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"The little boy!" she gave a kind of bright cry, and herself came to the door. She opened it, and standing yet there, said, with the loveliest manner, "You will not quarrel with this little thing! But forgive her, and pray come in. It was kind to come all the way up those stairs, which are steep as the road to fame."
"Is that steep?" I asked, for her style instantly excited me to a rallying mood.
"Some say so," she replied,--"those who seek it. But come and rest."
And she led me by her flower-soft finger-tips to a sofa, also in the light, as in the room I had quitted, and bathed in airs that floated above the gardens, and downwards from the heavens into that window also open. A curtain was drawn across the alcove at the end, and between us and its folds of green, standing out most gracefully, was a beautiful harp; there were also more books than I had seen in a sitting-room since I left my Davy, and I concluded they had been retrieved from her lost father's library. But upon the whole room there was an atmosphere thrown neither from the gleaming harp nor ill.u.s.trating volumes; and as my eyes rested upon her, after roving everywhere else, I could only wonder I had ever looked away. Her very dress was such as would have become no other, and was that which she herself invested with its charm. She wore a dark-blue muslin, darker than the summer heaven, but of the self-same hue; this robe was worn loosely, was laced in front over a white bodice. Upon those folds was flung a shawl of some dense rose-color and an oriental texture, and again over that shady brilliance fell the long hair, velvet-soft, and darker than the pine-trees in the twilight. The same unearthly hue slept in the azure-emerald of her divinely moulded eyes, mild and liquid as...o...b..d stars, and just as superhuman. The hair, thus loosened, swept over her shoulder into her lap. There was not upon its stream the merest ripple,--it was straight as long; and had it not been so fine, must have wearied with its weight a head so small as hers.
"What magnificent hair you have!" said I.
"It seems I was determined to make of it a spectacle. If I had known you were coming, I should have put it out of the way; but whenever I am lazy or tired, I like to play with it. The Chevalier calls it my rosary."
I was at home directly.
"The Chevalier! Oh! have you seen him since that day?"
"Four, five, six times."
"And I have not seen him once."
"You shall see him eight, nine, ten times. Never mind! He comes to see me, you know, out of that kindness whose prettiest name is charity."
"Where is he now?" I inquired, impatient of that remark of hers.
"Now? I do not know. He has been away a fortnight, conducting everywhere. Have you not heard?"
"No,--what?"
"Of the Mer de Glace overture and accompaniments?"
"I have not heard a word."
She took hold of her hair and stroked it impatiently; still, there was such sweetness in her accent as made me doubt she was angry.
"I told Florimond to tell you. He always forgets those things!"
I looked up inquiringly; there was that in her eye which might be the light of an unfallen tear.
"But I don't know who you mean."
"I am glad not. How silly I am! Oh, _madre mia_! this hot weather softens the brain, I do believe,--I should never have done it in the winter. And all this time I have been wondering what is that basket upon which Josephine seems to have set her whole soul."
"It is for you," said Josephine.
"Oh," I exclaimed, "how careless I am! Yes, but I do not know who it comes from. Franz brought it."
"Young Delemann? Oh, thank him, please! I know very well. Here, then, _piccola, carina_! you shall have to open it. Where are the ivory scissors?"
"Oh, how exquisite!" I cried; for I knew she meant those tiny fingers.
"Exquisite, is it? It is again from the Chevalier."
"Did he say so? I thought it like him; but you are so like him."
"I well, I believe you are right,--there is a kind of likeness."
She raised her eyes, so full of l.u.s.tre, that I even longed for the lids to fall. The brilliant smile, like the most ardent sunlight, had spread over her whole face. I forgot her strange words in her unimaginable expression, until she spoke again. All this while the little one was untwisting the green bands which were pa.s.sed over and under the basket. At length the cover was lifted: there were seven or eight immense peaches. I had thought there must be fruit within, from the exhaling scent, but still I was surprised. There was no letter.
This disappointed me; but there were fresh leaves at the very bottom.
My chief companion took out these, and laid each peach upon a leaf: her fingers shone against the downy blush. She presented me with one after another. "Pray eat them, or as many as you can; I do not eat fruit to-day, for it is too hot weather, and _she_ must not eat so many." I instantly began to eat, and made efforts to do even more than I ought. Josephine carried off her share on a doll's plate. Then her sister rose and took in a birdcage from outside the window, where it had hung, but I had not seen it. There was within it a small bird, and dull enough it looked until she opened the door, when it fluttered to the bars, hopped out, stood upon a peach, and then, espying me, flew straight into her bosom. It lay there hidden for some minutes, and she covered and quite concealed it with her lovely little hand. I said,--
"Is it afraid of me? Shall I go?"
"Oh dear no!" she replied; "it does like you, and is only shy. Do you never wish to be hidden when you see those you like?"
"I never have yet, but I daresay I shall, now I come to think about it."
"You certainly will. This silly little creature is not yet quite sure of us; that is it."
"Where did it come from?"
"It came from under the rye-stacks. He--that is always the Chevalier, you know--was walking through the rye-fields when the moon was up; the reapers had all gone home. He heard a small cry withering under the wheat, and stayed to listen. Most men would not have heard such a weak cry; no man would have stayed to listen, except one, perhaps, besides.
He put aside all the loose ears, and he found under them--for it could not move--this wretched lark, with its foot broken,--broken by the sickle."
There was no quiver of voice or lip as she spoke. I mention this merely because I am not fond of the mere sentiment almost all women infuse into the sufferings of inferior creatures, while those with loftier claims and pains are overlooked. She went on,--
"How do you think he took it up? He spread his handkerchief over the stubble, and sh.e.l.led a grain or two, which he placed within reach of the lark upon the white table-cloth. The lark tried very hard, and hopped with its best foot to reach the grains, then he drew the four corners together, and brought it here to me. I thought it would die, but it has not died; and now it knows me, and has no mind to go away."
"Does it know him?"
"Not only so, but for him alone will it sing. I let it fly one day when its foot was well; but the next morning I found it outside the window pecking at its cage-wires, and it said, 'Take me back again, if you please.'"
"That is like the Chevalier too. But you _are_ like him; I suppose it is being so much with him."
"And yet I never saw him till the first day I saw you, and you had seen him long before. I think it must be dead, it is so still."
Hereupon she uncovered the lark's head; it peeped up, and slowly, with sly scrutiny, hopped back to the peach and began to feed, driving in its little bill. I wanted to know something now, and my curiosity in those days had not so much as received a wholesome check, much less a quietus; and therefore presumptuously demanded,--
"Who was the somebody, Fraulein Cerinthia, that might stop to listen to a bird's cry besides the Chevalier. You stopped."
"And that is why you wished to know. I had better have said it in the right place. Did anybody ever tell you you are audacious? It was Florimond Anastase."
"My master!" and I clapped my hands.
"Mine, sir, if you please."
"But he teaches me the violin."
"And he does not teach me the violin, but is yet my master."
"How, why?"