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"But why won't you listen to Francis? None of my birds sings as he does. Let me tell you, Louise--"
But Louise's step hastened.
"Stop! Don't you hear the Sword motive? That is Aloysius."
Louise stopped for a moment, and, true enough, there was the Sword motive whistled from the branches of a sycamore. And Louise began to doubt her own sanity.
"You do hear him, I can see you do."
"What does all this mean?" Louise said to the Reverend Mother, drawing her aside. "The birds, the birds, Mother Superior, the birds!"
"What birds?"
"The birds singing the motives of 'The Ring.'"
"You mean Teresa's bullfinches, Mademoiselle Helbrun? Yes, they whistle very well."
"But they whistle the motives of 'The Ring!'"
"Ah! she taught them."
"Is that all? I thought she and I were mad. You'll excuse me, Mother Superior? May I ask her about them?"
"Of course, Mademoiselle Helbrun, you can." And Louise walked on in front with Evelyn.
"Mother Superior tells me you have taught bullfinches the motives of 'The Ring,' is it true?"
"Of course. How could they have learned the motives unless from me?"
"But why the motives of 'The Ring'?"
"Why not, Louise? Short little phrases, just suited to a bird."
"But, dear, you must have spent hours teaching them."
"It requires a great deal of patience, but when there is a great whirl in one's head--"
Evelyn stopped speaking, and Louise understood that she shrank from the confession that to retain her sanity she had taught bullfinches to whistle,
"So she is sane, saner than any of us, for she has kept herself sane by an effort of her own will," Louise said to herself.
"Some birds learn much quicker than others; they vary a great deal."
"My dear Evelyn, it is ever so nice of you. Just fancy teaching bullfinches to sing the motives of 'The Ring,' It seemed to me I was in an enchanted garden. But tell me, why, when you had taught them, did you let them fly away?"
"Well, you see, they can only remember two tunes. If you teach them a third they forget the first two, and it seemed a pity to confuse them."
"So when a bullfinch knows two motives you let him go? Well, it is all very simple now you have explained it. They find everything they want in the garden. The bullfinch is a homely little bird, almost as domestic as the robin; they just stay here, isn't that it?"
"Sometimes they go into the park, but they come every morning to be fed. On the whole, Francis is my best bird; but there is another who in a way excels him--Timothy. I don't know why we call him Timothy; it isn't a pretty name, but it seems suited to him because I taught him 'The Shepherd's Pipe'; and you know how difficult it is, dropping half a note each time? Yet he knows it nearly all; sometimes he will whistle it through without a mistake. We could have got a great deal of money for him if he had been sold, and Reverend Mother wanted me to sell him, but I wouldn't."
And Evelyn led Louise away to a far corner.
"He is generally in this corner; these are his trees." And Evelyn began to whistle.
"Does he answer you when you whistle?"
"No; sc.r.a.ping one's feet against the gravel, some little material noise, will set him whistling." And Evelyn sc.r.a.ped her feet. "I'm afraid he isn't here to-day. But there is the bell for Benediction.
We must not keep the nuns waiting." And the singers hurried towards the convent, where they met the Prioress and the Mistress of the Novices and Sister Mary John.
"Dear me, how late you are, Sister!" said Sister Mary John. "I suppose you were listening to the bullfinches. Aren't they wonderful?
But won't you introduce me to Mademoiselle Helbrun? It would be delightful, mademoiselle, if you would only sing for us."
"I shall be very pleased indeed."
"Well, we have only got two or three minutes to decide what it is to be. Will you come up to the organ loft?"
And that afternoon the Wimbledon laity had the pleasure of hearing two prima donne at Benediction.
XXVII
One day in the last month of Evelyn's noviceship--for it was the Reverend Mother's plans to put up Evelyn for election, provided she could persuade Evelyn to take her final vows--Sister Mary John sat at the harmonium, her eyes fixed, following Evelyn's voice like one in a dream. Evelyn was singing Stradella's "Chanson d'Eglise," and when she, had finished the nun rose from her seat, clasping her friend's hand, thanking her for her singing with such effusion that the thought crossed Evelyn's mind that perhaps her friend was giving to her some part of that love which it was essential to the nun to believe belonged to G.o.d alone; and knowing Sister Mary John so well, she could not doubt that, as soon as the nun discovered her infidelity to the celestial Bridegroom, she would separate herself at once from her. A tenderness in the touch of the hand, an ardour in the eye, might reveal the secret to her, or very likely a casual remark from some other nun would awaken her conscience to the danger --an imaginary danger, of course--but that would not be her idea.
Formal relations would be impossible between them, one of them would have to leave; and, without this friendship, Evelyn felt she could not live in the convent.
The accident she foresaw happened two days after, when sitting in the library writing. Veronica came in. Evelyn had seen very little of her lately, and at one time Evelyn, Veronica, and Sister Mary John had formed a little group, each possessing a quality which attracted the others; but, insensibly, musical interests and literary interests-- Sister Mary John had begun to teach Evelyn Latin--had drawn Evelyn and Sister Mary John together, excluding Veronica a little. This exclusion was more imaginary than real. But some jealousy of Sister Mary John had entered her mind; and Evelyn had noticed, though Sister Mary John had failed to notice, that Veronica had, for some time past, treated them with little disdainful airs. And now, when she opened the door, she did not answer Evelyn at once, though Evelyn welcomed her with a pretty smile, asking her whom she was seeking.
There was an accent of concentrated dislike in Veronica's voice when Evelyn said she was looking for Sister Mary John.
"I heard her trampling about the pa.s.sage just now; she is on her way here, no doubt, and won't keep you waiting."
The word "trampling" was understood by Evelyn as an allusion to the hobnails which Sister Mary John wore in the garden. Veronica often dropped a rude word, which seemed ruder than it was owing to the refinement and distinction of her face and her voice. A rude word seemed incongruous on the lips of this mediaeval virgin; and Evelyn sat nibbling the end of the pen, thinking this jealousy was dangerous. Sister Mary John only had to hear of it. The door opened again; this time it was Sister Mary John, who had come to ask Evelyn what was the matter with Veronica.
"I pa.s.sed her in the pa.s.sage just now, and when I asked her if she had seen you, she said she really was too busy to speak to me; and, a moment after, she stood a long while to play with the black kitten, who was catching flies in the window."
"There is no doubt that Veronica has changed; lately she has been rather rude to me."
"To you, Teresa? Now, what could she be rude about to you?" The nun's face changed expression, and Evelyn sat reading it, "Do you think she is jealous of the time we spend together? We have been together a great deal lately."
"But it is necessary that we should be--our music."
"Yes, our music, of course; but I was thinking of other times."
Evelyn knew that Sister Mary John was thinking of the time they had spent reading the Breviary together--four great volumes, one for every season of the year. It was Sister Mary John who had taught her to appreciate the rich, mysterious tradition of the Church, and how these books of ritual and observances could satisfy the mind more than any secular literature. There was always something in the Office to talk about, something new amid much that remained the same--the reappearance of a favourite hymn.
"All the same, Sister, we should not take so much pleasure in each other's society. Veronica is quite right."
At that moment Evelyn was called away by the portress, who had come to tell her that Mother Hilda wanted her in the novitiate, and Sister Mary John was left thinking in the library that Veronica was certainly right, and every moment the conviction grew clearer. It must have been forming in her mind for a long time past, for, within five minutes after Evelyn had left the room, the nun determined to go straight to the Prioress and tell her that her life was being absorbed by Evelyn and beg her to transfer her to the Mother House in France. Never to see Evelyn again! Her strength almost failed her as she went towards the door. But what would it profit her to see Evelyn for a few years if she should lose her for eternity? A little courage, and they would meet to part no more. In a few years both would be in heaven. A confusion of thought began in her; she remembered many things, that she no longer loved Christ as she used to love him. She no longer stood before the picture in which Christ took St. Francis in His arms, saying to Christ, "My embrace will be warmer than his when thou takest me in thy arms." She had often thought of herself and Evelyn in heaven, walking hand in hand. Once they had sat enfolded in each other's arms under a flowering oleander. Christ was watching them! And all this could only point to one thing, that her love of Evelyn was infringing upon her love of G.o.d. And Evelyn, too, had questioned her love of G.o.d as if she were jealous of it, but she had answered Evelyn that nuns were the brides of Christ, and must set no measure on their love of G.o.d. "There is no lover," she had said, "like G.o.d; He is always by you, you can turn to Him at any moment. G.o.d wishes us to keep all our love for Him." She had said these things, but how differently she had acted, forgetful of G.o.d, thinking only of Evelyn, and her vows, and not a little of the woman herself.