jones, of the U. S. Navy? No? ... Not Mr.
-John _Paul_ Jones?”
-
-“Beast!” laughed Cynthia, then “Tell me some more.”
-
-“Well, as you know, this is the Department of Finisterre, Lands End,
-and is the farthest west of all western provinces. Some centuries
-ago, dunno how many, but not long, it belonged to England and the
-people here are closer to the southwest-of-England type than you could
-imagine.”
-
-They turned a corner, past a wide lipped stone well where a woman
-dipped water in a huge, creamy-toned pitcher. Cynthia murmured, “Wait
-till I can get to my sketch book!” and Nancy nodded understandingly.
-
-“Then the French got it back,” she continued, “and perhaps the English
-again after that. Anyway the English burnt it a couple of times, though
-there were still some English families living here, but spared the
-houses in which they lived. That’s why there are still some very old
-places, in spite of the conquerors. Here’s the quay. You must get out
-your canvas sneakers, these cobbles are death on good leather shoes.
-Wooden sabots are best, though I’ve never tried ’em.”
-
-The tiny hotel smelled pleasantly of soap and good Breton cooking. One
-went steeply up two flights of stairs to a narrow hall and turned into
-a small, whitewashed room with a dresser, a wash stand and a white
-covered bed. The single window overlooked the long stretch of quay and
-the tidal river, very low now and turning to marvelous lavender in the
-sunset light.
-
-“My room is next door, and mother’s beyond that. Here are your things.
-I brought you the longest way so you could see the town--Goodness, you
-aren’t catching a cold are you?”
-
-Cynthia sneezed again. “I hope not. But a small child in the train from
-Paris had frightful snuffles, right in my own compartment, and it was
-sort of drafty on the trolley from Brest.”
-
-Promising to hurry, she closed the door and went to the window to hang
-out, gazing. Wooden shoes clattered merrily on the cobbles of the quay,
-and along the distant dunes, purpling with dusk, smoke rose from the
-smouldering potash fires where, Nancy had said, the thrifty Bretons
-burned seaweed for fertilizer.
-
-She was pleasantly weary and very hungry. All last night she had been
-traveling, more than half the width of France from Paris to Brest.
-Uncle Leslie had sailed from Brest after the Armistice, she remembered,
-and its steep streets and ancient houses, built on half a dozen
-different levels, had fascinated her during the hours she had to wait
-for her trolley to Le Conquet.
-
-It had been surprisingly hard to leave Paris. That city had changed for
-her, almost overnight. She could have stayed on there, almost happily,
-doing paintings and more paintings, digging herself in. _Almost_
-happily, but not quite. After all, she could have done that in New
-York. And what was the use of keeping on with a thing, once you had
-learned you could really do it, once you had met it and conquered it?
-While she was over here it was up to her to travel, learn, experiment,
-grow.
-
-And here, right outside the window was her first view of a real French
-village. How different from Paris, how quaint and sweet and clean--and
-oh, how paintable it was going to be. No wonder Nancy’s famous artist
-mother planned to spend her summer here. Perhaps Mrs. Brewster would be
-able to tell her how to find a model for the next cover, the Christmas
-number of _Little One’s Magazine_. Cynthia wanted to paint a little
-dark eyed Breton girl or boy, in wooden shoes and quaint cap for that
-December number.
-
-Goodness, there was the dinner gong! Cynthia pulled in her head just in
-time to face Nancy at the door. “Mother just came up stairs. Want to
-come say hello?”
-
-Cynthia sneezed and fumbled in her suitcase for a clean handkerchief.
-“Just a moment, Nan. I’ve been so busy just looking that I haven’t
-had time to get washed or combed. Now where did I put those hankies?
-Pour out the water, will you honey? So I can wash. Oh ... darling Mrs.
-Brewster!”
-
-Nancy’s mother, as pretty as ever, tanned from sea bathing, seemed
-hardly older than her daughter. “We’re so glad to have you here, my
-child. I want to hear all about your covers, and see what you’ve
-been doing. Nancy tells me you’ve already completed one painting, in
-Paris--Here’s the dining room, and this is our table.”
-
-There were several painters and two writers among the jolly little
-crowd at the Hotel Des Poissons. Cynthia got a tremendous thrill out
-of having these older people, all professional craftsmen of proved
-ability, regard her with respect and as an artist already “arrived.”
-Yet she was, after all, also a professional, traveling, actually
-seeing the world on what she earned with her brush and pencil.
-When she stopped to think about that, Cynthia always felt like a
-fairy-tale-princess who has rubbed the magic ring. But generally she
-was too busy to think about it.
-
-The next morning Nancy took her to explore the little town, not a long
-tour, for there were not six streets in the whole place. The ancient
-sturdy houses, facing the sea for half a dozen centuries seemed to
-grow from the very rock on which they were built. Below the hotel one
-crossed a bridge, at high water, or walked on a raised path across the
-sands, at low tide, to a long sandy beach bordered with dunes and tall
-waving grasses, very white and flat and clean.
-
-Cynthia surveyed the clear stretch of deserted sand, and Nancy’s brief
-little bathing suit with a longing eye. “I won’t go swimming for a
-day or two, I guess,” she decided. “This cold doesn’t seem to get any
-better and I’d rather not risk it.” She wondered if she were being
-old-maid fussy about herself.
-
-Breakfast was a delightfully informal meal, at almost any hour of the
-morning, and in the inn parlor, not the dining room. Here the ceiling
-quivered with reflections from the sunspangled river.
-
-On the second morning Nancy brought to breakfast a large, mysterious
-bag, and when she had received her huge bowl of _café au lait_, weak
-coffee made with milk, she opened the paper bag and dumped a handful
-of what appeared to be rolled oats, raw, into her bowl.
-
-“What on earth is that?” asked Cynthia.
-
-“That’s my breakfast food, want to try some?”
-
-Cynthia shook her head, “Goodness no. But where can you get breakfast
-food, American style, in a paper bag, in a French village?”
-
-“Feed store,” mumbled Nancy around her large spoonful. “It’s just
-chicken feed. Bran. I get so hungry by noon, with these continental
-breakfasts.”
-
-“How about an egg?” was Cynthia’s suggestion. “Soft boiled.”
-
-“Try and get it.” Nancy’s tone was amused.
-
-Cynthia struggled with the hard-to pronounce _oeuf_. Shortly it came,
-all alone on a small dish. It was hot, so it must have been in hot
-water. But when she broke it ... “Ugh! It’s completely raw!”
-
-“They simply won’t boil it any longer, unless you want a twenty minute
-egg, like a rock,” explained Nancy. “It’s one of the unsolved mysteries
-of the French cuisine. You’ll come to chicken-feed yet!”
-
-Meanwhile the time was passing. Cynthia had arrived on a Thursday,
-Sunday had rolled round, her Christmas cover must go off to Paris this
-week, and she seemed no nearer it than the week before. In fact, so
-far, she hadn’t seen any children that looked paintable.
-
-“They are pretty enough,” she mourned, at breakfast on Sunday. “But
-it’s merely a matter of color with them. I haven’t seen a single child
-that I thought would make a good poster cover.”
-
-Mrs. Brewster nodded. “I know. But some of the old people are
-marvelous. There are no better types for models of old people in all of
-France.”
-
-“But not for the Christmas cover of a children’s magazine. Unless ...
-there is a thought, I give them a Breton Santa Claus.”
-
-“No whiskers on ’em here.” Nancy was most discouraging. “What have you
-to suggest, Mother?”
-
-“Hark, there’s the church bell. I suggest that you two hurry into your
-best bonnets and shawls and go to church. All the village will be there
-and you will have a good chance to look them over. Then if you find
-what you want I’ll ask Madame, our patronne, to introduce us. Hurry
-now!”
-
-It was a splendid idea, Cynthia admitted, as she followed Nancy into
-the little stone church. Surely every good Breton inhabitant of Le
-Conquet was present, the women in wide skirts trimmed with bands of
-black velvet, with full sleeves, and tight black bodices setting off
-the lace-trimmed white aprons, the frosty white caps of Breton lace
-and the wide lace collars. Here at least, all the lovely quaintness
-of medieval France had not gone down before the stupid uniform of
-store-bought gingham dresses.
-
-The men were no less picturesque, with their low crowned wide brimmed
-hats, the shining silver buttons on their short, black velvet coats.
-And each child was a miniature replica of its parents, with the
-exception of the caps which mark the married women.
-
-The small bleak church was warmed to light by the rustle of many
-garments, by the soft glow of candles and Cynthia was enchanted by the
-little ship-models that swung from the hand hewn rafters, all of them
-as perfect as skill and loving care could make them.
-
-“They are thank offerings for the safe return of the ships they
-represent,” Nancy whispered to her. “Oh look, Cindy; isn’t she a
-darling?” Her elbow nudged for Cynthia’s attention.
-
-The minute Cynthia saw her, her artist’s eye registered her as the one
-model for that Christmas cover. Such pansy-brown eyes, such soft curls
-around the little pink-cheeked face, such a dimpled round chin above
-the starched white collar and the tight little bodice, like a small
-child playing at grown-up.
-
-Cynthia nodded her approval of Nancy’s choice. “How nice,” she thought,
-“to be with artists again. Oh, I wish they could be with me all over
-France,” remembering her loneliness in Paris.
-
-After the service they edged their way toward the door, Cynthia keeping
-the child in sight all the way. The little girl’s mother, who walked
-behind her, was a larger edition of the same type and must have been
-lovely when she was young, but was now bent and weary eyed, like so
-many of the hard working Breton peasants.
-
-Nancy’s eyes had been roving the church. Now she gave Cynthia a
-reassuring nod. “Wait for me outside,” she commanded and wriggled away
-through the crowd. Cynthia, who was taller than most of the villagers,
-saw her stop at last before a woman in black and wearing a hat. Their
-own patronne from the hotel, very much in her Sunday best. Nancy waved
-to Cynthia, then the two disappeared, blotted out by the congregation.
-
-Five minutes later she joined Cynthia in the little square above the
-fountain. “It’s all right,” she reported triumphantly. “We identified
-your model and her mother, and Madame says she will ask her about
-posing.”
-
-That was fine. Cynthia already saw her cover, painted, delivered,
-printed, and exhibited on every Christmas news stand in New York. She
-drew a breath of relief.
-
-They strolled back toward the hotel and the pleasant smell of Sunday
-dinner, the crowd slowly trickling away behind them. The little bakery
-was already doing a brisk business, for many of these small shops
-opened as soon as the church was out. Cynthia’s eyes caught a new
-poster on the bakery wall, a single sheet of vivid lemon yellow with
-blue and red type, such a bright patch of color in the pearly gray
-street that she hauled Nancy along to look at it.
-
-“Well ...” after a minute of Nancy’s silent contemplation. “What does
-it say, stupid? Can’t you read out loud, the way you were taught?”
-
-Nancy chuckled. “Sorry, I forgot. Well, ‘Hypnotiste’ means ‘Hypnotist.’”
-
-“I gathered as much as that. What comes after it?”
-
-“‘World renowned Professor Reynaldo.’ That sounds Spanish but he
-says he’s from Paris--‘Parisien’--will be here on Tuesday evening to
-give a demonstration of his stupendous and altogether unexplainable
-power of the human eye,” Nancy translated loosely. “It also says his
-demonstration will be held in the meat market. ... I suppose that’s the
-biggest room they have, except the church, and that admission will be
-one and two francs. Standing room fifty centimes. Poor thing, he can’t
-make much of a living out of that.”
-
-“Let’s go,” suggested Cynthia.
-
-“Eh? ... Well ... yes.” Then as the idea struck her. “I think it would
-be fun. Maybe mother would like to go. Let’s ask her now.”
-
-Mrs. Brewster was amused at the idea and quite willing they should go,
-but refused to be a third of the party. “Not if it’s to be held in the
-meat market. I never could stand the odor of so many sides of beef and
-mutton. But you children go along. I’m sure you will find it an amusing
-cross section of the peasant’s amusement. I believe they have never had
-a hypnotist here before.”
-
-But Cynthia very nearly didn’t get to the entertainment after all. For
-on Sunday afternoon she went swimming with Nancy. It was an hour or two
-after dinner, the warmest part of the day when the girls took their
-bathing suits and crossed the little path across the tidal river. The
-way straggled along the top of a high, wind-torn meadow where coarse
-grasses tangled about the feet and where, on the rocks below, the sea
-piled, churning among the crevices. But the further side of this little
-peninsula was the bathing beach, quite wild and deserted, and one could
-choose any of a hundred grass-grown sand dunes for a dressing room.
-
-Nancy had raced on ahead, and Cynthia sneezed twice, and wondered
-if she ought to go for this swim, after all. She wrestled with her
-conscience for a bit ... and conscience lost.
-
-It was a beautiful swim, but about midnight Cynthia awoke with such
-a sore throat she could scarcely whisper. “Oh, darn!” she murmured
-feverishly. “What a bother! I do hope I’m not going to be sick!”
-
-She lay for a bit thinking about that, then rapped gently beside her
-bed. She heard Nancy’s springs creak, heard her mutter something
-sleepily, and in a moment the light of Nancy’s candle appeared beneath
-the crack of the door. The crack widened and a sleepy voice asked, “Did
-you rap, honey? Oh, you poor thing! Cynthia, you are a wreck!”
-
-Mrs. Brewster was called immediately and then Madame. Together they
-applied a hot, oily cloth to Cynthia’s throbbing throat, a funny
-aluminum hot-water bottle to her feet, and gave her a dose of something
-else, equally unpleasant and equally hot. Then she was given something
-to breathe on a handkerchief ... Cynthia muttered that it nearly blew
-off the top of her head, but it did miraculously clear her nose for
-its original purpose of breathing.
-
-Next day she felt heaps and heaps better and protested that she could
-easily get up. But she was kept in bed till noon and then allowed out
-only for a short stroll in the sunshine, equipped with a handkerchief
-soaked in the breathing stuff. “But no more bathing till you are quite
-over this,” was the stern order of Nancy’s mother.
-
-“Yes’m,” murmured Cynthia meekly, ashamed to have given them all such a
-fright.
-
-There was, however, a final straw. At dinner that night Madame reported
-that she had seen the mother of the little girl, Leonie her name was,
-and that the woman refused to let the child pose for her portrait.
-
-“But how silly,” stammered Cynthia. “What is the matter? I’ll pay for
-her time of course.”
-
-“It’s not that,” Mrs. Brewster explained from Madame’s conversation.
-“But they are rather afraid of artists. The few who come here paint
-only the sea and the dunes. They aren’t accustomed to the idea of
-artists’ models, not even for portraits. This woman seems unusually
-simple and I suppose the word ‘posing’ made her think of wicked Paris!
-I’m sorry, for I think I might have persuaded her. Madame probably
-didn’t know how to go about it tactfully. ... If the woman could have
-met you. ... But aren’t there others you can get? I’m sure there must
-be.”
-
-So that Christmas cover had gone to smash, too! It would be hard to
-pick out another child, after having seen Leonie. Perhaps she’d have
-another opportunity to see the villagers at the meeting on Tuesday
-evening.
-
-Mrs. Brewster again gave her reluctant, though amused, consent. “If
-you’ll take a fresh handkerchief with some of that Breathex on it. ...”
-
-“Three of ’em,” promised Cynthia and Nancy together.
-
-“... And come straight home if you find you’re in a draft, or if you
-start to sneeze.”
-
-“We will,” came the chorus.
-
-Mrs. Brewster laughed. “All right. And I may sound fussy, but a tiny
-village in a foreign country is no place for one to get ill. Now run
-along and get ready for your show.”
-
-They followed the crowd and the clomp of wooden shoes to the meat
-market at the center of the town. Here, in the big hall, benches--rough
-boards on trestles--had been arranged and the Professor himself stood
-at the improvised ticket window.
-
-“Shall we be extravagant and take a two-franc ticket? Then we can sit
-in the front row,” suggested Nancy.
-
-“Let’s,” urged Cynthia. “What fun to have eight cents buy so much
-luxury.”
-
-The first two rows were very de luxe; benches with backs, but so hard
-and narrow that Cynthia was glad they had brought their coats for
-cushions. The children, giggling and whispering, somewhat awestruck by
-the promised entertainment, crowded into the seats behind them, and in
-the front rows sat the old ladies, some even with their knitting, very
-straight and stiff and impressive. There was a scuffle of sabots on the
-stone floor and outside a tied sheep baa-a-a-ed plaintively.
-
-Everyone peered and craned and turned heads to see the two American
-mademoiselles, and discussed them in friendly fashion, but quite
-openly. Cynthia’s bright beret and red coat, her gray eyes and dark
-curls, her shoes, her silk stockings, the ring on her finger, were
-argued and debated ... and relayed by Nancy in a choked murmur.
-
-“You are rich, since you wear a gold ring with a greenglass stone in
-it. Someone suggests that you are married, also because of the ring,
-but it seems Madame at the hotel has reported that you are still a
-‘Mees,’ judging by your letters. Oh, here is our professor!”
-
-M’sieu Reynaldo, who had been at once ticket taker and dispenser,
-usher, and frightener-away of small boys who would press their snubby
-noses against the windows, at last barred the doors and strode proudly
-up the center, and only, aisle. The stage was a rough platform on
-saw-horses, beneath the light of a half dozen dim, swinging lanterns,
-and was but a few feet from the de luxe seats occupied by Cynthia and
-Nancy.
-
-“Look, Nancy; there’s my lost model, Leonie. See, there at the end.
-Isn’t she a darling!”
-
-“Sh-h,” Nancy nudged her. “He’s going to begin.”
-
-The professor’s performance began with a short talk on hypnotism, its
-great antiquity, its meaning, and mostly of how wonderful he was at
-that ancient art. How, with the supreme power of his eye and a few
-passes of his hands--somewhat soiled hands they were--he could control
-his subjects and command them, thereafter to do his bidding.
-
-“I don’t believe it,” murmured Cynthia.
-
-“Wait and see,” muttered Nancy.
-
-“I must have absolute quiet here, during my demonstrations,” frowned
-the great Reynaldo. He was a small, slender-boned man in a soiled
-velvet jacket, and the jetty hair, the low brows, the wide cheekbones
-of the typical lower class Parisien--an amusing contrast to the bigger,
-blonder, slow-moving Breton audience.
-
-He asked first for two volunteers from the audience. After considerable
-shy shuffling of feet and chattering insistence on the part of their
-feminine escorts, two boys were shoved forward, down the aisle.
-Laughing, red with embarrassment, the clumsy young fishermen mounted
-the stage, then half numb with stage fright awaited the next move.
-
-A chorus of murmured advice came from the interested and neighborly
-audience.
-
-“Silence!” ordered the professor, with a flash of his Paris-black eyes.
-
-Then before the eyes of each volunteer he made passes with his hand,
-gave a low murmured command, and first one, then the other became
-glassy eyed and appeared to go into a waking sleep, there on the stage.
-The hall was intensely still, hardly a foot stirred or a skirt rustled.
-
-Cynthia choked in her handkerchief. “Oh, dear,” she thought. “I believe
-I’m going to sneeze, and how shall we ever get out of here!” But the
-scent on her handkerchief, though it nearly strangled her, did put a
-halt to the sneeze.
-
-“You are now asleep,” the Professor told his subjects. “You will do
-exactly as I say. Lie down and roll over.”
-
-The two young men lay down on the platform and rolled over. There was a
-murmur of awe from the onlookers.
-
-“Now this is a stairway and you are climbing up it,” continued the
-orders. “Now open this door,” where there was no door. “It is cold and
-windy out and the rain beats on your faces as you open it.” The two
-staggered back, arms over eyes as though they had indeed opened a real
-door on a blast of wind and rain.
-
-Cynthia was getting a little bored with this. It seemed so onesided,
-so unsporting. The audience tittered, but the boys were such simple
-country lads it seemed unfair they should be made a laughing stock like
-this. She didn’t like that oily little man with his velvet coat and his
-soiled hands. “I wish he’d stop,” she thought.
-
-The exhibition continued with various orders. The subjects were given
-water to taste, an empty glass to smell, but the Professor directed
-that they smell or taste whatever he dictated, and their faces
-amusingly registered disgust or delight or surprise. Yes, they were
-funny, but Cynthia felt uncomfortable and looked back over her shoulder
-toward the bolted door. She wished she hadn’t come.
-
-Only once did the little professor nearly lose his subjects. During
-a tense and silent moment the sheep in the yard uttered a prolonged
-“Ba-a-ah!” The audience giggled hysterically and one of the young men
-began to come to himself again, looked around in a bewildered fashion
-and walked to the edge of the platform.
-
-The Professor waved his hands, snapped his fingers. “Go, it is
-finished,” he commanded.
-
-The two subjects blinked awake. If they had been caught abroad in their
-nightshirts they could not have looked more red and sheepish.
-
-After that the renowned Reynaldo attempted to hypnotize a small dog,
-a little fox terrier that belonged to someone in the audience. The
-effort was hardly a success, for the fox terrier didn’t seem to realize
-he was a subject for the professor’s art. But the audience, with the
-remembrance of the former demonstration, was properly impressed and
-after a bit the terrier was allowed to go, barking his joy at the
-release, unharmed to his master.
-
-Again the Paris Professor called for volunteers, asking this time for
-two little girls as he had already demonstrated his power over grown
-men. The children on the benches behind Cynthia and Nancy giggled and
-nudged, “You go ... no, you go ... Let M’rie go ... Let Leonie ...”
-till five had been suggested and the professor, making his choice,
-called two to the stage.
-
-“Oh, there goes my little model,” murmured Cynthia, really distressed.
-“Can’t we stop her, Nancy?”
-
-Nancy shook her head, her eyes on the stage. “I don’t know how we
-could. After all, the professor is French and we are just outsiders.
-Better let them handle it themselves.”
-
-Cynthia subsided meekly but kept an eye on the little Leonie. What a
-lovely pose ... and that one ... and the next. Why the child was a born
-model, a picture in herself!
-
-She was also excellent material for the hypnotist, for she immediately
-obeyed his orders, going to sleep bolt upright in her chair before the
-professor’s waving, commanding hands. The other little girl, older and
-of stouter stuff, though not so easy a victim was also finally put to
-sleep. To Cynthia’s relief Reynaldo used more discretion in this case
-and satisfied his audience by having the children do a little dance, by
-having them appear to smell a rose when he gave them an onion, seem to
-taste something sour when he gave them a bonbon.
-
-Then he asked if either of the girls were musical. Someone in the
-audience volunteered that Marie could sing but that Leonie could not
-sing a note. He then commanded Leonie to come forward and perform for
-them. “Sing correctly,” he ordered, and named a little nursery tune
-known to all French children.
-
-The child really had a very pretty voice and performed with
-considerable credit. Also her friends seemed to think it marvelous
-that she could sing at all. But Cynthia, stifling a sneeze in her
-handkerchief, tapped a restless foot on the stone floor.
-
-Good, it was going to end! Monsieur Reynaldo had commanded with a
-sharp clap of his hand beside the ear of each child, that his subjects
-come awake. M’rie blinked her china blue eyes, smiled timorously and
-clattered down the steps to join her friends.
-
-But Leonie was a different matter. As Cynthia, taking a deep breath of
-her “Breathex” soaked handkerchief, watched with some interest, then
-growing apprehension, it seemed that the Professor also was becoming
-concerned.
-
-To cover his own confusion, he ordered her to get up, to walk across
-the stage, to do various things, all of which she performed with her
-former obedience. But when he again made passes before her eyes, then,
-in a low tone to cover possible failure, again ordered her to waken,
-she remained as soundly, as blank-eyed asleep as before. The audience
-was apparently undisturbed, and seemed to take all this as part of the
-performance.
-
-“I’m worried,” Cynthia confided to Nancy through the muffling folds
-of her handkerchief. “Oh, but this stuff is strong.” Her eyes were
-streaming with tears, but so far she had managed to keep back that
-sneeze.
-
-“Worried?” Nancy turned big eyes on Cynthia. “Do you mean to say ...”
-
-“I don’t think he can get that child out of that trance. I wonder ...”
-
-Cynthia turned to look around the audience. They too were beginning,
-unconsciously, to reflect the professor’s concern. Quietly, three times
-now, he had given his command, Cynthia’s ears were abnormally keen, in
-spite of the cold.
-
-She glanced back again at the stage, then decided what she would do.
-Evading Nancy she slipped out of her seat, past the two old ladies who
-sat on the aisle. It was just a step to the stage, a step or two across
-it. Leonie’s blank stare did not turn to follow her, but Cynthia knew
-that she had the attention of every other soul in the house.
-
-She smiled briefly at the bewildered professor and crossed to the
-child. From her pocket she drew a clean handkerchief soaked with the
-over-powering scent of “Breathex.”
-
-“I wonder,” Cynthia spoke in English in the hope that the professor,
-being from Paris, knew a little of that tongue, “if the _petite enfant_
-would like to smell this.” And before the hypnotist could protest, had
-clapped the handkerchief to Leonie’s little snub nose.
-
-It was like a double dose of smelling salts. The American makers would
-have been proud of their preparation, though perhaps no such strange
-application of it had ever been suggested to them.
-
-Leonie choked, coughed, strangled a moment. But the blank left her
-eyes and she struggled to escape the handkerchief. Bewildered, for a
-moment she gazed at Cynthia, then smiled shyly in a perfectly human,
-understanding fashion.
-
-Tactfully Cynthia withdrew. “Merci, Professor,” she murmured and backed
-down the steps.
-
-She heard little of what followed. The Professor’s florid explanation
-of this occurrence, of the American’s interference with his
-demonstration, but his willingness to let that pass ... and so on and
-so on. The audience murmured polite amazement, stared at Cynthia,
-clapped at the end of Reynaldo’s speech, and began to rise from their
-benches. The door swung open into the sweet, starlit night.
-
-“Well ...!” stated Nancy. “You certainly distinguished yourself. Gosh,
-but that was a close call for Leonie. Wonder what would have happened
-...”
-
-Cynthia shook her head. “But I knew something must happen if she got a
-whiff of this. It would have pulled a mummy back to life. Ah, here’s
-Leonie.”
-
-The child’s mother had appeared beside her, holding her hand. She at
-least was not unaware that the American Mees had done something,
-though she wasn’t quite sure what, for her petite.
-
-“Thank you,” she murmured in shy, halting English; then, that proving
-to be all she knew, she broke into fluid French which almost stumped
-Nancy to translate.
-
-“She asks,” interpreted Miss Brewster, “if there is anything she can do
-for the pretty American ... make a bow, Cindy ... She says she is very
-grateful to you and that it was very naughty for her Leonie to go up on
-the stage like that, before all the village. I’ve told her that we will
-come tomorrow to pay our respects to Leonie’s household. We’ll bring
-Mother along, too. That all sounds sufficiently formal.”
-
-They streamed out into the fan of light across the cobbled road. The
-white caps and dark dresses of the audience melted behind them into
-darkness. The night was sweet and warm and there was a sound of the sea
-on the rocks, far off.
-
-“Good night,” called Cynthia. “Good night!” then slipped her hand into
-Nancy’s arm.
-
-“There,” said Nancy, “is your Christmas cover, my dear, and in such a
-funny way.”
-
-“_Aitchoo!_” sneezed Cynthia in eloquent reply.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 4
-
-_Mont St. Michel_
-
-“LITTLE MISS FIX-IT”
-
-
-Nancy’s mother, who as a young art student had lived in France, knew
-all the places that Cynthia, as a younger art student, ought to see and
-go.
-
-“Don’t,” she told Cynthia, “despise the well-worn routes just because
-they are well-worn. Later on you can go to the out of the way places
-too. But you need the talked-about places as a basis for comparison,
-just as you need to know black and white in order to paint color.”
-
-The idea interested Cynthia. “What do you call the well-worn places.”
-
-“Mother means those that are full of tourists and trippers,” explained
-Nancy.
-
-“Yes, of course,” said Mrs. Brewster, “Just the sort of places you
-saw in Paris. The Louvre, the tomb of Napoleon, Montmartre, the Arc
-de Triomphe. You don’t need to rush through them, Baedecker in
-hand--though a guidebook is always useful--like the American couple out
-of Punch. ‘You see the outside Marthy, and I’ll see the inside, and
-we’ll cut the time in half.’”
-
-Cynthia laughed. She knew those tourists, so intent on gathering data
-to relate at home that they were blind to real beauty, to all the
-little local color and pleasant customs of the people. “But besides
-Paris, what would you suggest?”
-
-“Well, there’s Carcassonne, of course.”
-
-“Oh _yes!_” agreed Cynthia. Carcassonne had been on her list too.
-
-“Then I think you should see a bit of the Basque country. It’s lovely,
-though it has become a little self-conscious lately, with so many books
-being written about it.”
-
-Nancy had a suggestion here. “Don’t you think Cynthia would adore
-Mouleon Soule?” And Mrs. Brewster, agreeing, had promised a letter of
-introduction to an old Basque artist there. “And that will be real
-local color too. Then there’s Rome and Venice and Florence ...”
-
-Cynthia shook her head. Not much chance of her getting to Italy, not
-unless the reward for capturing Goncourt, on the ship coming over,
-should materialize. “Tell me some places near here. Normandy, Brittany.”
-
-“Mont St. Michel!” cried Nancy.
-
-Mrs. Brewster nodded. “I wonder ...” she began.
-
-Nancy took her up. “If we couldn’t go too?”
-
-“Oh that would be wonderful!” cried Cynthia. And so the matter was
-arranged.
-
-Mont St. Michel was famous for four things; its tides and the island
-with its mile long causeway to land, its fortress abbey, and omelets.
-Nature was responsible for the first two, Normandy abbots and the
-wealth which William of Normandy had filched from England, for the
-second, and Madame Poulard now dead, but still surviving in her
-reputation, for the third.
-
-It was to partake of the third that Cynthia was seated, on the evening
-of her first day at Mont St. Michel, before a red checked cloth covered
-table in the Hotel Tete D’or. It was a distracting scent. The great
-arched room with ceiling darkened by the smoke of many fires, the
-enormous fireplace under the great cowled chimney, and the fascinating
-process of mixing that omelet which Madame Poulard had made famous
-among gourmets all the world over. And for a further distraction there
-was the couple at the corner table; the man so dark and slim and ...
-well, interesting looking, the girl so pretty, and so angry. Cynthia’s
-attention was doubly held, by the girl’s prettiness and by her anger.
-
-Nancy’s tug at her sleeve pulled Cynthia’s attention back to the omelet
-making. This was a ceremony, a rite in itself that people came from all
-over the world to see. A huge bowl of sweet butter, eggs, and the long
-handled iron skillet held in Madam’s skillful hand. From the butter she
-sliced a great golden gob, dumped it into the pan and held it over the
-small fire in the big fireplace.
-
-“I knew the original Madam Poulard,” Mrs. Brewster was saying. “She and
-her husband were the handsomest couple in Normandy, or so it was said.
-Look ... the eggs go in now.”
-
-The little cook, plump and trim in her black dress and neat white apron
-poured the golden mass into the hot butter, stirred it slowly with a
-long handled spoon.
-
-“Funny to think how small a thing, like an omelet, can make a place
-famous,” mused Cynthia.
-
-“Oh, but she made it an art. Like your child portraits, Cynthia,” said
-Mrs. Brewster.
-
-A delicious smell, wood smoke, butter, the omelet. Cynthia grew
-ravenous just watching the process. In another moment it would be ready
-for them. And again her attention sought the couple at the further
-table. The man looked almost French, thin and wiry and intense, the
-girl had buttercup hair that gleamed in the lamplight, and slim,
-capable hands with which she gestured as she talked.
-
-The finished omelet was served piping hot upon a plate warmed before
-the fire. When Cynthia had finished the last delicious morsel she
-looked up again. The party of two had become three by the addition of
-an older man, obviously the father of the girl.
-
-“I wonder if they’re engaged,” said Cynthia turning the little emerald
-on her own slim finger.
-
-“Who’s engaged, Cyn?” asked Nancy. “Listen honey, try the raspberries,
-with sour cream, they’re delicious.” But then Nancy’s back was toward
-the interesting couple so she might be excused for a lack of interest.
-Mrs. Brewster caught Cynthia’s eye and smiled.
-
-“The man looks like a Basque,” she said. “But I think the girl is
-American. I saw them in our hotel this afternoon.”
-
-The Brewsters, who with Cynthia had come the short but complicated trip
-from Brittany that morning, planned now to spend several days at Mont
-St. Michel. After that Cynthia was reconciled to traveling alone again.
-Meanwhile she and Nancy could paint and explore the abbey fortress and
-talk Academy gossip, there wouldn’t be such another chance till Cynthia
-got back to New York.
-
-Exploration got under way immediately after breakfast the next morning.
-Nancy with her mother’s sketch box, Cynthia with the sketching stool
-accompanied Mrs. Brewster up the steep cobbled street of the tiny
-village.
-
-“Just as far as half way up the hill,” directed Mrs. Brewster. “There’s
-a small garden of cabbages there that takes on the most heavenly color
-in the sunlight. That is if the man has planted cabbages this year.”
-
-The man had, and they were indeed heavenly. Cynthia sucked in her
-breath at the beauty of the color. One had not guessed that mere
-cabbages could be so decorative.
-
-Below them stretched stairs and more stairs of the dark purplish brown
-stone of the island, all the long, steep, curving way up which they
-had come. Slowly the stairway had widened, houses dropped away and
-now, level with the eye, rose the second and third stories of the
-fortress-like dwellings that fringed the town. Chimneys incredibly
-thick threw long morning shadows of rich blue on salmon pink walls and
-grey tiled roofs. Round towers lent piquant variety to the outlines and
-the incongruity of a bedquilt stuffed through the window of a beetling
-fortress, to air above a frowning keep, made Cynthia’s fingers tingle
-for paper and pencil with which to note it all down. Below the windows,
-tiny gardens--something pinkish, something ochre--Cynthia with eyes
-half closed to shut out shapes of things saw only color where some
-thrifty Normandy farmer had planted provender for the coming winter.
-And cabbages, so green they were almost blue, jewel vivid, jewel
-bright. Cynthia nodded. Tomorrow she would bring her paint box.
-
-“My stool, Cynthia dear.” Amusedly Mrs. Brewster broke in on her
-reverie. “I’ll be here for two hours at least. Run along and don’t fall
-off any parapets or into any oubliettes.”
-
-“What’s an oubliette?” asked Cynthia racing upward beside Nancy.
-
-“It’s a ‘forgettery,’” explained Nancy, “and if that doesn’t mean
-anything to you, my child, it’s an extremely graphic name for the
-trap-door, underground dungeons that they used to drop you into if you
-offended a king or an abbot. Monte Cristo stuff, you know. I believe
-this place is simply riddled with ’em.”
-
-“Ugh! Horrid people, kings and abbots!”
-
-“Ah, but they could build. Look up, honey!”
-
-Above now, far above them, rose the peaks and pinnacles of this
-fairy-tale place. Below them the whole island rose like a hand from
-the sea, joined to the mainland by only the single mile-long causeway.
-Ringed about the finger’s root were the far off houses, fronting the
-sea, backs to the land. And surmounting the whole, like a thimble atop
-the finger, the abbey, rising, ever rising in the still clear air
-to the final peak of all, the glittering image of Saint Michel de la
-mer du peril; of the perilous sea. The Archangel, it seemed, loved
-heights. From the tip of the tower that crowned his abbey, wings of
-gold outspread, sword uplifted, his mailed foot crushed the devil who
-crawled beneath, and atop one foot perched the golden cock, symbol of
-eternal vigilance.
-
-Cynthia, gazing skyward murmured, “Lovely!”
-
-“Marvelous!” whispered Nancy looking seaward. The sands of St. Michel,
-those treacherous sands through which the tide can rip and roar in
-minutes, seconds almost, shone far below them now, peacefully dry,
-almost lavender in the sun, creating a false horizon for the fringe of
-little houses along the shore.
-
-“Let’s get a guide,” suggested Nancy turning back. “I detest them as a
-rule. But this place is a perfect labyrinth, and besides you can pick
-up so much information the guide books don’t give you.”
-
-At the entrance gate, where a few francs bought admittance, they found
-that a group would start through the abbey in about twenty minutes.
-Preferring to wait outside they braced themselves against the wall
-where the sun was pleasantly warm and watched their fellow tourists
-assemble.
-
-A little old lady and her husband, both very winded from the long
-climb. “From Ioway,” Cynthia bet Nancy in a whisper. “And on their
-wedding anniversary trip.”
-
-“Heads you win, tails I lose,” said Nancy scornfully. “But these are
-Britishers, I’ll bet my new tube of Prussian blue.”
-
-Sober hats set high on the head, bright complexions, and, as they
-drew nearer up the stair, broad A’s and clipped G’s proved Nancy to
-be right. Next three French sisters in black and white, from some
-religious order.
-
-“Probably from a convent in Canada,” hazarded Nancy, listening to their
-French. “They come on holiday to visit the churches in France. Mother
-and I have crossed with groups of them several times; they are always
-so picturesque and so jolly. And here’s a pretty girl for your sketch
-book, Cyn.”
-
-It was the girl from the restaurant, the girl with the buttercup hair.
-And her young man. The girl seemed to half recognize Cynthia, for she
-gave a little tremulous smile, then turned abruptly away as though she
-wasn’t sure whether they had met or not.
-
-“_Mesdames et Messieurs_ ...” began the guide in shrill tones and,
-fumbling with an enormous bunch of keys, unlocked the great door to the
-abbey. For the next hour he led them through cloisters twelve hundred
-feet above the ocean, through the refectory and the ancient church,
-through banqueting halls in which kings and princes had feasted. “They
-say Harold the Saxon was a guest and a prisoner here of William of
-Normandy before William became the Conqueror,” translated Nancy.
-
-Beyond her the young man also translated for the benefit of the girl
-with him. Between them Cynthia managed to pick up most of the guide’s
-information. They were in the banqueting hall, that long gray drafty
-hall with its many pillars, and Cynthia, gazing about her, tried to
-transform it to the way it must have been when Harold was the unwilling
-guest. A place of flaring torches, lords and ladies in silks and
-velvets, in trailing veils and sky-pointing hennins, lifting their
-heavy trains from the rushes that covered the floor. There would be
-tapestries, rippling along the walls as the drafts caught them, painted
-ceilings that had long ago faded to gray and stone color, minstrels to
-make music, great dogs to lie about on the rush-strewn floor, and the
-delicious scent of long forgotten foods from those great fireplaces in
-the kitchens beyond. Yes, the far off times must have been fun too. She
-wished she had been here then.
-
-But the oubliettes changed her opinion on that. Only a few of them, so
-the guide said, now remained open to the public. The others, cut down
-through the solid rock, lay far, far below, damp, almost airless, foul
-with rats and crawling things.
-
-“And if the abbot or the king wanted you out of the way, you lived for
-years down there,” said Nancy.
-
-One, not far below the dining hall, was a tiny place, dark, airless,
-with scarcely room to lie or sit or stand upright.
-
-“Do you mean to say,” asked Cynthia, “that those people up above could
-dance and sing and ... and enjoy themselves with all those prisoners
-down below them?”
-
-The group had gone on a way; but Cynthia, lingering behind to explore,
-had jumped down into the oubliette to see just what kind of a place it
-really was. She spoke from the floor, some distance below Nancy’s neat
-brown oxfords.
-
-Nancy shrugged. “That’s the middle ages, darling.”
-
-Cynthia reached up. “Give me a hand, Nancy. I want to get out of here.
-Ugh ...” once on the floor beside the other, “I hate this place, it’s
-haunted by all those horrible things they used to do.”
-
-Nancy looked at her queerly. “Not see any more? All right. I’m
-willing,” and five minutes later they stood once more before the great
-western entrance looking out over the sands and the town below.
-
-“Ou ... uf!” Cynthia drew a great breath of the free air. “I’d go off
-my nut if we stayed in there much longer. It’s beautiful, but gosh,
-it was cruel. Let’s go somewhere and pick daisies and get the smell
-of those forgetteries out of our noses. C’mon, Nannie.” And grabbing
-Nancy’s wrist she hauled her headlong down the stairs towards the town
-below.
-
-As they raced past, Mrs. Brewster was still absorbed in her cabbages
-and did not even look up. The steps narrowed, they came to the
-block-long village with its dark, tiny windowed houses where were
-displayed all the usual tricks to catch the tourist trade.
-
-“Daisies!” cried Cynthia. “Where can we get daisies?” and looked about
-her. Steep cobbled streets, the sands ahead.
-
-“Let’s stop and get us a citronade, and I’ll ask,” suggested the
-diplomatic Nancy. While they sipped the sweet warmish drink from
-thick tumblers she chattered with the waitress. “It’s all right,” she
-reported. “There are pretty flowers for you to pick, my child. Oh,
-there’s your blonde friend’s boy friend, and all alone.”
-
-Cynthia had noticed him too, furiously striding down the steep street.
-Where was the buttercup girl? “They were quarreling last night,” she
-said, watching the nervous wiry back as it turned the lower corner of
-the street, entered the hotel. “And then her father came in. She didn’t
-seem very happy today either.”
-
-“Little Miss Fix-it,” teased Nancy. “What’s it to you? Come on now,
-we’ll go hunt daisies.”
-
-At the very foot of the street where, at high tide the seas must wash,
-where boats lay, small and deserted on the yellow sand, footprints led
-along the base of the cliff. Here, rounding the turn, the wind blew
-freshly from off the coasts of England, small crabs scuttled to shelter
-as they passed and far far above them Saint Michel dominated his devil
-and the cock eternally crowed.
-
-Above them suddenly rose steep cliffs covered with coarse grass,
-and, if not daisies, at least their French cousins. No houses here,
-though piles of rubble and a bit of crumbled wall told that the abbey
-buildings must once have straggled down the face of this cliff. Far
-above small peasant children climbed and called, or swung bare legs
-from an outcrop of rock, and still higher a small hunched figure sat
-all alone on a rock. Cynthia was about to say, “Oh, there’s the little
-American,” but remembering what Nancy had just called her, held her
-tongue and busied herself with collecting a bouquet for Mrs. Brewster’s
-room.
-
-Presently wearying of this she sat on a stone to survey the steep climb
-she had already come and the sands beyond that. It seemed to her that
-the color of the sand had changed, darkened, in the past ten minutes.
-Idly she noted that the children had gone; already she could see them
-scampering past the rock at the base, saw them disappear. She looked
-back of her. Nothing here, no connection with the town. To get home
-one must go the way they had come. Just beyond where Nancy was still
-picking flowers was the American girl. Cynthia’s gaze took her in with
-the rest of the scene. Suddenly she was startled almost out of her wits
-by a small figure that tore past her, yelling at the top of his lungs.
-
-She sprang to her feet, and was still more startled to see Nancy come
-pelting after the boy.
-
-“_La marée ... la marée montante ..._”
-
-“What is it?” asked Cynthia, gazing after the small figure that had
-passed. A good model that boy would be, with his wind blown curls, his
-startled eyes.
-
-Nancy grabbed her arm, shouted in her ear, “Run ... _run_ ...”
-
-“What ... why?” Cynthia’s feet pounded after Nancy. Over her shoulder
-Nancy flung, “‘The tide,’ he said. ‘The tide is rising.’”
-
-Cynthia looked back. The girl behind them had risen from her rock. With
-a wrench Cynthia freed her arm from Nancy’s grasp, put hands to mouth
-and megaphoned. “Hurry! _Hurry!_ The _tide!_”
-
-She seemed to get the idea for immediately she came leaping down over
-the rocks. Cynthia paused only once to glance behind and see what good
-speed the girl was making, then raced to catch up with Nancy. Almost
-together the three reached the sands.
-
-So that was why they had changed so rapidly from ochre to lavender.
-Water, tidal water, seeping swiftly, menacingly from beneath, pouring
-in from every side. But the sand at the base of the rocks was still
-dry, it was hardly five minutes race around the rocks to the end of
-the little street. Hearts pounding, breath sobbing, they reached it
-together.
-
-Cynthia could not stop there. She wanted to reach her hotel, her room,
-feel safe ground, familiar ground that could not dissolve into seas
-beneath her feet, before she stopped. As she tore through the hallway,
-passed the astonished eyes of Madame at the desk, Nancy was close
-behind. Together they dragged the little American in with them, slumped
-together on the two beds.
-
-“Well!” gasped Cynthia.
-
-“_Well!_” Nancy echoed her. “My good gosh, Cynthia, that was a close
-call!” The buttercup girl rose first, stood for a long moment at the
-window looking out. “Look here ...” she said at last, seemed to have
-trouble with her voice and spoke again, “Come here, you two.” It was
-the first they had heard her speak.
-
-Cynthia who had by now slightly recovered her breath, felt that her
-knees would bear her again. But when she looked out she nearly lost
-what breath she had gained.
-
-“Nancy ... oh _Nancy!_”
-
-From base of rock to farthest horizon the sea rushed, tumbling,
-foaming, stealthily rising, rising. Ten minutes later and they would
-have been engulfed in it, even five minutes later and the quicksands,
-forerunner of the rush of waves, would have caught them.
-
-“They say it rises sixteen feet every tide.” Nancy’s voice was shaking.
-
-The best thing that could have happened was the entrance of Mrs.
-Brewster. Having heard Madame’s story at the desk she immediately took
-cheerful charge of the situation. “We’ll have lunch here in the room,”
-she suggested. “I’ll order anything you like, and then all three of you
-had better lie down for an hour. This is Miss ...?”
-
-“Comstock, Betsey Comstock,” murmured the buttercup girl.
-
-Cynthia, endeavoring to follow Mrs. Brewster’s cheerful lead, asked if
-the hotel couldn’t serve some _escargots_, snails. She had heard they
-were good, and she said she felt in a mood to experiment. Actually not
-even snails for lunch seem very reckless after their recent experience.
-Betsey still seemed a little dazed but Nancy had several wildly
-fantastic suggestions and Mrs. Brewster rang for the waiter, ordered
-lunch to be brought to their room.
-
-They had scarcely sat down to eat when a knock sounded imperatively on
-the door. As Mrs. Brewster answered it Cynthia saw beyond her shoulder
-a man’s face, distraught and white.
-
-“Oh, Madame,” he cried. “Is Miss ... I was told ... that is. ...”
-
-“Robert!” Betsey Comstock had rushed past Mrs. Brewster, and
-flung herself into the young man’s arms. Smiling, Mrs. Brewster
-discreetly closed the door, but murmurs and soft voices as though in
-reconciliation sounded beyond it. The girls were half way through lunch
-when Betsey, such a changed Betsey, all smiles and radiance, reappeared.
-
-“Apologies, please,” she begged charmingly. “Robert had a luncheon
-engagement with a man he met here at the hotel, an architect. So I did
-not ask him in. But the rest, I’d like to explain.”
-
-To Cynthia it sounded very romantic, a young Basque, Yberri was the
-name, educated in America for his career of architecture and Betsey,
-now engaged to be married to him, with her own career as a costume
-designer. What could be nicer?
-
-“Who do you work for?” asked the practical Nancy. “Have you sold
-anything yet?”
-
-“I had my first act in Cochran’s Revue, the recent one, in London.”
-
-“Oh! Moms and I saw that. Did you see the lovely ballet with the
-Chinese pagodas on their heads?”
-
-Betsey flushed a little and smiled. “That one was mine. ...”
-
-“Cynthia, she’s good,” Nancy turned enthusiastically to the others.
-“The stuff was swell. ...”
-
-Betsey continued. They were to be married next week, in Paris, and
-return to the States, Dad and Robert and she. Betsey had letters of
-introduction to two or three big theatrical producers in New York and
-promise of further work with Cochran.
-
-“Grand!” applauded Nancy.
-
-But the trouble, it seemed, was this: Robert didn’t want his wife to
-continue her work after they were married.
-
-“Oh dear!” murmured Cynthia. Just suppose Chick didn’t want her to keep
-on with her covers. But then Chick was an artist also; he understood.
-
-“Stop your painting?” asked Nancy, puzzled to understand anyone in a
-family that didn’t design or illustrate or paint.
-
-“Oh no, he’s willing I should keep on with the designing, but not
-willing I should earn money with it.”
-
-Which explained their quarrel at the table last night, explained why
-Betsey had gone off today by herself on the rocks.
-
-“But now it’s all right, isn’t it?” asked Cynthia.
-
-Betsey’s smile became somewhat less bright. “No ... o,” she admitted.
-“We made it up, the quarrel I mean. But nothing is decided, nothing
-definite.”
-
-“It’ll work out somehow,” consoled Cynthia. “Just see if it doesn’t.”
-
-Betsey of the buttercup hair was still on her mind next morning. Nancy
-had volunteered to go on a hunt for the small boy of the hill, the one
-who had warned them of the tide. Cynthia had an idea that he would make
-a good model for her next magazine cover. She herself was sharing the
-privilege of the cabbage patch and the shade of the parapet with Mrs.
-Brewster, both painting busily, when Betsey’s voice sounded slightly
-above Cynthia’s right ear.
-
-“’S good,” murmured the voice.
-
-Cynthia looked up. “Hi!” she said, around the paintbrush in her mouth,
-but her gaze wandered back to the sunny ochre of the sands and the
-blue-green of the cabbages. Difficult to depict sunlight against that
-false horizon; you need blue sky to make a landscape look sunny.
-
-“I’m going up to the abbey,” whispered Betsey with an eye on Mrs.
-Brewster busily painting along the wall.
-
-“Stop on the way back. And don’t fall into any oubliette.” But after
-she had gone Cynthia still worried about her. It was all mixed up
-with the hue of cabbages in sunlight. Why was Betsey alone, had they
-quarreled again? If that Robert Yberri had any sense he’d let her keep
-on with her work ... oh glory, _how_ did you get the color of that
-shadow! Cynthia took a peek at Mrs. Brewster’s oil sketch, almost
-groaned at the comparison, but mixed a tiny drop of rose madder with
-her wash and cocked her head on one side. Perhaps that was it!
-
-An hour later she put the last touch on it, yawned, stretched and
-looked up. Mrs. Brewster had tactfully stolen away. Below the fortress
-wall the sands were slowly darkening into lavender as they had
-yesterday and the shadow of the wall no longer gave her shelter. Time
-to pack up and go home.
-
-But with her paints packed, her box strapped neatly, she perched on
-the wall to watch again that relentless tide. First the darkening of
-the sand. One could not say at just what instant the lavender began to
-gleam with moisture, at what precise second one noted water seeping
-into this hollow and that, at what tick of the watch the hollows
-joined, ran into each other, became larger, ran into a hundred thin,
-continuous streams across the wide expanse of sand.
-
-Someone was coming up the steps, a man with thick brown hair uncovered,
-with American plus fours.
-
-“Miss Wanstead?” asked Betsey’s Robert.
-
-Cynthia nodded, then glanced back at the sands below, and gasped. Where
-an instant before had been wet sand with a few thin streams across it
-a dozen rushing rivers now flowed, joining swiftly into a relentless,
-heaving sea.
-
-“Frightening, isn’t it?” said Betsey’s Robert. “We saw it rise like
-that two days ago. That’s why I’m here. I know how dangerous it is and
-I want to thank you for bringing Betsey back yesterday, you and Miss
-Brewster.”
-
-“Oh,” murmured Cynthia. “It ... it wasn’t anything.” Then she laughed.
-“I mean, of course, it was a lot. Only she would have got back. ...”
-
-“She says she wouldn’t. Of course she could have stayed there eight or
-nine hours.”
-
-“Or you could have sent for her in a boat,” suggested the more
-practical Cynthia.
-
-“Anyway, I’m tremendously grateful.” He sat down on the wall beside
-her. “Imposing, isn’t it?” He gestured toward the great abbey behind
-them. “One of the most imposing sites in all the world, and combined
-with what man has done to it, it’s stupendous. You’re an artist, aren’t
-you?”
-
-Cynthia admitted it. “And you too ... and Betsey.”
-
-“Betsey’s a smart kid.” And suddenly Cynthia thought, “Why, he’s
-awfully in love with her,” and liked him better, even if he were as
-stubborn as a mule.
-
-“Is she?” she asked aloud and ingenuously, so that Robert had to brag a
-little.
-
-“She’s worked for Cochran, you know; costumes,” with quiet pride in the
-ability of his fiancée.
-
-“Marvelous. She must be good. Though of course he takes lots of
-beginners, doesn’t he, for a short tryout?” She knew nothing of the
-kind, but spoke as one with inside information.
-
-Robert flushed and set his jaw. “Not at all,” he said stiffly.
-“Betsey’s good enough to keep on with him, show after show. And to get
-work in New York too, if she wishes.”
-
-“Really?” Cynthia’s eyebrows expressed her scepticism. “Only of course,
-once she’s married. ... I mean no girl can really manage two jobs, can
-she?”
-
-She almost giggled at the way he took it. “I ...” his mouth hung open
-a minute. But stubborn people were contrary, too, and Robert was no
-exception. “Well, after all, I expect to keep on with architecture
-after I’m married.”
-
-“Oh yes, but a man ...” Cynthia’s air was still one of polite
-incredulity. “Here’s Betsey now.”
-
-Buttercup hair windblown, cheeks very pink. “But my dear, you’ve been
-crying again,” thought Cynthia and wondered if it wouldn’t be tactful
-to withdraw immediately. Betsey herself answered that.
-
-“Finished your sketch, Cynthia? I’m so glad you waited. I’ve got a
-telegram to show you. ... I’m leaving tonight, if I can get across to
-the mainland.” She was carefully avoiding Robert’s eyes.
-
-Betsey had a little pink slip in her hand. Cynthia took it and read
-aloud, as well as she could, the garbled English of the French wire.
-“Miss Elizabeth Comstock. Hotel des Poissons ... and so on. Please be
-in London Monday the eleventh, my office. Stop. Wish to talk over two
-scenes in new revue. Stop. Charles Cochran.”
-
-So. Betsey had made her decision. What would Betsey’s Robert say to
-that. Cynthia looked up, was about to burst into congratulations when
-the man forestalled her.
-
-“Betsey! I’m so glad! But hadn’t we better hurry? I’ve got to pack and
-you know how slow I am. We’ll get your Dad to chaperon us as far as
-London and get married there instead of in Paris. This Cochran thing
-is too grand a chance to miss.”
-
-Cynthia, viewing Betsey’s radiant astonishment, thought almost smugly,
-“What price Nancy’s little Miss Fix-it?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 5
-
-_The Basque Country_
-
-THE CUCKOO
-
-
-It was Nancy and Mrs. Brewster who had suggested the Basque country.
-This was partly because Cynthia needed a new type of child’s head
-for her covers for _Little One’s Magazine_, and partly because they
-thought it would be a new and amusing adventure. It bore also the
-extra recommendation of economy. Mrs. Brewster had a friend in a tiny
-village, well off the beaten track of tourists. He was an artist, he
-would see that Cynthia found good accommodations, if not in his own
-house, then in a house nearby. Good, she would write to him, find out
-for sure if he was still living. For he was, she said, old, old.
-
-The Basque country seemed, to Cynthia, a very long way off from Paris,
-and from the Brewsters in Brittany, and from all the places she had
-grown to know. The scare and loneliness of Paris had been exorcised
-by her first success with the portrait of Nono. No place where you can
-earn a living can be, after you have proved yourself, really strange
-or unfriendly. But miles and miles away, in the southwestern corner of
-France it might be different.
-
-Somewhat reluctantly, feeling a little forlorn and abandoned, Cynthia
-left the Brewsters in Britanny and returned to Paris. France is a great
-spider web of glittering rails of railways, but Paris, like a giant,
-not unfriendly, spider, sits in the heart, if not the exact center, and
-to go almost anywhere it is cheaper and easier to return to that city
-and start all over again.
-
-An hour on the train, and the feeling of forlornness began to
-disappear. Under Nancy’s stern tutelage Cynthia’s French had improved
-enormously. Now she knew how to order a meal, where and how to buy her
-lunch, if there was no dining car on the train; knew that she must give
-up her ticket at the exit barrier, but retain it until then, and half a
-hundred other small things that went to make life and travel smoother
-and more pleasant.
-
-Going back to Paris was almost like going home again. Her own little
-room up near the roof in the Hotel St. Severin, or one very like it
-except that the wallpaper sprawled magenta fuschias on a green ground
-instead of huge coins of blue and gold and purple on a red ground. A
-dinner with Alice and the Murchisons, and a pressing invitation to
-bring over her bags from the hotel and stay with them as long as she
-could. Then she encountered, of all people, Stasia Carruthers, in front
-of the Café de la Paix, and was carried off to Rumplemeier’s for one of
-their scrumptious teas.
-
-News was exchanged. Stasia had been down to Switzerland, was back now
-for some fittings and to buy some new hats. Gaily Cynthia plunged
-into her own adventures, even to how she had sold three portraits of
-children in the little town of Le Conquet, once she had succeeded in
-breaking down the reserve of the villagers. For just a little while
-she found herself envying Stasia; her new, smart little Paris hat, her
-trick little silk suit, fresh from the scissors of Chanel. Looking up
-suddenly she surprised a strange expression in Stasia’s dark eyes.
-Could it be envy? Envy for the greater adventure of earning your way.
-Anyone could buy his way on a fat letter of credit. But to earn as you
-went, that was the greater risk, hence the greater adventure.
-
-Cynthia chuckled to herself, tucked a stray curl beneath the brim of
-the hat she had bought for fifty francs in the Rue St. Roch, and ceased
-to envy Stasia.
-
-Two days later, having restocked her box of water colors on the
-Boulevard Montparnasse, that parnassus of all good little art students,
-she took train at some uncanny hour of the early morning for Bordeaux.
-There, late in the afternoon and from the shouting hotel runners at the
-station, each screaming the particular merits of his own hotel, she
-chose the Hotel de New York. It seemed homelike as to name at least.
-
-It proved dingy and down at heels, but with a charming view out over
-one of Bordeaux’ countless city squares. Cynthia yawned through her
-dinner, left an early call for breakfast, and was off again almost
-before daylight for Gotien, in the Basses-Pyrénées. Three times that
-day she changed trains, until, from sheer weariness Gotien began to
-seem like some Never-never land, always retreating as one advanced. And
-beyond Gotien--the address she was bound for was Mouleon-Soule.
-
-She had gone through the gate with her suitcase and sketch box and
-stood, almost shaking with weariness full in the afternoon sun that
-streamed across the dusty, cobblestoned plaza. No one could tell her
-how to get to Mouleon-Soule. But perhaps if she could find the station
-hotel, get a good dinner and a night’s sleep, she could grapple,
-tomorrow, with the problem.
-
-Then from beyond the ragged plane trees that lined the plaza came
-a little shabby, stoop-shouldered man in a Basque beret timidly
-displaying a wide, toothless smile. His English savored quaintly of
-both French and American.
-
-“Is it that this is the Mademoiselle Euanstead?”
-
-Cynthia squinted against the sun. She was too weary to think. Was
-someone to meet her here?
-
-“Yes, I’m Miss Wanstead.”
-
-“_Bon!_ We had the letter from Madame Brewster.”
-
-“Oh, then you are Monsieur Marge. How nice! I couldn’t discover a train
-for Mouleon.”
-
-“No train,” he shook his head. “Only the tramcars. But come and meet my
-wife.”
-
-Madame was a plump little dumpling in plain worn black, knitting on
-one of the benches beneath the trees. She beamed a silent welcome and
-carried her knitting with her, needles clicking without a break, into
-the tram which had been waiting, small town fashion, for Monsieur Marge
-to find his guest. For an hour, while Cynthia struggled to keep her
-eyes open, they rattled and banged through clouds of dust toward the
-tiny town of Mouleon, then out again into open country.
-
-Sunset had passed and it was nearly dark when they reached their final
-stop and Cynthia stumbled up the path behind her hosts. Twice, during
-the simple dinner, she found herself nodding. Then at some brief remark
-from Madame, Monsieur Marge suggested kindly:
-
-“My wife sees that you are very tired. I will light the candle and show
-you to your room.” Behind him a silly little cuckoo clock chirped nine
-times, as Cynthia stumbled up the bed.
-
-Cynthia woke slowly, aware of an unusual sound. Something, someone was
-snoring. Surely--no, the sound couldn’t possibly be human. She lay
-still a moment, listening, then decided she really must investigate,
-and sat up against her pillows.
-
-She was in a high, story-book bed, such a bed as might have
-accommodated the princess of a Grimm fairy-tale. With four high posts,
-heavy dark draperies sweeping the floor, and, actually, three little
-steps of a ladder to lead up to it. She leaned over and peered down at
-them, then gave a delighted bounce. She had been too sleepy the night
-before to notice those steps, but she did remember her host’s very
-French warning that the night air was dangerous and that she must keep
-her windows tight closed. But after Madame and Monsieur had departed
-she had crossed to the casements and opened them wide.
-
-Now she pattered, barefooted, down the steps and leaned out over the
-low sill. The curious snores came from just below. Grunts, not snores!
-Oh, the darlings! Pigs, little ones, and all ten of them very vocal and
-very hungry and directly beneath her window.
-
-“Well, I never thought I’d live over a pigpen,” laughed Cynthia. “Isn’t
-that France for you!”
-
-At the end of the long room a dusty old mirror in a tall gold frame
-reflected the polished parquet floor with its dark oak inlay, the huge
-heavy furniture, built to last many lifetimes, the two high windows,
-and the Basque Pyrénées, towering, blue, beyond the green of rolling
-fields. In the center of it all Cynthia herself, like some new kind of
-a blue-and-white striped, pyjamaed, fairy-tale princess; dark hair a
-tangle of curls, blue eyes wide and amused, bare pink toes pattering
-over the shining floor.
-
-“Well, you certainly are an anach ... anachronism ... or however you
-pronounce it when you mean you’re out of place!” she twinkled at the
-fairy in the mirror. “Wonder what time they breakfast here! Gosh, I’m
-hungry!”
-
-She tiptoed to the door. It swung silently on well-oiled hinges. No
-footsteps sounded below but there was a murmur of soft voices, the
-smell of toast--she sniffed--and chocolate. Then from somewhere in the
-house a bird call sounded. Nine times.
-
-A cuckoo clock. Nine cuckoos. My, but it was late! Hurry and get
-dressed, my dear. She scampered back to fling on her clothes. “Glory,
-what a day!”
-
-She must have slept twelve hours solid. Goodness, how heavenly the
-pines smelled, how wonderful this peace and quiet after the hot
-asphalt, the ceaseless noise, the rattle and scream of Paris.
-
-She ran a comb through her hair, gave a dab of powder to her nose and
-opened the door again. The wide shallow stairs led directly into the
-sun-drenched kitchen.
-
-Madame, looking up, beamed good morning from her work over the stove.
-“Bon jour, bon jour,” and seemed very proud of even that much French.
-Her own language was Basque, of course.
-
-“Good morning, Mam’selle Euanstead. You have slep’ well?”
-
-“Gorgeously! Is this for me, Monsieur Marge?”
-
-A single place at the kitchen table was set with a bowl of hot cocoa on
-a red checked napkin. There was another napkin, a big spoon, crisp hot
-bread fresh toasted in the oven, and a huge sweet orange.
-
-“An egg also?” asked Monsieur Marge from the doorstep where he sat with
-his pipe. “No? Then when you have finished a second cup of cocoa I
-shall show you my hive’ and my bee’ and my studio.”
-
-The latter proved to be a small, dingy, not too well-lighted building
-behind the rambling, whitewashed, red-roofed house. Here dusty
-canvases and dried tubes of paint, bits of old tapestry and ancient
-stretcher-frames were piled and presided over by two of those artist’s
-lay figures that resemble life-sized, wigless dolls.
-
-Monsieur Marge turned over the quaint old pictures to display them and
-Cynthia murmured appreciation, trying hard to find something to admire
-in each. But they were of such an ancient manner, of the “brown gravy”
-school, with shadows dead as brown paint and thick, lifeless color,
-that proper applause was difficult.
-
-“You know I paint in America too?” he asked her proudly.
-
-“Yes, Mrs. Brewster told me. Where was that?”
-
-“I live in Philadelphia fifteen years. That was before the war. Then
-I live in South America with my son, long time. Many Basque live in
-South America. Then I come home here, to my old farm I buy when I young
-man ... many year ago. That was before you were born.” He chuckled at
-his own age. “Long ago I paint those panorama for the World Fair in
-Chicago.”
-
-“Goodness! Did you? I’ve heard of them but never saw one.”
-
-“Yes, indeed. They be gre-e-a-t painting.” He spread his arms to
-indicate an immense canvas. “And figures modeled like life. I paint
-twelve of those. They go all round the country. Twelve Battle of
-Gettysburg, with men in uniform in the wheat field. Battle of
-Gettysburg, she was fought in a wheat field.” He chuckled again and
-sucked on his empty pipe. “We work all night, many night, on that to
-get her ready for the opening of the Fair. We were all French, the
-artists who work on her. But the day after the opening we close the
-doors again, take her down and paint again all night long.”
-
-“Oh, why?” cried Cynthia.
-
-“Because,” he grinned in cheerful toothlessness. “We have paint
-_French_ wheat field. Full of puppies. American wheat field have no
-puppies.” And he roared with laughter over the ancient jest.
-
-“Pup ...” for a moment Cynthia was puzzled. Then she too laughed. “Oh
-yes, _poppies!_” For all day yesterday she had admired the glorious
-silky red flowers blooming among the wheat beside the railway.
-
-“You want to paint this morning?” And, when Cynthia decided that she
-might as well start immediately, “Go down the road and then turn right,
-by the mill. That is near and pretty, and tomorrow you can go further.
-You have everything you want? Oil? Turpentine? Oh, you paint in the
-water color. That is pretty, too.”
-
-So Cynthia settled down contentedly on the old Basque farm. It was two
-miles through the hot sunlight to the nearest village but she found
-plenty to paint within easy walking distance of the Marge house; nearby
-houses with their Spanish iron balconies overhung with roses and vines;
-the sturdy Basque farmers at work in the fields, and their great cream
-colored oxen that paced so slowly along the road. The houses were white
-with steep roofs and wide eaves of deep gray and heavy shutters painted
-green, and the vines, sprayed with arsenic green made rich shadow
-patterns on the old walls. Then she found an old stone church with the
-three-peaked tower so characteristic of Basque village churches and
-beneath its porch an iron grill to discourage the pigs from entering
-the place of worship. She peeped through the stone doorways where the
-lintels bore blurred dates of the early seventeenth century, to peer
-into the dim, dark timbered kitchens on whose table-high hearthstones
-a tiny fire of twigs burned beneath the black kettle on a crane. With
-many of the women she had a pleasant nodding and smiling acquaintance,
-but she spoke no word of their language and found that her French was
-not understood. Besides, these people seemed unusually reserved. She
-could establish no contact with them.
-
-Cynthia began to suspect that Monsieur Marge was in a similar position
-and was very lonely because of it. He had lived so long in America
-that he had lost touch with these, his own people, and when he had
-returned to them found that they considered him a foreigner. He was now
-neither Basque nor American.
-
-It was a valley of enchantment hidden between the high snow capped
-peaks of the Pyrénées. Each day was as clear-skied, as sunny and warm
-as the one before it and Cynthia woke each morning in her fairytale
-bed to look forward to another bright morning of painting, another
-sleepy afternoon of sketching. Still, she reminded herself after a week
-of this, she wasn’t getting any further with her job for the month.
-She had come down here to do a Basque cover for the _Little Ones’
-Magazine_. Somewhere she must find herself a model.
-
-Her second week in the Basque country had started. Monday slipped by,
-Tuesday evening she sat, as usual on the doorstep after a late dinner.
-Monsieur Marge smoked placidly, Madame knitted in the half dark of the
-vine-hung verandah. There was a sound of cattle bells far down the
-smooth winding road and the mountains leaned, purple dark, against the
-sunset.
-
-Cynthia and the old man had been comparing their memories of old
-songs. Astonishing how many of the old ones, the really old ones that
-belonged to mother’s, even to grandmother’s day, he remembered from his
-years in America. There was “Sweet Marie” and “Sweet Rosey O’Grady,”
-and “Sidewalks of New York.”
-
-“Oh yes, they sing that still,” cried Cynthia and whistled it with him.
-Madame hummed and smiled placidly while her fingers seemed to twinkle
-in time to the gay little tune.
-
-“A Bicycle Built for Two,” he suggested.
-
-Yes, Cynthia knew that one. She had heard it in the movies. A moment
-of silence then, while they paused to think of more, and from the dark
-room behind them came a cheerful “Cuck ... oo. Cuckoo ...!”
-
-“What makes the bird in the clock cuckoo?” asked Cynthia when she had
-finished counting nine warbles.
-
-“Wait, I show you.” Monsieur sprang to his feet and disappeared into
-the kitchen, to return a moment later with the clock beneath his arm.
-
-Madame gave a little chuckle and Monsieur explained. “We bought this on
-our wedding trip, in Switzerland, almost fifty years ago.”
-
-He set it down on the step and returned for a lamp, which he lighted
-and placed beside the clock. Then, with delicate fingers he removed the
-screws in the back and exposed the carved wooden works for Cynthia to
-see. Unlike the usual cuckoo-clock this was all self-contained, without
-the long pendulum and the heavy iron weights that usually hang down
-below the little box. Its face and the surrounding frame was like old
-lace, interwoven with tiny intricate figures and small deer and cows
-and squirrels, the whole dark with age and good French furniture polish.
-
-“See,” explained the old man. “There are two little b’lows, here, and
-here,” and his finger indicated the tiny bellows of leather, like those
-used to blow a fire, “Now watch. I make him sing.”
-
-He turned the white hands to ten o’clock, and the cuckoo popped out,
-opened his little red mouth and warbled. One small bellow went _Cu ...
-ck_, and the other, immediately afterwards, went _ooooo. Cuck ... oo.
-Cuck ... oo!_ Over and over. Ten times.
-
-“Oh, I never knew what made him do it,” cried Cynthia. “Now let me
-try.” The bird popped out in such a quaintly serious fashion that one
-wanted to laugh every time he appeared.
-
-“I will keep him here and oil him in the morning,” decided Monsieur
-Marge. “Perhaps, in the night, he will attract other cuckoos, yes?”
-Madame chuckled.
-
-“Does she understand English?” asked Cynthia, getting up to put the
-clock on the verandah table.
-
-“I un’ stand,” murmured Madame, in the darkness and her husband shook
-his head. “Only little. But she too lazy to speak anything but Basque.
-We are conservative peepul, we Basque. Per’aps it is as well. Otherwise
-we could not remain so entrench’ against the centuries of invaders, and
-of change.” And as the night deepened and the stars came out Cynthia
-heard old tales of Charlemagne and of his blond barbarians from the
-north who had been defeated in these very hills. Of how the Basque had
-dwelt here for hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of years, unconquered,
-unchanging.
-
-“It may be because our language is so difficul’,” explained the old man
-with pride. “We have a saying that the Devil once came here, to our
-country and stayed seven years. In that time he learn but two words.
-... “By” for “Yes,” and “Es,” for “No.” At las’ disgusted by his waste
-of time, he flew away again, and soon forgot even those two. That is
-why the evil never comes here.”
-
-He sighed in the darkness and Cynthia felt a pang of pity. Even here,
-among his own people, he was homesick, denied a closer contact with
-them because of his long years in America.
-
-The next morning Cynthia unfolded the camp stool, on which she sat to
-sketch, beneath the vines at the side of the farmhouse. A stone-paved
-walk ran back to the little ramshackle studio and M. Marge pottered
-about in the sunlight with his beehives. Cynthia opened her sketch
-book, squeezed color onto her palette and set to work.
-
-The cuckoo clock behind her ticked steadily with no relation to the
-hour of the day. Cynthia, rapidly sketching in the grape arbor and
-the green door in the white wall beyond it, wondered how to get the
-effect of spattered sunlight where the light dribbled down through
-leaves, and discovered with a little thrill that part of the trick
-lay in breaking the color, patting it on in little spats of the brush
-with flecks of white paper showing between, part in letting the shadow
-actually dribble off her brush so that it was lightest farthest from
-the leaves.
-
-A small, cooing voice sounded behind her. Turning, she saw on the path,
-a little girl of six or maybe less, very Basque in her bright blouse
-and dark blue cotton skirt and bare brown feet thrust into rope soled
-espadrilles. Her eyes were soft and brown and her hair had been plaited
-into two pigtails, so tight that they seemed actually to drag her
-eyelids upwards at the corners.
-
-“Oh, you duck!” breathed Cynthia. “What fun if I could paint you!”
-
-The brown eyes danced with mischief, and the small mouth was puckered
-into a demure rosebud. What could have drawn her up the path from the
-road? Cynthia’s glance followed the child’s. The tick of the clock? But
-surely she had heard a clock before. Then Cynthia remembered that a
-moment before it had erratically struck eleven. Laughing, she gestured
-a query towards the clock. Was that it?
-
-The small one nodded shyly.
-
-“Sure, I’ll show it to you,” Cynthia offered. “Want to see the birdie,
-do you?” She put down book and brushes and led the way up the steps.
-Then she turned the hands gently as she had seen M. Marge do the night
-before. The bird answered with a startled “Cuck ... oo!”
-
-“Oh!” The brown eyes danced with delight, the small hands clapped
-_ecstatically_. The child came closer.
-
-“Now the next will be twelve,” Cynthia said, though of course that
-wouldn’t mean anything to this infant, and turned the hands again. This
-time the bird gave a most satisfactory performance. By the time his
-song was finished the child’s face was so close to the little flapping
-doors that Cynthia was afraid she would pop inside, out of sheer
-rapturous delight.
-
-“If I could get her, just so, with her head turned like that, and those
-quaint little pigtails, and the sunlight behind her--but I’m afraid I’m
-not clever enough,” mourned Cynthia. “No; it’s impossible.” Then to the
-child, “Birdie’s all gone, my dear. No more today. I refuse to ruin M.
-Marge’s wedding present just because a Basque baby wants to hear the
-cuckoo clock. Sit down won’t you, and amuse me while I work.”
-
-Monsieur Marge came up the walk from his beehives. He said something
-in Basque to the child, who answered stammeringly. “She should not be
-here,” he explained. “She lives down there, the Yturbe house. She is
-the only one left. The two sons died in the war, and this is the only
-grandchild. The old people worship her. I will take her home.”
-
-Cynthia was sorry to see her go. “I wish I could paint her,” she
-thought again wistfully, but she knew M. Marge was not on good enough
-terms with his neighbors to make the unusual request. This was not
-Paris, where everyone knew about artists and where models seem to drop
-ripe from every lamp-post, blossom in every _zinc_ with your breakfast
-cocoa.
-
-That afternoon a hive of bees swarmed and M. Marge was so busy with
-them that the little cuckoo clock waited another night unoiled,
-upon the verandah. “I’ll do the job tomorrow and put it back in the
-morning,” he promised Madame. “It is quite safe there.”
-
-But apparently it wasn’t so safe. At least when Cynthia came down to
-breakfast M. Marge reported the clock was gone.
-
-“Gone? ... The cuckoo clock?” Cynthia heard herself repeating
-idiotically. “Well! but goodness! Who on earth would take it?”
-
-M. Marge shook his head and Madame, pouring the morning chocolate,
-murmured something in Basque.
-
-“She says she is sorry to lose our wedding present.”
-
-“Oh dear, I feel terribly responsible,” mourned Cynthia. “If I only
-hadn’t asked you to bring it out and show me.”
-
-“It is my own fault.” The old man became firmly cheerful. “Mais non,
-Mademoiselle, I am a careless old man. I should not have left the clock
-on the verandah. But the Basque are honest peepul. We do not steal and
-we are too far from the town for gypsies or tramps. I cannot figure it
-out.”
-
-Cynthia painted that morning with a wretched feeling of responsibility.
-“I could get them a new clock,” she told herself, “but it wouldn’t be
-the same.” She had chosen a spot down the main road, where two small
-stone, white-washed houses, overgrown with rambling roses, were as
-theatrically picturesque as a scene from the Follies. But the sketch
-was not very satisfactory. “It’s not my kind of thing,” she fretted.
-“It’s fun to do, but I’d rather paint people. Wonder where my little
-friend of yesterday is. She must live in one of those houses. ...”
-
-A team of oxen plodded slowly down the dusty road, brilliantly golden
-beneath the shadow of the blue dyed sheepskin that lay atop their heavy
-yoke, their eyes hidden behind a heavy fringe of bright colored net.
-Their driver walked ahead, his _makhila_ over his shoulder rested on
-the yoke to guide the animals.
-
-Cynthia listened to the soft jangle of bells till it died in the
-distance, then decided she was hungry; that was what must be wrong with
-her sketch, and packed up her materials. The Marges never ate lunch.
-Cynthia had discovered that a continental breakfast did not sustain one
-very well from eight A.M. till five in the afternoon, and after two
-days of semi-starvation had persuaded Madame to give her a cold meal
-at noon. Today there was sliced duckling and a pleasant salad set on
-the red checked table cloth beneath the sun spangled arbor.
-
-She finished her raspberries, with the thick pat of rich sour cream
-and the crust of warm bread and idly watched M. Marge talking to
-someone beyond the beehives. It looked like the old man in the Yturbe
-household, Thomasina’s grandfather. Cynthia wondered at that, for she
-knew the two men were not close friends. “I wish I could get that child
-to paint,” she thought idly, remembering the small eager face of the
-day before.
-
-M. Marge came slowly and alone up the stone flagged walk and sat down
-on the step beside Cynthia’s luncheon table.
-
-“There must be gypsies here,” he stated, “For Thomasina has been
-stolen.”
-
-“Thomasina!” cried Cynthia, aghast. “How perfectly dreadful!” and
-felt her throat tighten. For a moment she could not speak for fear of
-bursting into tears. Little Thomasina! “When ... how long?” she asked
-after a moment.
-
-“Perhaps not stolen ... perhaps. ... But she has been gone since early
-this morning. It is two now. She did not come home for her noon meal.
-Her grandfather came to ask if we had seen her. She has never gone from
-the dooryard before, not until yesterday when she came here. Her father
-thinks she may have strayed down the road and met someone; she was very
-unhappy over a little thrush they had, which died. She may have been
-looking for him.”
-
-Cynthia knew those little thrushes in their willow cages which hung
-outside so many French doorways.
-
-“They are afraid of the canal, and the mill-pond.”
-
-“Oh, but surely ...” Cynthia shivered and was silent. No, nothing like
-that could happen to someone that one knew! Absently she pushed away
-the last of her raspberries. They were her favorite fruit but she had
-lost any appetite for them.
-
-“Painting this afternoon?” asked her host, trying to be cheerful.
-
-Yes, Cynthia had thought she’d take the tram into the tiny village and
-sketch the interior of the old ruined fort, with the remains of the
-sally-port and guardhouse.
-
-Monsieur Marge surveyed the sky, unflinchingly blue. “Too hot to go
-into town,” he commented. “Why not stay and we go hunt for mushrooms.
-Madame wishes some for the dinner tonight. I know deep woods, cool,
-where the sun does not strike.”
-
-City-bred Cynthia had never gathered mushrooms; it sounded like a new
-and amusing experience, and it would certainly be cooler than sketching
-on that hot and sunny hill beyond the town. Besides she didn’t really
-want to go far from the house, in case little Thomasina should be found
-... no, _when_ she should be found.
-
-Cynthia went to her room for a wide shade hat and came downstairs again
-to find M. Marge ready for her. He bore a leather bound _makhila_, the
-Basque walking stick, with its graven brass binding and leather strap.
-
-“Won’t we need a basket or something?”
-
-“No. I show you.”
-
-The method, it seemed, was to string the fungus on a long thin peeled
-rod. They were big things, flabby and pale lavender, rather like
-unpleasantly raw liver, but Monsieur assured her they were delicious
-when cooked.
-
-They had found the grove about two miles from the house up an old
-logging road now nearly overgrown with brush and deep damp moss. The
-pines rose huge and straight and the air was cool, but after an hour
-or more of scrabbling over dead logs and grubbing among fallen leaves
-for the mushrooms Cynthia was glad to sink wearily to a seat on a mossy
-stone.
-
-“_Ouff_ but I’m weary. Goodness, how you can walk!” she exclaimed to
-the pleased old man.
-
-“I have been hard worker in my time.”
-
-“There’s a funny noise about here,” Cynthia commented after a moment of
-silence. “Sounds rather like a cricket, yet not. ... I wonder. ...” She
-listened again and as the old man started to speak held up her hand for
-silence. There was no breeze. The pine boughs high overhead scarcely
-moved. There were certainly no crickets about, yet what was that noise?
-
-Then from a thicket just a few yards away came a familiar call. “Cuck
-... oo! Cuck ... ooooo!”
-
-“Your clock!” Cynthia almost shouted, and jumped to her feet. Monsieur
-Marge was right behind her as she parted the brush, looked downward.
-She chuckled and held back the branch that he might see.
-
-There, wrapped in an old shawl and fast asleep was Thomasina Yturbe.
-In her arms, its placid little face turned to the skies, ticked the
-imperturbable cuckoo clock.
-
-“Well, we’ve found one kidnapper at least,” laughed Cynthia somewhat
-shakily. “Shall we wake her up?” Poor little thing, she had come a long
-way in this heat and the clock was quite a weight for those small arms.
-
-“It is too far to carry her home,” advised the old man.
-
-The child stirred at his voice, opened one sleepy eye. Her face was
-pink as a seashell from the rough warmth of the old shawl beneath her.
-For a moment she blinked like a little owl, then recognized them and
-beamed, murmuring something. Monsieur chuckled and repeated it for
-Cynthia’s benefit.
-
-“She said the bird wouldn’t sing.”
-
-“Come on honey. Time to go home.” Cynthia’s words might not have been
-understood, but her brightly matter of fact tone was sufficient.
-Thomasina scrambled to her feet. “Here, better let me take the clock.
-No? All right. But let me carry the shawl, anyway. I wonder why she
-brought the shawl?” she puzzled.
-
-Monsieur had the suggestion that it had been one thrown over the
-thrush’s cage at night.
-
-“Poor kid,” murmured Cynthia.
-
-It was a long journey back. Monsieur had the two long sticks of
-mushrooms. Cynthia, toward the last, was so far trusted as to be
-allowed the clock but Thomasina kept one hand in Cynthia’s. One was
-to understand that she was not weary, but she wanted closer contact
-with her little bird. The clock itself ticked steadily throughout the
-journey and twice it even cuckooed.
-
-It was late and the sun was low, throwing long shadows across the road
-as they came down it towards the Yturbe farm. Cynthia heard the soft
-cooing of doves, the grunt of the little pigs that lived beneath her
-window. Thomasina stumbled once or twice.
-
-They neared the doorway with its seventeenth century date on the
-lintel. Someone inside was sobbing.
-
-“I won’t go with you.” Cynthia pushed the child forward and nodded that
-Monsieur Marge was to follow her. This might be--who could tell?--just
-the right moment for him to become a Basque again.
-
-Thomasina, the clock again in her arms, stumbled through the doorway.
-Cynthia heard nothing for a moment, then such a heartfelt cry of
-delight and joy as made her, for the second time that day, brush away
-the tears. Followed, in three voices, much talk in the rapid Basque
-tongue, and after a moment Grandmother Yturbe came out, to throw her
-arms about the petite Americaine.
-
-“She says,” twinkled Monsieur behind her, “that you are wonderful, that
-you found her little cabbage.”
-
-“Non--non. It was Monsieur,” Cynthia gestured towards her host. “It’s
-all right anyway, Thomasina would have come home for dinner,” protested
-the embarrassed Cynthia.
-
-They got away at last, but there was more to come.
-
-After dinner Cynthia and Madame were sitting beneath the vines.
-Madame’s fingers flew steadily as her needles ate up the gray yarn,
-and moonlight bright as day dripped through the dark leaves of the
-arbor. Someone came slowly up the stone walk and spoke in Basque. It
-was Thomasina’s grandfather.
-
-“He has come to thank the American lady,” explained M. Marge after
-a moment’s conversation and added that he had told M. Yturbe that
-Thomasina was to keep the clock for herself. “After all, we have no
-grandchildren ourselves.” And a moment later he translated again, “He
-asks if the American lady will do him a portrait of his little one; he
-will of course be proud to pay for it.”
-
-“I’d adore it,” cried Cynthia, “Oh, what a day!”
-
-The men moved off together, talking. Cynthia saw them cross the road
-slowly, two old men together.
-
-Madame, chuckling richly, made one of her rare remarks in English:
-“They not be back till late.” But she seemed more pleased than
-concerned.
-
-“I guess that means M. Marge has become all Basque at last,” thought
-Cynthia sleepily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 6
-
-_Carcassonne_
-
-ROMANCE IN CARCASSONNE
-
-
-Cynthia had long ago learned how to say in French “Stand still. Turn
-a little to the right ... to the left. Raise the chin please.” And
-finally and most urgent, again “stand still!” One needed these phrases
-constantly in the one language the model understood. She had had
-occasion to use them all, and more besides, this afternoon, for the
-ragged little urchin, posing against a background of old stone house
-and carved fourteenth century doorway, was an imp, though a delightful
-one, and had far too large a circle of friends vitally interested in
-what he was doing. Cynthia glanced up from her painting and for the
-twentieth time in ten minutes sighed in exasperation.
-
-Every small child’s head, including of course the model’s, had turned
-to watch the small group crossing the square. It was just the usual
-collection of American tourists; every child in the city must have
-seen their like hundreds of times, herded by the Carcassonne guide--an
-old _mutilé_ of the Great War. Cynthia herself had twice been round the
-wonderful old walls with him, so she knew quite well what the others
-were about to hear; of the ancient old towers, fifty of them, and the
-ramparts dating back and back to the tenth century, the foundations
-older even than that, for the Romans had held a fortress here; of the
-lovely little cathedral of Saint Nazaire, set like a jewel in the heart
-of the town; all these and more would the visiting Americans see. The
-small model and his friends must know by heart every syllable of the
-guide’s lecture, every stone of the city by now. So why need they turn,
-like a group of little monkeys, just because someone had crossed the
-square!
-
-“Oh _do_ sit still!” she muttered crossly in French.
-
-The sketch was a good one, the best she had made this week. Now if she
-could get just the right hue of the shadow on his shoulder. ...
-
-For several minutes the shadow and the mixing of it from her color box
-held her absorbed. Then an undue amount of chatter, even for a group
-of small French boys watching an American lady who made the _peinture_,
-caused her to glance up again. One of the American tourists had let the
-group go on without her and had come across to stand behind Cynthia.
-She was a tall girl, pretty, though pale, with big black eyes and curly
-dark lashes and a smart American traveling suit of blue and white
-wash silk. In a low tone she was chatting with the children and with
-such amazing ease and flourish of idiom that Cynthia, with a pang of
-envy thought; Canadian ... or Louisiana bred. She’s grown up with the
-language. Oh darn that model!
-
-“Look here,” she turned to address the visitor. “I wish you’d tell
-this little devil that I won’t pay him the two francs I’d promised
-him unless he sits still for ten more minutes. Then he can go. My
-vocabulary simply won’t stand the strain of putting that forcefully.”
-
-The girl laughed. She had a nice laugh thought Cynthia still slightly
-resentful of the interruption, then followed a stream of fluent French
-addressed to the model.
-
-“Mind if I watch?” she asked quietly, and Cynthia, again intent on the
-color of that shadow, muttered an absent-minded permission. Thereafter
-for the space of ten minutes there was peace.
-
-Along the old walls of Carcassonne, swimming in the golden haze of
-afternoon light, pigeons circled and cooed. From a not too distant
-watch tower came the nasal drone of the guide, explaining how, just
-here, the Black Prince had stormed the city and burned the tower. The
-air smelt of hot dust, sleepiness, and France, and Cynthia’s busy brush
-flew from palette to sketch and back again.
-
-Finally, she leaned back on her stool, squinted at the sketch with her
-head on one side, then looked up and nodded. “It’s finished I guess. I
-don’t know what you said to him, but it worked like a charm. Sorry I
-was rude.”
-
-“You weren’t rude. That’s a lovely painting, and a good likeness
-too. You’re American aren’t you? My name is Serena Grayson, from New
-Orleans.” Only she said “O’lean” in the prettiest manner imaginable.
-
-“I guessed it,” grinned Cynthia. “Staying in the Lower Town? Wait till
-I pay off this infant and we’ll walk down together.”
-
-“I should wait for Aunt Anna,” the girl hesitated. “Look here, let
-me have a piece of paper from your sketch book, will you? I’ll just
-scribble a note to tell her that I’ve gone on. She is shopping in the
-Cité, and started me out with that guide.” Serena made a little face of
-dislike. “I thought watching you would be more fun, so I deserted, but
-she’ll be looking for me when the tour is finished.”
-
-Cynthia didn’t say anything but she thought it was strange that a girl,
-fully her own age, should have to report so carefully on where she was
-going. Serena dispatched the note by one of the small urchins who still
-lingered to watch the fascinating process of packing up the paint box.
-Almost any of them was eager to earn an extra franc. “Though I hope it
-gets delivered,” remarked Serena, watching the small boy dubiously as
-he scampered off, “perhaps I hadn’t better go, after all.”
-
-“Oh, come along. It’s just to the Lower Town. Nothing can hurt you and
-surely your Aunt won’t care. Why I go all over France alone.”
-
-“Do you?” almost wistfully.
-
-The way out of the ancient walled city led down a steep little cobbled
-street where houses leaned their heads together, like gossips over tea
-cups, and between whose stones grasses grew and the shadows of the late
-afternoon flung a welcome coolness. Then out past the tourney court
-where once gallant knights in full armor had fought for their ladies’
-favor, and past the Porte d’Aude, which looked out over the lower and
-newer ... and uglier town.
-
-“Where are you staying?” asked Cynthia. “Glory, but it’s good to talk
-to an American again! It’s been weeks since I have been able to.” She
-hadn’t quite been aware how much she had missed Nancy; had wished that
-Chick were here until she met someone from home.
-
-“It is jolly to speak your own tongue again. We’re staying at the Chat
-d’Or, Aunt Anna and myself. We only got here today. And won’t you come
-and have dinner with us tonight? I’d love to have you.”
-
-“I’d love to come. I’ve been here nearly a week now, and it’s worth
-every minute you can spend here too. Look!” and Cynthia clutched the
-other’s arm to turn her attention behind them.
-
-Above the road they had descended, full in the glow of the late sun the
-city rose, golden pale against the southern sky; turrets and towers,
-battlements and barbicans, dreaming in the fairy-tale light exactly as
-they had dreamed for the past six hundred years and more.
-
-“Lovely!” murmured the other, starry eyed. For just a moment Cynthia
-thought there were tears in her eyes, as well as stars, but she could
-understand that. Cynthia herself often felt teary when something was
-too beautiful to believe.
-
-They took up this matter of dinner again. “It will be nice to eat
-somewhere else, neither of the two places I’ve tried are very good
-and I’m sick of the boiled veal and caramel custard at the Cheval
-Blanc,” said Cynthia. “And where the French ever got the idea they
-were a nation of born cooks! ... I know where your hotel is, suppose I
-run home now, my road goes this way and yours to the left, then I’ll
-get a bath and into a clean dress and be at your place ... when? About
-seven?”
-
-There were three hotels in Carcassonne, one in the upper Cité, very
-grand and quaint, and with the grandest, quaintest prices too, and two
-in the lower town across the river Aude. Cynthia had taken a room at
-the station hotel, which was the first one she saw when she got off
-the train. It was at least cheap and convenient. Oh yes, and there
-was the Hotel de l’Universe, hardly worthy of the name of a hotel but
-displaying its grandiloquent appellation in gilt letters two feet high
-across its entire three room frontage. Cynthia had smiled at the name,
-for she had found in France that it was generally the smallest places
-that bore the biggest names.
-
-The Universe looked cozy and very clean, and she had even thought of
-moving her suitcase inside its hospitable blue door, but had been
-too busy to carry out the thought. Often however she dined there and
-tonight as she crossed the square and passed the little red checked
-gingham curtains and the green painted iron tables on the terrace, she
-saw the American boy having a beer on the terrace, just as she had
-seen him every evening since she came. She smiled and waved a hand
-at him, and he very nearly smiled in return. Cynthia had an impulse
-to try once more to talk to him, as she had tried on the train, but
-immediately his gaze had returned morosely to the long lane of dusty
-plane trees that lined the street. Oh well, she wasn’t going to waste
-her time picking up someone who evidently didn’t want to be picked up.
-But when you travel for miles and miles, and hours and hours in the
-same railway coach with a chap, and you know he’s a fellow countryman,
-and hard up probably, like you are ... just look at the clothes he
-wore; neat, but not any product of Park Avenue, and when there’s
-scarcely another American in the Lower Town, not at least until today,
-why it would seem sort of pleasant to meet once or twice and have a
-talk. Cynthia gave a little skip of pleasure and forgot the boy on the
-terrace. Nice to have a dinner date, nice to be going to talk good old
-United States for an evening. Adventure was exciting ... afterwards,
-but it was pretty dull sometimes while it was happening.
-
-But when she returned along the narrow little street, past the Hotel de
-l’Universe, with the last rays of the sun gilding the far off towers
-of the upper city, the boy was still sitting on the terrace. Cynthia
-wondered.
-
-She had first seen him at Toulouse, standing on the platform with his
-suitcase in his hand and Cynthia, leaning out of the window to buy
-a _sandwich jambon_ and a bottle of mineral water from the little
-pushcart, like a giant baby carriage, that peddles lunches on all the
-train platforms in France, noticed his very American shoes. She always
-played little games with herself to ward off boredom, and by this time
-considered herself quite skillful in telling even Norwegians from
-English, who looked so much like them.
-
-This boy had ascended further down on the corridor train. Cynthia was
-riding second class instead of third for it was a long trip from the
-Pyrenees to Carcassonne. Later in the afternoon she noticed him in the
-very next compartment, and still later passed him in the corridor,
-leaning listlessly against the long window. The last time before
-Carcassonne she noticed him on the platform of a tiny way-station where
-he stopped to buy a flower from a little girl and for the first time,
-he smiled. Cynthia was startled at that smile, so white and sudden and
-flashing. “Why, he doesn’t look cross and unhappy at all!” she thought.
-“Somebody ought to tell him to smile more often!”
-
-But she hadn’t seen him smile again in all the weeks since then.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It might have been a very happy evening, but for Miss Comstock,
-Serena’s Aunt Anna. She was a pretty, plump little Southerner,
-carefully rouged and powdered and manicured, exquisitely dressed, with
-manners as sleek as the fur of a well tended cat. But her manners
-didn’t somehow put you at your ease, they just made you feel crude
-and ill bred by contrast. Miss Comstock’s slow drawl, even more
-pronouncedly of the south than Serena’s, was as purring as a kitten’s
-song of content, and she appeared to be intensely interested in all her
-guest had been and done and seen.
-
-The hotel was much more pretentious than Cynthia’s humble Cheval
-Blanc, with corridors choked with palm trees and hanging baskets; with
-delicious food; and with a great yellow cat on the front mat attesting
-to the excellence of the cuisine. Cynthia thought the cat’s smug
-countenance bore a fantastic resemblance to Serena’s Aunt Anna, but she
-wouldn’t have trusted him alone with a canary.
-
-“How wonderful to be an artist, wonderful to do as you like with your
-life, no cares, no responsibilities, no ties!” gushed Aunt Anna over
-their coffee on the terrace.
-
-Cynthia rudely thought “Oh yeah,” and remembered the cover she must
-send back to the States every month and all the other work she had
-accomplished in Europe, but said nothing.
-
-“You know I always had a fancy to be an artist. But once I had an
-artist in love with me,” and she sighed romantically.
-
-“Lots of people in love with you, Auntie,” murmured Serena, in so
-dutiful a tone that Cynthia wondered how many hundred times she had
-made the same remark.
-
-Someone was playing a violin in the café across the street, the lights
-and the sound of voices streamed out across the little square beyond
-the hotel terrace and a big yellow moon swam up behind the plane trees.
-The streets were full of people coming and going, for tonight was
-Saturday when all the town felt free to play.
-
-Serena had gone very silent since her last remark and Cynthia, in spite
-of the beauty of the hour, was beginning to feel sleepy and finding it
-difficult to stifle her yawns as she watched the shadow silhouettes of
-people passing, dark against the café lights. It was like a scene in
-a play. Some of the characters she already recognized from her week
-in the town. There was good old Madame Brassard, who kept the pastry
-shop down by the river, leaning plumply on the arm of her thin, gray
-little husband, and both in spotless black as befitted a gala Saturday
-night. And there was the guide from the Carcassonne walls, limping
-on his cane, his face as blankly sweet as a chromo portrait. It had
-been, Cynthia knew, almost entirely shot away at Amiens, and repaired
-again by a surgeon who had almost, but not quite repeated the charm of
-the original. And there was the boy from the other terrace, slouching
-slowly, hands in pockets, shoulders hunched disconsolately. Some day,
-perhaps tomorrow morning, she would certainly cross the street and
-start talking to him. ...
-
-Aunt Anna gave a faint exclamation and leaned forward, blinking against
-the lights, “Oh, isn’t that ... but no, of course not, how foolish
-of me!” She gave a nervous little laugh. “I ... excuse me, I thought
-I recognized someone from home,” she said, and began to tell Cynthia
-all about the nice man in the shop in the Upper Town who was keeping a
-lovely silk shawl till she came in to look at it again in the morning.
-
-Serena, sitting with her back to the light, was still silent. Cynthia
-suddenly jumped to her feet and exclaimed. “Come on, let’s go for a
-walk up to the walls. It’s a wonderful night to see them, and it’s
-perfectly safe, there will be lots of people along the road.”
-
-Miss Comstock glanced swiftly down the street, then reached out to pat
-her hand. “You Yankee girls are so energetic,” she drawled. “I’m sure
-Serena would much prefer to sit right here and listen to the beautiful
-music.”
-
-But it seemed Serena wouldn’t. She, too, was on her feet. “We’ll just
-go a little way, Aunt Anna,” she said, “and we won’t be gone long. Come
-on, Yankee gal,” and she linked her arm through Cynthia’s.
-
-She laughed and talked animatedly for the next block or two but when
-they came out of the new town and faced the walls of the ancient
-fortress, all green and dark gold under the moon, with crickets
-shrilling from the banks of the little stream and the lights of the
-houses behind them, she was silent again.
-
-“Let’s not go any farther, here’s a splendid place to sit,” suggested
-Cynthia, who thought the other might be rather tired, and had found a
-seat on the handrail of the little stone bridge. One could hear far off
-music and voices sounding faintly, and contrary to expectations the
-road was almost deserted. Perhaps the old town had little romance or
-mystery for those who had always lived within sight of its walls. But
-she must make conversation; this wasn’t being a good guest.
-
-“Where do you go after Carcassonne?” she asked, politely, then saw,
-with astonishment that Serena was crying!
-
-“Oh, don’t do that!” cried Cynthia distressed. “Look here, you aren’t
-happy. Can’t you tell me about it?”
-
-“Oh I hate France, I hate Europe, I hate this town worst of all!” and
-Serena suddenly flopped down beside Cynthia and dropped her head on a
-much surprised Yankee shoulder. “I want to go ho ... ome! I want ... to
-... go ... ho ... ome!”
-
-“Is it just homesickness?” asked Cynthia gently. She certainly knew
-a lot about that feeling since she came abroad, but Serena shook her
-head, then started to wipe her eyes. “No ...” forlornly. “It’s ... it’s
-Jack.”
-
-“Jack? Oh ... ah ... yes,” murmured Cynthia vaguely. “Come, sit up and
-tell me all about it,” and she patted the other’s back, reassuringly.
-She had heard that it was sometimes easier to tell your troubles to a
-stranger. Serena may have heard that too, for she said:
-
-“It’s Aunt Anna, really. She’s mother’s oldest sister. Oh I know she
-doesn’t look it, but she’s always had money and can afford to do things
-to keep young and buy clothes to make herself pretty and I guess that’s
-about all she cares about anyway. I guess long ago she was in love with
-Jack’s father, too, though that’s only a sort of guess.”
-
-“Jack?”
-
-“Jack Hemstead. He’s a boy from home,” as though that were sufficient
-explanation. “And when Jack ... Jack said he ca ... cared for me ...”
-she swallowed, waited a minute and went on, “Aunt Anna made fun of him,
-and said it was all foolishness at our age, though I’m eighteen ... and
-Jack’s nearly twenty one, and finally she said she’d take me abroad for
-the summer and then maybe I’d see Jack wasn’t so marvelous. But he is,
-oh he’s the most marvelous person.”
-
-She’d start to cry again if Cynthia wasn’t careful. “But haven’t you
-written him?” she asked.
-
-Serena nodded vigorously. “Yes, but we had a quarrel just before I
-left. He said if I really cared I’d marry him then, even if we weren’t
-of age. But I guess maybe I wanted the trip and I thought I could have
-Jack too, and I haven’t heard a word, not one single word since I left
-home. I’ve written and written begging him to write me and I’m so
-ashamed!”
-
-“Something’s wrong somewhere,” thought Cynthia, wondering what on earth
-she could do about it. “Tell me more about him? And how long have you
-been over?”
-
-“Only four weeks and Auntie’s really been awfully kind, in her own way.
-She’s bought me things and things, and we shopped for clothes till
-I never want to see another Paris label again. I hated Paris. Then
-Aunt decided to come to Carcassonne. We are sailing from the south of
-France. She said she’d once read a poem about it. But you’re the first
-young person I’ve talked to since we left home. On the boat she was
-awfully sick and wanted to be read to all the time, so I just stayed in
-the cabin with her, I was so grateful for the trip. But I didn’t know
-Jack wasn’t going to forgive me,” she wailed.
-
-Cynthia, looking off towards the walls through the sweet scented
-moonlight, felt very sorry for this little Southerner. But it all
-seemed too remote, too far away for her to do anything to help. With
-Jack in America she couldn’t do anything more than lend a listening ear
-to Serena and try to cheer her up as much as possible in the few days
-they’d be staying here.
-
-Serena seemed quite content with that, quite willing, in the days
-that followed just to trail along with a book or a bit of sewing and
-sit, not too far off, while Cynthia sketched along the walls of the
-old city. She proved indeed extremely useful. Her fluent French was a
-prop for Cynthia’s faltering accents and she had a delightful knack
-with persuading the children to pose. Cynthia made three excellent
-portraits, any one of which would do for her monthly cover, then felt
-free to give her time to sketching the town itself.
-
-But wherever they went Aunt Anna either hovered in the background or
-knew exactly where they would be from half hour to half hour. It was
-like having a secret service man always in the offing. Serena didn’t
-mind but Cynthia said it gave her the creeps, always to have Miss
-Comstock bobbing up like a cuckoo out of a clock, and put up with it
-only for the sake of the other girl.
-
-Meanwhile she heard more about this Jack person. She heard about the
-color of his eyes and of his hair, about his cleverness and about his
-family and about his job, which was, at the moment, junior clerk, very
-junior indeed, in a big real estate office in New Orleans.
-
-“He’s got the nicest smile ... you’d think he was cross, really, until
-he smiles and then it sort of ... flashes across his face,” expatiated
-Serena. They had been sitting for the past hour in the tourney court,
-trying to reconstruct the ancient Court of Beauty with its lists; the
-ground enclosed for the contest, its seats for the great ladies from
-which the Queen of Beauty was chosen. “I wonder if they called her
-‘Miss Carcassonne,’ or ‘Miss France,’” murmured Cynthia to herself.
-
-All was quiet here. One could follow, on the ancient walls, the
-reconstruction of centuries, the lower bricks of Roman tile, small and
-flat, the higher coarser stone of the tenth century, then above that,
-still more careful work of later years and finally the deliberately
-antiqued and weathered rebuilding of the great Viollet-le-Duc, without
-whose interest and wealth this greatest relic of the middle ages would
-not exist today. Birds wheeled in the sunlight above them, but the
-shadow of the wall was cool and the small herd of tourists, whose
-voices sounded from the tower above them, scarcely left a ripple on the
-peace of the afternoon.
-
-“I love this place,” murmured Cynthia splashing happily in rich blue
-shadow color, but she frowned a little. Something Serena had said a
-moment back had started her memory working. She didn’t really want it
-to work, she wanted to stay here and finish her sketch. “That was it
-though ... ‘it sort of flashes across his face!’”
-
-“This place gives me the shivers,” Serena remarked crossly. “I guess
-it’s because it’s so full of romance and I ... I feel so empty of it.”
-
-Suddenly Cynthia jumped off the wall and began to gather up her
-painting materials. She had remembered what she wanted to remember, it
-was just a chance, the wildest chance possible, but she had to know for
-sure. “I’m going back to the hotel,” she said. “You stay here, Serena
-... but I’d like it if you could come along in a couple of hours and
-have tea with me. French tea is terrible of course but we can order
-citron pressé. I may have something to show you too.”
-
-“Just me, without Auntie?” asked Serena.
-
-Cynthia nodded. “Try, for Pete’s sake to get her into a shop for an
-hour or two, or tell her it’s time she took the tour around the walls.
-She might enjoy the guide, he was very handsome once,” she added
-maliciously, “but do come without her.”
-
-“I’ll try. I’ve got to stay here and wait for her anyway. She said
-she’d be along about two o’clock and it’s only half past one.” And
-her puzzled dark gaze followed Cynthia down the steep steps to the
-court, across it, through the high pointed arch of the gate, and long
-afterwards as she appeared again on the dusty stretch of sunlit road to
-the lower town.
-
-Cynthia had suddenly remembered that boy at the Hotel de l’Universe,
-and how flashing his smile had been, that one time she had seen it. But
-he hadn’t even appeared on the terrace for the past two days, perhaps
-he had left Carcassonne entirely, and almost certainly he had no least
-connection with Serena’s Jack, but he had looked so forlorn and somehow
-he had looked Southern too. Cynthia’s ardent desire to be again a
-Little Miss Fixit almost persuaded her she could tell a Yankee from a
-Louisianian even before he had said a single word.
-
-She’d ask at the hotel for the young American with the brown eyes, and
-if he were still registered there she’d leave a note inviting him to
-join her for tea this afternoon ... anyway it might be rather fun, even
-if nothing came of it.
-
-Serena was on time, and Cynthia suggested that the Hotel de l’Universe
-looked more amusing than the terrace of her own hotel.
-
-“And I’d like to try a grenadine, it’s such a pretty color,” she
-announced, once settled at the green painted table. So they each had
-one of the sickly pink syrups so beloved of the French and sat sipping
-contentedly while they gazed out across the low hedge of dusty box that
-separated the terrace from the street. Then Cynthia, who was watching
-her companion, saw her grab the edge of the table and go almost white.
-
-“I was right ... I was right!” thought Cynthia. “Oh Golly!”
-
-“_Cynthia!_” gasped the other wildly. “Who ... who’s that?”
-
-A tall figure was lounging down the street, coming swiftly towards
-them. Then he had got Cynthia’s little note, and had come almost as
-though he had guessed what it was about.
-
-The next happened so suddenly that Cynthia could scarcely untangle
-it all. A very flushed, happily laughing Serena, different from any
-Serena Cynthia had yet seen, standing in the entrance to the street,
-then tearing wildly towards the approaching boy. A meeting of the two,
-no doubt about its being the right Jack ... and the amused delighted
-proprietor beaming in the doorway. After all this was Carcassonne,
-and it was France, where else in the world would one expect to find
-romance, if not here?
-
-“But how did you guess, how did you guess?” asked Serena, as,
-introductions properly over they sat again at the little green table.
-Jack had placed his straw hat and the Tauchniz book he had been
-carrying on the next table, had ordered a beer, but had made no move to
-consume it for his attention was too occupied with Serena.
-
-“Oh, we traveled together, once upon a time,” began Cynthia but
-immediately saw that neither of her listeners was giving her the
-slightest attention. Wisest to slip away and stand guard outside. “I’ll
-give you a half hour together, _mes enfants_,” she said firmly, “but
-if I give an alarm, you’ve got to scoot! Better get busy and make your
-plans. May I borrow this?” and picking up the little Tauchnitz paper
-covered volume, she nodded, and went out through the dusty hedge.
-
-All this was making her feel pretty blue, herself. Chick, also,
-might have been here today, with a bit of luck. But Chick was a very
-satisfying person; he, at least wrote letters, and fat ones too. She
-had had one this morning and while she waited would be a good time to
-read it again, for the third time.
-
-That finished she found a seat beneath the plane trees and turned to
-the book she had picked up, a volume of Conrad’s sea stories with _Jack
-Hemstead_ sprawled in large, plain hand across the cover. She gave
-the couple thirty-five minutes, then fearing that Miss Comstock, who
-of course knew where Serena had gone for the afternoon, might happen
-along, Cynthia got up and briskly returned to the terrace.
-
-Serena’s head was close to Jack’s tumbled locks, and Cynthia was amused
-to note that their warming drinks stood in the glasses just at the
-height they had been when she left them.
-
-“Well children, what’s the plans?” she asked pulling out her chair
-again.
-
-“We’re going to be married.” Serena’s eyes were like stars. “Jack was
-twenty one last month and he came over on a cattle boat, wasn’t that
-brave of him? He got a big commission, big for a beginner that is, for
-selling a business plot in the city, so he decided to trail us over
-here and see what was wrong. He found out our address from the hotel in
-Paris. I’ve got a first class ticket home, and Jack has a third class,
-he thinks we can trade them in for two second class. My ticket’s my own
-because Mother paid for that, not Aunt Anna.”
-
-“The American consul at Marseilles can marry us,” Jack told Cynthia. “I
-can’t tell you how grateful we are for arranging this. Serena hasn’t
-been getting any of my letters.”
-
-“Your aunt?” Cynthia’s eyebrows were questioning and Serena nodded and
-shrugged. “It’s all right now, but we can’t give her another chance
-to mess things up for us. Jack thinks we had better get away on the
-_rapide_ tonight. But I don’t see how I can get away before tomorrow,
-not without an awful fuss.”
-
-“You’ve got to,” said Jack firmly, already playing the heavy husband.
-“This is one time when you’ll have to put on some Yankee pep. Your
-aunt knows I’m here, or at least that I was here for over a week.”
-
-“_What!_” gasped Serena, and even Cynthia was astonished.
-
-“Yes, she saw me one evening when I was strolling about the streets
-here, that was, let’s see, about five days ago.”
-
-The night Serena talked to me on the bridge, thought Cynthia ... that’s
-so, he passed the café where the lights were so bright.
-
-“So a couple of days later she hunted me up at the hotel. She said she
-had no intention of my seeing her niece and of making her unhappy all
-over again, and that Serena’s not writing was proof enough that she was
-through caring for me. That sort of set me thinking, for how could she
-be sure that Serena wasn’t really writing to me unless she herself was
-doing something about it.”
-
-“But I did write Jack, two letters every week,” protested the indignant
-Serena.
-
-“Yes, I know, honey child, but your aunt was very careful that they
-didn’t get mailed, or that you didn’t get mine either. So I let her
-come down to the station to see me off. She was most gracious, having
-won her point. She saw me buy a ticket for Marseilles and get on the
-express, but she didn’t know that it stops again about a half hour
-beyond here, and that I got off there and returned by the next train.
-I’ve been very careful ever since to keep out of sight as much as
-possible, but I’d seen you two together so when I got Miss Wanstead’s
-note I suspected that she had arranged something.”
-
-“Oh Jack, and I never guessed you were in Carcassonne all this time.”
-
-For a long moment then they forgot all about Cynthia till in protest
-that young lady remarked. “Hadn’t we better get on with those plans of
-yours?”
-
-So for fifteen more minutes plans were made, rejected, and reaccepted,
-till Cynthia looking up suddenly exclaimed, “And here comes your aunt!”
-
-Tripping gaily down the street on the arm of the little blesse, parasol
-unfurled, eyes upcast in characteristic admiring pose came Miss
-Comstock.
-
-“Run, Jack!” gasped Serena. “She mustn’t see you ...” and there was a
-scramble for the doorway, a hasty return for the straw hat, and at the
-last minute Cynthia reached out to switch the untasted beer to another
-table, as though a departing customer had left it there. But it was a
-close shave.
-
-Aunt Anna was full of the sights she had seen, the new bargains she had
-procured, of the delightful little soldier who had showed her around,
-but her eyes were keen and Cynthia knew she did not miss that beer at
-the next table. Then Cynthia did a clumsy thing, she dropped the volume
-of Conrad. For just a moment it lay, face upward on the floor, the
-sprawling signature showing plainly across its cover. Cynthia bent to
-grab it, hastily flapped it on top her purse, she rose immediately to
-go, she couldn’t risk the fact that Miss Comstock might have glimpsed
-that name.
-
-The next two hours were merely a matter of waiting. Serena and her
-aunt usually dined at eight, and Cynthia, cautiously strolling along
-the street which commanded Serena’s bedroom window watched for the
-agreed signal, a handkerchief; pasted against the pane as though put
-there for drying. She waited five minutes more, then slipped upstairs,
-repeating to herself the story she would tell if any one tried to stop
-her. But no one did.
-
-Serena’s room-key hung, in trusting European fashion on a high nail
-beside her door. Cynthia took it down, glanced once again along the
-corridor, thought she heard footsteps and hastily turned the key.
-Inside.
-
-Serena’s bag, already packed, had been slid beneath her bed. Her
-traveling coat and hat, her street shoes were with it. Cynthia grabbed
-the lot and opened the door again. Then came a moment of fright, for
-the maid, Agnés, stood just outside in the corridor. But she was
-wreathed in smiles, already primed by Serena for the _enlévement_, the
-elopement, and her ancient romantic heart was in the job. She piloted
-Cynthia along the corridor and down the servant’s stairway, then out
-through an alley behind the garage, put her finger to her lips as a
-vow of silence, then blew a kiss into the air as a gesture of her best
-wishes for the bride and groom. No word between them had been passed
-during the whole four minutes of action. Cynthia, giggling, was on her
-way. This was certainly something to write home about.
-
-The remainder worked like a charm, a charm of ancient Carcassonne,
-where, even in the tenth century young ladies must have fled with their
-heart’s desire. At nine o’clock the _rapide_ for Marseilles stopped for
-five minutes at the tiny station. At nine minutes to nine Jack with his
-suitcase, Cynthia with Serena’s belongings and a bunch of flowers for
-the bride-to-be, watched anxiously down the street. Then against the
-sunset appeared Serena, breathless, with dusty evening slippers, still
-in her dinner gown, but happy and incoherent with excitement.
-
-“Oh you treasures, both of you!” she cried. “Have we tickets? ...
-Goodness, there’s the train already ... She thinks I’m out buying
-some aspirin tablets ... I didn’t have time to leave a note on the
-pincushion ... My lamb, will you tell her I’ve gone? ...” and rattled
-on and on while they climbed into the compartment. Cynthia kept one
-anxious eye on the door. She didn’t know what would be the proper
-procedure should Aunt Anna appear at the station with the fire of
-suspicion in her eye. Cynthia had a wild momentary vision of herself
-grabbing the woman around her ample waist and hanging on until the
-train could have pulled out.
-
-But no one appeared. The conductor blew his little toy trumpet, shouted
-the usual warning, and at the last minute Cynthia still clasping the
-bridal bouquet had to run beside the carriage to fling it through the
-window. She had a final glimpse of Serena’s starry eyes, of Jack’s
-white smile.
-
-Then silence. Nothing.
-
-Cynthia came out of the station door to the deserted cobble street
-and twilight. “I wish it had happened to me,” she thought a little
-mournfully. “But maybe it will, soon,” and had no idea how very soon
-that would be. The moon hung like a burnished platter above the
-romantic old town, too beautiful, too unreal to be true.
-
-“Well,” thought Cynthia, going practical all of a sudden, “I guess
-somebody’s got to break the news to Auntie!” And started down the
-street toward the hotel of Miss Comstock.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 7
-
-_Siena_
-
-THE RACING SNAIL
-
-
-Then at Marseilles, where Cynthia had planned to take train for Paris,
-for Cherbourg and a ship for home, she caught up with her mail. One
-specially fat and formidable envelope, with many seals, for which she
-had to sign papers and more papers, proved to contain, of all things,
-the long deferred check for the capture of Goncourt, the jewel thief.
-
-Cynthia, in the office of Cook and Sons, stood surveying the paper
-with bright round eyes. So many francs--one thought in francs now, not
-in dollars--would purchase--what? Presents for home? Her luggage was
-already heavy with ’em. More clothes in Paris? She had, really, all
-she needed. A trip to some place farther on? Cynthia nibbled a pink
-finger tip and thought about that. Maybe never again, after this once,
-would she get to Europe. Maybe she’d be some day, a long time off,
-one of those little old ladies with shawls who sit in corners, well
-out of the draft, and talk with wistful reminiscence of “when I was in
-France--when I was in Italy.” Meaning of course the _one_ time they
-were there. Perhaps that wouldn’t be true, perhaps she’d come again in
-a year or two. But just the same she owed it to herself to get all she
-could out of this adventure while she was right here on the spot. The
-thief had proved to be just so many extra francs, dropped by the gods
-directly into her lap. Shouldn’t she, therefore, take it for a sign,
-cable home that she was waiting for a later boat, and go on with the
-adventure?
-
-“When I was in Italy,” the rhythm returned. Cynthia whirled to face the
-surprised young man behind the counter.
-
-“If you had a windfall of ... so many hundred or thousand francs,” she
-asked him, “where would you go--from here?”
-
-The young man grinned cheerfully and replied in meticulous English.
-“Madmoiselle, I should go to Italy.”
-
-“Bon!” Cynthia was enchanted that his advice should agree with her
-mental toss of a coin. “And where in Italy, please?”
-
-The young man grinned more widely and shuffled the papers on his
-counter. Here then was a customer for the tickets he had to sell.
-“Madmoiselle, I should go to the palio in Siena. It is the month for
-that. Madmoiselle has heard of the palio? Non? Oh, but then----,” and
-he proceeded to expound.
-
-Twenty minutes later Cynthia, walking on air, emerged from Cook and
-Sons. In her purse reposed a ticket for Italy. And the palio in Siena
-would be one of those things she could talk of, once she got to the age
-of relating, “When I was in Italy.”
-
-Five days later Cynthia, in Siena, pressed her small tip tilted nose
-flat against the glass of the dusty window, peering in. She had come
-again, for the third time today to see the frame. The lovely leather
-frame was right in the foreground propped against the glass, just as
-it had been yesterday and probably for weeks and weeks before that.
-Beside it lay other leather things; cigarette cases, glove boxes
-and portfolios, all beautiful. But it was the frame that interested
-Cynthia.
-
-It was the one frame in all Siena, which, after all is a city of
-leather frames, for the photograph of Chick which she had received in
-the mail in Marseilles. And nothing short of perfection was worthy of
-holding that picture. In it the face of Chick squarely fronted the
-beholder, the hair of Chick was fluffy and rumpled, as it had been when
-the Academy bunch had given him his nickname, the eyes looked straight
-and truly into the eyes of Cynthia, and the quirky mouth seemed just
-about to say: “Hi, Cynthia ... Darling!”
-
-The frame was wine colored, the leather as soft as old satin, and all
-around its edge was a delicate gold border of conventional ivy leaves,
-with, next to it, a band of oak leaves and tiny acorns, and inside,
-next to the glass a tiny frail beading. All very simple but it was the
-color and the workmanship that held Cynthia’s eye.
-
-She sighed. She knew to a lira just exactly what was in her purse, knew
-that she mustn’t afford the frame, no matter how low the price might
-be. Nevertheless she pushed open the paint scarred old door in the
-stone housefront and entered the little shop.
-
-It was, as she had expected, dim and dusty within. The proprietor,
-an aged little Italian with the down-drooping nose of one who works
-in delicate detail, was busy with another customer. She also, was an
-American, small and dainty, expensively clad, older than she appeared.
-Cynthia smiled to herself. After two months in Europe she knew the type
-very well.
-
-“Too much, too much!” she was saying, in Italian over and over again,
-and gestured prettily with a gloved hand toward a small pile of
-cigarette cases lying on the counter. Unexpectedly then she turned to
-Cynthia.
-
-“You look as though you could speak Italian, my dear. Do ask him if he
-will give me a better price for the whole dozen. I want them for bridge
-prizes, next winter.”
-
-Cynthia was willing to try, and struggled with her scant store of the
-language. The proprietor shrugged his shoulders and spread expressive
-Italian fingers wide. “Yes, yes, eight, ten lira less perhaps,” he
-smiled. And Cynthia knew that all along he had expected to take less
-than his original price. But the pretty lady was pleased.
-
-“Wrap them up,” she ordered the man, in the loud tone so often employed
-to the foreigner who seems not to understand, as though by mere volume
-of sound one could impress one’s meaning.
-
-Cynthia had removed the lovely frame from the window and now held it
-in her hand. Close like this, it was even more beautiful than when
-viewed through the wavering old glass, and at Cynthia’s “How much?”
-the old man smiled almost fondly, as though he too knew this for one
-of his best pieces. He named the sum in lire and Cynthia made a rapid
-calculation, then, with a sigh, shook her head and turned to replace
-it in the window. He might as well have said fifteen hundred dollars,
-as fifteen. Why, in her tiny room in the _pensione_ she could live for
-two whole weeks on fifteen dollars. Chick would have to wait, unframed,
-till she returned to the States and a steady job.
-
-The American lady was still fussing over the wrapping of her package
-when Cynthia left the shop and stepped out into the street again, one
-of those steep streets of Siena that seemed to bear always in their
-sunny stone the tinge of a perpetual sunset glow. From far down the
-street came the roll of a drum, and Cynthia who had already seen two
-of these _contrade_ rehearsals pelted off as fast as rubber soles on
-cobbles could carry her. Never mind the frame, though she gave it a
-regretful relinquishing thought.
-
-Tomorrow was the Palio, the famous horse race with which Siena, twice
-a year, for the past four hundred years, has celebrated her liberation
-from the long arm of her tyrant neighbor, Florence. And now for the
-past three days Siena had fallen back, body and spirit, into the
-fifteenth century.
-
-Certainly Cynthia, rounding the corner of the narrow street, felt as
-though she had been projected feet first into a slice of the middle
-ages. Banners of silk and of satin, of tapestry and of heavy velvet,
-fringed and tasseled in gold, embroidered with the arms of some ancient
-family, hung from a high balcony, and above it, glowing in the warm
-stone was carved again the heraldic device. Below the slow swaying
-banners stood a little band of Siennese, two drummerboys in long-hose
-and doublets, peaked caps over their frizzy locks, their companions two
-banner-bearers, all in black and white and gold. The flags displayed
-the arms of their _contrada_, or ward; this one Lupa, the Wolf, and
-their huge ruffled sleeves and the little purses which dangled from
-their belts were embroidered in fine gold with a similar device.
-
-The drums tapped out a strange, intriguing little rhythm while the two
-banner bearers, practising their rite, did a sort of solemn dance with
-the great five foot square flags. The object seemed to be to keep up a
-continual stepping, with the banners never for one moment allowed to
-lag. Under the arms and up again, out and beneath the dancing feet, and
-the drums always beating faster and faster. Fascinated, Cynthia watched
-for the culmination which she knew would come. With a final roll of
-the drums the banners were flung high, high, almost ... incredibly, to
-the tops of the houses, then descending, their heavy sticks acting as
-weights, were caught lightly and skillfully. And the dance, for the
-moment, was over.
-
-There was a slight cheer from the small group that had gathered to
-watch and a voice behind her said “Gosh, that was great!”
-
-It was such a shock to hear, in this scene of the past, a good American
-voice that Cynthia whirled involuntarily to face the speaker. To
-her surprise he was all of fifty, with the reddish complexion of a
-confirmed golf player, a shock of nice thick white hair, gray tweeds,
-the expensive kind, and a panama hat which he wore in his hand.
-
-Cynthia met his smile with one as friendly. “It is nice, isn’t it,” she
-said, for no particular reason except that one so often does speak to
-fellow Americans on foreign soil. Then she started to turn away.
-
-“They’re having a _prove_, in the Piazza del Campo, this morning,” he
-informed her. “Perhaps you’d like to see that too?”
-
-“Oh are they? Thank you,” said Cynthia, and this time she really did
-turn away. She had already seen one of the _proves_, the rehearsal for
-the big race, and thought she’d prefer, instead of seeing this one, to
-find a place to sketch. With her final cover off to America she was
-free now to sketch wherever she pleased, and she had an idea that she
-might work up material for an exhibition, back in New York. The heads
-to be her main attraction but perhaps a few landscapes to add a little
-variety to the show.
-
-That afternoon she saw the man again. She had taken her sketch box
-and camp stool, and having hired a tiny barouche, was set down about
-two miles out of Siena where a little old monastery sat atop a tall
-hill. Here among the cypresses she could sketch for an hour, or two,
-or three, nibble her apple and sandwiches, and in the cool of later
-afternoon pack her box and walk back to town.
-
-Cynthia had chosen a shady angle of the wall, and had roughed in her
-drawing; a bit of a gateway tiled in warm red, and a tall niche where
-stood a della robbia madonna robed in blue as deep as the Italian
-sky. Bougainvillea spilled in a fountain of magenta over the wall,
-and Cynthia was struggling with this riot of color when she heard the
-_clopity-clop_ of horses’ hoofs, but did not look up. Color dried so
-swiftly in this warm dry air, one had no time for distractions.
-
-Then there were voices, two, a man’s and a woman’s, the feminine voice
-light, pleasant, but pitched to a note of amused complaint that was
-vaguely familiar. Cynthia could not help overhearing.
-
-“Why on earth you had to drag me way out here, Gerald! Oh, of course
-the road was lovely, but we have so little time in Siena and I did want
-to get in some more shopping ...”
-
-“Shopping! Always shopping! Don’t you get enough shops in the States?”
-replied the man’s voice in very husbandly tones.
-
-“Now Gerald, you remember I didn’t really want to come to Siena in the
-first place, but then of course I had no idea the leather and the iron
-work was so lovely here.”
-
-Leather, that was it! The woman who had bought the cigarette boxes this
-morning. And the man with her? Cynthia, absent-mindedly wiping her
-brush on her white skirt said a faint “Darn!” for the color was rose
-madder and probably would stain ... peered out from behind her wall.
-The man was her nice gray haired acquaintance. Well, his trip to the
-monastery was no business of hers.
-
-Now how to get that tone of sunlight between the deep leaf-shadows? Ah,
-that did it! Intent on the success of a trick of the trade, Cynthia
-forgot the voices and when she came out of her corner an hour later
-there was no one, native or American, in sight. Cynthia took the two
-mile walk home through a lemon tinted sunset, ran into another flag
-rehearsal just at the edge of the town and enjoyed it hugely.
-
-So pervasive and insistent was the tap. tap ... tr...r..r..r... tap.
-tap. of the drums that she seemed, that night to dream about them all
-night long and she woke the next morning with the distant, dream patter
-of the rhythm still tapping merrily through her head. In the pale light
-of early morning the sound was so real she could not banish it with the
-remainder of her doze and finally hopped out of bed to see if she had
-been hearing the reality.
-
-Sure enough, just down the street the banner-dancers were practicing
-their strange little steps, and the first rays of sunlight over the
-housetops caught the gilded tips of the banner staves as they were
-flung, in the final flourish of the dance, to the house tops. Cynthia
-remembered the fourteenth of July celebration in Paris and grinned to
-herself. She was prepared, now, for such festive spirits. Besides that,
-and all reports to the contrary notwithstanding, the Italians didn’t
-seem to put so much noise into their celebrations as their French
-neighbors. But then they let off more steam in just every-day living.
-
-When she had finished her brief and early breakfast and emerged to the
-street she saw that this was truly and whole-heartedly a gala day.
-
-The steep cobbled way to the cathedral which crowned the hill was like
-an illustration clipped from her Morte d’Arthur, a street made ready
-for the entrance of a Lancelot or a King. Banners of silk and banners
-of velvet, cloth of gold and cloth of silver, all embroidered with the
-arms of Siena and her ruling houses, and, so far as Cynthia knew, of
-Mussolini himself, hung from every upper window and balcony, fluttering
-in the morning breeze with a constant play of color and pageantry along
-the gay little street. Every doorway held smiling faces above the
-garments of this holiday mood. Every child carried a brilliant hued
-balloon or a whistle, or a small flag. And down around the _piazza_
-where the race was to be run the side streets were crowded with tiny
-bright colored booths, peddling those cheap and sticky indigestibles
-that go with a holiday all the world over.
-
-Cynthia wanted very much to see the ceremony of blessing the horses
-that were to run in the race. Only ten of the seventeen wards might
-compete, due to the tiny race course, and these would be chosen by lot
-just before the race began. Each horse would be in the little chapel of
-its own _contrada_, so Cynthia chose the Snail, since that of all the
-ward names seemed to appeal to her most. It was so delightfully silly
-for a Snail to be running a race, even by proxy.
-
-The chapel was a plain little building of warm stone, hidden in the
-lower edges of the walled town, and the room was already crowded with
-interested and loyal Snailists, including the horse, who seemed the
-most interested of all.
-
-Cynthia listened with delight to the sonorous Latin phrases of the
-little priest, but almost burst into giggles at the horse’s astonished
-expression when his nose was sprinkled with water from a kind of
-overgrown silver pepper box. It was an emotional relief when she caught
-a glance from an amused gray eye, twinkling over the heads of the
-shorter Sienese and automatically she twinkled back at it. Then she
-saw a tuft of stiff white hair and recognized her acquaintance of the
-day before. Cynthia flushed and bit her lip. When she looked again he
-was gone.
-
-Behind the chapel was a room used for exhibition purposes. Here in the
-dim glass cases, dusty with age, were the ancient costumes worn in past
-Palios by the jockeys of the Snail. Many of them were hundreds of years
-old and all displayed the same careful craftsmanship, the same loving
-care for detail that Cynthia had noted in the costumes she had seen on
-the streets.
-
-She made some sketches in her notebook, and went back to the _pensione_
-by way of the leather shop to have another look at the frame in the
-window.
-
-Back in her room she emptied her pocketbook on the bed, and counted her
-express checks and lire. But the frame was hopeless. She just couldn’t
-manage it, not even if she asked the shop keeper to come down in his
-price. The price was fair, Cynthia felt that it was even more than
-that, and one couldn’t ask a fellow artist to cheapen his wares.
-
-“I’m afraid, Chick darling,” she told the photograph propped between
-the mirror and the hair brush, “you’ll just have to go as you are.
-Maybe a little later ...”
-
-For the future looked very bright indeed. Cynthia had already received
-two letters from advertising firms who were interested in her covers on
-_Little One’s Magazine_, and she had an idea for a new series for that
-same publication, once she was back in the States. But at the moment,
-in a strange country, with no friend nearer than Nancy and her Mother
-in Brittany, Cynthia didn’t dare risk fifteen of her precious dollars.
-Oh dear, it was difficult to be poor, ’specially when Chick needed a
-frame!
-
-Where at she planted a cautious kiss on the pictured countenance of Mr.
-Charles Dalton.
-
-The Palio race was due to start at five that afternoon. Cynthia took
-her sketch book and her portfolio to use as a lap-rest and went off
-early to find the seat she had purchased three days before. She could
-spend the time in sketching the crowd--you never could tell; some day
-she might be called on to illustrate a story about Siena and then her
-foresight and her sketches would come in handy.
-
-For days the workmen of Siena had been preparing the Piazza del Campo
-for this event. In the center was a walled off space known as the Dog’s
-Box, where the poorer people might stand. The race course itself came
-between this and the tiers of seats raised against the housefronts that
-faced the piazza; hard, narrow little seats like the bleachers of a
-ball park. But Cynthia was lucky, for she was on the shady side, and
-was so interested that she didn’t much care how long she sat there.
-
-Her neighbors were mostly tourists, French, Italians from the south,
-Germans, a few Austrians, and one or two Americans. Small boys sold
-bags of nuts, and programs in five languages while the shadow of the
-bell tower slowly crept across the Dog’s Box and the hard packed earth
-of the race course. Cynthia noted the mattresses strapped against the
-bare walls at the four corners of the course, presumably that the
-horses or riders might not be injured in the scramble around these
-dangerous places, and learned from her pink leafed program that many
-of the horses did daily duty through Siena’s streets, pulled cabs, or
-fruit carts during the year and their owners each belonged to the
-_contrada_ from which they were chosen to race.
-
-At last the sound of a mortar. The crowd which had been strolling
-leisurely about the course began to squeeze in under the fence to their
-places in the box, or scramble, goat-like up the steep tiers of wooden
-seats. Urged on by the carabinieri, those delightful, self-contained,
-tweedledum and tweedledee police of Italy, loiterers were soon cleared
-from the course and way was made for a group of little men, like blue
-clad gnomes. These, pushing tiny wheelbarrows, swarmed along the
-roadway. Their job seemed to be to cover with earth any places where
-the original paving stones might show through.
-
-Then again the sound of the mortar. And here they come!
-
-First the Ensign Bearer of Siena, with the simple black and white flag
-of the city. Then the Palace Trumpets, the picturesque long trumpets
-with their pendent banners carried by youthful pages in jaunty velvet
-caps, slashed doublet and sleekly silken hose. Then the musicians,
-all in costume and the crossbowmen with their ancient weapons and at
-last a group from each _contrada_. In each group a drummer, two flag
-bearers, a Lord or Captain on horseback in gorgeous armor, of silver,
-or bronze, or steel beautifully inlaid with gold that glittered in the
-sunlight. Behind him his squires, his ensign bearers, and on the race
-horse, the jockey who would ride later, in the race.
-
-Slowly the procession passed around the course. Before the judges’
-stand, and four times as they circled the square each group paused that
-the drummers might perform their little rhythm, that the banner bearers
-might dance their skillful little steps.
-
-Cynthia sat enthralled. Almost she had to pinch herself to believe it
-was real. Glorious in color as an old window of stained glass; silks
-and velvets, knights in full armor, pages, banners and trumpeters, and
-at the very end the Palio itself, a great banner drawn in a cart, with
-the staked flags of the _contrada_ around it.
-
-The procession was over. Cynthia sat back and cracked a few nuts and
-ate them. Just to return to reality for a while, after so much beauty,
-was a rest and a relief. She had thought so intensely, packed it
-down so tightly into her memory that no least gesture of it might be
-forgotten. Even so, she felt as though she would have liked a week of
-that procession in order to be able to remember it all.
-
-Again the mortar.
-
-The race was about to start. Ten restive little horses ranged behind
-a rope, ten jockeys struggling to keep them in line. The sound of the
-gun. They’re off!
-
-Panting, scrambling, hurled against the Dog’s Box, cutting corners,
-they tore around the course, and the piazza was one vast shout as
-though from a single throat. Cynthia, on her feet like the rest,
-stamped and clapped and shouted with the others. The Snail, the little
-brown Snail was among the leaders. Once around the course. Three times
-was the extent of the race. And the starting post was in sight again.
-But one rider was off--which was it?
-
-The Snail’s! Cynthia could have sobbed aloud with despair, with
-disappointment. Her favorite, out of the race because without a rider.
-Someone had raised a whip and the Snail’s jockey had been the victim.
-
-Oh well, so much for that! Cynthia, disgusted, almost sank back to her
-seat, but the mass of excitement around her was too strong to resist.
-The Snail, for some reason, seemed still to be a favorite, his name
-rose again and again from surrounding throats. Stubbornly he kept to
-the track, came to the first of the tiny streets that turned off, away
-from the race track. Gallantly he resisted temptation, clung to the
-course. Past the next alley, past the next street, and well among the
-leaders still. Pulling ahead now, faster and faster, because riderless,
-guideless. The Snail caught up with the horse of the Eagle, passed him,
-caught up with the horse of the Owl, hitherto the leader. The Owl’s
-rider plied whip with vigor, but he was a husky youth, quite a burden
-for the Owl’s little horse to carry. And the Snail was half a head in
-the lead as the goal post was passed for the second time.
-
-“Oh come on ... come _on!_” Regardless now of the fact that the horse
-was riderless, Cynthia wanted only that he should make the circle the
-third time. Successfully.
-
-Now he was well in the lead, past the wicked flail of the Owl’s
-malicious rider. Nothing now could stop him, though as he approached
-for the third time the steep street leading up into the town Cynthia
-held her breath lest this time he should leave the course and gallop up
-it. Held her breath so that she was completely unconscious of the broad
-shoulders in front of her which her eager hands were grasping.
-
-For an instant the pony faltered. Then urged on by the pounding hoofs
-behind him passed the last temptation. And was on the final stretch for
-the goal post.
-
-Faster. Faster! A length, two lengths, three lengths ahead. Cynthia
-shouted wildly, pounded a fist on the harris tweed shoulder and yelled
-with the others. “Go on ... Snail ... go on! ... Go on! ... Home! ...
-_Ah..h..h!_”
-
-The race was over. “And quite fitting that it should have been won by
-the Snail,” dryly remarked the owner of the harris tweed shoulder.
-
-Cynthia came out of her daze and gaped at him. It was the nice twinkley
-man she had seen in the chapel this morning, the one who had come to
-the monastery with his wife.
-
-“Oh, I’m so sorry,” she gasped, feeling very hot and red in the face.
-“Did I pound you to a jelly? Races are pretty exciting, aren’t they?”
-
-“They certainly are,” he agreed cheerfully. “And that was a most
-surprising one.”
-
-“Do you suppose he really won?” asked Cynthia, carefully following the
-man down the steep narrow steps. “I don’t imagine it will be allowed
-like that, without a rider, will it?”
-
-The man laughed. “Well, this is Italy, you know, and after all they may
-figure it was a race for horses, not jockeys. And the horse certainly
-came in ahead. But let’s go and find out,” he suggested. “By the way,
-my name is Lewis, though I believe we have met before, even if you
-didn’t know my name.”
-
-“How do you do, Mr. Lewis. I’m pleased to meet you I’m sure,” stated
-Cynthia with mock primness. “And now that’s over, we’re both from the
-States, I gather, and my name is Wanstead. Didn’t your wife come to the
-races?”
-
-Mr. Lewis shook his head. “If it had been Longchamps, or Saratoga ...
-But she wasn’t interested in a little Italian hick town race. Oh, here
-we are, and I imagine there’s little doubt about the winner.”
-
-The rose-and-gold Snail jockey, wreathed in flowers and comically
-suggestive of an ancient Greek statue, a blood stained handkerchief as
-additional decoration about his forehead, was being carried high on the
-shoulders of a dozen competitors for the honor of the burden. Around
-him surged a horde of shouting friends and at least a score of pretty
-girls tossed jests and languorous glances toward the victor.
-
-“I think they ought to be carrying the horse up there,” was Cynthia’s
-objection. “The jockey didn’t do anything but tumble off.”
-
-“That in itself seems to have been a feat not without its perils. How
-about some tea up here, to celebrate that our horse won?”
-
-Over the tea cups, in the ancient palace now transformed into a tea
-shop, over delicious tiny cakes, sweet with honey, deep with frosting,
-Cynthia heard about Mr. Lewis. Heard that long ago he, too, had been
-an art student and had come to Siena, heard that he had come back this
-time, a successful broker, to try to recapture some of the enchantment
-of that far off time. “But it’s not the same,” he said sadly. “How
-about some more tea?--No?--Then some more cakes--oh, just one more.”
-
-“Well, maybe, just one.” Cynthia chose a cake like a little Italian
-palace, all tiled with lemon peel and crowned with a candied cherry.
-“And do you know the lovely old monastery at the top of the hill?”
-
-“I should say I do. I made a sketch of that, years ago--before you
-were born, young lady.” Why did people always lay such emphasis on
-one’s lack of age? “But my wife didn’t think much of it, and perhaps it
-wasn’t very good, really. Anyway it got lost once when we were moving.”
-
-His smile was slightly rueful and Cynthia forgave the remark about
-her youthfulness. “It was of the gate, and a lovely old Della Robbia
-madonna. I went out to see it again, just yesterday, but couldn’t find
-it.”
-
-“Why, I found it, and did a sketch of it too,” Cynthia blurted out,
-and a moment later wished she hadn’t. It was obvious that he had been
-dragged away before he had had time to do much exploring.
-
-“Did you? Oh, could I see it perhaps? But first won’t you have another
-cake, some more tea?” urged the hospitable Mr. Lewis.
-
-“I couldn’t eat another cake if I knew it was the last one in Siena,”
-protested Cynthia. “And I think I’ve got the sketch right here. The
-portfolio made a good rest for my sketch book.”
-
-So there in the tea shop, cool and quiet and growing a bit dim as the
-sun sank behind the towers and tiles of Siena, Cynthia hauled out
-her sketches. There were some of the crowd she had made just this
-afternoon, of the carabinari, heads gravely bent, two by two, always
-two by two, white gloved hands folded behind their solemn backs.
-
-“You have quite a knack for caricature,” commented Mr. Lewis, and
-Cynthia said, “You have to, if you are going to do portraits. A really
-good likeness always holds a little exaggeration.”
-
-At which he nodded understandingly. Nice to be showing your sketches to
-another artist.
-
-“And here are some of the landscapes I’ve done around Siena, mostly
-bits of streets and old tiled houses. They aren’t as good as my people.”
-
-“And here is your madonna,” she cried, hauling out the drawing she
-had finished the day before. She told him about her plan to have an
-exhibition of the heads and of the landscapes together.
-
-“That’s a good idea too,” he agreed, and propped the little sketch of
-the monastery against a chair and sat back to squint at it.
-
-“I wonder,” he said at last, “if you’d be willing to make a sale before
-you go home. I have a fancy to own this one,” and he nodded towards the
-little tiled gateway. “Could you part with it, do you think?”
-
-Cynthia hesitated. She did sort of want to show that one to Chick and
-hear his approval. But perhaps tomorrow she could go back to the same
-place and make another, even a better one.
-
-“We..ll, yes,” she agreed reluctantly. “I might.”
-
-And then came the “How much?” which she had dreaded. Cynthia knew
-the value, at least the commercial value, of her portraits. But the
-landscapes were different. They were just studies, perhaps not worth
-anything at all. “Would ... would two dollars be too much?” she asked.
-“Or maybe three?”
-
-“My dear child!” protested Mr. Lewis, and Cynthia laughed.
-
-“Well, give me what you like. It will be all right anyway.--Oh,
-American money, how nice to see it again!” And it was quite a roll, too.
-
-She took the two bills and handed over the painting. “Better take
-along this cardboard, it’s just the back of the pad, but it fits, and
-will keep the sketch from being crumpled. And now I really must run. I
-promised a little English girl at the _pensione_ that I’d have dinner
-with her tonight and tell her all about the palio. She couldn’t afford
-a ticket for it. I know she won’t at all approve of the way it turned
-out. ‘Most unsportin’ my deah!’” she laughed, mimicking the other’s
-accent.
-
-“Goodbye,” waved Cynthia from the doorway. Nice Mr. Lewis. It had been
-fun, the tea, and such an appreciative audience--and the two dollars.
-She opened her purse, just for the comfort of seeing good United States
-greenbacks again, shook them out of the rumple and gazed at them,
-startled. Not two one dollar bills, but two for ten dollars each.
-Twenty good bucks! Oh gosh ... oh glory ... oh joy!
-
-“Miss British Isles can wait,” said Cynthia aloud to the deserted
-street and turned rapidly in a direction opposite to the _pensione_.
-She knew somehow that her luck would hold, her marvelous luck of
-the day, and that even as late as this sunset hour, with the rosy
-housefronts of Siena still holding their perpetual sunset glow, the
-little man in the frame shop would still be there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Chick that night was no longer propped limply, somewhat forlornly,
-between the dusty, green tinged mirror and the box of cold cream, but
-smiled gaily, resplendently, festively, in a frame of wine colored
-leather with a border of acorns and gold beading.
-
-Cynthia bent over and bestowed a brief kiss on the chilly glass.
-
-“Hi, Chick ... Darling,” she laughed. And turned off the light.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER 8
-
-_Venice_
-
-ALL IS NOT LOST
-
-
-Cynthia was sleepy when she stumbled into the station at Genoa. She
-hadn’t been too sure that the hotel keeper would wake her in time to
-get the train for Venice. So all night long she had dozed fitfully,
-waking to sit bolt upright and flash on the light to see her watch,
-then finally been waked from a sound sleep at five, just an hour before
-train time by the sharp summoning knuckles of the garçon on her bedroom
-door.
-
-And it must have been because her eyes were still blurred with sleep
-that she took the _rapide_ instead of the express for Venice. They were
-standing directly opposite each other, and both of them had “Venezia”
-in letters a foot high along the carriages. An Italian _rapide_ does
-not necessarily move with great rapidity. By the best of expresses it
-is a long day’s journey across the width of Italy and by the time she
-had discovered, with the half dozen native phrases that she knew, that
-she had taken the wrong train it was too late to do anything about it.
-They were already an hour east of Genoa.
-
-“What time do we get to Venezia,” she begged. “Venezia ... _Venezia_.
-...”
-
-“Si...si...si...si...si,” hissed the beaming conductor as he punched
-her ticket.
-
-“Yes, but what time? Tempo? Tempo?” she pleaded.
-
-The conductor shook his head and shrugged. Probably mad, this pretty
-signorina. But he had no English, and what did she in third class, in
-that expensive dress of real silk, with leather shoes upon her feet,
-a hat, and a suitcase also of veritable leather? He gave it up and
-sauntered down the crowded aisle between the wooden benches to examine
-the biglietto of a wizened little great-grandmother traveling, with six
-great-grandchildren, to Milan.
-
-Cynthia grinned and settled philosophically against the frame of the
-open window. Ten hours was a pretty long time, and it would be more
-than that now in this poky old train, but anyway it was an adventure
-and all part of traveling. She was certainly going in the right
-direction, there was no one to meet her at the other end, no one to
-worry when she didn’t arrive, and she would have all day to observe and
-to make sketches.
-
-Third class had been almost a necessity, this Italian trip hadn’t been
-allowed for in her original budget, but Cynthia had found third class
-in France so much more fun than second ... and of course even the
-Italians say that no one but rich, rich Americans and officials who
-travel on passes ever go by first. This was the coolest carriage too,
-since the always open windows let in floods of air and sunlight along
-with the floods of dust, and the hard wooden benches were pleasantly
-free of the small insect life almost universally inhabiting the
-upholstery of first and second coaches.
-
-But third class in Italy! The young man at Cooks who had sold her her
-ticket had almost expired to hear of an Anglo-Saxon traveling in so
-unorthodox a fashion. No one ... _no one_ ever traveled third class in
-Italy! Cynthia surveyed the coach and chuckled again.
-
-Further down the aisle, two lovely little Sisters of Santa Chiara, in
-the soft, dove-gray habit of their order, with spotless wide-spreading
-winged headdresses and speckless collars munched contentedly and
-daintily on bread and cheese augmented by a bottle of water they had
-brought with them. Cynthia’s eye took in the angle of that tilted,
-sail-like headdress, stealthily her fingers groped for sketch-book
-and pencil. A moment later she was so absorbed in her drawing that
-she absent-mindedly grinned back in friendly fashion at the littlest
-Sister, who had caught her drawing. Nobody seemed to mind being
-sketched in this country.
-
-Then there was the old great grandmother and her boisterous brood.
-Beside them she tended a hen in her apron, a hen that seemed very
-content to sleep and to cluck drowsily in the warm depths of that blue
-lap. The littlest bambino was not more than a year old, sleeping with
-bobbing head on the shoulder of the oldest sister. He had the most
-beautiful hands, tapering, with tiny dimples and wee pink nails, which
-fell into enchanting poses. Cynthia sketched happily.
-
-People came and went from every tiny station and crowds gathered
-and dispersed beneath the trailing potted flowers that decorated the
-pillars of every station platform. Cheerily they screamed “_Buon
-giorno!_” “_Addio!_” “_Arrivederci! Arrivederci!_” Italian, someone had
-told Cynthia, was a language intended to be shouted.
-
-The sun grew warmer, the paper beneath her hand sticky with
-perspiration. Somewhere along the line a few lire purchased a sandwich
-of garlic-flavored sausage between thick slices of warm bread, a bottle
-of warmish water and a bunch of sweet, very juicy green grapes. After
-lunch she curled in her corner and slept.
-
-When she awoke the car was nearly empty and they were clattering and
-banging through the light of midafternoon. Hills were purple beyond
-hot haze and vineyards, white with dust, spread for miles and miles on
-either side the track. Cynthia sighed and got up to walk the length of
-the car and back again. Where were they now, she wondered?
-
-When they stopped with a clatter and bang at the next station she
-hopped out to look at the map hung on the station wall. Keeping
-one careful eye on the train lest it slide out and leave her, she
-estimated the probable time that it would reach Venice. Good gracious,
-it was hours away yet! And at the rate this train was going ...
-
-The little horn tooted its warning and Cynthia fled back to her seat.
-What to do, what to do? Thank goodness, nobody would be at all worried
-or put out by this fool mistake of hers. Nancy, back in Brittany by
-now, and Mrs. Brewster were the only people that knew about her trains
-and her plans. Mother had insisted when Cynthia first left America that
-she keep in touch, close touch, with some one person in Europe, and she
-had been awfully faithful about that. She had even written Nancy what
-train she was taking from Genoa ... and now, Cynthia grinned ... look
-at the darn thing!
-
-By five o’clock she was ravenous and very weary. From former experience
-she knew that she could hop off almost any place that the train might
-stop and continue next day on the same ticket. But for hours they had
-not passed a decent sized town, just little settlements about the usual
-tiny church and inn, a few donkeys and a mangy yellow dog or two. Did
-she dare get off just anywhere and risk what she might find, or should
-she stick on here till seeming doomsday, till midnight anyway and
-arrive at some weird hour on the unknown canals of Venice?
-
-Fumbling in the pocket of her silk jacket she found a single lira and
-on impulse flipped it into the air. It dropped into her lap and she
-covered it quickly with her hand.
-
-“Heads; I’ll get off at the very next stop, no matter if it’s in the
-middle of a field. Tails; I’ll go on to Venice, no matter how late we
-get there or how hungry I am,” she said aloud.
-
-She uncovered the coin. Heads it was!
-
-Cynthia was a little scared. But determined, oh very determined.
-Resolutely she took down her suitcase from the rack, swung her painting
-box beside it. Firmly she waited by the open window till the train
-banged again to a stop beside a little shack that served as a station.
-The sign read Santa Maria Something-or-other, a name which meant
-nothing to Cynthia. Sturdily she stepped backward down the three steep
-steps to the ground, swung her box and suitcase off beside her and
-turning her back on the poky little train walked toward the gate.
-
-“Tomorrow ... tomorrow morning I go to Venice,” she explained to
-the gatekeeper who was punching lacework patterns into her ticket.
-“_Domani. Comprendo?_”
-
-“_Si, si._” Wonderingly he let her pass. Not until the gate had closed
-firmly did Cynthia feel sure that she herself wouldn’t turn and race
-toward the departing train, the train that eventually must reach Venice.
-
-When the last shriek of the whistle had died along the echoing hills,
-when the last smudge of smoke had disappeared against the dazzling
-light of the sinking sun, Cynthia was plodding almost ankle deep in
-dust along the wide path that seemed to do duty as the town road. But
-there was literally no town here. Far off across the plowed fields
-a sugar white tower reared against the skyline; the village church.
-Four or five scattered houses with the inevitable grape vine, their
-whitewashed sides stained verdigris green with arsenic spray, and a
-tiny inn to which the gateman had directed her. This latter was her
-objective.
-
-Its entrance was beneath a vine covered lattice and its bare dirt
-floor, its collection of dogs looked much like the other farmhouses.
-But inside there were several tables and a girl behind a counter. She
-slid forward and smiled shyly with a flutter of incredible lashes.
-Cynthia felt reassured.
-
-Stumblingly she asked for a room for the night, explained her wish to
-be called early for the first train for Venice.
-
-Yes, signorina, there was a room, but one. The signorina should regard
-it.
-
-It was bare, save for the bed, table and chair and directly above the
-café, but clean and cool. Cynthia nodded, did not ask the price and
-letting her suitcase slide to the floor, ordered water with which to
-wash. That was easy, one always asked for water. Supper also should be
-simple, since a traveler was expected to desire food. Cynthia thought
-of her first night in Paris and felt a little proud of how much more
-confident she had become since then. What would Chick think of this
-adventure of hers, she wondered and was glad he needn’t know about it
-for weeks yet. He’d be sure to scold her for taking such a risk.
-
-It proved however to be no risk at all. At supper, a simple meal of
-spaghetti, a salad and grapes, she was examined shyly by several
-children, hopefully by several dogs, curiously by the adults of the
-family. But the spaghetti was delicious and Cynthia was hungry. After
-dinner she was far too sleepy to do more than take a short walk down
-the quiet dusty road. Back in her room she wedged a chair under the
-latch of the lockless door and fell asleep almost before she could
-think again what an adventure this was.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The express from the north, to which Cynthia transferred a half hour
-beyond the little village, arrived in Venice about nine o’clock. It
-looked, she thought as she waited in the train corridor, just a little
-disappointing, only a long, tunnel-like train shed. No canals, no
-gondolas, no palaces in sight.
-
-The burly Italian in front of her swung off with his bags, Cynthia
-prepared to follow, and stopped stock still, midway of the top step.
-
-“_Chick!_”
-
-“_Cynthia_,” came the excited reply, “Where on earth? ...”
-
-“I ... I thought you were in New York, Chick!” And stood gaping with
-open mouth until a large bag prodded her, not too gently, in the middle
-of her back. Then she swung down the steps and dropped suitcase and
-paint box to fling herself into the arms of the surprised young man.
-Almost, it seemed, as surprised as she was.
-
-“I thought you were due last night, on the _rapide_ from Genoa,”
-exclaimed the disgusted Chick. “You wrote that to Nancy you know. And
-I’ve been meeting trains almost all night. ... It was only by luck I
-stopped here. I was meeting the express from Genoa on track six ten
-minutes ago.”
-
-He signaled a porter. “This your stuff? All of it?” A hand beneath her
-elbow, impersonally, kindly, almost as though he were the favorite
-nephew of a maiden aunt, all concern for her baggage, that she pass
-the _dogana_, the local custom house, that she give her ticket to the
-proper uniformed official. They came out of the stone doorway onto a
-half dozen steep stone steps. Before them shimmered the canal. So the
-popular report was true and Venice did have them?
-
-“I’ve got a gondola waiting right here ...” he looked along the
-bobbing, yelling line of gondoliers who shouted their wares and virtues
-below the quay. “Dash that fellow ...” she heard him mutter. “Oh well,
-never mind Cyn, we’ll take this one,” and still with that air of a
-nephew-who-expects-to-be-well-remembered-in-the-will, piloted her down
-the step.
-
-The wide upholstered seat was very comfortable. With surprisingly
-little fuss they were in the center of the stream, Chick had given the
-order, his fingers caught hers and held them tight. Good, then they
-really were still engaged! Cynthia chuckled happily.
-
-“I can’t ...” she turned to gaze at him ... “can’t get over this Chick.
-It’s the greatest surprise of my life.”
-
-“That was the intention,” Chick grinned back. He had, he told her,
-arrived in Naples two days ago, had promptly wired Nancy to find
-Cynthia’s exact address and had been told of the train she would take
-to Venice.
-
-“Neat, very neat!” approved Cynthia. “If I just hadn’t taken a local by
-mistake. And now where are you taking me?”
-
-“Pensione Casa Petrarca?”
-
-She nodded, Yes, that was where she had reserved a room.
-
-“Had your breakfast? Good. Then wash and tidy up and we’ll do a bit of
-sightseeing. After that. ...” Quietly he slipped his hand from hers,
-slid it into his pocket.
-
-“Oh dear, Chick, what’s the matter, what is it?”
-
-“I’ve ... that is I seem to have. ...” And with the maddening masculine
-manner of one blessed with many pockets started fumbling through them
-all, one after another.
-
-“Lost something?”
-
-Chick frowned. “Gone. But I hope it’s not lost.” Deliberately he went
-through the whole lot again while the gondola rocked gently before the
-steps of the pensione. At last he shrugged. “I came out last night and
-this morning with a gondolier named Luigi, from the traghetta, that’s a
-sort of gondola taxi-stand, across the way. If I’ve dropped the thing,
-it’ll probably be in his gondola. Go on up, will you? I’ll see if I can
-trace him.”
-
-A big airy room with a quaint porcelain stove in the corner. As the
-door closed behind the porter, Cynthia dropped into a chair and
-dragged off her hat. She didn’t know whether to weep or to laugh. Was
-she, or was she not, engaged to Chick? He hadn’t mentioned it, he
-hadn’t acted like it. She decided to laugh and felt better. Washed her
-face, ran a comb through her curls and felt better yet.
-
-A bit of powder, some rouge and she was ready to meet the world again,
-or at least Venice and Chick. He was waiting for her by the pensione
-steps.
-
-“Know any Italian?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“Not much, I’m afraid, Chick.” But, she thought, probably more than he
-did.
-
-“Well, come see if you can make anything out of this jumble of talk.
-I’m about cuckoo. We’ll walk across, it’s a good chance to see the
-Rialto bridge.”
-
-This was of stone, lined with a shallow, stepped, series of shops on
-either side, going up, going down till one reached the farther side
-of the Grand canal. Here Chick pointed out the row of gondolas as the
-taxi-rank from which he had taken Luigi.
-
-Cynthia stammered a few questions, listened to the voluble replies and
-managed to make out that Luigi had gone some where with a sightseeing
-party, probably to one of the islands. He’d be back later in the day.
-
-“This morning?” asked Chick anxiously.
-
-“I guess so.” Cynthia was slightly careless about that. Funny of Chick,
-not like him to make such a fuss over some silly little souvenir he’d
-bought. “Come on,” she put a hand on his arm, “let’s go sight-see for a
-while.”
-
-Somewhat reluctantly Chick agreed. Over tiny crooked stone bridges
-they went, along quays along whose mossy sides the water lapped dark
-and mysterious, down blind, colorful alleys where small children stuck
-their heads from windows and yelled shrilly. “_Non passaggio_ ... no
-passage!” Cynthia adored it all, adored being with Chick again.
-
-If he only wouldn’t fuss so, she thought. For he kept looking at his
-watch, glancing back over his shoulder, until finally she gave it up in
-despair. No use of sightseeing till Chick recovered his lost property.
-
-“How about going back now and having another try at your gondolier?”
-she suggested.
-
-He was so grateful that she was almost ashamed of her impatience, and
-they turned back immediately. But there was no further news; Luigi had
-not returned. Desperately Chick started to ask questions, perhaps one
-of the other gondoliers had heard Luigi speak of a package he had found?
-
-Cynthia, first on one foot and then on the other, for she was getting a
-little tired, translated to the best of her ability. Chick stuck in a
-word now and then.
-
-“_Perdita._ ... Lost ... lost.” Was Chick’s gender wrong, or had he
-really mislaid a blonde?
-
-But a few in the group of gondoliers got the idea. Apparently each
-one had, at one time or another discovered something _perdita_.
-From beneath the flea-infested blanket of a gondola was produced a
-dogs-eared magazine. Cynthia beginning to be amused read the lurid
-title in flaming vermilion sprawled across its cover. “True Tales
-of the Wild West.” The date was over a year ago but it had been,
-undoubtedly, once lost.
-
-Other gondoliers left their bobbing craft, passers-by drew closer as
-Chick’s eagerness held promise of rich reward. Waving the magazine
-aside he chanted impatiently, “Piccolo ... piccolo,” while he made
-gestures of small measurement with his hands. Then aside to Cynthia,
-“that does mean ‘little,’ doesn’t it? Not a musical instrument?”
-
-Cynthia nodded silently, not daring to risk speech and watched with
-dancing eyes while Chick refused, from a second cheerful brigand a
-musty, torn golash.
-
-Cheerful brigand number two was a sheer loss to high pressure
-salesmanship. Cynthia caught the word “_Impermeabile_ ... waterproof,”
-as he covered the tear with one big hand. Twisting the rubber inside
-out he sought to display its amazing suppleness and elasticity while
-an admiring group applauded both at the golash and the salesman, with
-ohs and ahs of astonishment. Cynthia was wondering how a single torn
-rubber had been brought from so many thousand miles to lie forgotten in
-a Venetian gondola, and also how the gondolier thought Chick, with a
-foot obviously many sizes larger, was going to use it. But perhaps he
-surmised a sentimental attachment.
-
-She glanced at Chick. Poor darling, this was awfully important to
-him, and it was mean of her to take it all so lightly. But he was
-being pretty darn solemn and masculine. Impatiently she said. “If
-you’d _only_ tell me what it is, Chick, perhaps I could make them
-understand.” Oh dear, how annoying men could be!
-
-Chick seemed not to hear. The new distraction was a cabbage, wilted,
-but unquestionably of more recent vintage than either the galosh or
-the ancient magazine. Its discoverer had waited for a time outside the
-magic circle, while firing forth a rapid stream of “_Ecco ... ecco ...
-ecco!_” as he held aloft the proffered vegetable. Breaking through
-at last he encountered the two previous presenters of articles, thus
-gaining the attention also of the crowd. Which was his downfall.
-
-An old woman, black shawl over her head, flattened slippers of magenta
-felt upon her feet, having heaved her way through by sheer force of
-language, not only wanted a cabbage, but _the_ cabbage. Perhaps it was
-the cabbage of her childhood, perhaps she had nursed it from a tiny
-seedling, this dejected thing. For a moment longer Cynthia listened,
-then screwed up her face and clapped frantic hands to ears. Couldn’t
-they get out of this soon?
-
-Close behind the old woman came shouldering two calm carabinieri, just
-in time it seemed to prevent a general combat. White gloved hands
-behind them, patent leather hats set squarely above unruffled brows,
-two identical, magnificent examples of the Venetian police. Tweedledum,
-it seemed, asked the questions. Tweedledee answered them. Conversely
-Dum asked and Dee answered. Comparative silence settled upon the circle
-and Cynthia cautiously removed her hands from her ears.
-
-All available witnesses began to present their evidence. As there were
-perhaps a score in number all acting out their theories in violent
-pantomime, Cynthia began to wish they weren’t right in the center
-of it. The one who had taken upon himself the part of the inquirer
-after lost articles, Chick’s rôle in fact, was losing things in all
-directions with wide, dramatic sweeps of his arms.
-
-Tweedledum and Tweedledee executed a half turn in perfect unison,
-raised right hands in gloves of immaculate whiteness in formal
-salutation and in Chick’s direction. By now, Cynthia knew them of old,
-they would have come to an unshakable conclusion. If they awarded the
-galosh to the old lady, the cabbage to Chick, both parties would have
-to be content. But no, they had another plan.
-
-The cabbage was bestowed upon its rightful owner who still lingered,
-voluminous with words, to see what else might happen. The golash
-returned to the gondolier in whose craft it had originally been found.
-Cynthia applauded the decision, then translated for Chick’s benefit
-Tweedledum’s speech:
-
-“We’re to go to the police station, Chick. That’ll teach you, young
-man, not to start riots. And I hope it does!”
-
-Behind them an admiring and still unsilenced throng applauded their
-departure, even followed a short distance along the quay and over the
-ancient bridge.
-
-“My heavens!” fumed Chick, “can’t they understand! I’ve said ‘perdita,’
-and ‘piccolo’ till I’m black in the face.” But Cynthia was enjoying
-herself.
-
-“If you’d tell them a little more,” she soothed, slipping her hand into
-his arm. “Or if you’d even tell me. ... What in the name of Agatha
-_have_ you lost, anyway?”
-
-The police were speaking again. Cynthia thought she caught the word.
-... “Fondere.” Did that mean “found?” The Lost and Found Department
-perhaps? She made that suggestion to Chick.
-
-A few more streets, a bridge or two, a narrow sun-lit way and one of
-the innumerable palaces which seemed now to be a police station, with
-the crown and arms of Italy above the door. Beyond this a damp and
-cheerless room, none too clean and the equivalent of a desk sergeant
-who drew towards him a large book and set down their names, Chick’s
-and Cynthia’s, and their _pensione_. Dum and Dee were doing all the
-explaining but in Italian far too rapid for Cynthia to follow. It might
-yet prove that she and Chick had defied municipal authority by starting
-a barter shop on the quayside, one decaying golash for a wilted cabbage.
-
-Tweedledum and Tweedledee had finished, the man at the desk made a
-gesture. An attendant opened a door, flung back a huge iron grill that
-closed off about half the room behind it and signed for them to enter.
-Cynthia clutched at Chick’s arm. Oh dear!
-
-Frankly uncertain she followed Chick’s slow steps, the attendant
-close behind, Dum and Dee bringing up in the rear. Then the attendant
-switched on a light, a series of lights disclosing what might have been
-a wine cellar. But instead of wine ... Cynthia choked back her laughter
-and pointed.
-
-A bicycle, a shelf of gloves, a regular store of ancient umbrellas and
-sunshades, piles and piles of books, mostly Baedeckers by their moldy
-red bindings, boots, odd bits of clothing, a coffeepot, market loads
-still knotted in capacious handkerchiefs, a coffin, a load of bricks.
-...
-
-Chick’s face was flaming. “How in the name of goodness can we tell
-whether it’s here or not!” He turned to Cynthia. “Don’t they have a
-list of things somewhere, and the times they were found? Tell them it’s
-small, small. And done up in white paper and a box.”
-
-“I know,” Cynthia nodded solemnly. “A pound of butter, Chick dear. Oh
-Chick, you weren’t going to ask me to set up housekeeping were you?”
-But at the hurt expression in his eyes her levity dimmed. “I’ll tell
-them you lost it last night, is that it?” And turning to Dum and Dee,
-carefully choosing her words, she managed to convey the idea.
-
-One of them gave a shrug of disappointment which was echoed by the
-other. With all these things to choose from, they seemed to say,
-surely any but the most captious would be satisfied. But they turned
-to discuss the matter with the attendant. Lights began to go out,
-indication that this particular exhibition was over, Finish. But
-apparently more was to follow. Chick might yet discover his pound of
-butter.
-
-As they returned to the main room the attendant departed and polite
-gestures demanded that Chick and Cynthia should take chairs and wait.
-An air of expectancy hung above the little room. Obviously the choicest
-gem of the collection, something too valuable to be left with the other
-articles had been sent for.
-
-“Do you think they’ve sent to the bank?” asked Cynthia.
-
-Chick brightened at the suggestion, brightened until the door swung
-open again. There entered behind the attendant a woman, slatternly,
-down at heels, very cross and carrying a basket on her arm. Slowly,
-reluctantly she advanced to the desk, lifted the cover of the basket.
-At the summons of the sergeant Chick appeared beside her. With a wild
-burst Dum and Dee grabbed the basket from the woman, thrust it into
-Chick’s reluctant arms. Whereat the basket, considerably disturbed, let
-out a long neck, green mottled with brown feathers, a wide open yellow
-beak, an indignant eye and a stiffly upstanding comb of violent red.
-Loudly the occupant of the basket protested with a violent “... C ck
-... a ... doo ... dle ... do!”
-
-Chick nearly dropped the basket.
-
-Cynthia, nearly helpless with laughter, had fallen into a chair and,
-with face buried in her handkerchief, could only indulge in what Dum
-and Dee must surely have considered tears of uncontrolled joy at
-this return of her lost property. Sympathetic murmurs, croonings of
-consolation echoed about the room. Even the rather hard faced woman was
-touched. Chick stood stupidly staring.
-
-The hardest part of the day came when Cynthia, drying her streaming
-eyes, was forced into sufficient sobriety and Italian to explain that
-indeed and indeed the rooster, and it was a beautiful rooster, oh a
-magnificent rooster, was not theirs. Was not at all what they sought.
-
-“No, no, no, no, no!” Like a popgun, Cynthia shot out violent
-negatives. And at last she had made it clear. Almost with joy the woman
-received back the cherished rooster from Chick’s relieved embrace.
-Almost haughtily they were shown to the door, sent, with an air of
-extreme disapproval, upon their way.
-
-Outside in the sunlight Cynthia was almost surprised to find it was the
-same day, and Chick pulled down his coat, let out a great puff of a
-sigh.
-
-After that first burst of laughter Cynthia had managed to get control
-of herself, but she wasn’t sure how long this would last. She must
-get somewhere, anywhere, and have it all out with Chick. Meekly she
-took his arm, let him lead her along the quay, through small streets
-toward the Piazza San Marco. She glanced upward. Chick was being very
-masculine, very stern, one might almost think, unforgiving.
-
-In silence they traversed the small streets. Well, if Chick was going
-to be stuffy! ... But he couldn’t be, he simply couldn’t be. And whose
-beastly old bundle was it anyway? _She_ didn’t go about leaving things
-in gondolas.
-
-Florio’s, on the Piazza San Marco. A small green iron table, two small
-twisted iron chairs and an attentive waiter in a white apron. Chick’s
-eyes consulted Cynthia, then ordered two lemonades. They came. In
-silence Cynthia sipped hers, bit her lips, gulped and regarded fixedly
-a stupid, pink toed pigeon who was strutting, with puffed out chest
-before the lovely little faun colored lady of his choice. Sideways out
-of her eyes Cynthia caught a glimpse of Chick, then turned to face him.
-
-His face was red but in his eyes was now a glimmer of understanding,
-one might almost say mirth. Cynthia dared a slight, tremulous giggle,
-forerunner of the gale to come. Then. ...
-
-“Oh Chick, Chick, if you could have seen yourself with that silly
-rooster. ... And the cabbage ... and Tweedledum ...!”
-
-The tide had risen now, all bars were down. Rocking with mirth they
-clung to the little iron chairs and laughed and laughed. A moment’s
-pause to recount the pomposity of the attendant, the old woman with the
-cabbage, the galosh, the list of things in that storeroom. Did you see
-the bicycle? ... Who could have left those high, buttoned shoes? ...
-Oh, and the fans, simply stacks of them!
-
-For ten minutes the gale raged backwards and forwards then, weak and
-helpless Cynthia begged for another lemonade, wiped the tears from her
-eyes and subsided into comparative sanity. Their laughter together
-had relieved her in many ways. It was going to be all right now, she
-and Chick still thought alike, could still find amusement in the same
-things, and the doubts of the morning were all swept away.
-
-“But Chick,” doggedly she returned to the old question. “Now it’s all
-over, you can tell me, can’t you? What was in that package?”
-
-Chick wasn’t going to be stuffy about it any more. He grinned this
-time, but shook his head. “If we don’t find it today I’ll really tell
-you. Not yet, though.”
-
-“Cross your heart?”
-
-“Cross my heart!”
-
-From the corner of the square a big bell began a slow solemn booming
-and as though it was a signal, hundreds, thousands of pigeons rose
-against the deep blue of the Venetian sky and the sunlit columns
-opposite. Glinting silvery, iridescent, dark blue and rose and gold
-they whirled with the muffled beat and roar of a thousand wings.
-Cynthia gazed enthralled.
-
-Across the square, giving access to the Merceria, the Way of the
-Merchants, was the clock tower. As the great painted face recorded noon
-two giant moors slowly struck a bronze bell with big hammers, marking
-the hour.
-
-“Lovely!” murmured Cynthia. “Oh Chick, I wish ... I wish we didn’t have
-to go back, ever. I wish we could stay on, in one of those sweet old
-palaces. ...”
-
-“Like Othello and Desdemona?”
-
-“No ...,” slowly. “She got smothered, didn’t she? I guess I wouldn’t
-care for that.”
-
-“New York will be fun too,” hazarded Chick. “And with all the
-advertisement you’ve had, young lady; your magazine covers on every
-newstand, month after month.”
-
-“Chick! Are they really? Yes, I suppose they are, I hadn’t thought
-of that. Better hurry back, hadn’t I?” And then laughed at her own
-weather-vane mood. “Well, what shall we do next, Chick? I feel sane
-once more.”
-
-Chick’s suggestion was: lunch at the Danieli, which was the swankiest
-hotel in Venice, and, he had heard, one of the loveliest of the old
-Venetian palaces. Then back to the traghetti to see if Luigi had come.
-
-Oh, that again! Cynthia made an impatient gesture. Save us from a man
-with one idea! But she adored the lunch, loved the gracious old palace
-with its carved, minstrel gallery, its floor of multicolored tiles, its
-ceiling carved and painted in deep blue and rose and gold. Out into the
-sunlight again, and the Adriatic shimmering as blue as the ceiling, a
-pleasant little wind chilled by the snows of the Dalmatian Alps and the
-white bubble of the Church of the Salute rising across the lagoon.
-
-“Shall we ride, or walk?” asked Chick. By the way he said it Cynthia
-knew he wanted to walk.
-
-“We see more on foot, don’t we?” she suggested amiably. Perhaps a
-little later they could go through the Grand Canal in a gondola. And
-indeed she loved the great Piazza flanked by the Doges Palace, by St.
-Mark’s and the long colonnade of the Library and the Mint. And the
-shops beneath those columns most fascinating of all. Cynthia’s whole
-allowance for abroad had been divided between seeing places, and saving
-up a bit for what might, when she got home, prove to be a long wait for
-more work. But she had learned a lot by looking just in windows, had
-learned that you can so memorize a beautiful thing you can at least
-carry it away with you in your mind.
-
-“See, Chick, isn’t that the loveliest old bracelet? ...” A thick
-circle, not quite joined, of gold, the two ends which almost touched
-circled with tiny crowns of blue, blue turquoises. “And oh, Chick, just
-look at that ring. ...” A lovely old thing of Florentine gold, studded
-with seed pearls and surrounding a topaz as richly dark as the gold
-itself. Chick put a hand on her arm and urged her along to the next
-window which, being full of ancient books and maps was not quite so
-enthralling.
-
-Perhaps it hadn’t been really tactful to admire that ring, almost as
-though she had wanted it herself. She had Chick’s own ring, hadn’t she?
-The little emerald, very prettily set, not quite good enough, not quite
-old enough to be called an antique, not quite the same as though it
-had been bought just for her. ... Cynthia checked the feeling. It was
-unkind, ungracious, ungrateful. Chick was just a poster artist in the
-first year of his success, he had come all the way to Venice just to
-see her, or at least she supposed he had, for he hadn’t said so yet. ...
-
-And thank goodness, here was the traghetti. Perhaps they’d find that
-stupid lost bundle of Chick’s at last.
-
-Word must have been passed around for there was someone, Chick
-exclaimed that it was Luigi, waiting for them, his weathered old face a
-mass of interweaving laughter wrinkles. Sturdy, stocky, clad in ragged
-clean shirt, with the uniform black trousers and sash of the public
-gondolier, Luigi dashed up the short flight of steps, rushed toward
-them. In his outstretched hand he held a parcel, small, oh very small.
-Not big enough even for a quarter of a pound of butter.
-
-It had been opened, clumsily retied with gray twine. Thrusting it into
-Chick’s hand he followed with a flood of rapid Italian. Once more a
-circle of interested onlookers threatened to engulf them.
-
-Chick gave a hasty order, grasped Cynthia’s arm and thrust her down the
-steps, into the Luigi gondola. Then waved a wide gesture down the Grand
-Canal toward the lagoon beyond.
-
-“Buono! ... Buono!” agreed Luigi, nodding vigorously like a porcelain
-mandarin. There came a faint cheer from the crowd on the quay and
-Cynthia recognized a few of their morning’s spectators. But the man
-with the galosh, the woman with the cabbage were not present. From the
-comfortable cushioned seat she watched palaces of kings and doges,
-princesses, great composers and poets glide past. This was heavenly,
-this was the way to see Venice, to see any place, with Chick’s hand in
-hers and not a care in the world.
-
-Then she saw the little package in his other hand, glanced up
-inquiringly and caught the look in his eyes. Her heart skipped a beat,
-two beats. No nephew ever looked like that at a maiden aunt!
-
-“Let’s,” said Chick, taking his hand out of hers, “let’s both undo the
-package. You do want to see what’s in it, don’t you, Cyn?”
-
-Cynthia laughed. “Here I’ve been hustled and bustled over half of
-Venice, in jail and out again ...” she addressed the diminishing houses
-of candy pink, baby blue, as the gondola struck the wide lagoon and
-rocked slowly away from the town, “and he asks me, do I want to know
-what’s in it. Man alive, do you think I’ve got no curiosity?”
-
-From behind them came a musical shout. Luigi warning off another
-gondola. Beyond him, Venice glowed pearl pink in the late light of
-afternoon, the long paddle made a soft ripple on the blue lagoon. Dark
-Italian eyes looked over their shoulders, whole heartedly, honestly
-as curious as Cynthia, and two heads, one brown, one blond bent close
-together.
-
-Cynthia untied the knot, with slim fingers that were cold and
-loosened the rumpled white paper. A small box of blue stained leather
-beautifully tooled in gilt. She lifted the lid.
-
-“Oh Chick ... oh you darling! Chick, is it really, really for me?”
-
-On the third finger of her right hand she slipped it. Quaint old green
-gold, delicately lacy as the collar of a doge, held firmly in its heart
-a single pink pearl. Chick reached and took the hand in his, slipped
-off the ring, slid into his palm the little emerald she had worn all
-summer, and in its place substituted the other. It fitted as though it
-had been made for her. Perhaps it was.
-
-“Just for you, yourself,” he said. “It’s quite old, four or five
-hundred years they told me. I got it yesterday afternoon in one of
-those shops you looked at, Cynthia. And I’ve been frantic all day. ...
-I wanted to tell you, just this way, in a gondola, with just this ring.
-And I couldn’t, darling, tell you before.”
-
-“Chick, it’s the most beautiful, beautiful thing I ever saw in my whole
-life.”
-
-“Isn’t it?” said Chick, but when she glanced up his eyes were not
-on the ring. “Tomorrow,” he said, “we’ll see the American consul. I
-understand he’s the marrying guy about here.”
-
-Behind them suddenly came a great shout, baritone, Italian. “_Yum
-tum tumti tumtum. ... Yum tiddilty tum, tum ti tumitytum_. ...”
-Confidentially Luigi leaned forward, whispered in tones that might have
-been heard back in Venice. “That, ladiee, gentleman ... that ver’ fine
-Venezia loove song. You like?”
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation, punctuation, spelling, the use of golash and
-galosh and poster and paster, and placement of the apostrophe in Little
-One’s Magazine and Little Ones’ Magazine have been retained as printed
-in the original publication except as follows:
-
- Page 16
- had tipped and fallen _changed to_
- had tripped and fallen
-
- Page 22
- before the senorita and dramatized the _changed to_
- before the señorita and dramatized the
-
- Page 24
- every step she made took here nearer _changed to_
- every step she made took her nearer
-
- Page 33
- with small sharp eyes and an opologetic _changed to_
- with small sharp eyes and an apologetic
-
- Page 43
- a member of the Begger’s Opera
- a member of the Beggar’s Opera
-
- Page 47
- Its all pearly gray mists _changed to_
- It’s all pearly gray mists
-
- Page 52
- the _garcon_ of the striped waistcoat _changed to_
- the _garçon_ of the striped waistcoat
-
- Page 60
- leaned againt the heavy stone balustrade _changed to_
- leaned against the heavy stone balustrade
-
- Page 78
- chance to to look them over _changed to_
- chance to look them over
-
- Page 79
- medieval France had not, _changed to_
- medieval France had not
-
- Page 99
- the Arc de Triomph _changed to_
- the Arc de Triomphe
-
- Page 102
- that omelet which Madame Poularde _changed to_
- that omelet which Madame Poulard
-
- Page 127
- all right anyway. --Oh _changed to_
- all right anyway.--Oh
-
- Page 146
- mourned Cynthia. No; it’s _changed to_
- mourned Cynthia. “No; it’s
-
- Page 160
- darn that model!” _changed to_
- darn that model!
-
- Page 164
- caramel custard, at the Cheval Blanc _changed to_
- caramel custard at the Cheval Blanc
-
- Page 166
- street, past the hotel de l’Universe _changed to_
- street, past the Hotel de l’Universe
-
- Page 171
- till she come in to look at it _changed to_
- till she came in to look at it
-
- Page 184
- but your Aunt was _changed to_
- but your aunt above was
-
- Page 199
- of horses hoofs _changed to_
- of horses’ hoofs
-
- Page 201
- pervasive and insistant was the tap _changed to_
- pervasive and insistent was the tap
-
- Page 202
- brillant hued balloon _changed to_
- brilliant hued balloon
-
- Page 208
- the judges stand _changed to_
- the judges’ stand
-
- Page 215
- and Cynthia said. _changed to_
- and Cynthia said,
-
- Page 219
- waking to sit bold upright _changed to_
- waking to sit bolt upright
-
- Page 246
- irridescent, dark blue and rose _changed to_
- iridescent, dark blue and rose
-
- Page 250
- like a porcelain manderin _changed to_
- like a porcelain mandarin
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cynthia Steps Out, by Erick Berry
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Cynthia Steps Out
-
-Author: Erick Berry
-
-Release Date: October 2, 2016 [EBook #53197]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CYNTHIA STEPS OUT ***
-
-
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-
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-
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-
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-
-</pre>
-
-
-<hr class="divider mt3" />
-<h1><em>Cynthia</em><br />
-STEPS OUT</h1>
-<hr class="divider2" />
-
-<div class="hidehand">
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" height="761" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="frontis" id="frontis"></a>
-<img src="images/title.jpg" width="400" height="643" alt="Title page" />
-<div class="caption"><em>Cynthia</em><br />
-STEPS OUT<br />
-<br />
-BY<br />
-ERICK BERRY</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter mt3">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<p class="center">CHICAGO<br />
-<br />
-<i>The Goldsmith Publishing<br />
-Company</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter mt3">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<p class="center smcap">
-Copyright, 1937, by<br />
-THE GOLDSMITH PUBLISHING COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-Made in U. S. A.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter mt3">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<h2 class="contents">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<th class="tdr">CHAPTER</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">I</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Always Trust Your Luck</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#i">11</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Shipboard</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">II</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">Corned Beef Hash</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ii">42</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Paris</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">III</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">Cold-in-the-Head</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iii">69</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Brittany</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IV</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">Little Miss Fix-it</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iv">99</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Mont St. Michel</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">V</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">The Cuckoo</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#v">127</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Basque Country</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VI</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">Romance in Carcassonne</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vi">158</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Carcassonne</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VII</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">The Racing Snail</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vii">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Siena</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VIII</td>
-<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap">All Is Not Lost</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#viii">219</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><em>Venice</em></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="i" id="i"></a>CHAPTER 1</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Shipboard</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">ALWAYS TRUST YOUR LUCK</p>
-
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">It must</span> be fun to be an artist.” Stasia’s
-speech was somewhat impeded by the mouthful
-of pins she was trying not to swallow.</p>
-
-<p>“Fun?” Cynthia frowned, thinking. “Yes,
-I suppose it is. I wouldn’t know how to be anything
-else. Ouch! That was me you were pinning.”
-She braced herself with one arm against
-the bulkhead as the ship tipped at a slight angle.
-“Make that sleeve as short as you can.”</p>
-
-<p>Stasia took the last pin out of her mouth.
-“Slip off your blouse now, and I’ll baste it up for
-you. You’ll make a sweet pirate, if pirates ever
-were sweet.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, free of the blouse, turned to experiment
-before the long mirror in the door, hesitating
-between the respective merits of a red bandana
-handkerchief over her black curls and the
-more sinister effect of a black scarf which could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-be continued down into a black mask with eyeholes.</p>
-
-<p>Stasia bit off her thread. “There, that’s
-ready. When will you break it to Miss Mitchall
-that she’s got to wear a costume tonight?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia giggled. “You ought to come along
-and help me. But I guess I’ll wait till the last
-minute and rush her into the idea.” She glanced
-toward the bed where a tall, witch’s cap, made
-of green cardboard from the ship’s barber shop,
-reposed beside a cape of green broadcloth, borrowed
-from Stasia, and a pair of Miss Mitchall’s
-own shoes, now adorned with huge buckles of
-cardboard and silver foil.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll need some help with my wig,” said
-Stasia, “and then I think we’re all finished.”
-The wig was of bright orange yarn, loosely
-knitted into a tight fitting cap of coarse net
-which completely covered Stasia’s sleek bob.</p>
-
-<p>“It needs tightening at the back. Wait a
-moment.” Cynthia braced her feet. “Dash
-this boat, I hope she stops rolling before dinner
-or we shan’t have any dance. Do they always
-have a costume party every trip?”</p>
-
-<p>“Uh-huh. Always the second day before we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-get into Cherbourg, Paris, day after tomorrow.
-Aren’t you thrilled?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, pinning the wig into a better fit,
-murmured a vague assent. But she didn’t feel
-at all thrilled. After eight days the ship was
-like another home in which she knew, by sight
-at least, almost every occupant. Paris was going
-to be new and strange. Oh yes, a grand new
-adventure, but sometimes she got scared at the
-thought of it. So big, with all the street signs
-and the menus in a different language and so
-much that was new to learn. What if she failed
-to make good on the job that had brought her
-over, the dozen covers for <cite>Little Ones’ Magazine</cite>?
-Suppose she didn’t have the money to
-stay? Suppose she couldn’t make people understand
-her French, even though Stasia had been
-coaching her all week? Oh shut up, Cynthia!</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Mitchall’s the old girl I admire,” she
-said suddenly. “She’s got more courage! You
-know she’s returning practically without a job
-and without money and she’s fifty if she’s a day,
-though she looks sixty, poor darling. I don’t
-believe she’s got ten dollars beyond her fare to
-London.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-“What was she doing in the States?” asked
-Stasia.</p>
-
-<p>Stasia hadn’t, Cynthia thought, much imagination,
-but perhaps that was because her father
-was president of the line. Look at this suite de
-luxe, the best in the ship. And if she had never
-earned her own living she couldn’t imagine what
-it was to be like Miss Mitchall.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she had some sort of a governess job.
-But she’s English you know, and she didn’t come
-in on the quota and so she had to go back home.
-She was with a Canadian family in Buffalo.
-They are paying her fare back, but that’s all. I
-wish ...” she stopped. She was going to say
-she wished she could help her.</p>
-
-<p>Stasia looked at her watch, the little platinum
-watch circled with diamonds. “It’s six my dear,
-and dinner’s at half past seven. If you’re going
-to get your roommate into her costume ...”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, you’re perfectly right.” Cynthia
-struggled into her wool dress, grabbed the
-black scarf, the buckled shoes, threw the blouse
-over her arm. “Here, give me a hand with the
-other stuff, will you? I’ll take the hat.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia’s small cabin was down, down, two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-steep flights below the cabins de luxe. Clean
-white corridors smelling of soap and sea and
-ship, doors shut and white, doors open and dark,
-doors open and lighted, a narrow corridor turning
-down to the left, two doors facing each
-other, the left one always closed. Cynthia often
-wondered about that door. She knew the cabin
-was occupied because the room steward went in
-and out but no one else ever did. The door to
-the right was Cynthia’s and Miss Mitchall’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Here we are. Thanks a lot. Can I help with
-make-up or anything?” Cynthia dumped her
-things on the bunk, turned on the lights.</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks. The stewardess and Lilia will
-help if I want it.” Lilia was Stasia’s maid.
-Cynthia smiled. Think of having a maid to
-yourself!</p>
-
-<p>Stasia was gone. Cynthia hustled out of her
-dress again, turned on the hot water, whistled
-happily. This was going to be fun tonight.
-Like the old Art Academy days when everybody
-dressed up and the dances lasted till morning.</p>
-
-<p>Someone in the cabin across the corridor
-coughed, a man’s cough. Cynthia turned off
-the hot water and listened, caught herself staring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-with wide gray eyes at the wide gray eyes
-in the mirror over the wash basin.</p>
-
-<p>The night she had come on board that left
-hand door had been wide open and in the corridor
-there had been a suitcase, big and black, with
-lots of stickers on it. Cynthia hurrying along
-the hall with an arm full of last minute fruit
-and flowers and books, Chick and Judy and the
-others of the old Art School bunch at her heels,
-had <a name="tripped" id="tripped"></a><ins title="Original has 'tipped'">tripped</ins> and fallen full length over that suitcase.
-When Chick had picked her up, unhurt,
-and brushed her off, she had noted the suitcase
-and a huge Ottawa Hotel paster on its side,
-bright with greens and blues and oranges. Chick
-had noticed it too. “A good poster design, that,”
-he had said.</p>
-
-<p>And Cynthia, thinking about Chick, sat down
-on the lower bunk and for three minutes was
-devastatingly and overwhelmingly homesick for
-New York and the studio, for Judy and Chick.
-Chick had, in this very room, standing on that
-very same rug, kissed her good-bye with his arms
-tight around her and wished her good luck and
-told her how rotten it was for him to have to
-stay behind like this. “Keep my ring on your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-finger and my face in your heart,” he had said.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia twisted the pretty emerald, which
-had belonged to Chick’s mother, now so ill that
-he couldn’t get away for the trip they had
-planned together. It was a sweet ring. Cynthia’s
-eyes were getting teary when the dressing
-gong sounded. Goodness, was it as late as that!</p>
-
-<p>The pirate costume had long black trousers&mdash;full
-ones from Cynthia’s beach pyjamas. A
-wide sash of twisted red and green bristled with
-an arsenal of silver paper pistols and knives.
-The white blouse, with sleeves tacked very short,
-bore a black silk skull and crossbones over
-the heart. She was tying heavy thread on brass
-curtain rings to loop over her ears when Miss
-Mitchall pattered in, closing the door gently
-behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mitchall’s small sloping shoulders,
-claw-like hands and thin blond hair, now a dusty
-gray, were the characteristics of the story-book
-English governess, but her eyes gleamed
-brightly behind her spectacles and one felt that
-her spirit was unconquerable.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh my dear, how sweet you look,” she twittered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-Cynthia hung an earring over one ear and
-patted it with a slim finger to see if it would
-swing free. In a minute she’d have to break the
-news to her roommate. But Miss Mitchall had
-news of her own.</p>
-
-<p>“I just heard a voice across the corridor, talking
-to the steward. It’s a man and he talks with
-a Canadian accent,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>They had both wondered about that room,
-for on this small ship everyone seemed to know
-everyone else, with that exception. Was he ill,
-perhaps, that he never came out, not even for
-meals? But there wasn’t time to discuss him
-now.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry and get into your costume for the
-party,” directed Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Costume? Oh yes.” Miss Mitchall was
-going to appreciate the small jest. “You mean
-my black dress.” She turned, bustling a little,
-to put her purse and book and scarf and sweater
-on the long couch beneath the porthole.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t mean just the black dress,”
-stated Cynthia in what she hoped was a firm
-tone. “I mean your costume. Stasia Carruthers
-and I made one for you this afternoon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-You’re going as a Green Witch. See here.”
-She took down the tall peaked hat, clapped it on
-the small gray head and turned her roommate
-to face the mirror. “Then the cape, like this.”
-She flung the long cape around the thin shoulders.
-“Of course we must make you up. A little
-powder on your nose, probably some rouge on
-your cheeks. But put on your black dress first.
-And hurry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh my dear, I couldn’t&mdash;I’m too old&mdash;what
-will people think?” Mildly clucking, continuing
-to protest, Miss Mitchall was shoved
-into her costume, into the shoes with the silver
-buckles, into the long green cape. Cynthia,
-against the other’s mild opposition, patted rouge
-on the pale cheeks, then flung a towel over the
-cape and shook half a box of white talcum powder
-on the gray hair.</p>
-
-<p>“But my dear,” beamed Miss Mitchall, “it
-... it makes me look so ... so young.”</p>
-
-<p>Indeed it did. The contrast of green cloth
-against the white hair was dramatic. “Very successful,”
-purred Cynthia. “You’ll be the belle
-of the ball. And it’s not immoral to look young
-you know. Now sit down there and be good till<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-I get this scarf tied. Or no, ring for the steward,
-we must get a broom to go with the witch.”</p>
-
-<p>By the time they hurried out of their cabin
-the echoes of the dinner gong had been dead for
-ten minutes. But the corridors were full of
-laughing groups: harlequins, monks, pierrots,
-Turkish ladies, Dutch girls and nondescript
-costumes that defied a label. For fear that the
-Green Witch might bolt back to the cabin,
-Cynthia kept close behind her but after a few
-minutes realized this was unnecessary. Their
-passage was a minor triumphal procession for
-everyone turned to look at them and made some
-delighted exclamation over the novel costumes.
-Cynthia was amused to note that Miss Mitchall’s
-sharp little chin went higher, her step
-became firmer as the approbation grew and by
-the time they reached the stairway to the dining
-saloon she walked like a princess approaching
-her throne.</p>
-
-<p>Cheers and a spatter of applause greeted
-their descent and three tables claimed their company
-but Cynthia looked around and made a
-quick decision. In a far corner sat Harvey
-O’Neill, as the Tin Woodman, and Johnnie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-Graham, in sackcloth and straw, presumably a
-scarecrow. Miss Mitchall needed what only
-an Irish tongue could supply. Cynthia steered
-toward the small table.</p>
-
-<p>“May I introduce the Green Witch of Greenwich
-Village?” sang Cynthia above the hubbub.
-“Did you know that Green Witches had special
-magic and charms, much stronger than black
-and white ones?”</p>
-
-<p>“Special charms, certainly,” agreed the Irishman.
-“Come and cast a spell on me, Miss
-Witch,” and he pulled out a chair for her. Cynthia
-took the one next to Johnnie.</p>
-
-<p>“Smart of you,” he whispered in her ear,
-“to give her a costume that went with her specs.
-It’s one of the best on the floor.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an almost continual pageant down
-the wide stairs. Stasia made her entrance alone
-and effectively in the long, slinky costume of a
-modern French doll. From the bright orange
-wig of knitted yarn, through the high bodice and
-long full skirt of brilliant reds and raw blues
-to the absurdly high heeled slippers of green
-satin and the painted circles on her cheeks beneath
-the wide lashed baby stare, she was perfect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-in every detail. Even to a price tag on her
-shoulder stating “twenty five francs.” She was
-followed by a Spanish señorita on the arm of a
-George Belchers, charlady, red nosed, apron-garbed,
-three dingy violets nodding in his bonnet
-as he stumbled apologetically, paused to mop up
-the steps before the <a name="senorita" id="senorita"></a><ins title="Original has 'senorita'">señorita</ins> and dramatized the
-amusing entrance.</p>
-
-<p>How she hated to have this end, Cynthia
-thought. Paris, surely, wasn’t going to be half
-so much fun. And never to see any of these
-nice people again. ... Miss Mitchall for instance.
-It didn’t seem possible that you could
-get to know a person so well and then let them
-slip out of your life. Stasia was going to stay in
-Cherbourg for a week. Johnnie ...</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you go, Johnnie?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Straight through Paris and down to Provence.
-I’m studying the poetry of Mistral,
-who, if you don’t happen to know, was the greatest
-poet of southern France. Why?”</p>
-
-<p>But she turned to O’Neill. “And you’re going
-to Ireland, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Better come along,” he suggested, “it’s
-a bit of heaven.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-“Oh yes, there’s a song about that, isn’t
-there,” she laughed. Weren’t any of these
-people going to be in Paris? Suppose she
-couldn’t get in touch with the editor she had
-come to see? Suppose the job didn’t materialize?
-Suppose ... well, these were nice cheerful
-meditations to have in the middle of a party!
-She bet Miss Mitchall wasn’t harboring any
-such gloomy thoughts. Suddenly Cynthia
-wished there was some way, some nice, tactful,
-subtle manner in which she could help the little
-governess without her knowing it. But a loan
-was out of the question. Cynthia herself hadn’t
-much more than the price of a ticket home.
-And you don’t pick up purses in mid ocean.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish there was a Duchess on board, with a
-million pounds sterling and eighteen children,
-and that she would fall overboard and I could
-save her life,” was her fantastic thought. She
-must have said it out loud for Johnnie murmured,
-“Heaven help us!” and then glanced
-at the little governess. “Oh, you mean for Miss
-Mitchall. But why stop at eighteen when you’re
-wishing!”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia spluttered into giggles and felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-better. In fact she could scarcely eat her dinner
-for all that was going on around her. Bright
-balloons bumped her elbow, a rain of multicolored
-confetti sprinkled the table cloth and
-brilliant streamers of paper flying through the
-air, must be picked up and returned, lacing the
-dining saloon with carnival colors.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner there was a dance in the lounge.
-Cynthia had looked forward to it all day and the
-day before, but after a few waltzes and foxtrots
-it began, somehow, to fall flat. Everyone else
-seemed to be having a perfectly gorgeous time.
-Even little Miss Mitchall was plentifully supplied
-with partners but their enjoyment seemed
-only to increase Cynthia’s gloom as every step
-she made took <a name="her" id="her"></a><ins title="Original has here">her</ins> nearer to the time of leaving
-the ship, to the dreaded unknown.</p>
-
-<p>She knew what it was. She had done too little
-work for days. This wasn’t the first time that
-idleness had made her miserable, and it would
-be useless to explain this to her puzzled partners.
-Between dances she would slip off and dive below
-for her sketch pad. Drawing would bring
-the relief it always had brought and as for
-models, they were all about her. All she needed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-was her book to make a record, not just of the
-clever costumes around her, but of the movement
-and the groups that the dancers made.
-Why not get it? Left, for the moment, between
-dances without a partner, Cynthia decided that
-she would, and sped down to the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>As she came along the main corridor, deserted
-now since all of the room stewards were at their
-dinner, she heard a door banging, banging, with
-the slow swing of the ship and irritatedly wondered
-why no one had fastened it.</p>
-
-<p>Turning down the small corridor that led to
-her own cabin she noted that the swinging door
-was that opposite her own. If someone were ill
-in there, the door must be extremely annoying.
-She opened her own door, switched on the cabin
-light, found her sketch book and stepped out
-again. Again the door opposite slammed back.
-The cabin light was on. She tapped gently on
-the doorframe. Perhaps the occupant was too
-ill to get up. But no one answered.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia put her hand on the knob to close
-it, but the door was partly wedged by a suitcase
-which had slid against it&mdash;the suitcase which
-she recognized as the same she had tripped over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-when she first came on board. Or was it the
-same? There was that Mexican Airways label,
-and next to it a circular yellow paster which
-formed a pattern her mind had already recorded,
-but something was missing. She closed the door
-gently, shoved it to see that it was firmly latched,
-and hurried along the corridor. But as she ran
-up the stairway she remembered what was missing.
-The Ottawa label had been sponged off.
-There was a darker spot on the leather where it
-had been.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance to the lounge, the color and
-light and music burst on her like a shower of
-thrown confetti. Figures whirled and swayed
-to the music, the room was a shifting patchwork
-of bright color. Even Miss Mitchall had been
-persuaded to dance and jigged round and round
-happily with a little Hungarian whose bent
-knees and extreme speed were relics of an older
-era.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia passed behind the row of chairs at
-the end of the dance floor and skirted the room
-to where, in a remote corner behind an empty
-card table, she could be comfortably inconspicuous
-yet have a good view of the dancers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-She leafed through her sketch book, found some
-blank pages and began to work.</p>
-
-<p>Between encores the couples paused, chatted,
-and applauded. That scarecrow with his
-whitened face and clay pipe ... Cynthia got it
-with a few strokes of the pencil. Then Miss Mitchall’s
-rapt expression as she gazed into her
-partner’s face, radiant, unconscious. Oh darn!
-The music had started again.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia made a dozen rapid action sketches
-of the dancing couples (some of them so close
-to caricatures she wouldn’t have cared to have
-the models see them), yawned, and looked about
-her. Perhaps it would be more fun to go back
-to dancing.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the older people had drifted away
-and were talking at the further end of the room,
-or had gone in to the card tables. How different
-some of them looked in costume. She would
-scarcely have recognized Mrs. Moody, for instance,
-in the white hair and patches of a colonial
-belle. And the man with her ... Cynthia
-frowned, trying to place him. Oh yes, it was
-the hat that had put her off. He was the man in
-the golf cap who tramped the deck all day long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-... “walking to Europe,” Johnnie Graham had
-said. But the middle aged man who sat alone,
-not far from Cynthia? Surely she had never
-seen him before, surely she would have remembered
-that beak-like nose, the hollow cut deeply
-on either side of it and the thin lipped mouth.</p>
-
-<p>She made a few strokes of her pencil on the
-blank page of her sketch book, then, noting how
-still her unconscious model sat, became absorbed
-in the portrait. Not a good face, but a strong
-one. The brows were as heavy as her pencil
-could etch, the graying hair at the temples disappeared
-beneath the tightly drawn edge of a
-stocking cap and the long chin dipped into a
-wide pierrot ruff. The costume was that of a
-harlequin and had probably been rented from
-the ship’s barber, who carried a stock of fancy
-costumes for these parties.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, absorbed in her sketch, worked
-rapidly. The claw-like hand that had reached
-up to pull away the ruff ... the long white scar
-just showing at the side of the chin, not an old
-scar, she thought, for it still showed pink at the
-edges. Her model sat quietly, unaware of the
-attention he was receiving.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-No, that chin wasn’t right. Cynthia flipped
-over another page and made a more detailed
-study of the lower part of the face. This was
-a type she could use, sometime, in an illustration.
-She wondered vaguely what the man did when
-he wasn’t on ship board. Then the music stopped.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was that his attention had wandered
-from the dancers or perhaps it was a sudden
-sense of being watched, but the man turned
-quickly in his seat and sent such a glare of enmity
-at the astonished Cynthia that she started and
-dropped her book. When she emerged from
-groping beneath the table her model had disappeared.
-He must have moved very quickly
-for he was already slipping through the door.
-Cynthia shook herself. That man certainly
-didn’t like artists! But this was a good waltz,
-why not enjoy it.</p>
-
-<p>It was after midnight when she tiptoed into
-the cabin. Miss Mitchall was already asleep.
-Her tall green hat and the long cape were neatly
-disposed on the couch beneath the window. She
-was still asleep when Cynthia dressed silently
-next morning, when she left for breakfast. The
-dining saloon was almost deserted. Nearly everyone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-seemed to be sleeping late or breakfasting in
-bed.</p>
-
-<p>“My last day on shipboard,” thought Cynthia
-a little mournfully. What to do to stretch it out
-to its full length? She decided to spend the
-morning on deck, sketching; the afternoon in
-the lounge with a book, or perhaps a game of
-deck tennis with Stasia. But in the middle of
-the morning a thunder shower drove everyone
-indoors and Cynthia found Stasia and her father
-over coffee and toast in the lounge.</p>
-
-<p>“This is Dad’s second breakfast and my first,”
-announced Stasia. “Have some coffee, Cynthia?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia declined the coffee. “I was up with
-the larks, or at least the seagulls,” she said. “Do
-you mind if I sketch you while you eat? I’ve
-wanted to get you all week.” But what she
-really wanted was Mr. Carruthers with his
-rugged beak of a nose, his thin, slightly curling
-mouth. In fact she became so intent on her
-sketch that she forgot she was supposed to be
-drawing Stasia till the tall girl laughed:</p>
-
-<p>“Dad, she’s found you more beautiful than I
-am!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-“What, what? That so?” Mr. Carruthers
-had been the ideal model, absolutely unconscious
-of Cynthia’s flying pencil. It seemed only fair,
-however, to show him the drawing when it was
-finished.</p>
-
-<p>“And this is my roommate. Look, Stasia, I
-got her last night when she was dancing with the
-Hungarian.”</p>
-
-<p>Stasia murmured, “wish I could draw like
-that.” Mr. Carruthers, too, seemed impressed.
-“Good work, young lady,” he nodded. But
-Cynthia felt he wouldn’t have much use for
-artists. He would have all the conventional
-ideas about them; temperament and talk and
-starving in garrets.</p>
-
-<p>Stasia was turning the leaves slowly, making
-here and there a comment, Mr. Carruthers looking
-over her shoulder till he stopped her with a
-large forefinger suddenly on one page.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this? Where did you sketch him?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia leaned across the table. “Oh, that
-man? Isn’t it a wicked face? I wish you could
-have seen ...”</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Carruthers was impatient. He took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-the book from Stasia. “Tell me about this.
-When did you sketch this? Last night? And
-what was this, part of the costume? Make-up?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Cynthia laughed, “it was a bad scar,
-a fairly new one for it was still pink and raw-looking.
-I think he had tried to cover it with
-that harlequin ruff, but when he grew warm he
-forgot about it, and pushed the ruff away from
-his face.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carruthers had already pushed the little
-electric bell with an insistent finger. Before
-the hurrying steward had reached the table, Mr.
-Carruthers barked, “Ask Captain Wain if we
-can see him immediately, in his office, and tell
-the purser to join us there.” Then he turned to
-Cynthia, “I’d like you to come along and tell
-the Captain what you just told me. And may
-we borrow your sketch book for an hour or two?”</p>
-
-<p>Puzzled and excited, Cynthia followed Stasia
-and her father out of the lounge, down the corridor
-towards the captain’s office. Captain
-Wain was a plump little man with a ruddy complexion
-that had weathered many storms, white
-walrus whiskers, and a blue uniform with lots of
-glittering buttons. Behind him stood the purser<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-whom Cynthia already knew, a lean, hatchet-faced
-man, with small sharp eyes and an <a name="apologetic" id="apologetic"></a><ins title="Original has 'opologetic'">apologetic</ins>
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carruthers held the door for the two
-girls, then closed it firmly behind him and
-plunged immediately into his subject.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s this matter of Goncourt,” he stated, and
-opened Cynthia’s sketchbook where his thumb
-had been keeping the place. “I want you two to
-see this.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain leaned to look at the portrait
-of the man in the ruff, and passed it to the purser
-with no comment save a brief “Mmumph!”</p>
-
-<p>The purser examined it somewhat longer.
-“Miss Wanstead made this?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, bewildered, explained when and
-where she had made the sketch, and questioned
-further, explained about the scar.</p>
-
-<p>“He really had such a scar? It wasn’t grease
-paint, or whatever it is you use on your face?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia shook her head. You didn’t put
-things like that in a sketch when you were making
-notes from real life. It was, she told them,
-exactly as she had drawn it. She didn’t have
-any reason to make it up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-Mr. Carruthers sat down and waved the
-others to chairs. “Might we,” he suggested,
-“see Goncourt’s passport again?”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the purser would bring it. He seemed
-glad to get away. Stasia, who had quietly
-watched all this now said, “Don’t you think it
-would be a good plan, Dad, if we told Cynthia
-what this was all about?” And, at her father’s
-nod of assent, explained: “Dad is owner of this
-steamship line, you see, and the night we sailed
-from New York the head of the Police Department
-came down to see us off. He had come,
-he said, especially to get track of a man with a
-scar on his face. It was then late in the evening,
-you see, and most of the passengers were on
-board, but the purser examined all passports for
-a man with a scar like that. It was said to be very
-conspicuous, and the men at the gate watched all
-other passengers who came in after that, but
-they decided that no such man was on board.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s wanted by the police?” asked Cynthia,
-feeling very much like a murder-mystery tale.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, for smuggling ... in ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Here is the passport.” The purser, returning,
-had a little blue book, not a dark red one,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-such as Cynthia’s, in his hand. He passed the
-book to the Captain who gave it a brief glance,
-grunted non-committally and shoved it towards
-Mr. Carruthers. Stasia’s father compared the
-photograph to the face in Cynthia’s sketch book,
-but as one was full face, the other in profile,
-little could be gained by the comparison.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this the man?” he asked Cynthia, indicating
-the passport photograph.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia got up and came around the desk.
-Passport in hand she moved to the window for a
-better light. As she examined the picture she
-was aware of the silent tenseness behind her and
-suddenly had an idea of how important all this
-was, important to several people. Closing her
-eyes, she tried to remember more fully the face
-she had sketched, not from the side as she had
-drawn him, but as he had quickly turned to gaze
-at her, full face, under the dark frowning brows.
-Then she looked again at the picture in her hand.
-It was very like. Still ...</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s not the same man.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a little stir in the room and Mr.
-Carruthers got up and came to stand beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s very like him.” Something teased<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-at her brain. Like and not like ... like and not
-like ...</p>
-
-<p>“It might be a relation,” she hazarded dubiously.
-“This man,” she tapped the passport,
-“has had a broken nose at some time. We had a
-model with one at the Academy, so I recognized
-the peculiar shape.” It was not at all like the
-beaky feature she had sketched.</p>
-
-<p>Absently she gazed at the cover of the passport.
-“What cabin is this man in? The one
-with the passport.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s in 376, Miss,” the purser answered.</p>
-
-<p>And Cynthia was in 374, right across the little
-corridor. The passport in her hand was Canadian,
-and Miss Mitchall had said ... “Look
-here,” Cynthia said suddenly, “could my roommate
-be called? I think she might be able to
-help us;” and added, “you can be sure she won’t
-talk.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain glanced dubiously at Stasia’s
-father. “The less people who know about this ...”
-then, at the other’s nodded gesture toward
-the purser, “ask her to come here,” he commanded
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mitchall, slightly fluttering, was produced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-almost immediately. Cynthia didn’t try
-to explain the circumstances, just showed her
-the passport. “Did you ever see this man? I
-mean, does he look familiar?”</p>
-
-<p>Squinting near-sightedly, the little governess
-examined the picture, then passed it back with
-a shake of her head. “No, my dear. I’ve never
-seen him.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a sigh in the cabin. But Cynthia
-had not finished. That teasing idea of hers ...
-Miss Mitchall had once told her something
-that bore on this. ... “Then if not that man,
-someone very like him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Someone like him, surely. But not that man.
-Probably a twin brother. I was a twin myself.”</p>
-
-<p>So that was it. Cynthia’s memory had almost,
-but not quite, done the trick.</p>
-
-<p>“By Gad!” barked the Captain, “the woman
-has brains! Where did you see this man, madame?”
-His tone was weighty with respect.</p>
-
-<p>“In the cabin across from 374. Once the
-door was open as I passed and he was shaving,
-with the light full on his face. There was
-quite a scar on his cheek. He shut the door
-with a slam when he saw me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-Cynthia was still looking at the passport in
-her hand. “Was this man from Ottawa, the
-one you wanted?” she asked. Then gasped.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost as though she had sprung a
-mine, so laughably surprised were the faces
-about her. “How did you know that?” the Captain’s
-gruff tones held suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>But Cynthia had suddenly remembered the
-suitcase she had stumbled over the first day, and
-the dark patch that showed some label had been
-removed from it. “You see,” she explained
-further, “I’m accustomed to remembering the
-shapes and colors of things, perhaps more than
-most people do because that’s part of my job.
-I remembered an Ottawa paster on the suitcase
-because of a certain clever arrangement of
-colors, green and blue and orange.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carruthers stopped her with a gesture.
-Stepping into the doorway he spoke a moment
-in a low voice to the steward outside then returned
-to the room. “Will you describe this
-label for us, or could you draw it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s something like this.” Cynthia took the
-pencil out of her pocket and made a little diagram
-on a blank page of her note book. “It had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-an orange moon and a tower, rather medieval,
-dark blue against it. Then there was a jiggley
-border of green, in this manner.”</p>
-
-<p>The steward with something in his hand,
-stood in the doorway. Mr. Carruthers rose and
-brought in a suitcase, not the black one, but a
-small, light-tan airplane case. He turned it
-around so that all might see the Ottawa label,
-exactly as Cynthia had sketched it.</p>
-
-<p>“We were in Ottawa a few weeks ago,” he explained,
-“and I remembered this label on our
-bag. You see,” he turned to Cynthia, “this man
-is wanted in Canada for jewel stealing. The
-police of Ottawa had wired the police of New
-York to watch for him on any boat leaving port
-within the next few days. I believe he has
-sailed on this line before, but we have to be
-awfully sure before we can make an arrest. The
-publicity, if the man were innocent, would be
-unpleasant for the steamship company.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go and make the arrest myself.” The
-Captain departed, taking the purser with him.</p>
-
-<p>Stasia, who had been quiet as a mouse all this
-time, prodded her father with a finger. “Daddy,
-tell Cynthia the rest of it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-“Oh yes ... ah,” Mr. Carruthers cleared
-his throat. “A hum ... we are extremely
-grateful to you ladies, Miss Wanstead, and Miss
-Mitchall. It would have been awkward if he
-had escaped by our line. Of course you understand
-that there is a reward for information
-leading to his arrest. And I think we can say
-that the reward will be yours if this is Goncourt,
-as we now fully believe.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“And to think that it really was Goncourt and
-that he has been in that cabin all the week,”
-thrilled Miss Mitchall for the hundredth time.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia grinned. “And to think of your
-suggesting the twin business, of your knowing
-it was a Canadian accent. That was really as
-important as the sketch. You see he got the scar
-in Ottawa, when he made a big haul of some
-jewels, about a year ago, and then he went to
-Quebec and did the same thing. But then he
-used the picture of a twin brother on his passport
-and covered the scar with a muffler when he
-came on board. I suppose he was afraid to go
-out of his cabin very much.”</p>
-
-<p>“How like a Wallace novel!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-Cynthia went on folding things to put into
-her suitcase. In another minute she could close
-it, not to be opened again until she was in France.
-“I wonder,” she asked without turning, “if you
-would do me a great favor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why of course my dear, what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see this reward business is rather
-a bother.” Cynthia didn’t say that Stasia had
-warned her it might be some weeks before the
-check got through. “I wonder if you would
-take some of my money now, as part of your
-share. If I have too much I’m liable to spend it
-on Paris hats and foolish things, you see. Perhaps
-a hundred now, and when the check comes
-I’ll send you the rest of your half.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Cynthia was afraid Miss Mitchall
-would see through her plan and refuse, but
-the little governess smiled and nodded. Yes,
-she knew how tempting Paris was if you had
-money. Yes, she’d be glad to take some of it
-now.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia snapped off the light and hauled herself
-into the upper bunk. Paris tomorrow!
-But she wasn’t afraid of her luck any more.
-She’d proved it would stand by her.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ii" id="ii"></a>CHAPTER 2</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Paris</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">CORNED BEEF HASH</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Steamship</span> and steamer friends had been left
-behind. Paris was ahead, closer now with every
-minute, every hurrying second. The little
-French girl who had kept on her hat and gloves
-and had read, in silence, a paper covered copy
-of Anatole France all the way from Cherbourg,
-let down the window, leaned out to wave a beckoning
-hand, and shouted, “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Porteur! Porteur!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia waited patiently, but as the other
-seemed in no haste to relinquish her place at the
-window, the American finally leaned over the
-French girl’s shoulder and beckoned in similar
-fashion. The long train slid gently to a stop
-and a score of stout little blue smocked men
-seemed to spring from the ground and began
-taking baggage from the open windows, loading
-it on wide straps over their sturdy shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia captured the eye of number 972; a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-beady eye above a red nose and a moustache that
-would have graced a member of the <a name="Beggars" id="Beggars"></a><ins title="Original has 'Begger’s'">Beggar’s</ins>
-Opera. She gulped, “Taxi!”&mdash;thank goodness,
-there was a word that meant the same in
-several languages, at which he grinned cheerfully
-and slung her heavy suitcase and her paint
-box in one huge paw. The other grasped her
-neighbor’s bags and the whole strange and unwieldy
-combination lumbered off down the platform.
-Was he gone for good? Better follow
-that French girl, Cynthia decided. She seemed
-unconcerned. Oh, one had to give up the ticket
-here, and there was the porter again. No more
-customs, that had all been cleared at the quay,
-earlier in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The street met her with a blast of warm July
-air, a dazzle of summer sunlight and such a medley
-of strange noises: taxis hooting in a new,
-high key; shrill-pitched voices, mingled shouts
-and confusion, that she stood for a moment bewildered
-and lost. Horrid luck that no one
-she knew from the boat had been coming to Paris
-on this train!</p>
-
-<p>Then Cynthia saw that her bag and paint box
-had been piled into a taxi like a shiny black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-beetle and the blue smocked one waited for his
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pourboire</i>. She tipped him ten francs. Was
-that too much, or too little? She had been
-warned that, in either case, he would glare, but
-this one smiled, muttered, “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Merci!</i>” and departed.
-The hotel address was written on a card
-and Cynthia had only to show that to the driver,
-hop in, and they were off.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so this is Paris!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well ...,” Cynthia giggled nervously.
-To be really here. To have arrived safely, all
-by herself. Well, that was something. “Paris!”</p>
-
-<p>She sighed, relaxed back against the cushions
-and closed her eyes for a moment. Oh, the taxi
-was stopping. Her eyes popped open. Just a
-little policeman in a toy soldier cape and a white
-stick with which he seemed, miraculously, to
-hold up this mad traffic. Off again. She shut
-her eyes once more. New smells, hot asphalt,
-violets, damp warm air, something cooking,
-other things. She just couldn’t keep her eyes
-shut.</p>
-
-<p>The car was running along gray cobbles between
-gray houses high and incredibly ancient.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-Tall, plane trees leaned out over gray walls that
-held in a silvery stream. The Seine! A little
-gay colored steamer, like a miniature ferry-boat,
-hooted and put off from a landing. Cynthia
-wanted to hug it all at once, to pinch herself
-to be sure she was here. How she wished
-Judy could see it, and Chick, dear Chick. This
-was to have been their honeymoon. He’d be
-over shortly, a few weeks at the most. And
-meanwhile there was work to be done; a language
-to learn, Nancy and Mrs. Brewster to see,
-and covers to be done for <cite>Little One’s Magazine</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>Was that, could that possibly be, Notre Dame
-over there to the left? And the Eiffel Tower
-clear ahead, misty against sunny sky? She had
-seen it as they came in on the train. Really
-Paris!</p>
-
-<p>“Not a motion picture!” chuckled Cynthia.
-And tomorrow she could go and see it all for
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>Then a second bridge, Place St. Michel. And
-a swift turn to the left into a narrow street where
-noises echoed back from the high stone houses
-to right and left. They drew up before a door
-and a boy, in a horizontal striped waistcoat and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-white shirt sleeves, came out from the hotel
-entrance. Here was her home in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Inside, at the little brass-railed desk, they
-had a key for her room and a letter from Mrs.
-Brewster, who had made her reservation for
-her. There was a little cage-like elevator into
-which one squeezed, barely avoiding the folding
-doors, and then up, up, like a wobbly balloon.
-A hallway musty and dark, and at last a tall
-room with two high French windows opening
-on to a small balcony.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, this will do nicely,” said Cynthia in her
-best French, and so moved into Paris.</p>
-
-<p>When the door closed, Cynthia sat down to
-catch her breath. So much had happened in the
-last half hour, she had seen so much that was
-new, and strange, and lovely. “I suppose there
-are people that live in Paris all the time and
-take it as a matter of course,” she told herself.
-“And, I suppose, I shall get to take it that way
-too, after a bit. But now it’s all rather frightening.
-I wonder if I can make myself understood,
-I wonder if I shall get lost, I wonder ...
-oh goodness, how shall I order meals? But perhaps
-menu French is the same everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-Mrs. Brewster’s letter was reassuring. She
-seemed to think Cynthia would find everything
-very simple and easy. “But I am giving you the
-address of a little French girl, who speaks excellent
-English, she was a governess in London
-for some years. If you get lonely, or wish to
-improve your accent,” ha, <em>accent!</em> “don’t hesitate
-to look her up.” Enclosed was also a note
-from Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Do come to Conquet,” she begged. “Mother
-and I are both painting here. <a name="Its" id="Its"></a><ins title="Original has 'Its'">It’s</ins> all pearly gray
-mists and long, empty beaches and sabots, and
-fish and steep streets and old houses. And you
-can find lots of children to pose for your covers.”</p>
-
-<p>It did sound fun. But Paris seemed quite
-enough adventure for the moment. And Cynthia’s
-purse was very flat. She must first see
-Mr. Culbert, who was over here now, and was
-the editor of the magazine for which she had a
-contract for a dozen covers, see if she couldn’t
-get an advance on the first order, and if he
-could put her in touch with a way to get models.
-Just at the moment she hadn’t the slightest idea
-how to go about getting one for the painting
-she must do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-She sat down and wrote to Nancy, planning to
-mail the letter when she went out to dinner.
-Then leaning out on the little balcony, she
-watched the light fade in the street below, listening
-to the sounds of Paris echo up between
-the ancient, stained, backward sloping housefronts.</p>
-
-<p>What, she wondered, with a little pang of
-homesickness, were they doing now at home?
-Six o’clock ... but no, time was different.
-Was it three over there, or nine, now? The
-mental gymnastics made her head reel and she
-decided that she was hungry. But plenty of
-time yet. Cynthia hated to admit to herself
-that she dreaded that first meal alone, doubted
-her ability to order food, even to find her way
-home again, once she had set her foot off the
-hotel doorstep. It was after eight o’clock when
-she finally tore herself away from the window
-and summoned courage to go out for dinner.
-“You can’t starve till morning, idiot!” she told
-herself severely. “Just walk downstairs, and
-out the door. There must be lots of places to eat
-within the next two blocks. Why, France is a
-nation of cooks!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-A short way up the Boule’ Miche’, she found
-a little place with pretty red-and-white checked
-table cloths on the iron topped tables, behind
-dusty box hedges in their wooden boxes. This
-was pleasantly removed from a small band that
-was playing lustily, and not too melodiously, on
-the street corner. Funny about those bands. She
-had passed three in the short distance from the
-hotel and another had begun playing beneath
-her window just as she went out.</p>
-
-<p>No one else seemed to be eating. Perhaps
-French people dined later than this. The menu
-was as much an enigma as she had expected. It
-was written in a flowing Spencerian hand, in
-dim violet ink on a limp and food-stained bit of
-paper. Hardly a word seemed legible, and none
-of it was intelligible. “Goodness,” murmured
-Cynthia, and looked about her. Could she get
-up and leave, and try another place? But the
-waiter had already placed a napkin beside her,
-fork and knife beside the napkin. Cynthia decided
-she hadn’t the moral courage to rise and
-depart. Well, here goes!</p>
-
-<p>“Bring me some of that, and that, and that,”
-she directed and pointed near the center of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-page. The main body of a meal always came
-near the middle of the menu, didn’t it?</p>
-
-<p>The waiter, who wore a spotty black dinner
-jacket and a white apron, broke into a voluble
-explanation of some sort. Evidently they were
-out of this, would mademoiselle not prefer that?
-Mademoiselle nodded in agreement. Yes, anything.
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Oui, oui, oui!</i> The waiter departed on
-swift feet. Cynthia wondered what he would
-bring.</p>
-
-<p>What he brought was a strange piece of pink
-meat swimming in a cold bath of oil. This she
-poked about with a fork, wondering what particular
-portion of what animal it might be. It
-hardly seemed edible, and certainly though she
-was hungry, she was not yet hungry enough for
-that. After a long time the waiter seemed to
-appreciate that she had finished with that course,
-and brought her some hot boiled potatoes.
-These were more palatable. And bread helped
-too. Then came a small white something
-wrapped in tin foil, and served with a large salt
-shaker.</p>
-
-<p>But the foil proved to contain a small roll of
-really delicious cream cheese, and eaten with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-sugar, which came from the large salt shaker,
-and more of the crisp French bread. It served
-to round off the simple meal.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I have eaten,” thought Cynthia
-as she wandered home again. “I wish I weren’t
-still so hungry. At least that meal was cheap,
-and that’s important at the moment.” But she
-continued to think of hot beefsteaks, and hot
-muffins, and hot chicken pies, and what she
-wouldn’t do to a big plate of ham and eggs. ...
-Oh dear! But tomorrow she’d try another place.
-Perhaps that wasn’t a really good example of
-French cooking.</p>
-
-<p>As she strolled slowly back towards the hotel
-all the little bands were going full force. Cynthia
-noticed that people were beginning to
-dance, under the lights, on the hard cobbled
-pavements to the jiggling, monotonous tunes.
-She leaned for a while against the closed iron
-shutter of a shop, and watched the gay crowds
-gather. They seemed very happy. Was it some
-celebration, she wondered, or did French people
-always dance like this in the evening? The
-musicians beneath her window were in fine fettle,
-tootling, sawing, and bumping away at no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-particular tune, but just a sort of penny whistle
-noise with a strongly marked rhythm for the
-dancers.</p>
-
-<p>She sat in her window watching them till she
-got so sleepy she could no longer keep her eyes
-open, then deciding they’d probably keep it up
-pretty late, till ten or maybe eleven, crawled
-into bed. It had been a long day since Cherbourg
-that morning, and in spite of the band,
-which surely must stop before midnight, she
-thought she could sleep.</p>
-
-<p>But the monotonous, tuneless sound seemed to
-go round, and round, and round inside her head.
-She dreamed that she was waltzing rapidly with
-the <a name="garcon" id="garcon"></a><ins title="Original has 'garcon'"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">garçon</i></ins> of the striped waistcoat, with Madame
-in her black taffeta dress and wide gold
-chain, with the black cat of the restaurant.
-Then woke to hear the band still scraping, and
-bumping merrily. Foggily she struggled out of
-bed and closed first the heavy wooden shutters,
-then the window and went back to sleep with her
-head hot under the bedclothes. Twice she woke
-again at odd hours, but always that rhythm penetrated
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Then she woke again. Surprisingly all was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-still. How blissful that was! She was sure the
-musicians had stopped only a short time ago, and
-waited tensely to see if they would start again.
-But there was no sound. Then rolling over
-with aching head she saw that light streamed
-from between the chinks of the shutters, and
-that her watch said seven o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>She opened her window, went back to bed and
-slept till nine. Then she wandered out to find
-breakfast. Only a gnawing hunger had made
-her get up at all.</p>
-
-<p>Strangely enough none of the restaurants
-seemed to be open. She peered in at two, between
-drawn net curtains, to see chairs piled on
-empty tables, and boys washing down the floors.
-Then rounding a corner Cynthia came full on
-the Seine, between its gray stone banks, and a
-gray stone bridge beyond which loomed, full in
-the summer sunlight, the twin towers of Notre
-Dame de Paris. Oh lovely!</p>
-
-<p>Along the embankment were the tiny stalls
-of the booksellers, all closed now. Didn’t Paris
-people go to work until noon, she wondered?</p>
-
-<p>Then at the end of the block, facing a small
-open square she saw a sign which read “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Café,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-Chocolat</i>.” Here, perhaps, she could get some
-sort of meal. Outdoors, under a gay striped
-awning she found a little wicker table with a
-red and white top, and wicker chairs. A big
-black cat with a white bib, and green eyes gave
-her welcome with purrs and ankle rubbings.
-This was going to be jolly. She stammered her
-desire for chocolate, and learned that “little
-breads,” and butter could also be procured, and
-that little breads were really crisp warm rolls.</p>
-
-<p>Notre Dame faced her, serene, solid, impregnable.
-When breakfast was over she’d go across
-and visit the church, and stroll along by the
-river. This must be the famous Left Bank,
-where all the artists and students lived.</p>
-
-<p>The cat rubbed, purring, about the table, and
-a small boy with eyes as softly dark as the cat’s
-fur, and clad in a diminutive smock of black,
-with a small black beret perched on his dark
-curls came out to stare solemnly at this stranger.
-Cynthia buttered a piece of roll, and offered it to
-him. With a shy, “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Merci!</i>” muttered in an
-oddly deep voice he took it, bolted it, and
-watched for the next mouthful. Cynthia
-grinned at him, ate a bit herself and gave him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-thereafter, alternate bites. By the time two
-rolls were finished, and the big pitcher of hot
-chocolate was drained to the last sweet drop, the
-small boy had smiled also, had told her that his
-name was Nono, and that he lived here. Here
-at last was a friend. Tomorrow she’d bring a
-sketchbook to breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>When tomorrow came Nono appeared, along
-with his black cat, for more bits of warm roll.
-But this time he smiled immediately, crinkling
-his dark eyes with an amused and delightful
-welcome. When his father brought the chocolate,
-he said something in brief reproof, but
-Cynthia protested. “Let him stay,” she begged
-and displayed her sketchbook.</p>
-
-<p>The man grinned and nodded. He knew
-about artists, and explained to the boy that he
-must sit still for mademoiselle. Whereat Nono
-climbed into one of the café chairs, and grasping
-firm hold of the huge and somewhat reluctant
-cat, proceeded to demonstrate that he was
-born to be an artist’s model.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, this was glorious. Cynthia’s fingers flew
-to get it all down before it could dissolve, and
-when the cat finally went calmly to sleep, Nono<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-continued to sit immovable, wide eyed, minutes
-on minutes. Cynthia got more and more thrilled.
-It was going to be a honey of a sketch. She
-wondered if, maybe, colors tomorrow. ...</p>
-
-<p>At last she nodded to the child. He laughed
-and stretched, and dumped the sleeping cat from
-his knees. Cynthia put two francs in his small
-hand. Was that, she wondered, too much, or
-too little? It was what her breakfast had cost
-her. Apparently, by his reception, it was all
-right.</p>
-
-<p>“Tomorrow?” she asked in French, and
-pointed toward the chair again.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Oui, oui, Demain</i>,” agreed Nono. Then he
-must know that artists sometimes wanted one
-to pose again.</p>
-
-<p>That was on Sunday. Saturday had not been
-strikingly successful. For some reason, perhaps
-because it was Saturday, everything, banks and
-the Express Company, Mr. Culbert’s office and
-most of the museums Cynthia wished to visit,
-had been closed. Monday, of course, they would
-be open again, and she could get in touch with
-Mr. Culbert. Cynthia’s money was running
-low and she must ask for an advance on the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-cover, and must find some way to get in touch
-with models to work from.</p>
-
-<p>But Monday was no better than Sunday, nor
-than Saturday had been. The band, for the
-third time, had played all night, and Cynthia
-had slept fitfully, hot and miserable in the
-closed, noisy room. She awoke feeling as
-though she could sleep for a week. Then she
-remembered Nono. Here at last was one bright
-spot in Paris. She hurried out to breakfast with
-her large sketch pad and her color box under her
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>Nono was waiting for her, and so was the
-black cat. Cynthia was ravenously hungry. A
-continental breakfast wasn’t enough food to last
-one through a day of sightseeing, and so far she
-had found no good place to eat. Hastily she
-drank her chocolate, shared a double order of
-rolls and butter with the somewhat greedy little
-Nono. She herself was anxious to get to work
-on this color sketch.</p>
-
-<p>Nono, complete with the large sleepy cat,
-clambered into his wicker chair. The sunlight
-reflected warm and yellow beneath his chin and
-his eyes were half closed, amusingly, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-glare. The black smock seemed almost a dark
-green in contrast to the cat’s soft fur, and beyond
-them was the red and white ruffle of the awning,
-a brilliant splash of warm color. Cynthia asked
-to have her little painting pail filled with water,
-sketched in the brief outline of her composition,
-and slashed happily into color. Once she said,
-mechanically “Rest!” and found that the boy
-understood. In a few minutes he returned to his
-place. The cat was a little different, but Cynthia
-had allowed for that, and now sketched him
-in and completed that part of the drawing all in
-one pose.</p>
-
-<p>The drawing was emerging with both charm
-and strength. Black, red and warm flesh tones
-accented with the green of the cat’s eyes, and
-one white paw lifted to rest against Nono’s black
-smock. This, thought Cynthia, was one of the
-nicest things she had ever done. Even fatigue
-and hunger seemed to have added to her ability
-since her senses seemed sharpened, nerves tautened
-by the past two days.</p>
-
-<p>She had decided to go that afternoon and find
-the little French girl Mrs. Brewster had recommended
-for language lessons. Her visit to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-Express Company, and to the office where she
-had hoped to find Mr. Culbert were as unsuccessful
-as Saturday’s visits. Everything was still
-closed tight.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was beginning to worry. She had
-only a few hundred francs, about fifteen dollars,
-left in her purse and there was no telling how
-long this celebration might last. It puzzled her.
-She had asked Madame at the desk and had
-learned that it was the “Fourteenth of July,”
-whatever that was! But Friday had been the
-fourteenth. Surely they didn’t celebrate America’s
-Fourth of July over here, did they? Foggily
-she tried to connect it with Lafayette and
-the two Revolutions, but couldn’t make it out.
-Everywhere the little street bands continued to
-play and people continued to dance in the streets.</p>
-
-<p>Still pondering on this mystery she found the
-house on the Boulevard St. Michel that bore the
-address of the Mademoiselle Menard. Mrs.
-Brewster had explained that she lived on the
-fifth floor and that “in France the first floor is
-not the ground floor, nor the next, which is
-called the entresol. You have to go up two
-flights to get to the first floor and then begin to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-count from there!” They were long flights,
-too, and Cynthia had begun to feel a little faint
-by the time she reached the top. When she
-found Mr. Culbert, if she ever did, she would
-certainly beg him to take her out for a real
-dinner!</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia put her finger on the large white push
-button and a bell pealed somewhere way off inside.
-But no one answered it. After a bit she
-tried again, and then again. What should she
-do next? She already had visited Notre Dame,
-and knew the Cluny and Luxembourg Gardens,
-for the past two days, as well as the palm of her
-hand. Besides she still felt strangely faint. She
-leaned <a name="against" id="against"></a><ins title="Original has 'againt'">against</ins> the heavy stone balustrade and
-looked down.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly up through the hallway, wafted
-from below came the most glorious and enchanting
-odor. Cynthia closed her eyes. It made her
-think of home, of a loaded dinner table with big
-plates of corned-beef hash, with an egg on top,
-slabs of bread and butter, and a thick slice of
-apple pie with cheese. Oh dear!</p>
-
-<p>Like a good little hound following the scent,
-Cynthia, hypnotized by that delicious smell,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-stepped down, step after step, to the floor below.
-Still that beckoning, delightful odor. Another
-flight. It was stronger now, over the banisters.</p>
-
-<p>“Heavens!” thought Cynthia. “How can I
-ever stand this?”</p>
-
-<p>Here was the door and she had tracked it to its
-lair. A door, heavy and thick and solid, like
-those above. It was open just a crack, which
-was why the lovely smell had wandered out.
-Cynthia leaned against the doorpost. There
-were tears of hunger and of homesickness in her
-eyes as she sniffed ... and sniffed. Onions
-in that hash, too! No calves head in cold oil
-here, no tough thin steaks that might, or might
-not, be horsemeat!</p>
-
-<p>Then the door opened with a <em>whoosh</em> and Cynthia
-almost fell through it into the hall beyond.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">’Ello!</i>” said a cheery voice in French. Another
-girl, shorter than Cynthia but about her
-own age, with an amusing long nose, twinkly
-brown eyes, her hair covered by a chic little
-straw hat with a red quill, a white wool dress
-embroidered in red.</p>
-
-<p>The girl continued to chatter something in
-French. Cynthia looked as blank as a brick<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-wall; she had been wrenched all too suddenly
-from that corned-beef-hash day-dream.</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” cried the girl suddenly. “You’re an
-American, too, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia could have hugged her, right then
-and there. Why she hadn’t heard a word of
-English for three whole days.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <em>yes!</em>” she almost shouted. “And oh,
-is that hash you are cooking?”</p>
-
-<p>The girl giggled, then sniffed appreciatively.
-“Does smell good, doesn’t it? Mother’s a swell
-cook. Look here ...” she opened the door
-that had half closed behind her. “Hey,
-Mums, have we got enough for a guest?” and
-before Cynthia could object, had shoved her
-ahead, down the hallway, into a wide room lit by
-late sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>“Take off your mittens and bonnet and
-shawl,” laughed the girl. “You’re invited to
-dinner ... that is if you can stay. Mums,
-this is Miss America, winner of all beauty prizes
-to date, isn’t she pretty? ...” Heavens how
-the girl did rattle on, thought the amused Cynthia. ...
-“I found her fainting on our doorstep
-and brought her in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-“Mums” was wide and comfortable looking
-in a huge white apron and carried a turning-spoon
-in her hand. She seemed unperturbed by
-her daughter’s nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>“My name’s Wanstead, Cynthia,” explained
-the owner of that name. “And I do hope you
-will forgive me. I sniffed your delicious cooking
-two flights up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good grief, I must have left that door open
-again!” rattled the girl. “We’d just about lose
-our French lease if they sniff our cooking in the
-hall. Oh, I forgot, my name is Murchison.
-This is Mrs. Murchison, my honored parent. ...
-Listen I’ve got to run out with some letters
-for the post. Sit still and I’ll be back in a jiffy.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was only too glad to sit. Normally
-she would have protested more strongly against
-their forced hospitality, but today, homesick
-and genuinely hungry and considerably worried
-about the future, she found this American
-household irresistible. Mrs. Murchison puttered
-into the room and out again murmuring
-absentmindedly: “Father loves corn-beef
-hash. ... Can’t get French cook to make it
-properly. ... Marie, our cook, gone home<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-for the holidays ...” and still murmuring disappeared
-at last in the direction of the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Over the delicious dinner Cynthia heard the
-story of the mysterious holiday. “It’s the Jour
-de Bastille,” Alice explained to her, “in celebration
-of the destruction of that beastly prison.
-The French never have a half-holiday. They
-save it up and make four days of it. Father’s
-in the consular service and had to be home for
-tomorrow morning, but most Americans who
-live here plan to stay out of Paris during these
-four days, they’re so noisy. Our cook won’t be
-worth her salt for the next week, she’ll be so
-sleepy. If you ask me, you look half asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had one of those bands under my window
-for the past three nights,” apologized Cynthia.
-“Please, can I have some more hash?”</p>
-
-<p>“Save room for real American ice cream,”
-advised her hostess, and, when dinner was over,
-“I’m going to tuck you into bed right away, you
-poor thing. It’s only seven and you can sleep
-till ten or eleven. Then I’ll wake you to go
-home. Come on, my room is at the back, on the
-garden, you won’t hear a single drum or whistle
-or even a taxi horn.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-Cynthia was too weary to utter more than a
-feeble protest. “It seems kind of funny to
-break into a stranger’s house, eat their hash and
-go to sleep in their bed,” she murmured as she
-slipped off her shoes.</p>
-
-<p>“Take off your dress. That’s right. I’ll
-just throw a blanket over you and open this window
-a little. Sleep <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">doucement!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia started to call, “Don’t fail to wake
-me,” but must have been asleep before she could
-speak the words. At least when she awoke an
-apparent few minutes later the sentence still
-hung unuttered, in her mind. She stretched,
-blinked, fumbled for her thoughts, then glared
-at the window. It was full daylight!</p>
-
-<p>Frantically she bent to look at her watch. It
-had stopped. Then it <em>was</em> next day? The little
-clock on the bureau said “eight o’clock” and then
-Alice, tousle headed, in bright pink candy-striped
-pyjamas peeped round the edge of the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello you! Gosh how you did sleep! Are
-you by any chance a descendant of the Sleeping
-Beauty? I phoned your hotel so they wouldn’t
-think you had got run over, and went in to sleep
-with Mother.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-She pranced into the room and perched on
-the foot of the bed. “It’s a swell day. And
-things started to move again today. You’ll find
-your little editor chap, no doubt. Will you have
-your breakfast on a tray in here, milady, and go
-back to sleep again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness no! Oh, I feel fine.” Cynthia
-swung her feet out of bed.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly noon, however, when Cynthia
-sent her name to Mr. Culbert, the editor of
-<cite>Little Ones’ Magazine</cite>. He came out immediately,
-a plump little man with a round jolly
-face and held out both hands, beaming his welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a shame you landed here in the middle
-of the holiday. I was down in the south of
-France with the owner of the magazine, but got
-back last night. Now, my dear child, about
-those covers of yours, I suppose you want to
-get right at them. About models ... that’s
-going to be a bit difficult. Children, you
-know. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit difficult.” Cynthia’s eyes were
-dancing. “I’ve been working,” she said demurely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-“What, not already? Well, you are a wonder!
-Oh, you’ve got something there? Come
-into the office, will you? This is just a borrowed
-place and I hate it. Drat these French chairs.
-I like a good old swivel chair I can lean back in.
-Shall be glad to get back to the States myself.
-Now let’s see. ...”</p>
-
-<p>He had chatted incessantly as he led the way
-into a room resembling more a window display
-of a decorator’s shop than an office. Cynthia
-perched on the corner of the elaborate inlaid
-desk and slipped the wrapper off her drawing,
-the one Nono, over her second breakfast, had
-finished posing for, just a half hour ago.</p>
-
-<p>“Here you are.” She knew it was good.
-Would he think so too? Gosh, he liked it! She
-could tell by his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Sa ... ay, that’s fine. My dear child,
-you have certainly surpassed anything you have
-done yet.” He set it on the floor, propped
-against the wall and leaned back to squint at it.</p>
-
-<p>It was nice to be praised and Cynthia felt herself
-getting warm and pink cheeked. Yes, she
-knew Nono had been her best effort ... to
-date. “There’ll be better ones, though,” she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-told the little editor. “I’m going to Brittany
-next week to join the Brewsters, and to paint.
-I’ll do you a Breton child for the issue after
-this one.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Culbert got up and took her arm. “Now
-we’ll go and get a check made out for this. I
-know you can always use money in Paris. And
-then how about a celebration dinner tonight,
-some place where they have marvelous French
-cooking?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia laughed. “I can do better than that,
-I’ve got an invitation for you, instead. We’re
-both invited to a really American meal. Please,
-<em>do</em> you like corned beef hash?”</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iii" id="iii"></a>CHAPTER 3</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Brittany</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">COLD-IN-THE-HEAD</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nancy’s</span> rapid, fluent French gave directions
-to the small, sabot shod boy who dragged behind
-him a blue painted hand cart. Then she turned
-to bestow an additional hug on the waiting Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but it is grand to see you. And how
-brown you will get here! Come along. François’ll
-bring your luggage in his perambulator.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia drew a deep whiff of the ocean
-scented air. “Ouff! ’S nice to get on solid
-ground again. I feel inches deep in train dirt
-and trolley dust. How sweet the air smells,
-Nancy.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see the broad Atlantic in a moment or
-two, just over that way a few blocks. We have
-to walk about a half mile to the bathing beach,
-but it’s a beauty when you get there.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-Cynthia gave a little skip of delight. “How’s
-your especially nice parent?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s always lovely. At the moment she’s
-in a seventh heaven, having donned a disreputable
-paint-smeared smock, stuck an old straw
-hat on her head, and is painting ocean foam and
-wet rocks, laying the color on the canvas with
-a trowel! She’s awfully glad to be free of the
-illustration business for a time, if you ask me.
-But you’ll see her soon. She gets hungry and
-comes home to meals.” Nancy babbled on and
-Cynthia had a chance to see how brown and
-strong she looked, how much good the summer
-in this tiny provincial town was doing her.</p>
-
-<p>“We turn here, to the right. This, ladieeze
-and gen’lemen, is the main and principal street
-of Le Conquet, the most wester-r-r-n town in
-all France. Sweet, isn’t it, Cindy?”</p>
-
-<p>It was, Cynthia admitted, adorable. Old and
-gray and cobblepaved, with a tiny, one-pedestrian
-sidewalk along one wall, and with
-little two- and three-story houses of old, pearly-gray
-stone whose tiny windows opened intimately
-close to the street, as did the heavy
-wooden doors. Green lichened roofs sloped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-steeply, and there were red geraniums blooming
-in open windows between blowing red and
-green checked curtains, to give color to the mellow
-softness of the ancient stone.</p>
-
-<p>“Our American hero, Mr. Jones, used to put
-in here, they say,” remarked Nancy casually.</p>
-
-<p>“What Mr. Jones?” asked Cynthia, then at
-Nancy’s deepening dimple, always an index to
-her mood, suspected a trap. “Who was Mr.
-Jones?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why surely you remember John Jones, of
-the U. S. Navy? No? ... Not Mr. John <em>Paul</em>
-Jones?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beast!” laughed Cynthia, then “Tell me
-some more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as you know, this is the Department
-of Finisterre, Lands End, and is the farthest
-west of all western provinces. Some centuries
-ago, dunno how many, but not long, it belonged
-to England and the people here are closer to the
-southwest-of-England type than you could
-imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>They turned a corner, past a wide lipped stone
-well where a woman dipped water in a huge,
-creamy-toned pitcher. Cynthia murmured,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-“Wait till I can get to my sketch book!” and
-Nancy nodded understandingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the French got it back,” she continued,
-“and perhaps the English again after
-that. Anyway the English burnt it a couple of
-times, though there were still some English
-families living here, but spared the houses in
-which they lived. That’s why there are still
-some very old places, in spite of the conquerors.
-Here’s the quay. You must get out your canvas
-sneakers, these cobbles are death on good leather
-shoes. Wooden sabots are best, though I’ve
-never tried ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The tiny hotel smelled pleasantly of soap and
-good Breton cooking. One went steeply up two
-flights of stairs to a narrow hall and turned into
-a small, whitewashed room with a dresser, a
-wash stand and a white covered bed. The single
-window overlooked the long stretch of quay
-and the tidal river, very low now and turning
-to marvelous lavender in the sunset light.</p>
-
-<p>“My room is next door, and mother’s beyond
-that. Here are your things. I brought you the
-longest way so you could see the town&mdash;Goodness,
-you aren’t catching a cold are you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-Cynthia sneezed again. “I hope not. But a
-small child in the train from Paris had frightful
-snuffles, right in my own compartment, and it
-was sort of drafty on the trolley from Brest.”</p>
-
-<p>Promising to hurry, she closed the door and
-went to the window to hang out, gazing.
-Wooden shoes clattered merrily on the cobbles
-of the quay, and along the distant dunes, purpling
-with dusk, smoke rose from the smouldering
-potash fires where, Nancy had said, the
-thrifty Bretons burned seaweed for fertilizer.</p>
-
-<p>She was pleasantly weary and very hungry.
-All last night she had been traveling, more than
-half the width of France from Paris to Brest.
-Uncle Leslie had sailed from Brest after the
-Armistice, she remembered, and its steep streets
-and ancient houses, built on half a dozen different
-levels, had fascinated her during the hours
-she had to wait for her trolley to Le Conquet.</p>
-
-<p>It had been surprisingly hard to leave Paris.
-That city had changed for her, almost overnight.
-She could have stayed on there, almost
-happily, doing paintings and more paintings,
-digging herself in. <em>Almost</em> happily, but not
-quite. After all, she could have done that in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-New York. And what was the use of keeping
-on with a thing, once you had learned you
-could really do it, once you had met it and
-conquered it? While she was over here it was
-up to her to travel, learn, experiment, grow.</p>
-
-<p>And here, right outside the window was her
-first view of a real French village. How different
-from Paris, how quaint and sweet and
-clean&mdash;and oh, how paintable it was going to be.
-No wonder Nancy’s famous artist mother
-planned to spend her summer here. Perhaps
-Mrs. Brewster would be able to tell her how to
-find a model for the next cover, the Christmas
-number of <cite>Little One’s Magazine</cite>. Cynthia
-wanted to paint a little dark eyed Breton girl or
-boy, in wooden shoes and quaint cap for that
-December number.</p>
-
-<p>Goodness, there was the dinner gong! Cynthia
-pulled in her head just in time to face Nancy
-at the door. “Mother just came up stairs.
-Want to come say hello?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia sneezed and fumbled in her suitcase
-for a clean handkerchief. “Just a moment,
-Nan. I’ve been so busy just looking that I
-haven’t had time to get washed or combed. Now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-where did I put those hankies? Pour out the
-water, will you honey? So I can wash. Oh
-... darling Mrs. Brewster!”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy’s mother, as pretty as ever, tanned
-from sea bathing, seemed hardly older than her
-daughter. “We’re so glad to have you here,
-my child. I want to hear all about your covers,
-and see what you’ve been doing. Nancy tells
-me you’ve already completed one painting, in
-Paris&mdash;Here’s the dining room, and this is our
-table.”</p>
-
-<p>There were several painters and two writers
-among the jolly little crowd at the Hotel Des
-Poissons. Cynthia got a tremendous thrill out
-of having these older people, all professional
-craftsmen of proved ability, regard her with
-respect and as an artist already “arrived.” Yet
-she was, after all, also a professional, traveling,
-actually seeing the world on what she earned
-with her brush and pencil. When she stopped
-to think about that, Cynthia always felt like a
-fairy-tale-princess who has rubbed the magic
-ring. But generally she was too busy to think
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Nancy took her to explore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-the little town, not a long tour, for there were
-not six streets in the whole place. The ancient
-sturdy houses, facing the sea for half a dozen
-centuries seemed to grow from the very rock on
-which they were built. Below the hotel one
-crossed a bridge, at high water, or walked on a
-raised path across the sands, at low tide, to a long
-sandy beach bordered with dunes and tall waving
-grasses, very white and flat and clean.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia surveyed the clear stretch of deserted
-sand, and Nancy’s brief little bathing suit with
-a longing eye. “I won’t go swimming for a day
-or two, I guess,” she decided. “This cold
-doesn’t seem to get any better and I’d rather not
-risk it.” She wondered if she were being old-maid
-fussy about herself.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast was a delightfully informal meal,
-at almost any hour of the morning, and in the inn
-parlor, not the dining room. Here the ceiling
-quivered with reflections from the sunspangled
-river.</p>
-
-<p>On the second morning Nancy brought to
-breakfast a large, mysterious bag, and when she
-had received her huge bowl of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">café au lait</i>, weak
-coffee made with milk, she opened the paper bag<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-and dumped a handful of what appeared to be
-rolled oats, raw, into her bowl.</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth is that?” asked Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s my breakfast food, want to try
-some?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia shook her head, “Goodness no. But
-where can you get breakfast food, American
-style, in a paper bag, in a French village?”</p>
-
-<p>“Feed store,” mumbled Nancy around her
-large spoonful. “It’s just chicken feed. Bran.
-I get so hungry by noon, with these continental
-breakfasts.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about an egg?” was Cynthia’s suggestion.
-“Soft boiled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Try and get it.” Nancy’s tone was amused.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia struggled with the hard-to pronounce
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">oeuf</i>. Shortly it came, all alone on a
-small dish. It was hot, so it must have been in
-hot water. But when she broke it ... “Ugh!
-It’s completely raw!”</p>
-
-<p>“They simply won’t boil it any longer, unless
-you want a twenty minute egg, like a rock,” explained
-Nancy. “It’s one of the unsolved mysteries
-of the French cuisine. You’ll come to
-chicken-feed yet!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-Meanwhile the time was passing. Cynthia
-had arrived on a Thursday, Sunday had rolled
-round, her Christmas cover must go off to Paris
-this week, and she seemed no nearer it than the
-week before. In fact, so far, she hadn’t seen
-any children that looked paintable.</p>
-
-<p>“They are pretty enough,” she mourned, at
-breakfast on Sunday. “But it’s merely a matter
-of color with them. I haven’t seen a single child
-that I thought would make a good poster cover.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster nodded. “I know. But some
-of the old people are marvelous. There are no
-better types for models of old people in all of
-France.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not for the Christmas cover of a children’s
-magazine. Unless ... there is a thought,
-I give them a Breton Santa Claus.”</p>
-
-<p>“No whiskers on ’em here.” Nancy was most
-discouraging. “What have you to suggest,
-Mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hark, there’s the church bell. I suggest
-that you two hurry into your best bonnets and
-shawls and go to church. All the village will
-be there and you will have a good chance
-<a name="to" id="to"></a><ins title="Original has 'to to'">to</ins> look them over. Then if you find what you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-want I’ll ask Madame, our patronne, to introduce
-us. Hurry now!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a splendid idea, Cynthia admitted, as
-she followed Nancy into the little stone church.
-Surely every good Breton inhabitant of Le Conquet
-was present, the women in wide skirts
-trimmed with bands of black velvet, with full
-sleeves, and tight black bodices setting off the
-lace-trimmed white aprons, the frosty white
-caps of Breton lace and the wide lace collars.
-Here at least, all the lovely quaintness of medieval
-<a name="not" id="not"></a><ins title="Original has 'France had not,'">France had not</ins>
-gone down before the stupid
-uniform of store-bought gingham dresses.</p>
-
-<p>The men were no less picturesque, with their
-low crowned wide brimmed hats, the shining
-silver buttons on their short, black velvet coats.
-And each child was a miniature replica of its
-parents, with the exception of the caps which
-mark the married women.</p>
-
-<p>The small bleak church was warmed to light
-by the rustle of many garments, by the soft glow
-of candles and Cynthia was enchanted by the
-little ship-models that swung from the hand
-hewn rafters, all of them as perfect as skill and
-loving care could make them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-“They are thank offerings for the safe return
-of the ships they represent,” Nancy whispered
-to her. “Oh look, Cindy; isn’t she a darling?”
-Her elbow nudged for Cynthia’s attention.</p>
-
-<p>The minute Cynthia saw her, her artist’s eye
-registered her as the one model for that Christmas
-cover. Such pansy-brown eyes, such soft
-curls around the little pink-cheeked face, such a
-dimpled round chin above the starched white
-collar and the tight little bodice, like a small
-child playing at grown-up.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia nodded her approval of Nancy’s
-choice. “How nice,” she thought, “to be with
-artists again. Oh, I wish they could be with me
-all over France,” remembering her loneliness
-in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>After the service they edged their way toward
-the door, Cynthia keeping the child in
-sight all the way. The little girl’s mother, who
-walked behind her, was a larger edition of the
-same type and must have been lovely when she
-was young, but was now bent and weary eyed,
-like so many of the hard working Breton peasants.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy’s eyes had been roving the church.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-Now she gave Cynthia a reassuring nod. “Wait
-for me outside,” she commanded and wriggled
-away through the crowd. Cynthia, who was
-taller than most of the villagers, saw her stop at
-last before a woman in black and wearing a hat.
-Their own patronne from the hotel, very much
-in her Sunday best. Nancy waved to Cynthia,
-then the two disappeared, blotted out by the congregation.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later she joined Cynthia in the
-little square above the fountain. “It’s all right,”
-she reported triumphantly. “We identified
-your model and her mother, and Madame says
-she will ask her about posing.”</p>
-
-<p>That was fine. Cynthia already saw her
-cover, painted, delivered, printed, and exhibited
-on every Christmas news stand in New York.
-She drew a breath of relief.</p>
-
-<p>They strolled back toward the hotel and the
-pleasant smell of Sunday dinner, the crowd
-slowly trickling away behind them. The little
-bakery was already doing a brisk business, for
-many of these small shops opened as soon as the
-church was out. Cynthia’s eyes caught a new
-poster on the bakery wall, a single sheet of vivid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-lemon yellow with blue and red type, such a
-bright patch of color in the pearly gray street
-that she hauled Nancy along to look at it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well ...” after a minute of Nancy’s silent
-contemplation. “What does it say, stupid?
-Can’t you read out loud, the way you were
-taught?”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy chuckled. “Sorry, I forgot. Well,
-‘Hypnotiste’ means ‘Hypnotist.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I gathered as much as that. What comes
-after it?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘World renowned Professor Reynaldo.’
-That sounds Spanish but he says he’s from
-Paris&mdash;‘Parisien’&mdash;will be here on Tuesday
-evening to give a demonstration of his stupendous
-and altogether unexplainable power of the
-human eye,” Nancy translated loosely. “It also
-says his demonstration will be held in the meat
-market. ... I suppose that’s the biggest room
-they have, except the church, and that admission
-will be one and two francs. Standing room
-fifty centimes. Poor thing, he can’t make much
-of a living out of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go,” suggested Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? ... Well ... yes.” Then as the idea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-struck her. “I think it would be fun. Maybe
-mother would like to go. Let’s ask her now.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster was amused at the idea and
-quite willing they should go, but refused to be
-a third of the party. “Not if it’s to be held in the
-meat market. I never could stand the odor of
-so many sides of beef and mutton. But you
-children go along. I’m sure you will find it an
-amusing cross section of the peasant’s amusement.
-I believe they have never had a hypnotist
-here before.”</p>
-
-<p>But Cynthia very nearly didn’t get to the entertainment
-after all. For on Sunday afternoon
-she went swimming with Nancy. It was an
-hour or two after dinner, the warmest part of
-the day when the girls took their bathing suits
-and crossed the little path across the tidal river.
-The way straggled along the top of a high, wind-torn
-meadow where coarse grasses tangled about
-the feet and where, on the rocks below, the sea
-piled, churning among the crevices. But the
-further side of this little peninsula was the bathing
-beach, quite wild and deserted, and one could
-choose any of a hundred grass-grown sand dunes
-for a dressing room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-Nancy had raced on ahead, and Cynthia
-sneezed twice, and wondered if she ought to go
-for this swim, after all. She wrestled with her
-conscience for a bit ... and conscience lost.</p>
-
-<p>It was a beautiful swim, but about midnight
-Cynthia awoke with such a sore throat she could
-scarcely whisper. “Oh, darn!” she murmured
-feverishly. “What a bother! I do hope
-I’m not going to be sick!”</p>
-
-<p>She lay for a bit thinking about that, then
-rapped gently beside her bed. She heard
-Nancy’s springs creak, heard her mutter something
-sleepily, and in a moment the light of
-Nancy’s candle appeared beneath the crack of
-the door. The crack widened and a sleepy voice
-asked, “Did you rap, honey? Oh, you poor
-thing! Cynthia, you are a wreck!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster was called immediately and
-then Madame. Together they applied a hot,
-oily cloth to Cynthia’s throbbing throat, a funny
-aluminum hot-water bottle to her feet, and gave
-her a dose of something else, equally unpleasant
-and equally hot. Then she was given something
-to breathe on a handkerchief ... Cynthia muttered
-that it nearly blew off the top of her head,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-but it did miraculously clear her nose for its
-original purpose of breathing.</p>
-
-<p>Next day she felt heaps and heaps better and
-protested that she could easily get up. But she
-was kept in bed till noon and then allowed out
-only for a short stroll in the sunshine, equipped
-with a handkerchief soaked in the breathing
-stuff. “But no more bathing till you are quite
-over this,” was the stern order of Nancy’s
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m,” murmured Cynthia meekly,
-ashamed to have given them all such a fright.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, a final straw. At dinner
-that night Madame reported that she had seen
-the mother of the little girl, Leonie her name
-was, and that the woman refused to let the child
-pose for her portrait.</p>
-
-<p>“But how silly,” stammered Cynthia. “What
-is the matter? I’ll pay for her time of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not that,” Mrs. Brewster explained
-from Madame’s conversation. “But they are
-rather afraid of artists. The few who come here
-paint only the sea and the dunes. They aren’t
-accustomed to the idea of artists’ models, not
-even for portraits. This woman seems unusually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-simple and I suppose the word ‘posing’ made
-her think of wicked Paris! I’m sorry, for I
-think I might have persuaded her. Madame
-probably didn’t know how to go about it tactfully. ...
-If the woman could have met you. ...
-But aren’t there others you can get? I’m sure
-there must be.”</p>
-
-<p>So that Christmas cover had gone to smash,
-too! It would be hard to pick out another child,
-after having seen Leonie. Perhaps she’d have
-another opportunity to see the villagers at the
-meeting on Tuesday evening.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster again gave her reluctant,
-though amused, consent. “If you’ll take a fresh
-handkerchief with some of that Breathex on
-it. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Three of ’em,” promised Cynthia and
-Nancy together.</p>
-
-<p>“... And come straight home if you find
-you’re in a draft, or if you start to sneeze.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will,” came the chorus.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster laughed. “All right. And I
-may sound fussy, but a tiny village in a foreign
-country is no place for one to get ill. Now run
-along and get ready for your show.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-They followed the crowd and the clomp of
-wooden shoes to the meat market at the center
-of the town. Here, in the big hall, benches&mdash;rough
-boards on trestles&mdash;had been arranged
-and the Professor himself stood at the improvised
-ticket window.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we be extravagant and take a two-franc
-ticket? Then we can sit in the front row,”
-suggested Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s,” urged Cynthia. “What fun to have
-eight cents buy so much luxury.”</p>
-
-<p>The first two rows were very de luxe; benches
-with backs, but so hard and narrow that Cynthia
-was glad they had brought their coats for cushions.
-The children, giggling and whispering,
-somewhat awestruck by the promised entertainment,
-crowded into the seats behind them, and in
-the front rows sat the old ladies, some even with
-their knitting, very straight and stiff and impressive.
-There was a scuffle of sabots on the stone
-floor and outside a tied sheep baa-a-a-ed plaintively.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone peered and craned and turned heads
-to see the two American mademoiselles, and discussed
-them in friendly fashion, but quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-openly. Cynthia’s bright beret and red coat,
-her gray eyes and dark curls, her shoes, her silk
-stockings, the ring on her finger, were argued
-and debated ... and relayed by Nancy in a choked
-murmur.</p>
-
-<p>“You are rich, since you wear a gold ring with
-a greenglass stone in it. Someone suggests that
-you are married, also because of the ring, but it
-seems Madame at the hotel has reported that
-you are still a ‘Mees,’ judging by your letters.
-Oh, here is our professor!”</p>
-
-<p>M’sieu Reynaldo, who had been at once ticket
-taker and dispenser, usher, and frightener-away
-of small boys who would press their snubby
-noses against the windows, at last barred the
-doors and strode proudly up the center, and only,
-aisle. The stage was a rough platform on saw-horses,
-beneath the light of a half dozen
-dim, swinging lanterns, and was but a few feet
-from the de luxe seats occupied by Cynthia and
-Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Look, Nancy; there’s my lost model, Leonie.
-See, there at the end. Isn’t she a darling!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh-h,” Nancy nudged her. “He’s going to
-begin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-The professor’s performance began with a
-short talk on hypnotism, its great antiquity, its
-meaning, and mostly of how wonderful he was
-at that ancient art. How, with the supreme
-power of his eye and a few passes of his hands&mdash;somewhat
-soiled hands they were&mdash;he could
-control his subjects and command them, thereafter
-to do his bidding.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it,” murmured Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait and see,” muttered Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have absolute quiet here, during my
-demonstrations,” frowned the great Reynaldo.
-He was a small, slender-boned man in a soiled
-velvet jacket, and the jetty hair, the low brows,
-the wide cheekbones of the typical lower class
-Parisien&mdash;an amusing contrast to the bigger,
-blonder, slow-moving Breton audience.</p>
-
-<p>He asked first for two volunteers from the
-audience. After considerable shy shuffling of
-feet and chattering insistence on the part of their
-feminine escorts, two boys were shoved forward,
-down the aisle. Laughing, red with embarrassment,
-the clumsy young fishermen mounted the
-stage, then half numb with stage fright awaited
-the next move.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-A chorus of murmured advice came from the
-interested and neighborly audience.</p>
-
-<p>“Silence!” ordered the professor, with a flash
-of his Paris-black eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Then before the eyes of each volunteer he
-made passes with his hand, gave a low murmured
-command, and first one, then the other
-became glassy eyed and appeared to go into a
-waking sleep, there on the stage. The hall was
-intensely still, hardly a foot stirred or a skirt
-rustled.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia choked in her handkerchief. “Oh,
-dear,” she thought. “I believe I’m going to
-sneeze, and how shall we ever get out of here!”
-But the scent on her handkerchief, though it
-nearly strangled her, did put a halt to the sneeze.</p>
-
-<p>“You are now asleep,” the Professor told his
-subjects. “You will do exactly as I say. Lie
-down and roll over.”</p>
-
-<p>The two young men lay down on the platform
-and rolled over. There was a murmur of
-awe from the onlookers.</p>
-
-<p>“Now this is a stairway and you are climbing
-up it,” continued the orders. “Now open this
-door,” where there was no door. “It is cold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-and windy out and the rain beats on your faces as
-you open it.” The two staggered back, arms
-over eyes as though they had indeed opened a
-real door on a blast of wind and rain.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was getting a little bored with this.
-It seemed so onesided, so unsporting. The audience
-tittered, but the boys were such simple
-country lads it seemed unfair they should be
-made a laughing stock like this. She didn’t
-like that oily little man with his velvet coat and
-his soiled hands. “I wish he’d stop,” she
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>The exhibition continued with various orders.
-The subjects were given water to taste, an empty
-glass to smell, but the Professor directed that
-they smell or taste whatever he dictated, and
-their faces amusingly registered disgust or delight
-or surprise. Yes, they were funny, but
-Cynthia felt uncomfortable and looked back
-over her shoulder toward the bolted door. She
-wished she hadn’t come.</p>
-
-<p>Only once did the little professor nearly lose
-his subjects. During a tense and silent moment
-the sheep in the yard uttered a prolonged “Ba-a-ah!”
-The audience giggled hysterically and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-one of the young men began to come to himself
-again, looked around in a bewildered fashion
-and walked to the edge of the platform.</p>
-
-<p>The Professor waved his hands, snapped his
-fingers. “Go, it is finished,” he commanded.</p>
-
-<p>The two subjects blinked awake. If they
-had been caught abroad in their nightshirts they
-could not have looked more red and sheepish.</p>
-
-<p>After that the renowned Reynaldo attempted
-to hypnotize a small dog, a little fox terrier that
-belonged to someone in the audience. The effort
-was hardly a success, for the fox terrier didn’t
-seem to realize he was a subject for the professor’s
-art. But the audience, with the remembrance
-of the former demonstration, was
-properly impressed and after a bit the terrier
-was allowed to go, barking his joy at the release,
-unharmed to his master.</p>
-
-<p>Again the Paris Professor called for volunteers,
-asking this time for two little girls as he
-had already demonstrated his power over grown
-men. The children on the benches behind
-Cynthia and Nancy giggled and nudged, “You
-go ... no, you go ... Let M’rie go ... Let Leonie ...”
-till five had been suggested and the professor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-making his choice, called two to the stage.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there goes my little model,” murmured
-Cynthia, really distressed. “Can’t we stop her,
-Nancy?”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy shook her head, her eyes on the stage.
-“I don’t know how we could. After all, the
-professor is French and we are just outsiders.
-Better let them handle it themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia subsided meekly but kept an eye on
-the little Leonie. What a lovely pose ... and
-that one ... and the next. Why the child was
-a born model, a picture in herself!</p>
-
-<p>She was also excellent material for the hypnotist,
-for she immediately obeyed his orders,
-going to sleep bolt upright in her chair before
-the professor’s waving, commanding hands. The
-other little girl, older and of stouter stuff, though
-not so easy a victim was also finally put to sleep.
-To Cynthia’s relief Reynaldo used more discretion
-in this case and satisfied his audience by having
-the children do a little dance, by having
-them appear to smell a rose when he gave them
-an onion, seem to taste something sour when he
-gave them a bonbon.</p>
-
-<p>Then he asked if either of the girls were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-musical. Someone in the audience volunteered
-that Marie could sing but that Leonie could not
-sing a note. He then commanded Leonie to
-come forward and perform for them. “Sing
-correctly,” he ordered, and named a little nursery
-tune known to all French children.</p>
-
-<p>The child really had a very pretty voice and
-performed with considerable credit. Also her
-friends seemed to think it marvelous that she
-could sing at all. But Cynthia, stifling a sneeze
-in her handkerchief, tapped a restless foot on
-the stone floor.</p>
-
-<p>Good, it was going to end! Monsieur Reynaldo
-had commanded with a sharp clap of his
-hand beside the ear of each child, that his subjects
-come awake. M’rie blinked her china blue
-eyes, smiled timorously and clattered down the
-steps to join her friends.</p>
-
-<p>But Leonie was a different matter. As Cynthia,
-taking a deep breath of her “Breathex”
-soaked handkerchief, watched with some interest,
-then growing apprehension, it seemed that
-the Professor also was becoming concerned.</p>
-
-<p>To cover his own confusion, he ordered her
-to get up, to walk across the stage, to do various<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-things, all of which she performed with her
-former obedience. But when he again made
-passes before her eyes, then, in a low tone to
-cover possible failure, again ordered her to
-waken, she remained as soundly, as blank-eyed
-asleep as before. The audience was apparently
-undisturbed, and seemed to take all this as part
-of the performance.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m worried,” Cynthia confided to Nancy
-through the muffling folds of her handkerchief.
-“Oh, but this stuff is strong.” Her eyes were
-streaming with tears, but so far she had managed
-to keep back that sneeze.</p>
-
-<p>“Worried?” Nancy turned big eyes on Cynthia.
-“Do you mean to say ...”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think he can get that child out of that
-trance. I wonder ...”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia turned to look around the audience.
-They too were beginning, unconsciously, to reflect
-the professor’s concern. Quietly, three
-times now, he had given his command, Cynthia’s
-ears were abnormally keen, in spite of the
-cold.</p>
-
-<p>She glanced back again at the stage, then decided
-what she would do. Evading Nancy she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-slipped out of her seat, past the two old ladies
-who sat on the aisle. It was just a step to the
-stage, a step or two across it. Leonie’s blank
-stare did not turn to follow her, but Cynthia
-knew that she had the attention of every other
-soul in the house.</p>
-
-<p>She smiled briefly at the bewildered professor
-and crossed to the child. From her pocket she
-drew a clean handkerchief soaked with the over-powering
-scent of “Breathex.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” Cynthia spoke in English in the
-hope that the professor, being from Paris, knew
-a little of that tongue, “if the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petite enfant</i>
-would like to smell this.” And before the hypnotist
-could protest, had clapped the handkerchief
-to Leonie’s little snub nose.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a double dose of smelling salts.
-The American makers would have been proud
-of their preparation, though perhaps no such
-strange application of it had ever been suggested
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>Leonie choked, coughed, strangled a moment.
-But the blank left her eyes and she
-struggled to escape the handkerchief. Bewildered,
-for a moment she gazed at Cynthia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-then smiled shyly in a perfectly human, understanding
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Tactfully Cynthia withdrew. “Merci, Professor,”
-she murmured and backed down the
-steps.</p>
-
-<p>She heard little of what followed. The Professor’s
-florid explanation of this occurrence, of
-the American’s interference with his demonstration,
-but his willingness to let that pass ...
-and so on and so on. The audience murmured
-polite amazement, stared at Cynthia, clapped at
-the end of Reynaldo’s speech, and began to rise
-from their benches. The door swung open into
-the sweet, starlit night.</p>
-
-<p>“Well ...!” stated Nancy. “You certainly
-distinguished yourself. Gosh, but that was a
-close call for Leonie. Wonder what would have
-happened ...”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia shook her head. “But I knew something
-must happen if she got a whiff of this. It
-would have pulled a mummy back to life. Ah,
-here’s Leonie.”</p>
-
-<p>The child’s mother had appeared beside her,
-holding her hand. She at least was not unaware
-that the American Mees had done something,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-though she wasn’t quite sure what, for her petite.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” she murmured in shy, halting
-English; then, that proving to be all she knew,
-she broke into fluid French which almost
-stumped Nancy to translate.</p>
-
-<p>“She asks,” interpreted Miss Brewster, “if
-there is anything she can do for the pretty
-American ... make a bow, Cindy ... She says
-she is very grateful to you and that it was very
-naughty for her Leonie to go up on the stage
-like that, before all the village. I’ve told her
-that we will come tomorrow to pay our respects
-to Leonie’s household. We’ll bring Mother
-along, too. That all sounds sufficiently formal.”</p>
-
-<p>They streamed out into the fan of light across
-the cobbled road. The white caps and dark
-dresses of the audience melted behind them into
-darkness. The night was sweet and warm and
-there was a sound of the sea on the rocks, far off.</p>
-
-<p>“Good night,” called Cynthia. “Good
-night!” then slipped her hand into Nancy’s arm.</p>
-
-<p>“There,” said Nancy, “is your Christmas
-cover, my dear, and in such a funny way.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Aitchoo!</em>” sneezed Cynthia in eloquent reply.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iv" id="iv"></a>CHAPTER 4</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Mont St. Michel</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">“LITTLE MISS FIX-IT”</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nancy’s</span> mother, who as a young art student
-had lived in France, knew all the places that
-Cynthia, as a younger art student, ought to see
-and go.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t,” she told Cynthia, “despise the well-worn
-routes just because they are well-worn.
-Later on you can go to the out of the way places
-too. But you need the talked-about places as
-a basis for comparison, just as you need to know
-black and white in order to paint color.”</p>
-
-<p>The idea interested Cynthia. “What do you
-call the well-worn places.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mother means those that are full of tourists
-and trippers,” explained Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course,” said Mrs. Brewster, “Just
-the sort of places you saw in Paris. The Louvre,
-the tomb of Napoleon, Montmartre, the Arc de
-<a name="Triomphe" id="Triomphe"></a><ins title="Original has 'Triomph'">Triomphe</ins>. You don’t need to rush through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-them, Baedecker in hand&mdash;though a guidebook
-is always useful&mdash;like the American couple out
-of Punch. ‘You see the outside Marthy, and I’ll
-see the inside, and we’ll cut the time in half.’”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia laughed. She knew those tourists,
-so intent on gathering data to relate at home that
-they were blind to real beauty, to all the little
-local color and pleasant customs of the people.
-“But besides Paris, what would you suggest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s Carcassonne, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh <em>yes!</em>” agreed Cynthia. Carcassonne had
-been on her list too.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I think you should see a bit of the
-Basque country. It’s lovely, though it has become
-a little self-conscious lately, with so many
-books being written about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had a suggestion here. “Don’t you
-think Cynthia would adore Mouleon Soule?”
-And Mrs. Brewster, agreeing, had promised a
-letter of introduction to an old Basque artist
-there. “And that will be real local color too.
-Then there’s Rome and Venice and Florence ...”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia shook her head. Not much chance
-of her getting to Italy, not unless the reward for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-capturing Goncourt, on the ship coming over,
-should materialize. “Tell me some places near
-here. Normandy, Brittany.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mont St. Michel!” cried Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brewster nodded. “I wonder ...” she
-began.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy took her up. “If we couldn’t go too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh that would be wonderful!” cried Cynthia.
-And so the matter was arranged.</p>
-
-<p>Mont St. Michel was famous for four things;
-its tides and the island with its mile long causeway
-to land, its fortress abbey, and omelets.
-Nature was responsible for the first two, Normandy
-abbots and the wealth which William
-of Normandy had filched from England, for the
-second, and Madame Poulard now dead, but still
-surviving in her reputation, for the third.</p>
-
-<p>It was to partake of the third that Cynthia
-was seated, on the evening of her first day at
-Mont St. Michel, before a red checked cloth
-covered table in the Hotel Tete D’or. It was
-a distracting scent. The great arched room with
-ceiling darkened by the smoke of many fires,
-the enormous fireplace under the great cowled
-chimney, and the fascinating process of mixing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-that omelet which Madame <a name="Poulard" id="Poulard"></a><ins title="Original has 'Poularde'">Poulard</ins> had made
-famous among gourmets all the world over.
-And for a further distraction there was the
-couple at the corner table; the man so dark and
-slim and ... well, interesting looking, the girl
-so pretty, and so angry. Cynthia’s attention was
-doubly held, by the girl’s prettiness and by her
-anger.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy’s tug at her sleeve pulled Cynthia’s
-attention back to the omelet making. This was
-a ceremony, a rite in itself that people came from
-all over the world to see. A huge bowl of sweet
-butter, eggs, and the long handled iron skillet
-held in Madam’s skillful hand. From the butter
-she sliced a great golden gob, dumped it into
-the pan and held it over the small fire in the big
-fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew the original Madam Poulard,” Mrs.
-Brewster was saying. “She and her husband were
-the handsomest couple in Normandy, or so it
-was said. Look ... the eggs go in now.”</p>
-
-<p>The little cook, plump and trim in her black
-dress and neat white apron poured the golden
-mass into the hot butter, stirred it slowly with a
-long handled spoon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-“Funny to think how small a thing, like an
-omelet, can make a place famous,” mused Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but she made it an art. Like your child
-portraits, Cynthia,” said Mrs. Brewster.</p>
-
-<p>A delicious smell, wood smoke, butter, the
-omelet. Cynthia grew ravenous just watching
-the process. In another moment it would be
-ready for them. And again her attention sought
-the couple at the further table. The man looked
-almost French, thin and wiry and intense, the
-girl had buttercup hair that gleamed in the
-lamplight, and slim, capable hands with which
-she gestured as she talked.</p>
-
-<p>The finished omelet was served piping hot
-upon a plate warmed before the fire. When
-Cynthia had finished the last delicious morsel
-she looked up again. The party of two had
-become three by the addition of an older man,
-obviously the father of the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if they’re engaged,” said Cynthia
-turning the little emerald on her own slim finger.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s engaged, Cyn?” asked Nancy.
-“Listen honey, try the raspberries, with sour
-cream, they’re delicious.” But then Nancy’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-back was toward the interesting couple so she
-might be excused for a lack of interest. Mrs.
-Brewster caught Cynthia’s eye and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“The man looks like a Basque,” she said.
-“But I think the girl is American. I saw them
-in our hotel this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>The Brewsters, who with Cynthia had come
-the short but complicated trip from Brittany that
-morning, planned now to spend several days at
-Mont St. Michel. After that Cynthia was reconciled
-to traveling alone again. Meanwhile
-she and Nancy could paint and explore the abbey
-fortress and talk Academy gossip, there
-wouldn’t be such another chance till Cynthia
-got back to New York.</p>
-
-<p>Exploration got under way immediately after
-breakfast the next morning. Nancy with her
-mother’s sketch box, Cynthia with the sketching
-stool accompanied Mrs. Brewster up the steep
-cobbled street of the tiny village.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as far as half way up the hill,” directed
-Mrs. Brewster. “There’s a small garden of
-cabbages there that takes on the most heavenly
-color in the sunlight. That is if the man has
-planted cabbages this year.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-The man had, and they were indeed heavenly.
-Cynthia sucked in her breath at the beauty of
-the color. One had not guessed that mere cabbages
-could be so decorative.</p>
-
-<p>Below them stretched stairs and more stairs
-of the dark purplish brown stone of the island,
-all the long, steep, curving way up which they
-had come. Slowly the stairway had widened,
-houses dropped away and now, level with the
-eye, rose the second and third stories of the
-fortress-like dwellings that fringed the town.
-Chimneys incredibly thick threw long morning
-shadows of rich blue on salmon pink walls and
-grey tiled roofs. Round towers lent piquant
-variety to the outlines and the incongruity of a
-bedquilt stuffed through the window of a beetling
-fortress, to air above a frowning keep,
-made Cynthia’s fingers tingle for paper and pencil
-with which to note it all down. Below the
-windows, tiny gardens&mdash;something pinkish,
-something ochre&mdash;Cynthia with eyes half closed
-to shut out shapes of things saw only color where
-some thrifty Normandy farmer had planted
-provender for the coming winter. And cabbages,
-so green they were almost blue, jewel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-vivid, jewel bright. Cynthia nodded. Tomorrow
-she would bring her paint box.</p>
-
-<p>“My stool, Cynthia dear.” Amusedly Mrs.
-Brewster broke in on her reverie. “I’ll be here
-for two hours at least. Run along and don’t fall
-off any parapets or into any oubliettes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s an oubliette?” asked Cynthia racing
-upward beside Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a ‘forgettery,’” explained Nancy, “and
-if that doesn’t mean anything to you, my child,
-it’s an extremely graphic name for the trap-door,
-underground dungeons that they used to
-drop you into if you offended a king or an abbot.
-Monte Cristo stuff, you know. I believe this
-place is simply riddled with ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh! Horrid people, kings and abbots!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but they could build. Look up, honey!”</p>
-
-<p>Above now, far above them, rose the peaks
-and pinnacles of this fairy-tale place. Below
-them the whole island rose like a hand from the
-sea, joined to the mainland by only the single
-mile-long causeway. Ringed about the finger’s
-root were the far off houses, fronting the sea,
-backs to the land. And surmounting the whole,
-like a thimble atop the finger, the abbey, rising,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-ever rising in the still clear air to the final peak
-of all, the glittering image of Saint Michel de
-la mer du peril; of the perilous sea. The Archangel,
-it seemed, loved heights. From the tip
-of the tower that crowned his abbey, wings of
-gold outspread, sword uplifted, his mailed foot
-crushed the devil who crawled beneath, and
-atop one foot perched the golden cock, symbol
-of eternal vigilance.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, gazing skyward murmured,
-“Lovely!”</p>
-
-<p>“Marvelous!” whispered Nancy looking seaward.
-The sands of St. Michel, those treacherous
-sands through which the tide can rip and roar
-in minutes, seconds almost, shone far below them
-now, peacefully dry, almost lavender in the
-sun, creating a false horizon for the fringe of
-little houses along the shore.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s get a guide,” suggested Nancy turning
-back. “I detest them as a rule. But this place
-is a perfect labyrinth, and besides you can pick
-up so much information the guide books don’t
-give you.”</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance gate, where a few francs
-bought admittance, they found that a group<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-would start through the abbey in about twenty
-minutes. Preferring to wait outside they braced
-themselves against the wall where the sun was
-pleasantly warm and watched their fellow
-tourists assemble.</p>
-
-<p>A little old lady and her husband, both very
-winded from the long climb. “From Ioway,”
-Cynthia bet Nancy in a whisper. “And on their
-wedding anniversary trip.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heads you win, tails I lose,” said Nancy
-scornfully. “But these are Britishers, I’ll bet
-my new tube of Prussian blue.”</p>
-
-<p>Sober hats set high on the head, bright complexions,
-and, as they drew nearer up the stair,
-broad A’s and clipped G’s proved Nancy to be
-right. Next three French sisters in black and
-white, from some religious order.</p>
-
-<p>“Probably from a convent in Canada,” hazarded
-Nancy, listening to their French. “They
-come on holiday to visit the churches in France.
-Mother and I have crossed with groups of them
-several times; they are always so picturesque
-and so jolly. And here’s a pretty girl for your
-sketch book, Cyn.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the girl from the restaurant, the girl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-with the buttercup hair. And her young man.
-The girl seemed to half recognize Cynthia, for
-she gave a little tremulous smile, then turned
-abruptly away as though she wasn’t sure whether
-they had met or not.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mesdames et Messieurs</i> ...” began the guide
-in shrill tones and, fumbling with an enormous
-bunch of keys, unlocked the great door to the
-abbey. For the next hour he led them through
-cloisters twelve hundred feet above the ocean,
-through the refectory and the ancient church,
-through banqueting halls in which kings and
-princes had feasted. “They say Harold the
-Saxon was a guest and a prisoner here of William
-of Normandy before William became the Conqueror,”
-translated Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond her the young man also translated for
-the benefit of the girl with him. Between them
-Cynthia managed to pick up most of the guide’s
-information. They were in the banqueting hall,
-that long gray drafty hall with its many pillars,
-and Cynthia, gazing about her, tried to transform
-it to the way it must have been when
-Harold was the unwilling guest. A place of
-flaring torches, lords and ladies in silks and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-velvets, in trailing veils and sky-pointing hennins,
-lifting their heavy trains from the rushes
-that covered the floor. There would be tapestries,
-rippling along the walls as the drafts
-caught them, painted ceilings that had long ago
-faded to gray and stone color, minstrels to make
-music, great dogs to lie about on the rush-strewn
-floor, and the delicious scent of long forgotten
-foods from those great fireplaces in the kitchens
-beyond. Yes, the far off times must have been
-fun too. She wished she had been here then.</p>
-
-<p>But the oubliettes changed her opinion on
-that. Only a few of them, so the guide said,
-now remained open to the public. The others,
-cut down through the solid rock, lay far, far
-below, damp, almost airless, foul with rats and
-crawling things.</p>
-
-<p>“And if the abbot or the king wanted you out
-of the way, you lived for years down there,”
-said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>One, not far below the dining hall, was a tiny
-place, dark, airless, with scarcely room to lie or
-sit or stand upright.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say,” asked Cynthia, “that
-those people up above could dance and sing and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-... and enjoy themselves with all those prisoners
-down below them?”</p>
-
-<p>The group had gone on a way; but Cynthia,
-lingering behind to explore, had jumped down
-into the oubliette to see just what kind of a place
-it really was. She spoke from the floor, some
-distance below Nancy’s neat brown oxfords.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy shrugged. “That’s the middle ages,
-darling.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia reached up. “Give me a hand, Nancy.
-I want to get out of here. Ugh ...” once on
-the floor beside the other, “I hate this place, it’s
-haunted by all those horrible things they used to
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy looked at her queerly. “Not see any
-more? All right. I’m willing,” and five minutes
-later they stood once more before the great
-western entrance looking out over the sands and
-the town below.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou ... uf!” Cynthia drew a great breath
-of the free air. “I’d go off my nut if we stayed
-in there much longer. It’s beautiful, but gosh,
-it was cruel. Let’s go somewhere and pick
-daisies and get the smell of those forgetteries
-out of our noses. C’mon, Nannie.” And grabbing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-Nancy’s wrist she hauled her headlong
-down the stairs towards the town below.</p>
-
-<p>As they raced past, Mrs. Brewster was still
-absorbed in her cabbages and did not even look
-up. The steps narrowed, they came to the block-long
-village with its dark, tiny windowed houses
-where were displayed all the usual tricks to
-catch the tourist trade.</p>
-
-<p>“Daisies!” cried Cynthia. “Where can we get
-daisies?” and looked about her. Steep cobbled
-streets, the sands ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s stop and get us a citronade, and I’ll
-ask,” suggested the diplomatic Nancy. While
-they sipped the sweet warmish drink from thick
-tumblers she chattered with the waitress. “It’s
-all right,” she reported. “There are pretty
-flowers for you to pick, my child. Oh, there’s
-your blonde friend’s boy friend, and all alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia had noticed him too, furiously striding
-down the steep street. Where was the buttercup
-girl? “They were quarreling last night,”
-she said, watching the nervous wiry back as it
-turned the lower corner of the street, entered the
-hotel. “And then her father came in. She
-didn’t seem very happy today either.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-“Little Miss Fix-it,” teased Nancy. “What’s
-it to you? Come on now, we’ll go hunt daisies.”</p>
-
-<p>At the very foot of the street where, at high
-tide the seas must wash, where boats lay,
-small and deserted on the yellow sand, footprints
-led along the base of the cliff. Here, rounding
-the turn, the wind blew freshly from off the
-coasts of England, small crabs scuttled to shelter
-as they passed and far far above them Saint
-Michel dominated his devil and the cock eternally
-crowed.</p>
-
-<p>Above them suddenly rose steep cliffs covered
-with coarse grass, and, if not daisies, at least
-their French cousins. No houses here, though
-piles of rubble and a bit of crumbled wall told
-that the abbey buildings must once have straggled
-down the face of this cliff. Far above
-small peasant children climbed and called, or
-swung bare legs from an outcrop of rock, and
-still higher a small hunched figure sat all alone
-on a rock. Cynthia was about to say, “Oh, there’s
-the little American,” but remembering what
-Nancy had just called her, held her tongue and
-busied herself with collecting a bouquet for Mrs.
-Brewster’s room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-Presently wearying of this she sat on a stone
-to survey the steep climb she had already come
-and the sands beyond that. It seemed to her that
-the color of the sand had changed, darkened, in
-the past ten minutes. Idly she noted that the
-children had gone; already she could see them
-scampering past the rock at the base, saw them
-disappear. She looked back of her. Nothing
-here, no connection with the town. To get home
-one must go the way they had come. Just beyond
-where Nancy was still picking flowers was
-the American girl. Cynthia’s gaze took her in
-with the rest of the scene. Suddenly she was
-startled almost out of her wits by a small
-figure that tore past her, yelling at the top of his
-lungs.</p>
-
-<p>She sprang to her feet, and was still more
-startled to see Nancy come pelting after the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La marée ... la marée montante ...</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Cynthia, gazing after
-the small figure that had passed. A good model
-that boy would be, with his wind blown curls,
-his startled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy grabbed her arm, shouted in her ear,
-“Run ... <em>run</em> ...”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-“What ... why?” Cynthia’s feet pounded
-after Nancy. Over her shoulder Nancy flung,
-“‘The tide,’ he said. ‘The tide is rising.’”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia looked back. The girl behind them
-had risen from her rock. With a wrench Cynthia
-freed her arm from Nancy’s grasp, put
-hands to mouth and megaphoned. “Hurry!
-<em>Hurry!</em> The <em>tide!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to get the idea for immediately
-she came leaping down over the rocks. Cynthia
-paused only once to glance behind and see what
-good speed the girl was making, then raced to
-catch up with Nancy. Almost together the
-three reached the sands.</p>
-
-<p>So that was why they had changed so rapidly
-from ochre to lavender. Water, tidal water,
-seeping swiftly, menacingly from beneath,
-pouring in from every side. But the sand at
-the base of the rocks was still dry, it was hardly
-five minutes race around the rocks to the end of
-the little street. Hearts pounding, breath sobbing,
-they reached it together.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia could not stop there. She wanted to
-reach her hotel, her room, feel safe ground,
-familiar ground that could not dissolve into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-seas beneath her feet, before she stopped. As
-she tore through the hallway, passed the astonished
-eyes of Madame at the desk, Nancy was
-close behind. Together they dragged the little
-American in with them, slumped together on
-the two beds.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” gasped Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Well!</em>” Nancy echoed her. “My good
-gosh, Cynthia, that was a close call!” The
-buttercup girl rose first, stood for a long moment
-at the window looking out. “Look here ...”
-she said at last, seemed to have trouble with her
-voice and spoke again, “Come here, you two.”
-It was the first they had heard her speak.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia who had by now slightly recovered
-her breath, felt that her knees would bear her
-again. But when she looked out she nearly lost
-what breath she had gained.</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy ... oh <em>Nancy!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>From base of rock to farthest horizon the sea
-rushed, tumbling, foaming, stealthily rising,
-rising. Ten minutes later and they would have
-been engulfed in it, even five minutes later and
-the quicksands, forerunner of the rush of waves,
-would have caught them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-“They say it rises sixteen feet every tide.”
-Nancy’s voice was shaking.</p>
-
-<p>The best thing that could have happened was
-the entrance of Mrs. Brewster. Having heard
-Madame’s story at the desk she immediately
-took cheerful charge of the situation. “We’ll
-have lunch here in the room,” she suggested.
-“I’ll order anything you like, and then all three
-of you had better lie down for an hour. This
-is Miss ...?”</p>
-
-<p>“Comstock, Betsey Comstock,” murmured
-the buttercup girl.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, endeavoring to follow Mrs. Brewster’s
-cheerful lead, asked if the hotel couldn’t
-serve some <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">escargots</i>, snails. She had heard they
-were good, and she said she felt in a mood to experiment.
-Actually not even snails for lunch
-seem very reckless after their recent experience.
-Betsey still seemed a little dazed but Nancy had
-several wildly fantastic suggestions and Mrs.
-Brewster rang for the waiter, ordered lunch to
-be brought to their room.</p>
-
-<p>They had scarcely sat down to eat when a
-knock sounded imperatively on the door. As
-Mrs. Brewster answered it Cynthia saw beyond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-her shoulder a man’s face, distraught and white.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Madame,” he cried. “Is Miss ... I
-was told ... that is. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Robert!” Betsey Comstock had rushed past
-Mrs. Brewster, and flung herself into the young
-man’s arms. Smiling, Mrs. Brewster discreetly
-closed the door, but murmurs and soft voices as
-though in reconciliation sounded beyond it.
-The girls were half way through lunch when
-Betsey, such a changed Betsey, all smiles and
-radiance, reappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Apologies, please,” she begged charmingly.
-“Robert had a luncheon engagement with a man
-he met here at the hotel, an architect. So I did
-not ask him in. But the rest, I’d like to explain.”</p>
-
-<p>To Cynthia it sounded very romantic, a young
-Basque, Yberri was the name, educated in America
-for his career of architecture and Betsey,
-now engaged to be married to him, with her own
-career as a costume designer. What could be
-nicer?</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you work for?” asked the practical
-Nancy. “Have you sold anything yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had my first act in Cochran’s Revue, the
-recent one, in London.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-“Oh! Moms and I saw that. Did you see
-the lovely ballet with the Chinese pagodas on
-their heads?”</p>
-
-<p>Betsey flushed a little and smiled. “That one
-was mine. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Cynthia, she’s good,” Nancy turned enthusiastically
-to the others. “The stuff was
-swell. ...”</p>
-
-<p>Betsey continued. They were to be married
-next week, in Paris, and return to the States, Dad
-and Robert and she. Betsey had letters of introduction
-to two or three big theatrical producers
-in New York and promise of further
-work with Cochran.</p>
-
-<p>“Grand!” applauded Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>But the trouble, it seemed, was this: Robert
-didn’t want his wife to continue her work after
-they were married.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear!” murmured Cynthia. Just suppose
-Chick didn’t want her to keep on with her
-covers. But then Chick was an artist also; he
-understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop your painting?” asked Nancy, puzzled
-to understand anyone in a family that didn’t
-design or illustrate or paint.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-“Oh no, he’s willing I should keep on with
-the designing, but not willing I should earn
-money with it.”</p>
-
-<p>Which explained their quarrel at the table
-last night, explained why Betsey had gone off
-today by herself on the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>“But now it’s all right, isn’t it?” asked Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>Betsey’s smile became somewhat less bright.
-“No ... o,” she admitted. “We made it up,
-the quarrel I mean. But nothing is decided,
-nothing definite.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll work out somehow,” consoled Cynthia.
-“Just see if it doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Betsey of the buttercup hair was still on her
-mind next morning. Nancy had volunteered to
-go on a hunt for the small boy of the hill, the
-one who had warned them of the tide. Cynthia
-had an idea that he would make a good model
-for her next magazine cover. She herself was
-sharing the privilege of the cabbage patch and
-the shade of the parapet with Mrs. Brewster,
-both painting busily, when Betsey’s voice
-sounded slightly above Cynthia’s right ear.</p>
-
-<p>“’S good,” murmured the voice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-Cynthia looked up. “Hi!” she said, around
-the paintbrush in her mouth, but her gaze wandered
-back to the sunny ochre of the sands and
-the blue-green of the cabbages. Difficult to depict
-sunlight against that false horizon; you
-need blue sky to make a landscape look sunny.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going up to the abbey,” whispered
-Betsey with an eye on Mrs. Brewster busily
-painting along the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop on the way back. And don’t fall into
-any oubliette.” But after she had gone Cynthia
-still worried about her. It was all mixed up
-with the hue of cabbages in sunlight. Why was
-Betsey alone, had they quarreled again? If that
-Robert Yberri had any sense he’d let her keep
-on with her work ... oh glory, <em>how</em> did you
-get the color of that shadow! Cynthia took a
-peek at Mrs. Brewster’s oil sketch, almost
-groaned at the comparison, but mixed a tiny
-drop of rose madder with her wash and cocked
-her head on one side. Perhaps that was it!</p>
-
-<p>An hour later she put the last touch on it,
-yawned, stretched and looked up. Mrs. Brewster
-had tactfully stolen away. Below the fortress
-wall the sands were slowly darkening into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-lavender as they had yesterday and the shadow
-of the wall no longer gave her shelter. Time
-to pack up and go home.</p>
-
-<p>But with her paints packed, her box strapped
-neatly, she perched on the wall to watch again
-that relentless tide. First the darkening of the
-sand. One could not say at just what instant the
-lavender began to gleam with moisture, at what
-precise second one noted water seeping into this
-hollow and that, at what tick of the watch the
-hollows joined, ran into each other, became
-larger, ran into a hundred thin, continuous
-streams across the wide expanse of sand.</p>
-
-<p>Someone was coming up the steps, a man with
-thick brown hair uncovered, with American
-plus fours.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Wanstead?” asked Betsey’s Robert.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia nodded, then glanced back at the
-sands below, and gasped. Where an instant before
-had been wet sand with a few thin streams
-across it a dozen rushing rivers now flowed, joining
-swiftly into a relentless, heaving sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Frightening, isn’t it?” said Betsey’s Robert.
-“We saw it rise like that two days ago. That’s
-why I’m here. I know how dangerous it is and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-I want to thank you for bringing Betsey back
-yesterday, you and Miss Brewster.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” murmured Cynthia. “It ... it
-wasn’t anything.” Then she laughed. “I mean,
-of course, it was a lot. Only she would have got
-back. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“She says she wouldn’t. Of course she could
-have stayed there eight or nine hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or you could have sent for her in a boat,”
-suggested the more practical Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, I’m tremendously grateful.” He
-sat down on the wall beside her. “Imposing,
-isn’t it?” He gestured toward the great abbey
-behind them. “One of the most imposing sites
-in all the world, and combined with what man
-has done to it, it’s stupendous. You’re an artist,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia admitted it. “And you too ...
-and Betsey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Betsey’s a smart kid.” And suddenly Cynthia
-thought, “Why, he’s awfully in love with
-her,” and liked him better, even if he were
-as stubborn as a mule.</p>
-
-<p>“Is she?” she asked aloud and ingenuously, so
-that Robert had to brag a little.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-“She’s worked for Cochran, you know; costumes,”
-with quiet pride in the ability of his
-fiancée.</p>
-
-<p>“Marvelous. She must be good. Though
-of course he takes lots of beginners, doesn’t he,
-for a short tryout?” She knew nothing of
-the kind, but spoke as one with inside information.</p>
-
-<p>Robert flushed and set his jaw. “Not at all,”
-he said stiffly. “Betsey’s good enough to keep on
-with him, show after show. And to get work
-in New York too, if she wishes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?” Cynthia’s eyebrows expressed her
-scepticism. “Only of course, once she’s married. ...
-I mean no girl can really manage
-two jobs, can she?”</p>
-
-<p>She almost giggled at the way he took it.
-“I ...” his mouth hung open a minute. But
-stubborn people were contrary, too, and Robert
-was no exception. “Well, after all, I expect to
-keep on with architecture after I’m married.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, but a man ...” Cynthia’s air was
-still one of polite incredulity. “Here’s Betsey
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>Buttercup hair windblown, cheeks very pink.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-“But my dear, you’ve been crying again,”
-thought Cynthia and wondered if it wouldn’t be
-tactful to withdraw immediately. Betsey herself
-answered that.</p>
-
-<p>“Finished your sketch, Cynthia? I’m so
-glad you waited. I’ve got a telegram to show
-you. ... I’m leaving tonight, if I can get
-across to the mainland.” She was carefully
-avoiding Robert’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Betsey had a little pink slip in her hand. Cynthia
-took it and read aloud, as well as she could,
-the garbled English of the French wire. “Miss
-Elizabeth Comstock. Hotel des Poissons ...
-and so on. Please be in London Monday the
-eleventh, my office. Stop. Wish to talk over
-two scenes in new revue. Stop. Charles Cochran.”</p>
-
-<p>So. Betsey had made her decision. What
-would Betsey’s Robert say to that. Cynthia
-looked up, was about to burst into congratulations
-when the man forestalled her.</p>
-
-<p>“Betsey! I’m so glad! But hadn’t we better
-hurry? I’ve got to pack and you know how slow
-I am. We’ll get your Dad to chaperon us as
-far as London and get married there instead of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-in Paris. This Cochran thing is too grand a
-chance to miss.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, viewing Betsey’s radiant astonishment,
-thought almost smugly, “What price
-Nancy’s little Miss Fix-it?”</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="v" id="v"></a>CHAPTER 5</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>The Basque Country</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">THE CUCKOO</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was Nancy and Mrs. Brewster who had
-suggested the Basque country. This was partly
-because Cynthia needed a new type of child’s
-head for her covers for <cite>Little One’s Magazine</cite>,
-and partly because they thought it would be a
-new and amusing adventure. It bore also the
-extra recommendation of economy. Mrs.
-Brewster had a friend in a tiny village, well off
-the beaten track of tourists. He was an artist,
-he would see that Cynthia found good accommodations,
-if not in his own house, then in a
-house nearby. Good, she would write to him,
-find out for sure if he was still living. For he
-was, she said, old, old.</p>
-
-<p>The Basque country seemed, to Cynthia, a
-very long way off from Paris, and from the
-Brewsters in Brittany, and from all the places
-she had grown to know. The scare and loneliness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-of Paris had been exorcised by her first
-success with the portrait of Nono. No place
-where you can earn a living can be, after you
-have proved yourself, really strange or unfriendly.
-But miles and miles away, in the
-southwestern corner of France it might be different.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat reluctantly, feeling a little forlorn
-and abandoned, Cynthia left the Brewsters in
-Britanny and returned to Paris. France is a
-great spider web of glittering rails of railways,
-but Paris, like a giant, not unfriendly, spider,
-sits in the heart, if not the exact center, and to
-go almost anywhere it is cheaper and easier to
-return to that city and start all over again.</p>
-
-<p>An hour on the train, and the feeling of forlornness
-began to disappear. Under Nancy’s
-stern tutelage Cynthia’s French had improved
-enormously. Now she knew how to order a
-meal, where and how to buy her lunch, if there
-was no dining car on the train; knew that she
-must give up her ticket at the exit barrier, but
-retain it until then, and half a hundred other
-small things that went to make life and travel
-smoother and more pleasant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-Going back to Paris was almost like going
-home again. Her own little room up near the
-roof in the Hotel St. Severin, or one very like it
-except that the wallpaper sprawled magenta
-fuschias on a green ground instead of huge coins
-of blue and gold and purple on a red ground. A
-dinner with Alice and the Murchisons, and a
-pressing invitation to bring over her bags from
-the hotel and stay with them as long as she
-could. Then she encountered, of all people,
-Stasia Carruthers, in front of the Café de la
-Paix, and was carried off to Rumplemeier’s for
-one of their scrumptious teas.</p>
-
-<p>News was exchanged. Stasia had been down
-to Switzerland, was back now for some fittings
-and to buy some new hats. Gaily Cynthia
-plunged into her own adventures, even to how
-she had sold three portraits of children in the
-little town of Le Conquet, once she had succeeded
-in breaking down the reserve of the villagers.
-For just a little while she found herself
-envying Stasia; her new, smart little Paris hat,
-her trick little silk suit, fresh from the scissors
-of Chanel. Looking up suddenly she surprised
-a strange expression in Stasia’s dark eyes. Could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-it be envy? Envy for the greater adventure of
-earning your way. Anyone could buy his way
-on a fat letter of credit. But to earn as you went,
-that was the greater risk, hence the greater adventure.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia chuckled to herself, tucked a stray
-curl beneath the brim of the hat she had bought
-for fifty francs in the Rue St. Roch, and ceased
-to envy Stasia.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later, having restocked her box of
-water colors on the Boulevard Montparnasse,
-that parnassus of all good little art students, she
-took train at some uncanny hour of the early
-morning for Bordeaux. There, late in the afternoon
-and from the shouting hotel runners at the
-station, each screaming the particular merits of
-his own hotel, she chose the Hotel de New York.
-It seemed homelike as to name at least.</p>
-
-<p>It proved dingy and down at heels, but with a
-charming view out over one of Bordeaux’ countless
-city squares. Cynthia yawned through her
-dinner, left an early call for breakfast, and was
-off again almost before daylight for Gotien, in
-the Basses-Pyrénées. Three times that day she
-changed trains, until, from sheer weariness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-Gotien began to seem like some Never-never
-land, always retreating as one advanced. And
-beyond Gotien&mdash;the address she was bound for
-was Mouleon-Soule.</p>
-
-<p>She had gone through the gate with her suitcase
-and sketch box and stood, almost shaking
-with weariness full in the afternoon sun that
-streamed across the dusty, cobblestoned plaza.
-No one could tell her how to get to Mouleon-Soule.
-But perhaps if she could find the station
-hotel, get a good dinner and a night’s sleep, she
-could grapple, tomorrow, with the problem.</p>
-
-<p>Then from beyond the ragged plane trees that
-lined the plaza came a little shabby, stoop-shouldered
-man in a Basque beret timidly displaying
-a wide, toothless smile. His English
-savored quaintly of both French and American.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it that this is the Mademoiselle Euanstead?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia squinted against the sun. She was
-too weary to think. Was someone to meet her
-here?</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m Miss Wanstead.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bon!</i> We had the letter from Madame
-Brewster.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-“Oh, then you are Monsieur Marge. How
-nice! I couldn’t discover a train for Mouleon.”</p>
-
-<p>“No train,” he shook his head. “Only the
-tramcars. But come and meet my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>Madame was a plump little dumpling in plain
-worn black, knitting on one of the benches beneath
-the trees. She beamed a silent welcome
-and carried her knitting with her, needles clicking
-without a break, into the tram which had
-been waiting, small town fashion, for Monsieur
-Marge to find his guest. For an hour, while
-Cynthia struggled to keep her eyes open, they
-rattled and banged through clouds of dust
-toward the tiny town of Mouleon, then out again
-into open country.</p>
-
-<p>Sunset had passed and it was nearly dark when
-they reached their final stop and Cynthia stumbled
-up the path behind her hosts. Twice, during
-the simple dinner, she found herself nodding.
-Then at some brief remark from
-Madame, Monsieur Marge suggested kindly:</p>
-
-<p>“My wife sees that you are very tired. I will
-light the candle and show you to your room.”
-Behind him a silly little cuckoo clock chirped
-nine times, as Cynthia stumbled up the bed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-Cynthia woke slowly, aware of an unusual
-sound. Something, someone was snoring.
-Surely&mdash;no, the sound couldn’t possibly be human.
-She lay still a moment, listening, then
-decided she really must investigate, and sat up
-against her pillows.</p>
-
-<p>She was in a high, story-book bed, such a bed
-as might have accommodated the princess of
-a Grimm fairy-tale. With four high posts,
-heavy dark draperies sweeping the floor, and,
-actually, three little steps of a ladder to lead up
-to it. She leaned over and peered down at them,
-then gave a delighted bounce. She had been too
-sleepy the night before to notice those steps, but
-she did remember her host’s very French warning
-that the night air was dangerous and that she
-must keep her windows tight closed. But after
-Madame and Monsieur had departed she had
-crossed to the casements and opened them wide.</p>
-
-<p>Now she pattered, barefooted, down the steps
-and leaned out over the low sill. The curious
-snores came from just below. Grunts, not
-snores! Oh, the darlings! Pigs, little ones, and
-all ten of them very vocal and very hungry and
-directly beneath her window.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-“Well, I never thought I’d live over a pigpen,”
-laughed Cynthia. “Isn’t that France for
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the long room a dusty old mirror
-in a tall gold frame reflected the polished parquet
-floor with its dark oak inlay, the huge heavy
-furniture, built to last many lifetimes, the two
-high windows, and the Basque Pyrénées, towering,
-blue, beyond the green of rolling fields. In
-the center of it all Cynthia herself, like some
-new kind of a blue-and-white striped, pyjamaed,
-fairy-tale princess; dark hair a tangle of curls,
-blue eyes wide and amused, bare pink toes pattering
-over the shining floor.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you certainly are an anach ... anachronism
-... or however you pronounce it
-when you mean you’re out of place!” she twinkled
-at the fairy in the mirror. “Wonder what
-time they breakfast here! Gosh, I’m hungry!”</p>
-
-<p>She tiptoed to the door. It swung silently on
-well-oiled hinges. No footsteps sounded below
-but there was a murmur of soft voices, the smell
-of toast&mdash;she sniffed&mdash;and chocolate. Then
-from somewhere in the house a bird call sounded.
-Nine times.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-A cuckoo clock. Nine cuckoos. My, but it
-was late! Hurry and get dressed, my dear. She
-scampered back to fling on her clothes. “Glory,
-what a day!”</p>
-
-<p>She must have slept twelve hours solid.
-Goodness, how heavenly the pines smelled, how
-wonderful this peace and quiet after the hot
-asphalt, the ceaseless noise, the rattle and scream
-of Paris.</p>
-
-<p>She ran a comb through her hair, gave a dab
-of powder to her nose and opened the door again.
-The wide shallow stairs led directly into the sun-drenched
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Madame, looking up, beamed good morning
-from her work over the stove. “Bon jour, bon
-jour,” and seemed very proud of even that much
-French. Her own language was Basque, of
-course.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Mam’selle Euanstead. You
-have slep’ well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gorgeously! Is this for me, Monsieur
-Marge?”</p>
-
-<p>A single place at the kitchen table was set
-with a bowl of hot cocoa on a red checked napkin.
-There was another napkin, a big spoon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-crisp hot bread fresh toasted in the oven, and a
-huge sweet orange.</p>
-
-<p>“An egg also?” asked Monsieur Marge from
-the doorstep where he sat with his pipe. “No?
-Then when you have finished a second cup of
-cocoa I shall show you my hive’ and my bee’ and
-my studio.”</p>
-
-<p>The latter proved to be a small, dingy, not
-too well-lighted building behind the rambling,
-whitewashed, red-roofed house. Here dusty
-canvases and dried tubes of paint, bits of old
-tapestry and ancient stretcher-frames were piled
-and presided over by two of those artist’s lay
-figures that resemble life-sized, wigless dolls.</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur Marge turned over the quaint old
-pictures to display them and Cynthia murmured
-appreciation, trying hard to find something to
-admire in each. But they were of such an ancient
-manner, of the “brown gravy” school,
-with shadows dead as brown paint and thick,
-lifeless color, that proper applause was difficult.</p>
-
-<p>“You know I paint in America too?” he asked
-her proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Mrs. Brewster told me. Where was
-that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-“I live in Philadelphia fifteen years. That
-was before the war. Then I live in South America
-with my son, long time. Many Basque live
-in South America. Then I come home here, to
-my old farm I buy when I young man ...
-many year ago. That was before you were
-born.” He chuckled at his own age. “Long
-ago I paint those panorama for the World Fair
-in Chicago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness! Did you? I’ve heard of them
-but never saw one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed. They be gre-e-a-t painting.”
-He spread his arms to indicate an immense canvas.
-“And figures modeled like life. I paint
-twelve of those. They go all round the country.
-Twelve Battle of Gettysburg, with men in uniform
-in the wheat field. Battle of Gettysburg,
-she was fought in a wheat field.” He chuckled
-again and sucked on his empty pipe. “We work
-all night, many night, on that to get her ready
-for the opening of the Fair. We were all French,
-the artists who work on her. But the day after
-the opening we close the doors again, take her
-down and paint again all night long.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, why?” cried Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-“Because,” he grinned in cheerful toothlessness.
-“We have paint <em>French</em> wheat field.
-Full of puppies. American wheat field have no
-puppies.” And he roared with laughter over
-the ancient jest.</p>
-
-<p>“Pup ...” for a moment Cynthia was puzzled.
-Then she too laughed. “Oh yes, <em>poppies!</em>”
-For all day yesterday she had admired the glorious
-silky red flowers blooming among the wheat
-beside the railway.</p>
-
-<p>“You want to paint this morning?” And,
-when Cynthia decided that she might as well
-start immediately, “Go down the road and then
-turn right, by the mill. That is near and pretty,
-and tomorrow you can go further. You have
-everything you want? Oil? Turpentine? Oh,
-you paint in the water color. That is pretty,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>So Cynthia settled down contentedly on the
-old Basque farm. It was two miles through the
-hot sunlight to the nearest village but she found
-plenty to paint within easy walking distance of
-the Marge house; nearby houses with their
-Spanish iron balconies overhung with roses and
-vines; the sturdy Basque farmers at work in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-fields, and their great cream colored oxen that
-paced so slowly along the road. The houses
-were white with steep roofs and wide eaves of
-deep gray and heavy shutters painted green, and
-the vines, sprayed with arsenic green made rich
-shadow patterns on the old walls. Then she
-found an old stone church with the three-peaked
-tower so characteristic of Basque village
-churches and beneath its porch an iron grill to
-discourage the pigs from entering the place of
-worship. She peeped through the stone doorways
-where the lintels bore blurred dates of the
-early seventeenth century, to peer into the dim,
-dark timbered kitchens on whose table-high
-hearthstones a tiny fire of twigs burned beneath
-the black kettle on a crane. With many of the
-women she had a pleasant nodding and smiling
-acquaintance, but she spoke no word of their
-language and found that her French was not
-understood. Besides, these people seemed unusually
-reserved. She could establish no contact
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia began to suspect that Monsieur
-Marge was in a similar position and was very
-lonely because of it. He had lived so long in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-America that he had lost touch with these, his
-own people, and when he had returned to them
-found that they considered him a foreigner. He
-was now neither Basque nor American.</p>
-
-<p>It was a valley of enchantment hidden between
-the high snow capped peaks of the Pyrénées.
-Each day was as clear-skied, as sunny and
-warm as the one before it and Cynthia woke each
-morning in her fairytale bed to look forward to
-another bright morning of painting, another
-sleepy afternoon of sketching. Still, she reminded
-herself after a week of this, she wasn’t
-getting any further with her job for the month.
-She had come down here to do a Basque cover for
-the <cite>Little Ones’ Magazine</cite>. Somewhere she
-must find herself a model.</p>
-
-<p>Her second week in the Basque country had
-started. Monday slipped by, Tuesday evening
-she sat, as usual on the doorstep after a late
-dinner. Monsieur Marge smoked placidly, Madame
-knitted in the half dark of the vine-hung
-verandah. There was a sound of cattle bells far
-down the smooth winding road and the mountains
-leaned, purple dark, against the sunset.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia and the old man had been comparing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-their memories of old songs. Astonishing how
-many of the old ones, the really old ones that belonged
-to mother’s, even to grandmother’s day,
-he remembered from his years in America.
-There was “Sweet Marie” and “Sweet Rosey
-O’Grady,” and “Sidewalks of New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, they sing that still,” cried Cynthia
-and whistled it with him. Madame hummed
-and smiled placidly while her fingers seemed to
-twinkle in time to the gay little tune.</p>
-
-<p>“A Bicycle Built for Two,” he suggested.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Cynthia knew that one. She had heard
-it in the movies. A moment of silence then,
-while they paused to think of more, and from
-the dark room behind them came a cheerful
-“Cuck ... oo. Cuckoo ...!”</p>
-
-<p>“What makes the bird in the clock cuckoo?”
-asked Cynthia when she had finished counting
-nine warbles.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, I show you.” Monsieur sprang to his
-feet and disappeared into the kitchen, to return
-a moment later with the clock beneath his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Madame gave a little chuckle and Monsieur
-explained. “We bought this on our wedding
-trip, in Switzerland, almost fifty years ago.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-He set it down on the step and returned for a
-lamp, which he lighted and placed beside the
-clock. Then, with delicate fingers he removed
-the screws in the back and exposed the carved
-wooden works for Cynthia to see. Unlike the
-usual cuckoo-clock this was all self-contained,
-without the long pendulum and the heavy iron
-weights that usually hang down below the little
-box. Its face and the surrounding frame was
-like old lace, interwoven with tiny intricate
-figures and small deer and cows and squirrels,
-the whole dark with age and good French furniture
-polish.</p>
-
-<p>“See,” explained the old man. “There are
-two little b’lows, here, and here,” and his finger
-indicated the tiny bellows of leather, like those
-used to blow a fire, “Now watch. I make him
-sing.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned the white hands to ten o’clock,
-and the cuckoo popped out, opened his little red
-mouth and warbled. One small bellow went
-<em>Cu ... ck</em>, and the other, immediately afterwards,
-went <em>ooooo. Cuck ... oo. Cuck ... oo!</em>
-Over and over. Ten times.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I never knew what made him do it,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-cried Cynthia. “Now let me try.” The bird
-popped out in such a quaintly serious fashion
-that one wanted to laugh every time he appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“I will keep him here and oil him in the
-morning,” decided Monsieur Marge. “Perhaps,
-in the night, he will attract other cuckoos,
-yes?” Madame chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“Does she understand English?” asked Cynthia,
-getting up to put the clock on the verandah
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“I un’ stand,” murmured Madame, in the
-darkness and her husband shook his head. “Only
-little. But she too lazy to speak anything but
-Basque. We are conservative peepul, we Basque.
-Per’aps it is as well. Otherwise we could not remain
-so entrench’ against the centuries of invaders,
-and of change.” And as the night
-deepened and the stars came out Cynthia heard
-old tales of Charlemagne and of his blond barbarians
-from the north who had been defeated
-in these very hills. Of how the Basque had
-dwelt here for hundreds, perhaps even thousands,
-of years, unconquered, unchanging.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be because our language is so difficul’,”
-explained the old man with pride. “We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-have a saying that the Devil once came here, to
-our country and stayed seven years. In that time
-he learn but two words. ... “By” for “Yes,”
-and “Es,” for “No.” At las’ disgusted by his
-waste of time, he flew away again, and soon forgot
-even those two. That is why the evil never
-comes here.”</p>
-
-<p>He sighed in the darkness and Cynthia felt a
-pang of pity. Even here, among his own people,
-he was homesick, denied a closer contact with
-them because of his long years in America.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Cynthia unfolded the
-camp stool, on which she sat to sketch, beneath
-the vines at the side of the farmhouse. A stone-paved
-walk ran back to the little ramshackle
-studio and M. Marge pottered about in the sunlight
-with his beehives. Cynthia opened her
-sketch book, squeezed color onto her palette and
-set to work.</p>
-
-<p>The cuckoo clock behind her ticked steadily
-with no relation to the hour of the day. Cynthia,
-rapidly sketching in the grape arbor and
-the green door in the white wall beyond it, wondered
-how to get the effect of spattered sunlight
-where the light dribbled down through leaves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-and discovered with a little thrill that part of the
-trick lay in breaking the color, patting it on in
-little spats of the brush with flecks of white
-paper showing between, part in letting the
-shadow actually dribble off her brush so that it
-was lightest farthest from the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>A small, cooing voice sounded behind her.
-Turning, she saw on the path, a little girl of six
-or maybe less, very Basque in her bright blouse
-and dark blue cotton skirt and bare brown feet
-thrust into rope soled espadrilles. Her eyes were
-soft and brown and her hair had been plaited
-into two pigtails, so tight that they seemed actually
-to drag her eyelids upwards at the corners.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you duck!” breathed Cynthia. “What
-fun if I could paint you!”</p>
-
-<p>The brown eyes danced with mischief, and
-the small mouth was puckered into a demure
-rosebud. What could have drawn her up the
-path from the road? Cynthia’s glance followed
-the child’s. The tick of the clock? But surely
-she had heard a clock before. Then Cynthia
-remembered that a moment before it had erratically
-struck eleven. Laughing, she gestured a
-query towards the clock. Was that it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-The small one nodded shyly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I’ll show it to you,” Cynthia offered.
-“Want to see the birdie, do you?” She put down
-book and brushes and led the way up the steps.
-Then she turned the hands gently as she had
-seen M. Marge do the night before. The bird
-answered with a startled “Cuck ... oo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” The brown eyes danced with delight,
-the small hands clapped <em>ecstatically</em>. The child
-came closer.</p>
-
-<p>“Now the next will be twelve,” Cynthia said,
-though of course that wouldn’t mean anything
-to this infant, and turned the hands again. This
-time the bird gave a most satisfactory performance.
-By the time his song was finished the
-child’s face was so close to the little flapping
-doors that Cynthia was afraid she would pop inside,
-out of sheer rapturous delight.</p>
-
-<p>“If I could get her, just so, with her head
-turned like that, and those quaint little pigtails,
-and the sunlight behind her&mdash;but I’m afraid
-I’m not clever enough,” mourned Cynthia.
-<a name="no" id="no"></a><ins title="Original has 'No'">“No</ins>;
-it’s impossible.” Then to the child, “Birdie’s
-all gone, my dear. No more today. I refuse to
-ruin M. Marge’s wedding present just because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-a Basque baby wants to hear the cuckoo clock.
-Sit down won’t you, and amuse me while I
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur Marge came up the walk from his
-beehives. He said something in Basque to the
-child, who answered stammeringly. “She
-should not be here,” he explained. “She lives
-down there, the Yturbe house. She is the only
-one left. The two sons died in the war, and this
-is the only grandchild. The old people worship
-her. I will take her home.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was sorry to see her go. “I wish I
-could paint her,” she thought again wistfully,
-but she knew M. Marge was not on good enough
-terms with his neighbors to make the unusual
-request. This was not Paris, where everyone
-knew about artists and where models seem to
-drop ripe from every lamp-post, blossom in
-every <em>zinc</em> with your breakfast cocoa.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon a hive of bees swarmed and
-M. Marge was so busy with them that the little
-cuckoo clock waited another night unoiled, upon
-the verandah. “I’ll do the job tomorrow and
-put it back in the morning,” he promised Madame.
-“It is quite safe there.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-But apparently it wasn’t so safe. At least
-when Cynthia came down to breakfast M.
-Marge reported the clock was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone? ... The cuckoo clock?” Cynthia
-heard herself repeating idiotically. “Well!
-but goodness! Who on earth would take it?”</p>
-
-<p>M. Marge shook his head and Madame, pouring
-the morning chocolate, murmured something
-in Basque.</p>
-
-<p>“She says she is sorry to lose our wedding
-present.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear, I feel terribly responsible,”
-mourned Cynthia. “If I only hadn’t asked you
-to bring it out and show me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is my own fault.” The old man became
-firmly cheerful. “Mais non, Mademoiselle, I
-am a careless old man. I should not have left
-the clock on the verandah. But the Basque are
-honest peepul. We do not steal and we are too
-far from the town for gypsies or tramps. I cannot
-figure it out.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia painted that morning with a
-wretched feeling of responsibility. “I could get
-them a new clock,” she told herself, “but it
-wouldn’t be the same.” She had chosen a spot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-down the main road, where two small stone,
-white-washed houses, overgrown with rambling
-roses, were as theatrically picturesque as a scene
-from the Follies. But the sketch was not very
-satisfactory. “It’s not my kind of thing,” she
-fretted. “It’s fun to do, but I’d rather paint
-people. Wonder where my little friend of yesterday
-is. She must live in one of those
-houses. ...”</p>
-
-<p>A team of oxen plodded slowly down the
-dusty road, brilliantly golden beneath the
-shadow of the blue dyed sheepskin that lay atop
-their heavy yoke, their eyes hidden behind a
-heavy fringe of bright colored net. Their driver
-walked ahead, his <em>makhila</em> over his shoulder
-rested on the yoke to guide the animals.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia listened to the soft jangle of bells
-till it died in the distance, then decided she was
-hungry; that was what must be wrong with her
-sketch, and packed up her materials. The
-Marges never ate lunch. Cynthia had discovered
-that a continental breakfast did not sustain
-one very well from eight <small>A.M.</small> till five in the
-afternoon, and after two days of semi-starvation
-had persuaded Madame to give her a cold meal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-at noon. Today there was sliced duckling and
-a pleasant salad set on the red checked table
-cloth beneath the sun spangled arbor.</p>
-
-<p>She finished her raspberries, with the thick
-pat of rich sour cream and the crust of warm
-bread and idly watched M. Marge talking to
-someone beyond the beehives. It looked like
-the old man in the Yturbe household, Thomasina’s
-grandfather. Cynthia wondered at that,
-for she knew the two men were not close
-friends. “I wish I could get that child to paint,”
-she thought idly, remembering the small eager
-face of the day before.</p>
-
-<p>M. Marge came slowly and alone up the stone
-flagged walk and sat down on the step beside
-Cynthia’s luncheon table.</p>
-
-<p>“There must be gypsies here,” he stated,
-“For Thomasina has been stolen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thomasina!” cried Cynthia, aghast. “How
-perfectly dreadful!” and felt her throat tighten.
-For a moment she could not speak for fear of
-bursting into tears. Little Thomasina! “When
-... how long?” she asked after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not stolen ... perhaps. ... But
-she has been gone since early this morning. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-is two now. She did not come home for her
-noon meal. Her grandfather came to ask if we
-had seen her. She has never gone from the dooryard
-before, not until yesterday when she came
-here. Her father thinks she may have strayed
-down the road and met someone; she was very
-unhappy over a little thrush they had, which
-died. She may have been looking for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia knew those little thrushes in their
-willow cages which hung outside so many
-French doorways.</p>
-
-<p>“They are afraid of the canal, and the mill-pond.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but surely ...” Cynthia shivered
-and was silent. No, nothing like that could happen
-to someone that one knew! Absently she
-pushed away the last of her raspberries. They
-were her favorite fruit but she had lost any appetite
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>“Painting this afternoon?” asked her host,
-trying to be cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Cynthia had thought she’d take the tram
-into the tiny village and sketch the interior of
-the old ruined fort, with the remains of the
-sally-port and guardhouse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-Monsieur Marge surveyed the sky, unflinchingly
-blue. “Too hot to go into town,” he commented.
-“Why not stay and we go hunt for
-mushrooms. Madame wishes some for the
-dinner tonight. I know deep woods, cool, where
-the sun does not strike.”</p>
-
-<p>City-bred Cynthia had never gathered mushrooms;
-it sounded like a new and amusing experience,
-and it would certainly be cooler than
-sketching on that hot and sunny hill beyond the
-town. Besides she didn’t really want to go far
-from the house, in case little Thomasina should
-be found ... no, <em>when</em> she should be found.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia went to her room for a wide shade
-hat and came downstairs again to find M. Marge
-ready for her. He bore a leather bound <em>makhila</em>,
-the Basque walking stick, with its graven brass
-binding and leather strap.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t we need a basket or something?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I show you.”</p>
-
-<p>The method, it seemed, was to string the
-fungus on a long thin peeled rod. They were
-big things, flabby and pale lavender, rather like
-unpleasantly raw liver, but Monsieur assured
-her they were delicious when cooked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-They had found the grove about two miles
-from the house up an old logging road now
-nearly overgrown with brush and deep damp
-moss. The pines rose huge and straight and the
-air was cool, but after an hour or more of scrabbling
-over dead logs and grubbing among fallen
-leaves for the mushrooms Cynthia was glad to
-sink wearily to a seat on a mossy stone.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ouff</em> but I’m weary. Goodness, how you
-can walk!” she exclaimed to the pleased old
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been hard worker in my time.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a funny noise about here,” Cynthia
-commented after a moment of silence. “Sounds
-rather like a cricket, yet not. ... I wonder. ...”
-She listened again and as the old man
-started to speak held up her hand for silence.
-There was no breeze. The pine boughs high
-overhead scarcely moved. There were certainly
-no crickets about, yet what was that noise?</p>
-
-<p>Then from a thicket just a few yards away
-came a familiar call. “Cuck ... oo! Cuck ...
-ooooo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your clock!” Cynthia almost shouted, and
-jumped to her feet. Monsieur Marge was right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-behind her as she parted the brush, looked downward.
-She chuckled and held back the branch
-that he might see.</p>
-
-<p>There, wrapped in an old shawl and fast
-asleep was Thomasina Yturbe. In her arms, its
-placid little face turned to the skies, ticked the
-imperturbable cuckoo clock.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ve found one kidnapper at least,”
-laughed Cynthia somewhat shakily. “Shall we
-wake her up?” Poor little thing, she had come
-a long way in this heat and the clock was quite
-a weight for those small arms.</p>
-
-<p>“It is too far to carry her home,” advised
-the old man.</p>
-
-<p>The child stirred at his voice, opened one
-sleepy eye. Her face was pink as a seashell
-from the rough warmth of the old shawl beneath
-her. For a moment she blinked like a
-little owl, then recognized them and beamed,
-murmuring something. Monsieur chuckled
-and repeated it for Cynthia’s benefit.</p>
-
-<p>“She said the bird wouldn’t sing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on honey. Time to go home.” Cynthia’s
-words might not have been understood,
-but her brightly matter of fact tone was sufficient.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-Thomasina scrambled to her feet. “Here,
-better let me take the clock. No? All right.
-But let me carry the shawl, anyway. I wonder
-why she brought the shawl?” she puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur had the suggestion that it had been
-one thrown over the thrush’s cage at night.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor kid,” murmured Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long journey back. Monsieur had
-the two long sticks of mushrooms. Cynthia,
-toward the last, was so far trusted as to be allowed
-the clock but Thomasina kept one hand in
-Cynthia’s. One was to understand that she was
-not weary, but she wanted closer contact with
-her little bird. The clock itself ticked steadily
-throughout the journey and twice it even cuckooed.</p>
-
-<p>It was late and the sun was low, throwing
-long shadows across the road as they came down
-it towards the Yturbe farm. Cynthia heard
-the soft cooing of doves, the grunt of the little
-pigs that lived beneath her window. Thomasina
-stumbled once or twice.</p>
-
-<p>They neared the doorway with its seventeenth
-century date on the lintel. Someone inside was
-sobbing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-“I won’t go with you.” Cynthia pushed the
-child forward and nodded that Monsieur Marge
-was to follow her. This might be&mdash;who could
-tell?&mdash;just the right moment for him to become
-a Basque again.</p>
-
-<p>Thomasina, the clock again in her arms,
-stumbled through the doorway. Cynthia heard
-nothing for a moment, then such a heartfelt cry
-of delight and joy as made her, for the second
-time that day, brush away the tears. Followed,
-in three voices, much talk in the rapid Basque
-tongue, and after a moment Grandmother
-Yturbe came out, to throw her arms about the
-petite Americaine.</p>
-
-<p>“She says,” twinkled Monsieur behind her,
-“that you are wonderful, that you found her
-little cabbage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Non&mdash;non. It was Monsieur,” Cynthia
-gestured towards her host. “It’s all right anyway,
-Thomasina would have come home for
-dinner,” protested the embarrassed Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>They got away at last, but there was more to
-come.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner Cynthia and Madame were sitting
-beneath the vines. Madame’s fingers flew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-steadily as her needles ate up the gray yarn, and
-moonlight bright as day dripped through the
-dark leaves of the arbor. Someone came slowly
-up the stone walk and spoke in Basque. It was
-Thomasina’s grandfather.</p>
-
-<p>“He has come to thank the American lady,”
-explained M. Marge after a moment’s conversation
-and added that he had told M. Yturbe that
-Thomasina was to keep the clock for herself.
-“After all, we have no grandchildren ourselves.”
-And a moment later he translated again, “He
-asks if the American lady will do him a portrait
-of his little one; he will of course be proud to
-pay for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d adore it,” cried Cynthia, “Oh, what a
-day!”</p>
-
-<p>The men moved off together, talking. Cynthia
-saw them cross the road slowly, two old
-men together.</p>
-
-<p>Madame, chuckling richly, made one of her
-rare remarks in English: “They not be back
-till late.” But she seemed more pleased than
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that means M. Marge has become
-all Basque at last,” thought Cynthia sleepily.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vi" id="vi"></a>CHAPTER 6</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Carcassonne</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">ROMANCE IN CARCASSONNE</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cynthia</span> had long ago learned how to say in
-French “Stand still. Turn a little to the right
-... to the left. Raise the chin please.” And
-finally and most urgent, again “stand still!”
-One needed these phrases constantly in the one
-language the model understood. She had had
-occasion to use them all, and more besides, this
-afternoon, for the ragged little urchin, posing
-against a background of old stone house and
-carved fourteenth century doorway, was an imp,
-though a delightful one, and had far too large a
-circle of friends vitally interested in what he
-was doing. Cynthia glanced up from her painting
-and for the twentieth time in ten minutes
-sighed in exasperation.</p>
-
-<p>Every small child’s head, including of course
-the model’s, had turned to watch the small group
-crossing the square. It was just the usual collection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-of American tourists; every child in the city
-must have seen their like hundreds of times,
-herded by the Carcassonne guide&mdash;an old <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mutilé</i>
-of the Great War. Cynthia herself had twice
-been round the wonderful old walls with him,
-so she knew quite well what the others were
-about to hear; of the ancient old towers, fifty
-of them, and the ramparts dating back and back
-to the tenth century, the foundations older even
-than that, for the Romans had held a fortress
-here; of the lovely little cathedral of Saint
-Nazaire, set like a jewel in the heart of the town;
-all these and more would the visiting Americans
-see. The small model and his friends must
-know by heart every syllable of the guide’s lecture,
-every stone of the city by now. So why
-need they turn, like a group of little monkeys,
-just because someone had crossed the square!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh <em>do</em> sit still!” she muttered crossly in
-French.</p>
-
-<p>The sketch was a good one, the best she had
-made this week. Now if she could get just the
-right hue of the shadow on his shoulder. ...</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes the shadow and the mixing
-of it from her color box held her absorbed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-Then an undue amount of chatter, even for a
-group of small French boys watching an American
-lady who made the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">peinture</i>, caused her to
-glance up again. One of the American tourists
-had let the group go on without her and had
-come across to stand behind Cynthia. She was
-a tall girl, pretty, though pale, with big black
-eyes and curly dark lashes and a smart American
-traveling suit of blue and white wash silk. In
-a low tone she was chatting with the children
-and with such amazing ease and flourish of idiom
-that Cynthia, with a pang of envy thought;
-Canadian ... or Louisiana bred. She’s
-grown up with the language. Oh darn that
-<a name="model" id="model"></a><ins title="Original has 'model!”'">model!</ins></p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” she turned to address the visitor.
-“I wish you’d tell this little devil that I
-won’t pay him the two francs I’d promised him
-unless he sits still for ten more minutes. Then
-he can go. My vocabulary simply won’t stand
-the strain of putting that forcefully.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl laughed. She had a nice laugh
-thought Cynthia still slightly resentful of the
-interruption, then followed a stream of fluent
-French addressed to the model.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-“Mind if I watch?” she asked quietly, and
-Cynthia, again intent on the color of that
-shadow, muttered an absent-minded permission.
-Thereafter for the space of ten minutes
-there was peace.</p>
-
-<p>Along the old walls of Carcassonne, swimming
-in the golden haze of afternoon light,
-pigeons circled and cooed. From a not too distant
-watch tower came the nasal drone of the
-guide, explaining how, just here, the Black
-Prince had stormed the city and burned the
-tower. The air smelt of hot dust, sleepiness, and
-France, and Cynthia’s busy brush flew from palette
-to sketch and back again.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, she leaned back on her stool, squinted
-at the sketch with her head on one side, then
-looked up and nodded. “It’s finished I guess.
-I don’t know what you said to him, but it worked
-like a charm. Sorry I was rude.”</p>
-
-<p>“You weren’t rude. That’s a lovely painting,
-and a good likeness too. You’re American
-aren’t you? My name is Serena Grayson, from
-New Orleans.” Only she said “O’lean” in the
-prettiest manner imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>“I guessed it,” grinned Cynthia. “Staying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-in the Lower Town? Wait till I pay off this
-infant and we’ll walk down together.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should wait for Aunt Anna,” the girl hesitated.
-“Look here, let me have a piece of paper
-from your sketch book, will you? I’ll just scribble
-a note to tell her that I’ve gone on. She is
-shopping in the Cité, and started me out with
-that guide.” Serena made a little face of dislike.
-“I thought watching you would be more
-fun, so I deserted, but she’ll be looking for me
-when the tour is finished.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia didn’t say anything but she thought it
-was strange that a girl, fully her own age, should
-have to report so carefully on where she was
-going. Serena dispatched the note by one of the
-small urchins who still lingered to watch the
-fascinating process of packing up the paint box.
-Almost any of them was eager to earn an extra
-franc. “Though I hope it gets delivered,” remarked
-Serena, watching the small boy dubiously
-as he scampered off, “perhaps I hadn’t
-better go, after all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come along. It’s just to the Lower Town.
-Nothing can hurt you and surely your Aunt
-won’t care. Why I go all over France alone.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-“Do you?” almost wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>The way out of the ancient walled city led
-down a steep little cobbled street where houses
-leaned their heads together, like gossips over tea
-cups, and between whose stones grasses grew and
-the shadows of the late afternoon flung a welcome
-coolness. Then out past the tourney court
-where once gallant knights in full armor had
-fought for their ladies’ favor, and past the
-Porte d’Aude, which looked out over the lower
-and newer ... and uglier town.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you staying?” asked Cynthia.
-“Glory, but it’s good to talk to an American
-again! It’s been weeks since I have been able
-to.” She hadn’t quite been aware how much
-she had missed Nancy; had wished that Chick
-were here until she met someone from home.</p>
-
-<p>“It is jolly to speak your own tongue again.
-We’re staying at the Chat d’Or, Aunt Anna and
-myself. We only got here today. And won’t
-you come and have dinner with us tonight? I’d
-love to have you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d love to come. I’ve been here nearly a
-week now, and it’s worth every minute you can
-spend here too. Look!” and Cynthia clutched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-the other’s arm to turn her attention behind
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Above the road they had descended, full in
-the glow of the late sun the city rose, golden
-pale against the southern sky; turrets and
-towers, battlements and barbicans, dreaming in
-the fairy-tale light exactly as they had dreamed
-for the past six hundred years and more.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovely!” murmured the other, starry eyed.
-For just a moment Cynthia thought there were
-tears in her eyes, as well as stars, but she could
-understand that. Cynthia herself often felt
-teary when something was too beautiful to believe.</p>
-
-<p>They took up this matter of dinner again.
-“It will be nice to eat somewhere else, neither
-of the two places I’ve tried are very good and
-I’m sick of the boiled veal and caramel
-<a name="custard" id="custard"></a><ins title="Original has 'custard, at'">custard
-at</ins> the Cheval Blanc,” said Cynthia. “And
-where the French ever got the idea they were a
-nation of born cooks! ... I know where your
-hotel is, suppose I run home now, my road goes
-this way and yours to the left, then I’ll get a bath
-and into a clean dress and be at your place ...
-when? About seven?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-There were three hotels in Carcassonne, one
-in the upper Cité, very grand and quaint, and
-with the grandest, quaintest prices too, and two
-in the lower town across the river Aude. Cynthia
-had taken a room at the station hotel, which
-was the first one she saw when she got off the
-train. It was at least cheap and convenient. Oh
-yes, and there was the Hotel de l’Universe,
-hardly worthy of the name of a hotel but displaying
-its grandiloquent appellation in gilt
-letters two feet high across its entire three room
-frontage. Cynthia had smiled at the name, for
-she had found in France that it was generally
-the smallest places that bore the biggest names.</p>
-
-<p>The Universe looked cozy and very clean, and
-she had even thought of moving her suitcase
-inside its hospitable blue door, but had been too
-busy to carry out the thought. Often however
-she dined there and tonight as she crossed the
-square and passed the little red checked gingham
-curtains and the green painted iron tables on the
-terrace, she saw the American boy having a beer
-on the terrace, just as she had seen him every
-evening since she came. She smiled and waved
-a hand at him, and he very nearly smiled in return.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-Cynthia had an impulse to try once more
-to talk to him, as she had tried on the train, but
-immediately his gaze had returned morosely to
-the long lane of dusty plane trees that lined the
-street. Oh well, she wasn’t going to waste her
-time picking up someone who evidently didn’t
-want to be picked up. But when you travel for
-miles and miles, and hours and hours in the
-same railway coach with a chap, and you know
-he’s a fellow countryman, and hard up probably,
-like you are ... just look at the clothes
-he wore; neat, but not any product of Park
-Avenue, and when there’s scarcely another
-American in the Lower Town, not at least until
-today, why it would seem sort of pleasant to
-meet once or twice and have a talk. Cynthia
-gave a little skip of pleasure and forgot the
-boy on the terrace. Nice to have a dinner
-date, nice to be going to talk good old United
-States for an evening. Adventure was exciting
-... afterwards, but it was pretty dull sometimes
-while it was happening.</p>
-
-<p>But when she returned along the narrow little
-street, past the <a name="Hotel" id="Hotel"></a><ins title="Original has 'hotel'">Hotel</ins> de l’Universe, with the last
-rays of the sun gilding the far off towers of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-upper city, the boy was still sitting on the terrace.
-Cynthia wondered.</p>
-
-<p>She had first seen him at Toulouse, standing
-on the platform with his suitcase in his hand
-and Cynthia, leaning out of the window to buy
-a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sandwich jambon</i> and a bottle of mineral
-water from the little pushcart, like a giant
-baby carriage, that peddles lunches on all the
-train platforms in France, noticed his very
-American shoes. She always played little games
-with herself to ward off boredom, and by
-this time considered herself quite skillful in telling
-even Norwegians from English, who looked
-so much like them.</p>
-
-<p>This boy had ascended further down on the
-corridor train. Cynthia was riding second class
-instead of third for it was a long trip from the
-Pyrenees to Carcassonne. Later in the afternoon
-she noticed him in the very next compartment,
-and still later passed him in the corridor, leaning
-listlessly against the long window. The last
-time before Carcassonne she noticed him on the
-platform of a tiny way-station where he stopped
-to buy a flower from a little girl and for the first
-time, he smiled. Cynthia was startled at that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-smile, so white and sudden and flashing. “Why,
-he doesn’t look cross and unhappy at all!” she
-thought. “Somebody ought to tell him to smile
-more often!”</p>
-
-<p>But she hadn’t seen him smile again in all the
-weeks since then.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It might have been a very happy evening, but
-for Miss Comstock, Serena’s Aunt Anna. She
-was a pretty, plump little Southerner, carefully
-rouged and powdered and manicured, exquisitely
-dressed, with manners as sleek as the fur
-of a well tended cat. But her manners didn’t
-somehow put you at your ease, they just made
-you feel crude and ill bred by contrast. Miss
-Comstock’s slow drawl, even more pronouncedly
-of the south than Serena’s, was as purring as a
-kitten’s song of content, and she appeared to be
-intensely interested in all her guest had been
-and done and seen.</p>
-
-<p>The hotel was much more pretentious than
-Cynthia’s humble Cheval Blanc, with corridors
-choked with palm trees and hanging baskets;
-with delicious food; and with a great yellow
-cat on the front mat attesting to the excellence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-of the cuisine. Cynthia thought the cat’s smug
-countenance bore a fantastic resemblance to
-Serena’s Aunt Anna, but she wouldn’t have
-trusted him alone with a canary.</p>
-
-<p>“How wonderful to be an artist, wonderful
-to do as you like with your life, no cares, no responsibilities,
-no ties!” gushed Aunt Anna over
-their coffee on the terrace.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia rudely thought “Oh yeah,” and remembered
-the cover she must send back to the
-States every month and all the other work she
-had accomplished in Europe, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“You know I always had a fancy to be an
-artist. But once I had an artist in love with me,”
-and she sighed romantically.</p>
-
-<p>“Lots of people in love with you, Auntie,”
-murmured Serena, in so dutiful a tone that Cynthia
-wondered how many hundred times she had
-made the same remark.</p>
-
-<p>Someone was playing a violin in the café
-across the street, the lights and the sound of
-voices streamed out across the little square beyond
-the hotel terrace and a big yellow moon
-swam up behind the plane trees. The streets
-were full of people coming and going, for tonight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-was Saturday when all the town felt free
-to play.</p>
-
-<p>Serena had gone very silent since her last remark
-and Cynthia, in spite of the beauty of the
-hour, was beginning to feel sleepy and finding
-it difficult to stifle her yawns as she watched the
-shadow silhouettes of people passing, dark
-against the café lights. It was like a scene in a
-play. Some of the characters she already recognized
-from her week in the town. There was
-good old Madame Brassard, who kept the pastry
-shop down by the river, leaning plumply on the
-arm of her thin, gray little husband, and both
-in spotless black as befitted a gala Saturday night.
-And there was the guide from the Carcassonne
-walls, limping on his cane, his face as blankly
-sweet as a chromo portrait. It had been, Cynthia
-knew, almost entirely shot away at Amiens,
-and repaired again by a surgeon who had almost,
-but not quite repeated the charm of the original.
-And there was the boy from the other terrace,
-slouching slowly, hands in pockets, shoulders
-hunched disconsolately. Some day, perhaps tomorrow
-morning, she would certainly cross the
-street and start talking to him. ...</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-Aunt Anna gave a faint exclamation and
-leaned forward, blinking against the lights,
-“Oh, isn’t that ... but no, of course not, how
-foolish of me!” She gave a nervous little laugh.
-“I ... excuse me, I thought I recognized someone
-from home,” she said, and began to tell Cynthia
-all about the nice man in the shop in the Upper
-Town who was keeping a lovely silk shawl
-till she <a name="came" id="came"></a><ins title="Original has come">came</ins> in to look at it again in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>Serena, sitting with her back to the light, was
-still silent. Cynthia suddenly jumped to her
-feet and exclaimed. “Come on, let’s go for a
-walk up to the walls. It’s a wonderful night
-to see them, and it’s perfectly safe, there will be
-lots of people along the road.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Comstock glanced swiftly down the
-street, then reached out to pat her hand. “You
-Yankee girls are so energetic,” she drawled.
-“I’m sure Serena would much prefer to sit right
-here and listen to the beautiful music.”</p>
-
-<p>But it seemed Serena wouldn’t. She, too, was
-on her feet. “We’ll just go a little way, Aunt
-Anna,” she said, “and we won’t be gone long.
-Come on, Yankee gal,” and she linked her arm
-through Cynthia’s.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-She laughed and talked animatedly for the
-next block or two but when they came out of
-the new town and faced the walls of the ancient
-fortress, all green and dark gold under the moon,
-with crickets shrilling from the banks of the
-little stream and the lights of the houses behind
-them, she was silent again.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s not go any farther, here’s a splendid
-place to sit,” suggested Cynthia, who thought
-the other might be rather tired, and had found
-a seat on the handrail of the little stone bridge.
-One could hear far off music and voices sounding
-faintly, and contrary to expectations the road
-was almost deserted. Perhaps the old town had
-little romance or mystery for those who had
-always lived within sight of its walls. But she
-must make conversation; this wasn’t being a
-good guest.</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you go after Carcassonne?” she
-asked, politely, then saw, with astonishment
-that Serena was crying!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t do that!” cried Cynthia distressed.
-“Look here, you aren’t happy. Can’t you tell
-me about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh I hate France, I hate Europe, I hate this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-town worst of all!” and Serena suddenly flopped
-down beside Cynthia and dropped her head on
-a much surprised Yankee shoulder. “I want to
-go ho ... ome! I want ... to ... go
-... ho ... ome!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it just homesickness?” asked Cynthia
-gently. She certainly knew a lot about that
-feeling since she came abroad, but Serena shook
-her head, then started to wipe her eyes. “No
-...” forlornly. “It’s ... it’s Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack? Oh ... ah ... yes,” murmured Cynthia
-vaguely. “Come, sit up and tell me all about
-it,” and she patted the other’s back, reassuringly.
-She had heard that it was sometimes easier to tell
-your troubles to a stranger. Serena may have
-heard that too, for she said:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Aunt Anna, really. She’s mother’s oldest
-sister. Oh I know she doesn’t look it, but
-she’s always had money and can afford to do
-things to keep young and buy clothes to make
-herself pretty and I guess that’s about all she
-cares about anyway. I guess long ago she was
-in love with Jack’s father, too, though that’s
-only a sort of guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-“Jack Hemstead. He’s a boy from home,”
-as though that were sufficient explanation. “And
-when Jack ... Jack said he ca ... cared for me
-...” she swallowed, waited a minute and went
-on, “Aunt Anna made fun of him, and said it was
-all foolishness at our age, though I’m eighteen
-... and Jack’s nearly twenty one, and finally
-she said she’d take me abroad for the summer
-and then maybe I’d see Jack wasn’t so marvelous.
-But he is, oh he’s the most marvelous person.”</p>
-
-<p>She’d start to cry again if Cynthia wasn’t
-careful. “But haven’t you written him?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>Serena nodded vigorously. “Yes, but we had
-a quarrel just before I left. He said if I really
-cared I’d marry him then, even if we weren’t
-of age. But I guess maybe I wanted the trip and
-I thought I could have Jack too, and I haven’t
-heard a word, not one single word since I left
-home. I’ve written and written begging him to
-write me and I’m so ashamed!”</p>
-
-<p>“Something’s wrong somewhere,” thought
-Cynthia, wondering what on earth she could do
-about it. “Tell me more about him? And how
-long have you been over?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-“Only four weeks and Auntie’s really been
-awfully kind, in her own way. She’s bought
-me things and things, and we shopped for
-clothes till I never want to see another Paris
-label again. I hated Paris. Then Aunt decided
-to come to Carcassonne. We are sailing from
-the south of France. She said she’d once read a
-poem about it. But you’re the first young person
-I’ve talked to since we left home. On the
-boat she was awfully sick and wanted to be read
-to all the time, so I just stayed in the cabin with
-her, I was so grateful for the trip. But I didn’t
-know Jack wasn’t going to forgive me,” she
-wailed.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, looking off towards the walls
-through the sweet scented moonlight, felt very
-sorry for this little Southerner. But it all seemed
-too remote, too far away for her to do anything
-to help. With Jack in America she couldn’t
-do anything more than lend a listening ear to
-Serena and try to cheer her up as much as possible
-in the few days they’d be staying here.</p>
-
-<p>Serena seemed quite content with that, quite
-willing, in the days that followed just to trail
-along with a book or a bit of sewing and sit, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-too far off, while Cynthia sketched along the
-walls of the old city. She proved indeed extremely
-useful. Her fluent French was a prop
-for Cynthia’s faltering accents and she had a delightful
-knack with persuading the children to
-pose. Cynthia made three excellent portraits,
-any one of which would do for her monthly
-cover, then felt free to give her time to sketching
-the town itself.</p>
-
-<p>But wherever they went Aunt Anna either
-hovered in the background or knew exactly
-where they would be from half hour to half
-hour. It was like having a secret service man
-always in the offing. Serena didn’t mind but
-Cynthia said it gave her the creeps, always to
-have Miss Comstock bobbing up like a cuckoo
-out of a clock, and put up with it only for the
-sake of the other girl.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile she heard more about this Jack
-person. She heard about the color of his eyes
-and of his hair, about his cleverness and about
-his family and about his job, which was, at the
-moment, junior clerk, very junior indeed, in a
-big real estate office in New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s got the nicest smile ... you’d think he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-was cross, really, until he smiles and then it sort
-of ... flashes across his face,” expatiated Serena.
-They had been sitting for the past hour in the
-tourney court, trying to reconstruct the ancient
-Court of Beauty with its lists; the ground enclosed
-for the contest, its seats for the great
-ladies from which the Queen of Beauty was
-chosen. “I wonder if they called her ‘Miss
-Carcassonne,’ or ‘Miss France,’” murmured
-Cynthia to herself.</p>
-
-<p>All was quiet here. One could follow, on
-the ancient walls, the reconstruction of centuries,
-the lower bricks of Roman tile, small
-and flat, the higher coarser stone of the tenth
-century, then above that, still more careful work
-of later years and finally the deliberately antiqued
-and weathered rebuilding of the great
-Viollet-le-Duc, without whose interest and
-wealth this greatest relic of the middle ages
-would not exist today. Birds wheeled in the sunlight
-above them, but the shadow of the wall was
-cool and the small herd of tourists, whose
-voices sounded from the tower above them,
-scarcely left a ripple on the peace of the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-“I love this place,” murmured Cynthia
-splashing happily in rich blue shadow color, but
-she frowned a little. Something Serena had said
-a moment back had started her memory working.
-She didn’t really want it to work, she
-wanted to stay here and finish her sketch. “That
-was it though ... ‘it sort of flashes across his
-face!’”</p>
-
-<p>“This place gives me the shivers,” Serena remarked
-crossly. “I guess it’s because it’s so full
-of romance and I ... I feel so empty of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Cynthia jumped off the wall and
-began to gather up her painting materials. She
-had remembered what she wanted to remember,
-it was just a chance, the wildest chance possible,
-but she had to know for sure. “I’m going back
-to the hotel,” she said. “You stay here, Serena
-... but I’d like it if you could come along in a
-couple of hours and have tea with me. French
-tea is terrible of course but we can order citron
-pressé. I may have something to show you too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just me, without Auntie?” asked Serena.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia nodded. “Try, for Pete’s sake to get
-her into a shop for an hour or two, or tell her
-it’s time she took the tour around the walls.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-She might enjoy the guide, he was very handsome
-once,” she added maliciously, “but do come
-without her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try. I’ve got to stay here and wait for
-her anyway. She said she’d be along about two
-o’clock and it’s only half past one.” And her
-puzzled dark gaze followed Cynthia down the
-steep steps to the court, across it, through the
-high pointed arch of the gate, and long afterwards
-as she appeared again on the dusty stretch
-of sunlit road to the lower town.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia had suddenly remembered that boy
-at the Hotel de l’Universe, and how flashing his
-smile had been, that one time she had seen it. But
-he hadn’t even appeared on the terrace for the
-past two days, perhaps he had left Carcassonne
-entirely, and almost certainly he had no least connection
-with Serena’s Jack, but he had looked so
-forlorn and somehow he had looked Southern
-too. Cynthia’s ardent desire to be again a Little
-Miss Fixit almost persuaded her she could tell
-a Yankee from a Louisianian even before he had
-said a single word.</p>
-
-<p>She’d ask at the hotel for the young American
-with the brown eyes, and if he were still registered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-there she’d leave a note inviting him to
-join her for tea this afternoon ... anyway it
-might be rather fun, even if nothing came of it.</p>
-
-<p>Serena was on time, and Cynthia suggested
-that the Hotel de l’Universe looked more amusing
-than the terrace of her own hotel.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’d like to try a grenadine, it’s such a
-pretty color,” she announced, once settled at
-the green painted table. So they each had one
-of the sickly pink syrups so beloved of the French
-and sat sipping contentedly while they gazed out
-across the low hedge of dusty box that separated
-the terrace from the street. Then Cynthia,
-who was watching her companion, saw her grab
-the edge of the table and go almost white.</p>
-
-<p>“I was right ... I was right!” thought Cynthia.
-“Oh Golly!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Cynthia!</em>” gasped the other wildly. “Who
-... who’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>A tall figure was lounging down the street,
-coming swiftly towards them. Then he had
-got Cynthia’s little note, and had come almost as
-though he had guessed what it was about.</p>
-
-<p>The next happened so suddenly that Cynthia
-could scarcely untangle it all. A very flushed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-happily laughing Serena, different from any
-Serena Cynthia had yet seen, standing in the
-entrance to the street, then tearing wildly towards
-the approaching boy. A meeting of the
-two, no doubt about its being the right Jack ...
-and the amused delighted proprietor beaming in
-the doorway. After all this was Carcassonne,
-and it was France, where else in the world
-would one expect to find romance, if not here?</p>
-
-<p>“But how did you guess, how did you guess?”
-asked Serena, as, introductions properly over
-they sat again at the little green table. Jack
-had placed his straw hat and the Tauchniz book
-he had been carrying on the next table, had
-ordered a beer, but had made no move to consume
-it for his attention was too occupied with Serena.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we traveled together, once upon a
-time,” began Cynthia but immediately saw that
-neither of her listeners was giving her the slightest
-attention. Wisest to slip away and stand
-guard outside. “I’ll give you a half hour together,
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mes enfants</i>,” she said firmly, “but if I
-give an alarm, you’ve got to scoot! Better get
-busy and make your plans. May I borrow this?”
-and picking up the little Tauchnitz paper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-covered volume, she nodded, and went out
-through the dusty hedge.</p>
-
-<p>All this was making her feel pretty blue, herself.
-Chick, also, might have been here today,
-with a bit of luck. But Chick was a very satisfying
-person; he, at least wrote letters, and fat ones
-too. She had had one this morning and while she
-waited would be a good time to read it again, for
-the third time.</p>
-
-<p>That finished she found a seat beneath the
-plane trees and turned to the book she had picked
-up, a volume of Conrad’s sea stories with <em>Jack
-Hemstead</em> sprawled in large, plain hand across
-the cover. She gave the couple thirty-five minutes,
-then fearing that Miss Comstock, who of
-course knew where Serena had gone for the
-afternoon, might happen along, Cynthia got up
-and briskly returned to the terrace.</p>
-
-<p>Serena’s head was close to Jack’s tumbled
-locks, and Cynthia was amused to note that their
-warming drinks stood in the glasses just at the
-height they had been when she left them.</p>
-
-<p>“Well children, what’s the plans?” she asked
-pulling out her chair again.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re going to be married.” Serena’s eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-were like stars. “Jack was twenty one last
-month and he came over on a cattle boat, wasn’t
-that brave of him? He got a big commission,
-big for a beginner that is, for selling a business
-plot in the city, so he decided to trail us over here
-and see what was wrong. He found out our
-address from the hotel in Paris. I’ve got a first
-class ticket home, and Jack has a third class, he
-thinks we can trade them in for two second class.
-My ticket’s my own because Mother paid for
-that, not Aunt Anna.”</p>
-
-<p>“The American consul at Marseilles can
-marry us,” Jack told Cynthia. “I can’t tell you
-how grateful we are for arranging this. Serena
-hasn’t been getting any of my letters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your aunt?” Cynthia’s eyebrows were questioning
-and Serena nodded and shrugged. “It’s
-all right now, but we can’t give her another
-chance to mess things up for us. Jack thinks we
-had better get away on the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rapide</i> tonight. But
-I don’t see how I can get away before tomorrow,
-not without an awful fuss.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got to,” said Jack firmly, already
-playing the heavy husband. “This is one time
-when you’ll have to put on some Yankee pep.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-Your aunt knows I’m here, or at least that I was
-here for over a week.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What!</em>” gasped Serena, and even Cynthia
-was astonished.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she saw me one evening when I was
-strolling about the streets here, that was, let’s
-see, about five days ago.”</p>
-
-<p>The night Serena talked to me on the bridge,
-thought Cynthia ... that’s so, he passed the café
-where the lights were so bright.</p>
-
-<p>“So a couple of days later she hunted me up
-at the hotel. She said she had no intention of my
-seeing her niece and of making her unhappy all
-over again, and that Serena’s not writing was
-proof enough that she was through caring for
-me. That sort of set me thinking, for how could
-she be sure that Serena wasn’t really writing to
-me unless she herself was doing something about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I did write Jack, two letters every
-week,” protested the indignant Serena.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know, honey child, but your <a name="aunt" id="aunt"></a><ins title="Original has 'Aunt'">aunt</ins> was
-very careful that they didn’t get mailed, or that
-you didn’t get mine either. So I let her come
-down to the station to see me off. She was most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-gracious, having won her point. She saw me
-buy a ticket for Marseilles and get on the express,
-but she didn’t know that it stops again
-about a half hour beyond here, and that I got
-off there and returned by the next train. I’ve
-been very careful ever since to keep out of sight
-as much as possible, but I’d seen you two together
-so when I got Miss Wanstead’s note
-I suspected that she had arranged something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh Jack, and I never guessed you were in
-Carcassonne all this time.”</p>
-
-<p>For a long moment then they forgot all about
-Cynthia till in protest that young lady remarked.
-“Hadn’t we better get on with those
-plans of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>So for fifteen more minutes plans were made,
-rejected, and reaccepted, till Cynthia looking
-up suddenly exclaimed, “And here comes your
-aunt!”</p>
-
-<p>Tripping gaily down the street on the arm of
-the little blesse, parasol unfurled, eyes upcast
-in characteristic admiring pose came Miss Comstock.</p>
-
-<p>“Run, Jack!” gasped Serena. “She mustn’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-see you ...” and there was a scramble for the
-doorway, a hasty return for the straw hat, and
-at the last minute Cynthia reached out to switch
-the untasted beer to another table, as though a
-departing customer had left it there. But it
-was a close shave.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Anna was full of the sights she had seen,
-the new bargains she had procured, of the delightful
-little soldier who had showed her
-around, but her eyes were keen and Cynthia
-knew she did not miss that beer at the next table.
-Then Cynthia did a clumsy thing, she dropped
-the volume of Conrad. For just a moment it
-lay, face upward on the floor, the sprawling
-signature showing plainly across its cover. Cynthia
-bent to grab it, hastily flapped it on top
-her purse, she rose immediately to go, she couldn’t
-risk the fact that Miss Comstock might have
-glimpsed that name.</p>
-
-<p>The next two hours were merely a matter of
-waiting. Serena and her aunt usually dined at
-eight, and Cynthia, cautiously strolling along
-the street which commanded Serena’s bedroom
-window watched for the agreed signal, a handkerchief;
-pasted against the pane as though put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-there for drying. She waited five minutes more,
-then slipped upstairs, repeating to herself the
-story she would tell if any one tried to stop her.
-But no one did.</p>
-
-<p>Serena’s room-key hung, in trusting European
-fashion on a high nail beside her door. Cynthia
-took it down, glanced once again along the
-corridor, thought she heard footsteps and hastily
-turned the key. Inside.</p>
-
-<p>Serena’s bag, already packed, had been slid
-beneath her bed. Her traveling coat and hat,
-her street shoes were with it. Cynthia grabbed
-the lot and opened the door again. Then came
-a moment of fright, for the maid, Agnés, stood
-just outside in the corridor. But she was
-wreathed in smiles, already primed by Serena
-for the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">enlévement</i>, the elopement, and her
-ancient romantic heart was in the job. She
-piloted Cynthia along the corridor and down
-the servant’s stairway, then out through an alley
-behind the garage, put her finger to her lips as
-a vow of silence, then blew a kiss into the air as
-a gesture of her best wishes for the bride and
-groom. No word between them had been passed
-during the whole four minutes of action. Cynthia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-giggling, was on her way. This was certainly
-something to write home about.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder worked like a charm, a charm
-of ancient Carcassonne, where, even in the tenth
-century young ladies must have fled with their
-heart’s desire. At nine o’clock the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rapide</i> for
-Marseilles stopped for five minutes at the tiny
-station. At nine minutes to nine Jack with his
-suitcase, Cynthia with Serena’s belongings and
-a bunch of flowers for the bride-to-be, watched
-anxiously down the street. Then against the
-sunset appeared Serena, breathless, with dusty
-evening slippers, still in her dinner gown, but
-happy and incoherent with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh you treasures, both of you!” she cried.
-“Have we tickets? ... Goodness, there’s the train
-already ... She thinks I’m out buying some aspirin
-tablets ... I didn’t have time to leave a
-note on the pincushion ... My lamb, will you tell
-her I’ve gone? ...” and rattled on and on while
-they climbed into the compartment. Cynthia
-kept one anxious eye on the door. She didn’t
-know what would be the proper procedure
-should Aunt Anna appear at the station with the
-fire of suspicion in her eye. Cynthia had a wild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-momentary vision of herself grabbing the woman
-around her ample waist and hanging on
-until the train could have pulled out.</p>
-
-<p>But no one appeared. The conductor blew
-his little toy trumpet, shouted the usual warning,
-and at the last minute Cynthia still clasping the
-bridal bouquet had to run beside the carriage to
-fling it through the window. She had a final
-glimpse of Serena’s starry eyes, of Jack’s white
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>Then silence. Nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia came out of the station door to the
-deserted cobble street and twilight. “I wish
-it had happened to me,” she thought a little
-mournfully. “But maybe it will, soon,” and
-had no idea how very soon that would be. The
-moon hung like a burnished platter above the
-romantic old town, too beautiful, too unreal to
-be true.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” thought Cynthia, going practical all
-of a sudden, “I guess somebody’s got to break the
-news to Auntie!” And started down the street
-toward the hotel of Miss Comstock.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vii" id="vii"></a>CHAPTER 7</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Siena</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">THE RACING SNAIL</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Then</span> at Marseilles, where Cynthia had
-planned to take train for Paris, for Cherbourg
-and a ship for home, she caught up with her
-mail. One specially fat and formidable envelope,
-with many seals, for which she had to sign
-papers and more papers, proved to contain, of
-all things, the long deferred check for the capture
-of Goncourt, the jewel thief.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, in the office of Cook and Sons, stood
-surveying the paper with bright round eyes. So
-many francs&mdash;one thought in francs now, not in
-dollars&mdash;would purchase&mdash;what? Presents for
-home? Her luggage was already heavy with
-’em. More clothes in Paris? She had, really,
-all she needed. A trip to some place farther on?
-Cynthia nibbled a pink finger tip and thought
-about that. Maybe never again, after this once,
-would she get to Europe. Maybe she’d be some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-day, a long time off, one of those little old ladies
-with shawls who sit in corners, well out of the
-draft, and talk with wistful reminiscence of
-“when I was in France&mdash;when I was in Italy.”
-Meaning of course the <em>one</em> time they were there.
-Perhaps that wouldn’t be true, perhaps she’d
-come again in a year or two. But just the same
-she owed it to herself to get all she could out
-of this adventure while she was right here
-on the spot. The thief had proved to be just so
-many extra francs, dropped by the gods directly
-into her lap. Shouldn’t she, therefore, take it
-for a sign, cable home that she was waiting for a
-later boat, and go on with the adventure?</p>
-
-<p>“When I was in Italy,” the rhythm returned.
-Cynthia whirled to face the surprised young
-man behind the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“If you had a windfall of ... so many hundred
-or thousand francs,” she asked him, “where
-would you go&mdash;from here?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man grinned cheerfully and replied
-in meticulous English. “Madmoiselle, I
-should go to Italy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bon!” Cynthia was enchanted that his
-advice should agree with her mental toss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-of a coin. “And where in Italy, please?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man grinned more widely and
-shuffled the papers on his counter. Here then
-was a customer for the tickets he had to sell.
-“Madmoiselle, I should go to the palio in Siena.
-It is the month for that. Madmoiselle has heard
-of the palio? Non? Oh, but then&mdash;&mdash;,” and
-he proceeded to expound.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty minutes later Cynthia, walking on
-air, emerged from Cook and Sons. In her purse
-reposed a ticket for Italy. And the palio in
-Siena would be one of those things she could
-talk of, once she got to the age of relating,
-“When I was in Italy.”</p>
-
-<p>Five days later Cynthia, in Siena, pressed
-her small tip tilted nose flat against the glass of
-the dusty window, peering in. She had come
-again, for the third time today to see the frame.
-The lovely leather frame was right in the foreground
-propped against the glass, just as it had
-been yesterday and probably for weeks and
-weeks before that. Beside it lay other leather
-things; cigarette cases, glove boxes and portfolios,
-all beautiful. But it was the frame that
-interested Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-It was the one frame in all Siena, which, after
-all is a city of leather frames, for the photograph
-of Chick which she had received in the mail in
-Marseilles. And nothing short of perfection was
-worthy of holding that picture. In it the face
-of Chick squarely fronted the beholder, the hair
-of Chick was fluffy and rumpled, as it had been
-when the Academy bunch had given him his
-nickname, the eyes looked straight and truly into
-the eyes of Cynthia, and the quirky mouth
-seemed just about to say: “Hi, Cynthia ...
-Darling!”</p>
-
-<p>The frame was wine colored, the leather as
-soft as old satin, and all around its edge was a
-delicate gold border of conventional ivy leaves,
-with, next to it, a band of oak leaves and tiny
-acorns, and inside, next to the glass a tiny frail
-beading. All very simple but it was the color
-and the workmanship that held Cynthia’s eye.</p>
-
-<p>She sighed. She knew to a lira just exactly
-what was in her purse, knew that she mustn’t
-afford the frame, no matter how low the price
-might be. Nevertheless she pushed open the
-paint scarred old door in the stone housefront
-and entered the little shop.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-It was, as she had expected, dim and dusty
-within. The proprietor, an aged little Italian
-with the down-drooping nose of one who works
-in delicate detail, was busy with another customer.
-She also, was an American, small and
-dainty, expensively clad, older than she appeared.
-Cynthia smiled to herself. After two
-months in Europe she knew the type very well.</p>
-
-<p>“Too much, too much!” she was saying, in
-Italian over and over again, and gestured
-prettily with a gloved hand toward a small pile
-of cigarette cases lying on the counter. Unexpectedly
-then she turned to Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>“You look as though you could speak Italian,
-my dear. Do ask him if he will give me a better
-price for the whole dozen. I want them for
-bridge prizes, next winter.”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was willing to try, and struggled
-with her scant store of the language. The proprietor
-shrugged his shoulders and spread expressive
-Italian fingers wide. “Yes, yes, eight,
-ten lira less perhaps,” he smiled. And Cynthia
-knew that all along he had expected to take less
-than his original price. But the pretty lady was
-pleased.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-“Wrap them up,” she ordered the man, in
-the loud tone so often employed to the foreigner
-who seems not to understand, as though by mere
-volume of sound one could impress one’s meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia had removed the lovely frame from
-the window and now held it in her hand. Close
-like this, it was even more beautiful than when
-viewed through the wavering old glass, and at
-Cynthia’s “How much?” the old man smiled
-almost fondly, as though he too knew this for
-one of his best pieces. He named the sum in lire
-and Cynthia made a rapid calculation, then,
-with a sigh, shook her head and turned to replace
-it in the window. He might as well have
-said fifteen hundred dollars, as fifteen. Why, in
-her tiny room in the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pensione</i> she could live for
-two whole weeks on fifteen dollars. Chick would
-have to wait, unframed, till she returned to the
-States and a steady job.</p>
-
-<p>The American lady was still fussing over the
-wrapping of her package when Cynthia left the
-shop and stepped out into the street again, one
-of those steep streets of Siena that seemed to bear
-always in their sunny stone the tinge of a perpetual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-sunset glow. From far down the street
-came the roll of a drum, and Cynthia who had
-already seen two of these <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrade</i> rehearsals
-pelted off as fast as rubber soles on cobbles could
-carry her. Never mind the frame, though she
-gave it a regretful relinquishing thought.</p>
-
-<p>Tomorrow was the Palio, the famous horse
-race with which Siena, twice a year, for the past
-four hundred years, has celebrated her liberation
-from the long arm of her tyrant neighbor,
-Florence. And now for the past three days
-Siena had fallen back, body and spirit, into the
-fifteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly Cynthia, rounding the corner of the
-narrow street, felt as though she had been projected
-feet first into a slice of the middle ages.
-Banners of silk and of satin, of tapestry and of
-heavy velvet, fringed and tasseled in gold, embroidered
-with the arms of some ancient family,
-hung from a high balcony, and above it, glowing
-in the warm stone was carved again the heraldic
-device. Below the slow swaying banners stood a
-little band of Siennese, two drummerboys in
-long-hose and doublets, peaked caps over their
-frizzy locks, their companions two banner-bearers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-all in black and white and gold. The
-flags displayed the arms of their <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrada</i>, or
-ward; this one Lupa, the Wolf, and their huge
-ruffled sleeves and the little purses which
-dangled from their belts were embroidered in
-fine gold with a similar device.</p>
-
-<p>The drums tapped out a strange, intriguing
-little rhythm while the two banner bearers,
-practising their rite, did a sort of solemn dance
-with the great five foot square flags. The object
-seemed to be to keep up a continual stepping,
-with the banners never for one moment allowed
-to lag. Under the arms and up again, out and
-beneath the dancing feet, and the drums always
-beating faster and faster. Fascinated, Cynthia
-watched for the culmination which she knew
-would come. With a final roll of the drums the
-banners were flung high, high, almost ... incredibly,
-to the tops of the houses, then descending,
-their heavy sticks acting as weights, were
-caught lightly and skillfully. And the dance,
-for the moment, was over.</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight cheer from the small
-group that had gathered to watch and a voice
-behind her said “Gosh, that was great!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-It was such a shock to hear, in this scene of the
-past, a good American voice that Cynthia
-whirled involuntarily to face the speaker. To
-her surprise he was all of fifty, with the reddish
-complexion of a confirmed golf player, a shock
-of nice thick white hair, gray tweeds, the expensive
-kind, and a panama hat which he wore
-in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia met his smile with one as friendly.
-“It is nice, isn’t it,” she said, for no particular
-reason except that one so often does speak to
-fellow Americans on foreign soil. Then she
-started to turn away.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re having a <em>prove</em>, in the Piazza del
-Campo, this morning,” he informed her. “Perhaps
-you’d like to see that too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh are they? Thank you,” said Cynthia,
-and this time she really did turn away. She had
-already seen one of the <em>proves</em>, the rehearsal for
-the big race, and thought she’d prefer, instead of
-seeing this one, to find a place to sketch. With
-her final cover off to America she was free now
-to sketch wherever she pleased, and she had an
-idea that she might work up material for an
-exhibition, back in New York. The heads to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-her main attraction but perhaps a few landscapes
-to add a little variety to the show.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon she saw the man again. She
-had taken her sketch box and camp stool, and
-having hired a tiny barouche, was set down
-about two miles out of Siena where a little old
-monastery sat atop a tall hill. Here among the
-cypresses she could sketch for an hour, or two,
-or three, nibble her apple and sandwiches, and
-in the cool of later afternoon pack her box and
-walk back to town.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia had chosen a shady angle of the wall,
-and had roughed in her drawing; a bit of a gateway
-tiled in warm red, and a tall niche where
-stood a della robbia madonna robed in blue as
-deep as the Italian sky. Bougainvillea spilled
-in a fountain of magenta over the wall, and Cynthia
-was struggling with this riot of color when
-she heard the <em>clopity-clop</em> of <a name="horses" id="horses"></a><ins title="Original has 'horses'">horses’</ins> hoofs, but
-did not look up. Color dried so swiftly in this
-warm dry air, one had no time for distractions.</p>
-
-<p>Then there were voices, two, a man’s and a
-woman’s, the feminine voice light, pleasant,
-but pitched to a note of amused complaint that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-was vaguely familiar. Cynthia could not help
-overhearing.</p>
-
-<p>“Why on earth you had to drag me way out
-here, Gerald! Oh, of course the road was lovely,
-but we have so little time in Siena and I did want
-to get in some more shopping ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Shopping! Always shopping! Don’t you
-get enough shops in the States?” replied the
-man’s voice in very husbandly tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Now Gerald, you remember I didn’t really
-want to come to Siena in the first place, but then
-of course I had no idea the leather and the iron
-work was so lovely here.”</p>
-
-<p>Leather, that was it! The woman who had
-bought the cigarette boxes this morning. And
-the man with her? Cynthia, absent-mindedly
-wiping her brush on her white skirt said a faint
-“Darn!” for the color was rose madder and
-probably would stain ... peered out from behind
-her wall. The man was her nice gray haired acquaintance.
-Well, his trip to the monastery
-was no business of hers.</p>
-
-<p>Now how to get that tone of sunlight between
-the deep leaf-shadows? Ah, that did it! Intent
-on the success of a trick of the trade, Cynthia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-forgot the voices and when she came out of
-her corner an hour later there was no one, native
-or American, in sight. Cynthia took the two
-mile walk home through a lemon tinted sunset,
-ran into another flag rehearsal just at the edge
-of the town and enjoyed it hugely.</p>
-
-<p>So pervasive and <a name="insistent" id="insistent"></a><ins title="Original has 'insistant'">insistent</ins> was the tap. tap ...
-tr...r..r..r... tap. tap. of the drums that she
-seemed, that night to dream about them all night
-long and she woke the next morning with the
-distant, dream patter of the rhythm still tapping
-merrily through her head. In the pale light of
-early morning the sound was so real she could
-not banish it with the remainder of her doze and
-finally hopped out of bed to see if she had been
-hearing the reality.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, just down the street the banner-dancers
-were practicing their strange little steps,
-and the first rays of sunlight over the housetops
-caught the gilded tips of the banner staves as
-they were flung, in the final flourish of the dance,
-to the house tops. Cynthia remembered the fourteenth
-of July celebration in Paris and grinned
-to herself. She was prepared, now, for such
-festive spirits. Besides that, and all reports to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-the contrary notwithstanding, the Italians didn’t
-seem to put so much noise into their celebrations
-as their French neighbors. But then they let
-off more steam in just every-day living.</p>
-
-<p>When she had finished her brief and early
-breakfast and emerged to the street she saw that
-this was truly and whole-heartedly a gala
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The steep cobbled way to the cathedral which
-crowned the hill was like an illustration clipped
-from her Morte d’Arthur, a street made ready
-for the entrance of a Lancelot or a King. Banners
-of silk and banners of velvet, cloth of gold and
-cloth of silver, all embroidered with the arms
-of Siena and her ruling houses, and, so far as
-Cynthia knew, of Mussolini himself, hung from
-every upper window and balcony, fluttering in
-the morning breeze with a constant play of color
-and pageantry along the gay little street. Every
-doorway held smiling faces above the garments
-of this holiday mood. Every child carried a
-<a name="brilliant" id="brilliant"></a><ins title="Original has 'brillant'">brilliant</ins> hued balloon or a whistle, or a small flag.
-And down around the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">piazza</i> where the race was
-to be run the side streets were crowded with tiny
-bright colored booths, peddling those cheap and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-sticky indigestibles that go with a holiday all the
-world over.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia wanted very much to see the ceremony
-of blessing the horses that were to run in
-the race. Only ten of the seventeen wards might
-compete, due to the tiny race course, and these
-would be chosen by lot just before the race began.
-Each horse would be in the little chapel
-of its own <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrada</i>, so Cynthia chose the Snail,
-since that of all the ward names seemed to appeal
-to her most. It was so delightfully silly for a
-Snail to be running a race, even by proxy.</p>
-
-<p>The chapel was a plain little building of
-warm stone, hidden in the lower edges of the
-walled town, and the room was already crowded
-with interested and loyal Snailists, including
-the horse, who seemed the most interested of all.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia listened with delight to the sonorous
-Latin phrases of the little priest, but almost burst
-into giggles at the horse’s astonished expression
-when his nose was sprinkled with water from
-a kind of overgrown silver pepper box. It was
-an emotional relief when she caught a glance
-from an amused gray eye, twinkling over the
-heads of the shorter Sienese and automatically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-she twinkled back at it. Then she saw a tuft of
-stiff white hair and recognized her acquaintance
-of the day before. Cynthia flushed and bit her
-lip. When she looked again he was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the chapel was a room used for exhibition
-purposes. Here in the dim glass cases, dusty
-with age, were the ancient costumes worn in
-past Palios by the jockeys of the Snail. Many
-of them were hundreds of years old and all
-displayed the same careful craftsmanship, the
-same loving care for detail that Cynthia had
-noted in the costumes she had seen on the streets.</p>
-
-<p>She made some sketches in her notebook, and
-went back to the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">pensione</i> by way of the leather
-shop to have another look at the frame in the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>Back in her room she emptied her pocketbook
-on the bed, and counted her express checks and
-lire. But the frame was hopeless. She just
-couldn’t manage it, not even if she asked the
-shop keeper to come down in his price. The
-price was fair, Cynthia felt that it was even
-more than that, and one couldn’t ask a fellow
-artist to cheapen his wares.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid, Chick darling,” she told the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-photograph propped between the mirror and the
-hair brush, “you’ll just have to go as you are.
-Maybe a little later ...”</p>
-
-<p>For the future looked very bright indeed.
-Cynthia had already received two letters from
-advertising firms who were interested in her
-covers on <cite>Little One’s Magazine</cite>, and she had
-an idea for a new series for that same publication,
-once she was back in the States. But at the
-moment, in a strange country, with no friend
-nearer than Nancy and her Mother in Brittany,
-Cynthia didn’t dare risk fifteen of her precious
-dollars. Oh dear, it was difficult to be poor,
-’specially when Chick needed a frame!</p>
-
-<p>Where at she planted a cautious kiss on the
-pictured countenance of Mr. Charles Dalton.</p>
-
-<p>The Palio race was due to start at five that
-afternoon. Cynthia took her sketch book and
-her portfolio to use as a lap-rest and went off
-early to find the seat she had purchased three
-days before. She could spend the time in sketching
-the crowd&mdash;you never could tell; some day
-she might be called on to illustrate a story about
-Siena and then her foresight and her sketches
-would come in handy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-For days the workmen of Siena had been
-preparing the Piazza del Campo for this event.
-In the center was a walled off space known as
-the Dog’s Box, where the poorer people might
-stand. The race course itself came between
-this and the tiers of seats raised against the housefronts
-that faced the piazza; hard, narrow little
-seats like the bleachers of a ball park. But
-Cynthia was lucky, for she was on the shady side,
-and was so interested that she didn’t much care
-how long she sat there.</p>
-
-<p>Her neighbors were mostly tourists, French,
-Italians from the south, Germans, a few Austrians,
-and one or two Americans. Small boys
-sold bags of nuts, and programs in five languages
-while the shadow of the bell tower slowly crept
-across the Dog’s Box and the hard packed earth
-of the race course. Cynthia noted the mattresses
-strapped against the bare walls at the four
-corners of the course, presumably that the horses
-or riders might not be injured in the scramble
-around these dangerous places, and learned from
-her pink leafed program that many of the horses
-did daily duty through Siena’s streets, pulled
-cabs, or fruit carts during the year and their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-owners each belonged to the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrada</i> from
-which they were chosen to race.</p>
-
-<p>At last the sound of a mortar. The crowd
-which had been strolling leisurely about the
-course began to squeeze in under the fence to
-their places in the box, or scramble, goat-like up
-the steep tiers of wooden seats. Urged on
-by the carabinieri, those delightful, self-contained,
-tweedledum and tweedledee police
-of Italy, loiterers were soon cleared from the
-course and way was made for a group of little
-men, like blue clad gnomes. These, pushing
-tiny wheelbarrows, swarmed along the roadway.
-Their job seemed to be to cover with earth any
-places where the original paving stones might
-show through.</p>
-
-<p>Then again the sound of the mortar. And
-here they come!</p>
-
-<p>First the Ensign Bearer of Siena, with the
-simple black and white flag of the city. Then
-the Palace Trumpets, the picturesque long
-trumpets with their pendent banners carried by
-youthful pages in jaunty velvet caps, slashed
-doublet and sleekly silken hose. Then the musicians,
-all in costume and the crossbowmen with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-their ancient weapons and at last a group from
-each <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrada</i>. In each group a drummer, two
-flag bearers, a Lord or Captain on horseback in
-gorgeous armor, of silver, or bronze, or steel
-beautifully inlaid with gold that glittered in
-the sunlight. Behind him his squires, his ensign
-bearers, and on the race horse, the jockey who
-would ride later, in the race.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the procession passed around the
-course. Before the <a name="judges" id="judges"></a><ins title="Original has 'judges'">judges’</ins> stand, and four times
-as they circled the square each group paused that
-the drummers might perform their little
-rhythm, that the banner bearers might dance
-their skillful little steps.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia sat enthralled. Almost she had to
-pinch herself to believe it was real. Glorious in
-color as an old window of stained glass; silks
-and velvets, knights in full armor, pages, banners
-and trumpeters, and at the very end the
-Palio itself, a great banner drawn in a cart, with
-the staked flags of the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">contrada</i> around it.</p>
-
-<p>The procession was over. Cynthia sat back
-and cracked a few nuts and ate them. Just to
-return to reality for a while, after so much
-beauty, was a rest and a relief. She had thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-so intensely, packed it down so tightly into her
-memory that no least gesture of it might be
-forgotten. Even so, she felt as though she
-would have liked a week of that procession in
-order to be able to remember it all.</p>
-
-<p>Again the mortar.</p>
-
-<p>The race was about to start. Ten restive little
-horses ranged behind a rope, ten jockeys struggling
-to keep them in line. The sound of the gun.
-They’re off!</p>
-
-<p>Panting, scrambling, hurled against the Dog’s
-Box, cutting corners, they tore around the course,
-and the piazza was one vast shout as though
-from a single throat. Cynthia, on her feet like
-the rest, stamped and clapped and shouted with
-the others. The Snail, the little brown Snail was
-among the leaders. Once around the course.
-Three times was the extent of the race. And
-the starting post was in sight again. But one
-rider was off&mdash;which was it?</p>
-
-<p>The Snail’s! Cynthia could have sobbed
-aloud with despair, with disappointment. Her
-favorite, out of the race because without a rider.
-Someone had raised a whip and the Snail’s jockey
-had been the victim.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-Oh well, so much for that! Cynthia, disgusted,
-almost sank back to her seat, but the mass
-of excitement around her was too strong to resist.
-The Snail, for some reason, seemed still to
-be a favorite, his name rose again and again
-from surrounding throats. Stubbornly he kept
-to the track, came to the first of the tiny streets
-that turned off, away from the race track. Gallantly
-he resisted temptation, clung to the course.
-Past the next alley, past the next street, and well
-among the leaders still. Pulling ahead now,
-faster and faster, because riderless, guideless.
-The Snail caught up with the horse of the Eagle,
-passed him, caught up with the horse of the Owl,
-hitherto the leader. The Owl’s rider plied
-whip with vigor, but he was a husky youth,
-quite a burden for the Owl’s little horse to carry.
-And the Snail was half a head in the lead as the
-goal post was passed for the second time.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh come on ... come <em>on!</em>” Regardless now
-of the fact that the horse was riderless, Cynthia
-wanted only that he should make the circle the
-third time. Successfully.</p>
-
-<p>Now he was well in the lead, past the wicked
-flail of the Owl’s malicious rider. Nothing now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-could stop him, though as he approached for the
-third time the steep street leading up into the
-town Cynthia held her breath lest this time he
-should leave the course and gallop up it. Held
-her breath so that she was completely unconscious
-of the broad shoulders in front of her
-which her eager hands were grasping.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant the pony faltered. Then
-urged on by the pounding hoofs behind him
-passed the last temptation. And was on the final
-stretch for the goal post.</p>
-
-<p>Faster. Faster! A length, two lengths,
-three lengths ahead. Cynthia shouted wildly,
-pounded a fist on the harris tweed shoulder and
-yelled with the others. “Go on ... Snail ... go
-on! ... Go on! ... Home! ... <em>Ah..h..h!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>The race was over. “And quite fitting that it
-should have been won by the Snail,” dryly remarked
-the owner of the harris tweed shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia came out of her daze and gaped at
-him. It was the nice twinkley man she had seen
-in the chapel this morning, the one who had
-come to the monastery with his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m so sorry,” she gasped, feeling very
-hot and red in the face. “Did I pound you to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-jelly? Races are pretty exciting, aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>“They certainly are,” he agreed cheerfully.
-“And that was a most surprising one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose he really won?” asked Cynthia,
-carefully following the man down the steep
-narrow steps. “I don’t imagine it will be allowed
-like that, without a rider, will it?”</p>
-
-<p>The man laughed. “Well, this is Italy, you
-know, and after all they may figure it was a race
-for horses, not jockeys. And the horse certainly
-came in ahead. But let’s go and find out,” he
-suggested. “By the way, my name is Lewis,
-though I believe we have met before, even if
-you didn’t know my name.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Mr. Lewis. I’m pleased to
-meet you I’m sure,” stated Cynthia with mock
-primness. “And now that’s over, we’re both
-from the States, I gather, and my name is Wanstead.
-Didn’t your wife come to the races?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Lewis shook his head. “If it had been
-Longchamps, or Saratoga ... But she wasn’t interested
-in a little Italian hick town race. Oh,
-here we are, and I imagine there’s little doubt
-about the winner.”</p>
-
-<p>The rose-and-gold Snail jockey, wreathed in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-flowers and comically suggestive of an ancient
-Greek statue, a blood stained handkerchief as
-additional decoration about his forehead, was
-being carried high on the shoulders of a dozen
-competitors for the honor of the burden.
-Around him surged a horde of shouting friends
-and at least a score of pretty girls tossed jests and
-languorous glances toward the victor.</p>
-
-<p>“I think they ought to be carrying the horse
-up there,” was Cynthia’s objection. “The
-jockey didn’t do anything but tumble off.”</p>
-
-<p>“That in itself seems to have been a feat not
-without its perils. How about some tea up here,
-to celebrate that our horse won?”</p>
-
-<p>Over the tea cups, in the ancient palace now
-transformed into a tea shop, over delicious tiny
-cakes, sweet with honey, deep with frosting,
-Cynthia heard about Mr. Lewis. Heard that
-long ago he, too, had been an art student and
-had come to Siena, heard that he had come back
-this time, a successful broker, to try to recapture
-some of the enchantment of that far off time.
-“But it’s not the same,” he said sadly. “How
-about some more tea?&mdash;No?&mdash;Then some more
-cakes&mdash;oh, just one more.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-“Well, maybe, just one.” Cynthia chose a
-cake like a little Italian palace, all tiled with
-lemon peel and crowned with a candied cherry.
-“And do you know the lovely old monastery at
-the top of the hill?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say I do. I made a sketch of that,
-years ago&mdash;before you were born, young lady.”
-Why did people always lay such emphasis on
-one’s lack of age? “But my wife didn’t think
-much of it, and perhaps it wasn’t very good,
-really. Anyway it got lost once when we were
-moving.”</p>
-
-<p>His smile was slightly rueful and Cynthia
-forgave the remark about her youthfulness.
-“It was of the gate, and a lovely old Della
-Robbia madonna. I went out to see it again, just
-yesterday, but couldn’t find it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I found it, and did a sketch of it too,”
-Cynthia blurted out, and a moment later wished
-she hadn’t. It was obvious that he had been
-dragged away before he had had time to do much
-exploring.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you? Oh, could I see it perhaps? But
-first won’t you have another cake, some more
-tea?” urged the hospitable Mr. Lewis.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>
-“I couldn’t eat another cake if I knew it was
-the last one in Siena,” protested Cynthia. “And
-I think I’ve got the sketch right here. The portfolio
-made a good rest for my sketch book.”</p>
-
-<p>So there in the tea shop, cool and quiet and
-growing a bit dim as the sun sank behind the
-towers and tiles of Siena, Cynthia hauled out
-her sketches. There were some of the crowd
-she had made just this afternoon, of the carabinari,
-heads gravely bent, two by two, always
-two by two, white gloved hands folded behind
-their solemn backs.</p>
-
-<p>“You have quite a knack for caricature,”
-commented Mr. Lewis, and Cynthia <a name="said" id="said"></a><ins title="Original has 'said.'">said,</ins>
-“You have to, if you are going to do portraits.
-A really good likeness always holds a little exaggeration.”</p>
-
-<p>At which he nodded understandingly. Nice
-to be showing your sketches to another artist.</p>
-
-<p>“And here are some of the landscapes I’ve
-done around Siena, mostly bits of streets and old
-tiled houses. They aren’t as good as my people.”</p>
-
-<p>“And here is your madonna,” she cried, hauling
-out the drawing she had finished the day
-before. She told him about her plan to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-an exhibition of the heads and of the landscapes
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good idea too,” he agreed, and
-propped the little sketch of the monastery
-against a chair and sat back to squint at it.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” he said at last, “if you’d be willing
-to make a sale before you go home. I have
-a fancy to own this one,” and he nodded towards
-the little tiled gateway. “Could you part with
-it, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia hesitated. She did sort of want to
-show that one to Chick and hear his approval.
-But perhaps tomorrow she could go back to the
-same place and make another, even a better one.</p>
-
-<p>“We..ll, yes,” she agreed reluctantly. “I
-might.”</p>
-
-<p>And then came the “How much?” which
-she had dreaded. Cynthia knew the value, at
-least the commercial value, of her portraits.
-But the landscapes were different. They were
-just studies, perhaps not worth anything at all.
-“Would ... would two dollars be too much?” she
-asked. “Or maybe three?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear child!” protested Mr. Lewis, and
-Cynthia laughed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-“Well, give me what you like. It will be
-all right anyway.<a name="dash" id="dash"></a><ins title="Original has space before dash">&mdash;Oh</ins>, American money,
-how nice to see it again!” And it was quite a
-roll, too.</p>
-
-<p>She took the two bills and handed over the
-painting. “Better take along this cardboard, it’s
-just the back of the pad, but it fits, and will keep
-the sketch from being crumpled. And now I
-really must run. I promised a little English
-girl at the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">pensione</i> that I’d have dinner with
-her tonight and tell her all about the palio. She
-couldn’t afford a ticket for it. I know she won’t
-at all approve of the way it turned out. ‘Most
-unsportin’ my deah!’” she laughed, mimicking
-the other’s accent.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodbye,” waved Cynthia from the doorway.
-Nice Mr. Lewis. It had been fun, the tea,
-and such an appreciative audience&mdash;and the two
-dollars. She opened her purse, just for the comfort
-of seeing good United States greenbacks
-again, shook them out of the rumple and gazed
-at them, startled. Not two one dollar bills, but
-two for ten dollars each. Twenty good bucks!
-Oh gosh ... oh glory ... oh joy!</p>
-
-<p>“Miss British Isles can wait,” said Cynthia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-aloud to the deserted street and turned rapidly
-in a direction opposite to the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">pensione</i>. She
-knew somehow that her luck would hold, her
-marvelous luck of the day, and that even as late
-as this sunset hour, with the rosy housefronts of
-Siena still holding their perpetual sunset glow,
-the little man in the frame shop would still be
-there.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Chick that night was no longer propped
-limply, somewhat forlornly, between the dusty,
-green tinged mirror and the box of cold cream,
-but smiled gaily, resplendently, festively, in a
-frame of wine colored leather with a border of
-acorns and gold beading.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia bent over and bestowed a brief kiss
-on the chilly glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, Chick ... Darling,” she laughed. And
-turned off the light.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="viii" id="viii"></a>CHAPTER 8</h2>
-
-<p class="noi p180 mb2"><em>Venice</em></p>
-
-<p class="noi p120 mt2">ALL IS NOT LOST</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cynthia</span> was sleepy when she stumbled into
-the station at Genoa. She hadn’t been too sure
-that the hotel keeper would wake her in time
-to get the train for Venice. So all night long she
-had dozed fitfully, waking to sit <a name="bolt" id="bolt"></a><ins title="Original has 'bold'">bolt</ins> upright and
-flash on the light to see her watch, then finally
-been waked from a sound sleep at five, just an
-hour before train time by the sharp summoning
-knuckles of the garçon on her bedroom door.</p>
-
-<p>And it must have been because her eyes were
-still blurred with sleep that she took the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">rapide</i>
-instead of the express for Venice. They were
-standing directly opposite each other, and both
-of them had “Venezia” in letters a foot high
-along the carriages. An Italian <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">rapide</i> does not
-necessarily move with great rapidity. By the
-best of expresses it is a long day’s journey across
-the width of Italy and by the time she had discovered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</a></span>
-with the half dozen native phrases that
-she knew, that she had taken the wrong train it
-was too late to do anything about it. They were
-already an hour east of Genoa.</p>
-
-<p>“What time do we get to Venezia,” she
-begged. “Venezia ... <em>Venezia</em>. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Si...si...si...si...si,” hissed the beaming
-conductor as he punched her ticket.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but what time? Tempo? Tempo?”
-she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>The conductor shook his head and shrugged.
-Probably mad, this pretty signorina. But he had
-no English, and what did she in third class, in
-that expensive dress of real silk, with leather
-shoes upon her feet, a hat, and a suitcase also of
-veritable leather? He gave it up and sauntered
-down the crowded aisle between the wooden
-benches to examine the biglietto of a wizened
-little great-grandmother traveling, with six
-great-grandchildren, to Milan.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia grinned and settled philosophically
-against the frame of the open window. Ten
-hours was a pretty long time, and it would be
-more than that now in this poky old train, but
-anyway it was an adventure and all part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-traveling. She was certainly going in the right
-direction, there was no one to meet her at the
-other end, no one to worry when she didn’t arrive,
-and she would have all day to observe and
-to make sketches.</p>
-
-<p>Third class had been almost a necessity, this
-Italian trip hadn’t been allowed for in her
-original budget, but Cynthia had found third
-class in France so much more fun than second
-... and of course even the Italians say that no
-one but rich, rich Americans and officials who
-travel on passes ever go by first. This was the
-coolest carriage too, since the always open
-windows let in floods of air and sunlight along
-with the floods of dust, and the hard wooden
-benches were pleasantly free of the small insect
-life almost universally inhabiting the upholstery
-of first and second coaches.</p>
-
-<p>But third class in Italy! The young man at
-Cooks who had sold her her ticket had almost
-expired to hear of an Anglo-Saxon traveling in
-so unorthodox a fashion. No one ... <em>no one</em> ever
-traveled third class in Italy! Cynthia surveyed
-the coach and chuckled again.</p>
-
-<p>Further down the aisle, two lovely little Sisters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-of Santa Chiara, in the soft, dove-gray habit
-of their order, with spotless wide-spreading
-winged headdresses and speckless collars
-munched contentedly and daintily on bread and
-cheese augmented by a bottle of water they had
-brought with them. Cynthia’s eye took in the
-angle of that tilted, sail-like headdress, stealthily
-her fingers groped for sketch-book and pencil.
-A moment later she was so absorbed in her drawing
-that she absent-mindedly grinned back in
-friendly fashion at the littlest Sister, who had
-caught her drawing. Nobody seemed to mind
-being sketched in this country.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the old great grandmother
-and her boisterous brood. Beside them she
-tended a hen in her apron, a hen that seemed
-very content to sleep and to cluck drowsily in
-the warm depths of that blue lap. The littlest
-bambino was not more than a year old, sleeping
-with bobbing head on the shoulder of the oldest
-sister. He had the most beautiful hands, tapering,
-with tiny dimples and wee pink nails, which
-fell into enchanting poses. Cynthia sketched
-happily.</p>
-
-<p>People came and went from every tiny station<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-and crowds gathered and dispersed beneath the
-trailing potted flowers that decorated the pillars
-of every station platform. Cheerily they
-screamed “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Buon giorno!</i>” “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Addio!</i>” “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Arrivederci!
-Arrivederci!</i>” Italian, someone had told
-Cynthia, was a language intended to be shouted.</p>
-
-<p>The sun grew warmer, the paper beneath her
-hand sticky with perspiration. Somewhere
-along the line a few lire purchased a sandwich of
-garlic-flavored sausage between thick slices of
-warm bread, a bottle of warmish water and a
-bunch of sweet, very juicy green grapes. After
-lunch she curled in her corner and slept.</p>
-
-<p>When she awoke the car was nearly empty
-and they were clattering and banging through
-the light of midafternoon. Hills were purple
-beyond hot haze and vineyards, white with dust,
-spread for miles and miles on either side the
-track. Cynthia sighed and got up to walk the
-length of the car and back again. Where were
-they now, she wondered?</p>
-
-<p>When they stopped with a clatter and bang
-at the next station she hopped out to look at the
-map hung on the station wall. Keeping one
-careful eye on the train lest it slide out and leave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-her, she estimated the probable time that it
-would reach Venice. Good gracious, it was
-hours away yet! And at the rate this train was
-going ...</p>
-
-<p>The little horn tooted its warning and Cynthia
-fled back to her seat. What to do, what to
-do? Thank goodness, nobody would be at all
-worried or put out by this fool mistake of hers.
-Nancy, back in Brittany by now, and Mrs. Brewster
-were the only people that knew about her
-trains and her plans. Mother had insisted when
-Cynthia first left America that she keep in touch,
-close touch, with some one person in Europe, and
-she had been awfully faithful about that. She
-had even written Nancy what train she was
-taking from Genoa ... and now, Cynthia
-grinned ... look at the darn thing!</p>
-
-<p>By five o’clock she was ravenous and very
-weary. From former experience she knew that
-she could hop off almost any place that the train
-might stop and continue next day on the same
-ticket. But for hours they had not passed a
-decent sized town, just little settlements about
-the usual tiny church and inn, a few donkeys and
-a mangy yellow dog or two. Did she dare get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-off just anywhere and risk what she might find,
-or should she stick on here till seeming doomsday,
-till midnight anyway and arrive at some
-weird hour on the unknown canals of Venice?</p>
-
-<p>Fumbling in the pocket of her silk jacket she
-found a single lira and on impulse flipped it into
-the air. It dropped into her lap and she covered
-it quickly with her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Heads; I’ll get off at the very next stop,
-no matter if it’s in the middle of a field. Tails;
-I’ll go on to Venice, no matter how late we get
-there or how hungry I am,” she said aloud.</p>
-
-<p>She uncovered the coin. Heads it was!</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia was a little scared. But determined,
-oh very determined. Resolutely she took down
-her suitcase from the rack, swung her painting
-box beside it. Firmly she waited by the open
-window till the train banged again to a stop
-beside a little shack that served as a station. The
-sign read Santa Maria Something-or-other, a
-name which meant nothing to Cynthia. Sturdily
-she stepped backward down the three steep steps
-to the ground, swung her box and suitcase off
-beside her and turning her back on the poky
-little train walked toward the gate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</a></span>
-“Tomorrow ... tomorrow morning I go to
-Venice,” she explained to the gatekeeper who
-was punching lacework patterns into her ticket.
-“<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Domani. Comprendo?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Si, si.</i>” Wonderingly he let her pass. Not
-until the gate had closed firmly did Cynthia feel
-sure that she herself wouldn’t turn and race
-toward the departing train, the train that eventually
-must reach Venice.</p>
-
-<p>When the last shriek of the whistle had died
-along the echoing hills, when the last smudge
-of smoke had disappeared against the dazzling
-light of the sinking sun, Cynthia was plodding
-almost ankle deep in dust along the wide path
-that seemed to do duty as the town road. But
-there was literally no town here. Far off across
-the plowed fields a sugar white tower reared
-against the skyline; the village church. Four or
-five scattered houses with the inevitable grape
-vine, their whitewashed sides stained verdigris
-green with arsenic spray, and a tiny inn to
-which the gateman had directed her. This
-latter was her objective.</p>
-
-<p>Its entrance was beneath a vine covered lattice
-and its bare dirt floor, its collection of dogs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-looked much like the other farmhouses. But
-inside there were several tables and a girl behind
-a counter. She slid forward and smiled shyly
-with a flutter of incredible lashes. Cynthia felt
-reassured.</p>
-
-<p>Stumblingly she asked for a room for the
-night, explained her wish to be called early for
-the first train for Venice.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, signorina, there was a room, but one.
-The signorina should regard it.</p>
-
-<p>It was bare, save for the bed, table and chair
-and directly above the café, but clean and cool.
-Cynthia nodded, did not ask the price and letting
-her suitcase slide to the floor, ordered water with
-which to wash. That was easy, one always asked
-for water. Supper also should be simple, since
-a traveler was expected to desire food. Cynthia
-thought of her first night in Paris and felt a
-little proud of how much more confident she had
-become since then. What would Chick think of
-this adventure of hers, she wondered and was
-glad he needn’t know about it for weeks yet.
-He’d be sure to scold her for taking such a risk.</p>
-
-<p>It proved however to be no risk at all. At
-supper, a simple meal of spaghetti, a salad and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-grapes, she was examined shyly by several children,
-hopefully by several dogs, curiously by
-the adults of the family. But the spaghetti was
-delicious and Cynthia was hungry. After dinner
-she was far too sleepy to do more than take a
-short walk down the quiet dusty road. Back in
-her room she wedged a chair under the latch of
-the lockless door and fell asleep almost before
-she could think again what an adventure this
-was.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The express from the north, to which Cynthia
-transferred a half hour beyond the little
-village, arrived in Venice about nine o’clock.
-It looked, she thought as she waited in the train
-corridor, just a little disappointing, only a long,
-tunnel-like train shed. No canals, no gondolas,
-no palaces in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The burly Italian in front of her swung off
-with his bags, Cynthia prepared to follow, and
-stopped stock still, midway of the top step.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Chick!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Cynthia</em>,” came the excited reply, “Where
-on earth? ...”</p>
-
-<p>“I ... I thought you were in New York,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-Chick!” And stood gaping with open mouth
-until a large bag prodded her, not too gently, in
-the middle of her back. Then she swung down
-the steps and dropped suitcase and paint box to
-fling herself into the arms of the surprised young
-man. Almost, it seemed, as surprised as she was.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you were due last night, on the
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">rapide</i> from Genoa,” exclaimed the disgusted
-Chick. “You wrote that to Nancy you know.
-And I’ve been meeting trains almost all night. ...
-It was only by luck I stopped here. I was
-meeting the express from Genoa on track six
-ten minutes ago.”</p>
-
-<p>He signaled a porter. “This your stuff? All
-of it?” A hand beneath her elbow, impersonally,
-kindly, almost as though he were the
-favorite nephew of a maiden aunt, all concern
-for her baggage, that she pass the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">dogana</i>, the
-local custom house, that she give her ticket to
-the proper uniformed official. They came out
-of the stone doorway onto a half dozen steep
-stone steps. Before them shimmered the canal.
-So the popular report was true and Venice did
-have them?</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a gondola waiting right here ...” he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-looked along the bobbing, yelling line of gondoliers
-who shouted their wares and virtues below
-the quay. “Dash that fellow ...” she heard
-him mutter. “Oh well, never mind Cyn, we’ll
-take this one,” and still with that air of a
-nephew-who-expects-to-be-well-remembered-in-the-will,
-piloted her down the step.</p>
-
-<p>The wide upholstered seat was very comfortable.
-With surprisingly little fuss they
-were in the center of the stream, Chick had given
-the order, his fingers caught hers and held them
-tight. Good, then they really were still engaged!
-Cynthia chuckled happily.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t ...” she turned to gaze at him ... “can’t
-get over this Chick. It’s the greatest
-surprise of my life.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the intention,” Chick grinned
-back. He had, he told her, arrived in Naples
-two days ago, had promptly wired Nancy to find
-Cynthia’s exact address and had been told of
-the train she would take to Venice.</p>
-
-<p>“Neat, very neat!” approved Cynthia. “If I
-just hadn’t taken a local by mistake. And now
-where are you taking me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pensione Casa Petrarca?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-She nodded, Yes, that was where she had reserved
-a room.</p>
-
-<p>“Had your breakfast? Good. Then wash
-and tidy up and we’ll do a bit of sightseeing.
-After that. ...” Quietly he slipped his hand
-from hers, slid it into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear, Chick, what’s the matter, what is
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve ... that is I seem to have. ...” And
-with the maddening masculine manner of one
-blessed with many pockets started fumbling
-through them all, one after another.</p>
-
-<p>“Lost something?”</p>
-
-<p>Chick frowned. “Gone. But I hope it’s
-not lost.” Deliberately he went through the
-whole lot again while the gondola rocked gently
-before the steps of the pensione. At last he
-shrugged. “I came out last night and this
-morning with a gondolier named Luigi, from
-the traghetta, that’s a sort of gondola taxi-stand,
-across the way. If I’ve dropped the thing, it’ll
-probably be in his gondola. Go on up, will you?
-I’ll see if I can trace him.”</p>
-
-<p>A big airy room with a quaint porcelain stove
-in the corner. As the door closed behind the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-porter, Cynthia dropped into a chair and dragged
-off her hat. She didn’t know whether to weep
-or to laugh. Was she, or was she not, engaged
-to Chick? He hadn’t mentioned it, he hadn’t
-acted like it. She decided to laugh and felt
-better. Washed her face, ran a comb through
-her curls and felt better yet.</p>
-
-<p>A bit of powder, some rouge and she was
-ready to meet the world again, or at least Venice
-and Chick. He was waiting for her by the
-pensione steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Know any Italian?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Not much, I’m afraid, Chick.” But, she
-thought, probably more than he did.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, come see if you can make anything
-out of this jumble of talk. I’m about cuckoo.
-We’ll walk across, it’s a good chance to see the
-Rialto bridge.”</p>
-
-<p>This was of stone, lined with a shallow,
-stepped, series of shops on either side, going up,
-going down till one reached the farther side of
-the Grand canal. Here Chick pointed out the
-row of gondolas as the taxi-rank from which he
-had taken Luigi.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia stammered a few questions, listened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-to the voluble replies and managed to make out
-that Luigi had gone some where with a sightseeing
-party, probably to one of the islands.
-He’d be back later in the day.</p>
-
-<p>“This morning?” asked Chick anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so.” Cynthia was slightly careless
-about that. Funny of Chick, not like him to
-make such a fuss over some silly little souvenir
-he’d bought. “Come on,” she put a hand on his
-arm, “let’s go sight-see for a while.”</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat reluctantly Chick agreed. Over
-tiny crooked stone bridges they went, along
-quays along whose mossy sides the water lapped
-dark and mysterious, down blind, colorful alleys
-where small children stuck their heads from
-windows and yelled shrilly. “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Non passaggio</i>
-... no passage!” Cynthia adored it all, adored
-being with Chick again.</p>
-
-<p>If he only wouldn’t fuss so, she thought. For
-he kept looking at his watch, glancing back over
-his shoulder, until finally she gave it up in despair.
-No use of sightseeing till Chick recovered
-his lost property.</p>
-
-<p>“How about going back now and having another
-try at your gondolier?” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-He was so grateful that she was almost
-ashamed of her impatience, and they turned back
-immediately. But there was no further news;
-Luigi had not returned. Desperately Chick
-started to ask questions, perhaps one of the other
-gondoliers had heard Luigi speak of a package
-he had found?</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, first on one foot and then on the
-other, for she was getting a little tired, translated
-to the best of her ability. Chick stuck in a word
-now and then.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Perdita.</i> ... Lost ... lost.” Was Chick’s
-gender wrong, or had he really mislaid a blonde?</p>
-
-<p>But a few in the group of gondoliers got the
-idea. Apparently each one had, at one time or
-another discovered something <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">perdita</i>. From
-beneath the flea-infested blanket of a gondola
-was produced a dogs-eared magazine. Cynthia
-beginning to be amused read the lurid title in
-flaming vermilion sprawled across its cover.
-“True Tales of the Wild West.” The date was
-over a year ago but it had been, undoubtedly,
-once lost.</p>
-
-<p>Other gondoliers left their bobbing craft,
-passers-by drew closer as Chick’s eagerness held<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-promise of rich reward. Waving the magazine
-aside he chanted impatiently, “Piccolo ...
-piccolo,” while he made gestures of small
-measurement with his hands. Then aside to
-Cynthia, “that does mean ‘little,’ doesn’t it?
-Not a musical instrument?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia nodded silently, not daring to risk
-speech and watched with dancing eyes while
-Chick refused, from a second cheerful brigand
-a musty, torn golash.</p>
-
-<p>Cheerful brigand number two was a sheer loss
-to high pressure salesmanship. Cynthia caught
-the word “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Impermeabile</i> ... waterproof,” as
-he covered the tear with one big hand. Twisting
-the rubber inside out he sought to display its
-amazing suppleness and elasticity while an admiring
-group applauded both at the golash and
-the salesman, with ohs and ahs of astonishment.
-Cynthia was wondering how a single torn rubber
-had been brought from so many thousand miles
-to lie forgotten in a Venetian gondola, and also
-how the gondolier thought Chick, with a foot
-obviously many sizes larger, was going to use it.
-But perhaps he surmised a sentimental attachment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-She glanced at Chick. Poor darling, this
-was awfully important to him, and it was mean
-of her to take it all so lightly. But he was being
-pretty darn solemn and masculine. Impatiently
-she said. “If you’d <em>only</em> tell me what it is,
-Chick, perhaps I could make them understand.”
-Oh dear, how annoying men could be!</p>
-
-<p>Chick seemed not to hear. The new distraction
-was a cabbage, wilted, but unquestionably
-of more recent vintage than either the galosh or
-the ancient magazine. Its discoverer had
-waited for a time outside the magic circle, while
-firing forth a rapid stream of “<em>Ecco ... ecco
-... ecco!</em>” as he held aloft the proffered
-vegetable. Breaking through at last he encountered
-the two previous presenters of articles,
-thus gaining the attention also of the crowd.
-Which was his downfall.</p>
-
-<p>An old woman, black shawl over her head,
-flattened slippers of magenta felt upon her feet,
-having heaved her way through by sheer force
-of language, not only wanted a cabbage, but <em>the</em>
-cabbage. Perhaps it was the cabbage of her
-childhood, perhaps she had nursed it from a tiny
-seedling, this dejected thing. For a moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-longer Cynthia listened, then screwed up her
-face and clapped frantic hands to ears. Couldn’t
-they get out of this soon?</p>
-
-<p>Close behind the old woman came shouldering
-two calm carabinieri, just in time it seemed
-to prevent a general combat. White gloved
-hands behind them, patent leather hats set
-squarely above unruffled brows, two identical,
-magnificent examples of the Venetian police.
-Tweedledum, it seemed, asked the questions.
-Tweedledee answered them. Conversely Dum
-asked and Dee answered. Comparative silence
-settled upon the circle and Cynthia cautiously
-removed her hands from her ears.</p>
-
-<p>All available witnesses began to present their
-evidence. As there were perhaps a score in
-number all acting out their theories in violent
-pantomime, Cynthia began to wish they weren’t
-right in the center of it. The one who had taken
-upon himself the part of the inquirer after lost
-articles, Chick’s rôle in fact, was losing things
-in all directions with wide, dramatic sweeps of
-his arms.</p>
-
-<p>Tweedledum and Tweedledee executed a half
-turn in perfect unison, raised right hands in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</a></span>
-gloves of immaculate whiteness in formal salutation
-and in Chick’s direction. By now, Cynthia
-knew them of old, they would have come to
-an unshakable conclusion. If they awarded
-the galosh to the old lady, the cabbage to Chick,
-both parties would have to be content. But no,
-they had another plan.</p>
-
-<p>The cabbage was bestowed upon its rightful
-owner who still lingered, voluminous with
-words, to see what else might happen. The golash
-returned to the gondolier in whose craft it
-had originally been found. Cynthia applauded
-the decision, then translated for Chick’s benefit
-Tweedledum’s speech:</p>
-
-<p>“We’re to go to the police station, Chick.
-That’ll teach you, young man, not to start riots.
-And I hope it does!”</p>
-
-<p>Behind them an admiring and still unsilenced
-throng applauded their departure, even followed
-a short distance along the quay and over
-the ancient bridge.</p>
-
-<p>“My heavens!” fumed Chick, “can’t they
-understand! I’ve said ‘perdita,’ and ‘piccolo’
-till I’m black in the face.” But Cynthia was enjoying
-herself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-“If you’d tell them a little more,” she
-soothed, slipping her hand into his arm. “Or
-if you’d even tell me. ... What in the name
-of Agatha <em>have</em> you lost, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>The police were speaking again. Cynthia
-thought she caught the word. ... “Fondere.”
-Did that mean “found?” The Lost and Found
-Department perhaps? She made that suggestion
-to Chick.</p>
-
-<p>A few more streets, a bridge or two, a narrow
-sun-lit way and one of the innumerable palaces
-which seemed now to be a police station, with
-the crown and arms of Italy above the door.
-Beyond this a damp and cheerless room, none
-too clean and the equivalent of a desk sergeant
-who drew towards him a large book and set down
-their names, Chick’s and Cynthia’s, and their
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">pensione</i>. Dum and Dee were doing all the explaining
-but in Italian far too rapid for Cynthia
-to follow. It might yet prove that she and Chick
-had defied municipal authority by starting a
-barter shop on the quayside, one decaying golash
-for a wilted cabbage.</p>
-
-<p>Tweedledum and Tweedledee had finished,
-the man at the desk made a gesture. An attendant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-opened a door, flung back a huge iron grill
-that closed off about half the room behind it and
-signed for them to enter. Cynthia clutched at
-Chick’s arm. Oh dear!</p>
-
-<p>Frankly uncertain she followed Chick’s slow
-steps, the attendant close behind, Dum and Dee
-bringing up in the rear. Then the attendant
-switched on a light, a series of lights disclosing
-what might have been a wine cellar. But instead
-of wine ... Cynthia choked back her
-laughter and pointed.</p>
-
-<p>A bicycle, a shelf of gloves, a regular store of
-ancient umbrellas and sunshades, piles and piles
-of books, mostly Baedeckers by their moldy red
-bindings, boots, odd bits of clothing, a coffeepot,
-market loads still knotted in capacious handkerchiefs,
-a coffin, a load of bricks. ...</p>
-
-<p>Chick’s face was flaming. “How in the name
-of goodness can we tell whether it’s here or not!”
-He turned to Cynthia. “Don’t they have a list
-of things somewhere, and the times they were
-found? Tell them it’s small, small. And done
-up in white paper and a box.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” Cynthia nodded solemnly. “A
-pound of butter, Chick dear. Oh Chick, you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-weren’t going to ask me to set up housekeeping
-were you?” But at the hurt expression in his
-eyes her levity dimmed. “I’ll tell them you lost
-it last night, is that it?” And turning to Dum
-and Dee, carefully choosing her words, she managed
-to convey the idea.</p>
-
-<p>One of them gave a shrug of disappointment
-which was echoed by the other. With all these
-things to choose from, they seemed to say, surely
-any but the most captious would be satisfied.
-But they turned to discuss the matter with the
-attendant. Lights began to go out, indication
-that this particular exhibition was over, Finish.
-But apparently more was to follow. Chick
-might yet discover his pound of butter.</p>
-
-<p>As they returned to the main room the attendant
-departed and polite gestures demanded that
-Chick and Cynthia should take chairs and wait.
-An air of expectancy hung above the little room.
-Obviously the choicest gem of the collection,
-something too valuable to be left with the other
-articles had been sent for.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think they’ve sent to the bank?”
-asked Cynthia.</p>
-
-<p>Chick brightened at the suggestion, brightened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-until the door swung open again. There
-entered behind the attendant a woman, slatternly,
-down at heels, very cross and carrying a
-basket on her arm. Slowly, reluctantly she advanced
-to the desk, lifted the cover of the basket.
-At the summons of the sergeant Chick appeared
-beside her. With a wild burst Dum and Dee
-grabbed the basket from the woman, thrust it
-into Chick’s reluctant arms. Whereat the basket,
-considerably disturbed, let out a long neck, green
-mottled with brown feathers, a wide open yellow
-beak, an indignant eye and a stiffly upstanding
-comb of violent red. Loudly the occupant of the
-basket protested with a violent “... C ck ...
-a ... doo ... dle ... do!”</p>
-
-<p>Chick nearly dropped the basket.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia, nearly helpless with laughter, had
-fallen into a chair and, with face buried in her
-handkerchief, could only indulge in what Dum
-and Dee must surely have considered tears of uncontrolled
-joy at this return of her lost property.
-Sympathetic murmurs, croonings of consolation
-echoed about the room. Even the rather hard
-faced woman was touched. Chick stood stupidly
-staring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</a></span>
-The hardest part of the day came when Cynthia,
-drying her streaming eyes, was forced into
-sufficient sobriety and Italian to explain that indeed
-and indeed the rooster, and it was a beautiful
-rooster, oh a magnificent rooster, was not
-theirs. Was not at all what they sought.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, no, no, no!” Like a popgun, Cynthia
-shot out violent negatives. And at last she
-had made it clear. Almost with joy the woman
-received back the cherished rooster from Chick’s
-relieved embrace. Almost haughtily they were
-shown to the door, sent, with an air of extreme
-disapproval, upon their way.</p>
-
-<p>Outside in the sunlight Cynthia was almost
-surprised to find it was the same day, and Chick
-pulled down his coat, let out a great puff of a
-sigh.</p>
-
-<p>After that first burst of laughter Cynthia
-had managed to get control of herself, but she
-wasn’t sure how long this would last. She must
-get somewhere, anywhere, and have it all out
-with Chick. Meekly she took his arm, let him
-lead her along the quay, through small streets
-toward the Piazza San Marco. She glanced
-upward. Chick was being very masculine, very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-stern, one might almost think, unforgiving.</p>
-
-<p>In silence they traversed the small streets.
-Well, if Chick was going to be stuffy! ...
-But he couldn’t be, he simply couldn’t be. And
-whose beastly old bundle was it anyway? <em>She</em>
-didn’t go about leaving things in gondolas.</p>
-
-<p>Florio’s, on the Piazza San Marco. A small
-green iron table, two small twisted iron chairs
-and an attentive waiter in a white apron. Chick’s
-eyes consulted Cynthia, then ordered two lemonades.
-They came. In silence Cynthia sipped
-hers, bit her lips, gulped and regarded fixedly a
-stupid, pink toed pigeon who was strutting, with
-puffed out chest before the lovely little faun
-colored lady of his choice. Sideways out of
-her eyes Cynthia caught a glimpse of Chick,
-then turned to face him.</p>
-
-<p>His face was red but in his eyes was now a
-glimmer of understanding, one might almost say
-mirth. Cynthia dared a slight, tremulous giggle,
-forerunner of the gale to come. Then. ...</p>
-
-<p>“Oh Chick, Chick, if you could have seen
-yourself with that silly rooster. ... And the
-cabbage ... and Tweedledum ...!”</p>
-
-<p>The tide had risen now, all bars were down.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-Rocking with mirth they clung to the little iron
-chairs and laughed and laughed. A moment’s
-pause to recount the pomposity of the attendant,
-the old woman with the cabbage, the galosh, the
-list of things in that storeroom. Did you see
-the bicycle? ... Who could have left those
-high, buttoned shoes? ... Oh, and the fans,
-simply stacks of them!</p>
-
-<p>For ten minutes the gale raged backwards and
-forwards then, weak and helpless Cynthia
-begged for another lemonade, wiped the tears
-from her eyes and subsided into comparative
-sanity. Their laughter together had relieved
-her in many ways. It was going to be all right
-now, she and Chick still thought alike, could
-still find amusement in the same things, and
-the doubts of the morning were all swept away.</p>
-
-<p>“But Chick,” doggedly she returned to the
-old question. “Now it’s all over, you can tell
-me, can’t you? What was in that package?”</p>
-
-<p>Chick wasn’t going to be stuffy about it any
-more. He grinned this time, but shook his
-head. “If we don’t find it today I’ll really tell
-you. Not yet, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cross your heart?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</a></span>
-“Cross my heart!”</p>
-
-<p>From the corner of the square a big bell began
-a slow solemn booming and as though it was
-a signal, hundreds, thousands of pigeons rose
-against the deep blue of the Venetian sky and
-the sunlit columns opposite. Glinting silvery,
-<a name="iridescent" id="iridescent"></a><ins title="Original has 'irridescent'">iridescent</ins>, dark blue and rose and gold they
-whirled with the muffled beat and roar of a
-thousand wings. Cynthia gazed enthralled.</p>
-
-<p>Across the square, giving access to the Merceria,
-the Way of the Merchants, was the clock
-tower. As the great painted face recorded noon
-two giant moors slowly struck a bronze bell with
-big hammers, marking the hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovely!” murmured Cynthia. “Oh Chick,
-I wish ... I wish we didn’t have to go back,
-ever. I wish we could stay on, in one of those
-sweet old palaces. ...”</p>
-
-<p>“Like Othello and Desdemona?”</p>
-
-<p>“No ...,” slowly. “She got smothered,
-didn’t she? I guess I wouldn’t care for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“New York will be fun too,” hazarded Chick.
-“And with all the advertisement you’ve had,
-young lady; your magazine covers on every
-newstand, month after month.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-“Chick! Are they really? Yes, I suppose
-they are, I hadn’t thought of that. Better hurry
-back, hadn’t I?” And then laughed at her own
-weather-vane mood. “Well, what shall we do
-next, Chick? I feel sane once more.”</p>
-
-<p>Chick’s suggestion was: lunch at the Danieli,
-which was the swankiest hotel in Venice, and,
-he had heard, one of the loveliest of the old
-Venetian palaces. Then back to the traghetti to
-see if Luigi had come.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, that again! Cynthia made an impatient
-gesture. Save us from a man with one idea!
-But she adored the lunch, loved the gracious
-old palace with its carved, minstrel gallery, its
-floor of multicolored tiles, its ceiling carved
-and painted in deep blue and rose and gold. Out
-into the sunlight again, and the Adriatic shimmering
-as blue as the ceiling, a pleasant little
-wind chilled by the snows of the Dalmatian
-Alps and the white bubble of the Church of the
-Salute rising across the lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we ride, or walk?” asked Chick. By
-the way he said it Cynthia knew he wanted to
-walk.</p>
-
-<p>“We see more on foot, don’t we?” she suggested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</a></span>
-amiably. Perhaps a little later they could
-go through the Grand Canal in a gondola. And
-indeed she loved the great Piazza flanked by the
-Doges Palace, by St. Mark’s and the long colonnade
-of the Library and the Mint. And the shops
-beneath those columns most fascinating of all.
-Cynthia’s whole allowance for abroad had been
-divided between seeing places, and saving up a
-bit for what might, when she got home, prove
-to be a long wait for more work. But she had
-learned a lot by looking just in windows, had
-learned that you can so memorize a beautiful
-thing you can at least carry it away with you in
-your mind.</p>
-
-<p>“See, Chick, isn’t that the loveliest old bracelet? ...”
-A thick circle, not quite joined, of
-gold, the two ends which almost touched circled
-with tiny crowns of blue, blue turquoises. “And
-oh, Chick, just look at that ring. ...” A lovely
-old thing of Florentine gold, studded with seed
-pearls and surrounding a topaz as richly dark
-as the gold itself. Chick put a hand on her arm
-and urged her along to the next window which,
-being full of ancient books and maps was not
-quite so enthralling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-Perhaps it hadn’t been really tactful to admire
-that ring, almost as though she had wanted
-it herself. She had Chick’s own ring, hadn’t
-she? The little emerald, very prettily set, not
-quite good enough, not quite old enough to be
-called an antique, not quite the same as though it
-had been bought just for her. ... Cynthia
-checked the feeling. It was unkind, ungracious,
-ungrateful. Chick was just a poster artist in the
-first year of his success, he had come all the way
-to Venice just to see her, or at least she supposed
-he had, for he hadn’t said so yet. ...</p>
-
-<p>And thank goodness, here was the traghetti.
-Perhaps they’d find that stupid lost bundle of
-Chick’s at last.</p>
-
-<p>Word must have been passed around for there
-was someone, Chick exclaimed that it was Luigi,
-waiting for them, his weathered old face a mass
-of interweaving laughter wrinkles. Sturdy,
-stocky, clad in ragged clean shirt, with the uniform
-black trousers and sash of the public gondolier,
-Luigi dashed up the short flight of steps,
-rushed toward them. In his outstretched hand
-he held a parcel, small, oh very small. Not big
-enough even for a quarter of a pound of butter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-It had been opened, clumsily retied with gray
-twine. Thrusting it into Chick’s hand he followed
-with a flood of rapid Italian. Once more
-a circle of interested onlookers threatened to engulf
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Chick gave a hasty order, grasped Cynthia’s
-arm and thrust her down the steps, into the
-Luigi gondola. Then waved a wide gesture
-down the Grand Canal toward the lagoon
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>“Buono! ... Buono!” agreed Luigi, nodding
-vigorously like a porcelain <a name="mandarin" id="mandarin"></a><ins title="Original has 'manderin'">mandarin</ins>.
-There came a faint cheer from the crowd on the
-quay and Cynthia recognized a few of their
-morning’s spectators. But the man with the
-galosh, the woman with the cabbage were not
-present. From the comfortable cushioned seat
-she watched palaces of kings and doges,
-princesses, great composers and poets glide past.
-This was heavenly, this was the way to see
-Venice, to see any place, with Chick’s hand in
-hers and not a care in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Then she saw the little package in his other
-hand, glanced up inquiringly and caught the
-look in his eyes. Her heart skipped a beat, two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-beats. No nephew ever looked like that at a
-maiden aunt!</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s,” said Chick, taking his hand out of
-hers, “let’s both undo the package. You do want
-to see what’s in it, don’t you, Cyn?”</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia laughed. “Here I’ve been hustled
-and bustled over half of Venice, in jail and out
-again ...” she addressed the diminishing
-houses of candy pink, baby blue, as the gondola
-struck the wide lagoon and rocked slowly away
-from the town, “and he asks me, do I want to
-know what’s in it. Man alive, do you think I’ve
-got no curiosity?”</p>
-
-<p>From behind them came a musical shout.
-Luigi warning off another gondola. Beyond
-him, Venice glowed pearl pink in the late light
-of afternoon, the long paddle made a soft ripple
-on the blue lagoon. Dark Italian eyes looked
-over their shoulders, whole heartedly, honestly
-as curious as Cynthia, and two heads, one brown,
-one blond bent close together.</p>
-
-<p>Cynthia untied the knot, with slim fingers
-that were cold and loosened the rumpled white
-paper. A small box of blue stained leather beautifully
-tooled in gilt. She lifted the lid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-“Oh Chick ... oh you darling! Chick, is it
-really, really for me?”</p>
-
-<p>On the third finger of her right hand she
-slipped it. Quaint old green gold, delicately
-lacy as the collar of a doge, held firmly in its
-heart a single pink pearl. Chick reached and
-took the hand in his, slipped off the ring, slid
-into his palm the little emerald she had worn
-all summer, and in its place substituted the
-other. It fitted as though it had been made for
-her. Perhaps it was.</p>
-
-<p>“Just for you, yourself,” he said. “It’s quite
-old, four or five hundred years they told me. I
-got it yesterday afternoon in one of those shops
-you looked at, Cynthia. And I’ve been frantic
-all day. ... I wanted to tell you, just this
-way, in a gondola, with just this ring. And I
-couldn’t, darling, tell you before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Chick, it’s the most beautiful, beautiful
-thing I ever saw in my whole life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it?” said Chick, but when she glanced
-up his eyes were not on the ring. “Tomorrow,”
-he said, “we’ll see the American consul. I understand
-he’s the marrying guy about here.”</p>
-
-<p>Behind them suddenly came a great shout,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</a></span>
-baritone, Italian. “<em>Yum tum tumti tumtum. ...
-Yum tiddilty tum, tum ti tumitytum</em>. ...”
-Confidentially Luigi leaned forward, whispered
-in tones that might have been heard back in
-Venice. “That, ladiee, gentleman ... that
-ver’ fine Venezia loove song. You like?”</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<div class="tn">
-<p class="center p120">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Inconsistent hyphenation, punctuation, spelling, the
-use of golash and galosh and poster and paster, and placement of the
-apostrophe in Little One’s Magazine and Little Ones’ Magazine have
-been retained as printed in the original publication except as follows:</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li><ul><li>Page 16<br />
-had tipped and fallen <i>changed to</i>
-had <a href="#tripped">tripped</a> and fallen</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 22<br />
-before the senorita and dramatized the <i>changed to</i><br />
-before the <a href="#senorita">señorita</a> and dramatized the</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 24<br />
-every step she made took here nearer <i>changed to</i><br />
-every step she made took <a href="#her">her</a> nearer</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 33<br />
-with small sharp eyes and an opologetic <i>changed to</i><br />
-with small sharp eyes and an <a href="#apologetic">apologetic</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 43<br />
-a member of the Begger’s Opera<br />
-a member of the <a href="#Beggars">Beggar’s</a> Opera</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 47<br />
-Its all pearly gray mists <i>changed to</i><br />
-<a href="#Its">It’s</a> all pearly gray mists</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 52<br />
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">garcon</i> of the striped waistcoat <i>changed to</i><br />
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><a href="#garcon">garçon</a></i> of the striped waistcoat</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 60<br />
-leaned againt the heavy stone balustrade <i>changed to</i><br />
-leaned <a href="#against">against</a> the heavy stone balustrade</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 78<br />
-chance to to look them over <i>changed to</i><br />
-chance <a href="#to">to</a> look them over</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 79<br />
-medieval France had not, <i>changed to</i><br />
-medieval France had <a href="#not">not</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 99<br />
-the Arc de Triomph <i>changed to</i><br />
-the Arc de <a href="#Triomphe">Triomphe</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 102<br />
-that omelet which Madame Poularde <i>changed to</i><br />
-that omelet which Madame <a href="#Poulard">Poulard</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 127<br />
-all right anyway. &mdash;Oh <i>changed to</i><br />
-all right <a href="#dash">anyway.&mdash;Oh</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 146<br />
-mourned Cynthia. No; it’s <i>changed to</i><br />
-mourned Cynthia. <a href="#no">“No;</a> it’s</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 160<br />
-darn that model!” <i>changed to</i><br />
-darn that <a href="#model">model!</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 164<br />
-caramel custard, at the Cheval Blanc <i>changed to</i><br />
-caramel <a href="#custard">custard at</a> the Cheval Blanc</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 166<br />
-street, past the hotel de l’Universe <i>changed to</i><br />
-street, past the <a href="#Hotel">Hotel</a> de l’Universe</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 171<br />
-till she come in to look at it <i>changed to</i><br />
-till she <a href="#came">came</a> in to look at it</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 184<br />
-but your Aunt was <i>changed to</i><br />
-but your <a href="#aunt">aunt</a> above was</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 199<br />
-of horses hoofs <i>changed to</i><br />
-of <a href="#horses">horses’</a> hoofs</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 201<br />
-pervasive and insistant was the tap <i>changed to</i><br />
-pervasive and <a href="#insistent">insistent</a> was the tap</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 202<br />
-brillant hued balloon <i>changed to</i><br />
-<a href="#brilliant">brilliant</a> hued balloon</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 208<br />
-the judges stand <i>changed to</i><br />
-the <a href="#judges">judges’</a> stand</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 215<br />
-and Cynthia said. <i>changed to</i><br />
-and Cynthia <a href="#said">said,</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 219<br />
-waking to sit bold upright <i>changed to</i><br />
-waking to sit <a href="#bolt">bolt</a> upright</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 246<br />
-irridescent, dark blue and rose <i>changed to</i><br />
-<a href="#iridescent">iridescent</a>, dark blue and rose</li></ul>
-</li>
-
-<li><ul><li>Page 250<br />
-like a porcelain manderin <i>changed to</i><br />
-like a porcelain <a href="#mandarin">mandarin</a></li></ul>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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