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"Fearfully up to date, ain't it? Doesn't need any '1893' on it!"
"Full of jump! Why can't we fellows here at home get more of that sort of thing?"
Bertie's heart swelled proudly as she heard this jargon. It was quite unintelligible to her, but she felt sure it conveyed extreme approval.
She turned to look at Truesdale just as he turned to look at her.
He shook his head in burlesque deprecation of her too obvious appreciation, and then brought his attention back to his aunt.
"All right," he said; "I'll do it. I'll come down some day and paint her, or you, or the front doors, or anything else you say." He pondered for a moment, as he edged away a little from Bertie, and tried to carry his aunt with him. "I suppose I shall be expected to look the part?"
"Yes," she responded, sympathetically. "Bertie has never seen an artist, of course, but she has her ideas of how one would look. If it wouldn't be too much trouble for you to...."
"Oh, I don't mind the trouble so very much," replied Truesdale, magnanimously. "I hope I can put myself out a little. She might look for a loose red tie, perhaps, and a Tam O'Shanter, eh?"
"And a velvet coat," suggested his aunt, ardently.
"Oh, bother a velvet coat; that's going a little _too_ far. She would be more likely to look for a palette and a maul-stick."
"Why, certainly."
"Yes, they use those things sometimes. I wonder if she would insist upon an easel?"
"I think I could arrange that," replied his aunt. She drew on an expression of decorous and pensive sadness, and Truesdale knew that she was mentally detaching her crayon of the dear departed from that elaborate white and gold apparatus in her parlor. "And if you should care for a few Persian rugs hung up around...."
"By all means!" cried Truesdale. "And a few Bedouin rifles; and a few bits of bra.s.swork from Cairo; and a few sc.r.a.ps of drapery from Bombay or Trebizond; and one of those inlaid Turkish tables; and one or two stacks of old French armor. I think with all that help I could do a water-color or so."
"You're going to do her in oil," declared his aunt, stoutly.
"I am? Then I must have that table, sure. And a nargileh. And a dozen j.a.panese swords, if you happen to have them about the place. And what else?--oh yes; a small bit of canvas, now I think of it."
Bertie looked round once more, and divined herself under discussion. She sidled away, past a long row of landscapes and marines, and drifted out into the hall, where she leaned over the bal.u.s.trade and studied the mosaics of the vestibule below.
"Good little subject," said one of the students, looking after her. He ran a sudden hand upward through his hair, which had lately fallen from its high estate and had come to look like the hair of anybody else. "Get that profile against a red plush curtain--"
"And drape her in a red silk kimono or something."
"And have a vase of Jacqueminots to one side--a study in reds, you know."
"Yes, I know, you know." He turned on his heel. "Well, this ain't work, or anything like it. Come along up-stairs."
And up-stairs they went--through the main hallway.
Lydia Rhodes followed her protegee with a fond eye. "You know, Truesdale, that she's just the sweetest little thing in the world."
"Oh, yes, I know."
"Why don't you go into the business?" asked his aunt, impulsively, as she placed a cajoling hand upon his arm.
"The business? So I might. Well, you may pay me a hundred dollars for this commission, if you like!"
"You know what I mean--your father's business. Now that they are making it all over, they might easily find a place for you."
"Um," observed Truesdale, falling into a gloomy and chilling reserve.
His aunt saw the necessity of abandoning this new ground at once. "You'll take pains, won't you?" she said, struggling back to her former position.
"You'll make it as nice as you can?"
"Well, it will be a sort of sketch, of course," said Truesdale, still rather coldly.
"It won't, either," insisted his aunt; "it will be a real, regular picture."
"She'd get tired of it. Do you think it's any fun to pose?"
"Tired!" said his aunt, scornfully. She thrust the supposition into the outer darkness and slammed the door behind it. "How are you going to dress her?" she asked, pa.s.sing on with a resolute swiftness to detail.
"If you want anything of mine ... I've got a lovely breadth of old gold satin; and then there are those Roman pearls you brought me."
"Dress her? I sha'nt dress her at all. I don't believe I shall want any of your rugs, either. If they are on the floor, keep them there; that's where they belong. No; I shall just put her before a plain wall in her every-day clothes--the black hat and jacket she's wearing now. Won't that do well enough?"
"We--ell," said his aunt, doubtfully.
Truesdale had juggled enough in his time with draperies and accessories to know how to employ them here, if so minded; but he felt instinctively that any such manipulations would now be quite out of place. "She's a good, sincere, simple little thing," he said to himself, "and she will speak better for herself than all those things could speak for her. I shall make just a sketch--but a careful one. I shall do the best I can; I shall make a very lady-like thing of it." Suddenly he flushed. "I shall tear those old things up to-morrow--they've got to go sometime." He was thinking of certain studies at the back of one of his portfolios; they were _not_ ladylike. "Those models!" he muttered, in a tone at once of objurgation and of self-reproach.
Truesdale came for the first sitting in a costume discreetly picturesque, and his aunt frisked through all the preliminary preparations in a state of great glee. Bertie surrendered herself to the process with an expression of wondering self-depreciation; her large dark eyes shone with a kind of surprised humility.
"If she wouldn't look _quite_ so much like one of Murillo's Madonnas,"
thought Truesdale. "This isn't really the most important thing that has ever happened in the universe, after all." Then he sighed lightly.
"Still, I suppose she _is_ a good deal nearer to a Madonna than I am to a Murillo."
Mrs. Rhodes seemed to feel the necessity of upsetting the whole apartment. She had the inside man bring up the stepladder. "What's this for?" Truesdale asked.
"To fix the curtains right. I can have them taken down, if you say. How far up do you want the shades? Are those lambrequins in the way?"
"Good heavens!" cried Truesdale, "do you want to tear the house down? Do you think I am Raphael painting the Pope?" But all this was only his aunt's way of flattering him into a good-humor, and of making him share her sense of the importance of the occasion.
As the work went on, however, his aunt's song changed imperceptibly from allegretto to adagio, and from the major mode to the minor.
The change first appeared as she studied his charcoal outline. "Well,"
she observed, "I think you might have put Bertie somewhere near the middle of the picture, instead of away off to the left, like that."
"They put them in the middle sometimes--yes," admitted Truesdale, cheerily waving his aunt back. "I'm leaving the other side for you," he added, with a genial impudence.
"Oh, that's it, is it?" And she half believed it true.
On the day following she was distinctly mournful. "Do you mean to tell me that you can ever work over that ma.s.s of red and blue and yellow freckles into anything resembling Bertie's complexion?--such a beautiful one, too!" Bertie blushed. "There! look at it now!" cried his aunt, with a mounting enthusiasm; and Bertie blushed still more violently. Truesdale gave her a brief glance, which he at once transferred to his palette.
This was the first time in his life that he had ever lowered his eyes from a woman's face, merely because there happened to be a blush upon it.
"Work it over?" he presently inquired, as he looked up to his aunt across his shoulder. "I never work anything over."