<h2 class='c009'>CHAPTER XIV</h2></div>
<p class='c006' ><span class='sc'>As</span> they galloped up the long avenue under the arching
trees, the villa presently came into view. The sound of
laughing voices floated out from the open windows. Marcia
drew rein with a half-involuntary cry of dismay. The
Roystons had come.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’d forgotten!’ she explained to her companion.
‘We’re giving a dinner-party to-night.’</p>
<p class='c007' >At the sound of the clattering hoofs on the gravel of the
driveway a gay group poured out on to the loggia, welcoming
the dilatory riders with laughter and questions and
greetings.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘My dear child! Where have you been?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Here, Pietro; call some one to take the horses.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Is this the way you welcome guests? I shall never——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Dinner’s been waiting half an hour. We were beginning
to think——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’ve been worried to death! You haven’t caught cold,
have you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘No, Aunt Katherine,’ she laughed as she pulled off her
gloves and shook hands with the visitors. ‘But we’ve
been nearly drowned! We should have been wholly
drowned if Mr. Sybert hadn’t spied a very leaky ark on the
top of a hill.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m relieved!’ sighed her uncle as they passed into the
hall. ‘I was beginning to fear that you had had a disagreement
on the way, and that it was another case of the
Kilkenny cats.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Marcia, how you look! You’re covered with mud!’
cried Mrs. Copley.</p>
<p class='c007' >With a slightly apprehensive glance toward the mirror,
Marcia straightened her hat and rubbed a daub of mud
from her cheek. ‘Kentucky Lil and Triumvirate were in
too much of a hurry to get home to turn out for puddles,’
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_140' id='Page_140'>140</SPAN></span>
she said. ‘How much time may we have to dress, Aunt
Katherine?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Just fifteen minutes,’ returned her uncle; ‘and that
is a quarter of an hour more than you deserve. If you are
not down then, we shall eat without waiting for you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Fifteen minutes, remember!’ cried Marcia to Sybert
as they parted at the top of the stairs. ‘I’ll race with you,’
she added; ‘though I think myself that a girl ought to
have a handicap.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She found Granton, a picture of prim disapproval, waiting
with her dress spread out on the bed. Marcia dropped into
a wicker chair with a tired sigh.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You’ve ridden a long way,’ Granton remarked as she
removed a muddy boot.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes, Granton, I have; and dinner’s already been waiting
half an hour, and Pietro looks like a thunder-cloud,
and Mrs. Copley looks worried, and the guests look hungry—what
François looks like I don’t dare to think. We
must <i>fly</i>; our reputations depend on it.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Am I ready?’ she inquired, not much more than fifteen
minutes later, as she twisted her head to view the effect
in the mirror.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You’ll do very well,’ said Granton.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m terribly tired,’ she sighed; ‘and I feel more like
going to bed than facing guests—but I suppose, in the
natural order of events, dinner must be accomplished first.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘To be sure,’ said the maid, critically adjusting her train.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Your philosophy is so comfortable, Granton! As we
have done yesterday, so shall we do to-day and also to-morrow.
It saves one the trouble of making up one’s
mind.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She reached the salon just in time to take Paul Dessart’s
silently offered arm to the dining-room. Sybert did not
appear until the soup was being removed. He possessed
himself of the empty chair beside Eleanor Royston, with
a murmured apology to his hostess.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It’s excusable, Sybert,’ said Copley, with a frown.
‘You should not allow a woman to beat you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The furniture in that room you gave me,’ he complained
gravely, ‘was built as a trap for collar-buttons. The side
of the bed comes to within three inches of the floor—I
couldn’t crawl under.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_141' id='Page_141'>141</SPAN></span>
‘What did you do?’ Eleanor Royston asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I borrowed one of our host’s—and I had a hard time
finding it.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I shall put my wardrobe under lock and key the next
time you visit us,’ Copley declared.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert was curiously inspecting a small white globule he
found by his plate.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia laughed and called from the other end of the
table: ‘It’s your own prescription, Mr. Sybert; drop it
in your wine-glass and drink it like a man. I’ve taken my
dose.’</p>
<p class='c007' >During this exchange of badinage Paul Dessart said
never a word. He sat with his eyes fixed moodily on the
table-cloth, and—one hates to say it of Paul—he sulked.
For the first time since she had known him, Marcia found
him <i>difficile</i>. He started no subject himself, and those that
she started, after a brief career, fell lifeless. It may have
been that she herself was somewhat ill at ease, but in any
case several awkward silences fell between them, which
the young man made no attempt to break. Mr. Copley
would never have said of him to-night that he was an
ornament to any dinner-table. It fell to the Frenchman
across the way to keep the ball rolling.</p>
<p class='c007' >In an errant glance toward the other end of the table,
Marcia saw Sybert laughing softly at something Eleanor
had said. She stayed her glance a second to note involuntarily
how well they went together. Eleanor, with
her white shoulders rising from a cloud of pale-blue gauze,
looked fair and distinguished; and Sybert, with his dark
face and sullen eyes, made an esthetically satisfying contrast.
He was bending toward her with that air of easy
politeness, that superior self-sufficiency, which had always
exasperated Marcia so. But Eleanor knew how to take it;
she had been out nine seasons, and the smile with which she
answered him was quite as mocking as his own.</p>
<p class='c007' >He looked to-night, through and through, what Marcia
had always taken him for—the finished cosmopolitan—the
diplomat—the diner-out. But he was not just that, she
knew; she had seen him off his guard in the midst of the
storm that afternoon, and she was still tingling with the
surprise of it. She recalled what Mr. Melville had said
that afternoon in the ilex grove—she was always recalling
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_142' id='Page_142'>142</SPAN></span>
what people said about Sybert. The things seemed to
stick in one’s mind; he was a subject that gave rise to
many <i>mots</i>. ‘You think you are very broad-minded
because you see the man underneath the peasant. Don’t
you think you could push your broad-mindedness one step
further and see the man underneath the man of the world?’
She had caught a glimpse that afternoon. It seemed now
as if his air of super civilization were only a mask to conceal—she
did not know what, underneath. She was searching
for an apt description when she heard the young Frenchman
laughingly inquire: ‘Mademoiselle Copley <i>est un peu
distraite ce soir, n’est-ce pas</i>?’</p>
<p class='c007' >With a little start, she became aware that some one had
asked her a question. For the remainder of the dinner she
kept her eyes at her end of the table, and exerted herself to
be gracious to her taciturn companion. Paul’s bad temper
was not unbecoming, and he scarcely could have adopted
a wiser course. Marcia had expected to find him sparkling,
enthusiastic, convincing; and she had come down prepared
to withstand his charm. <i>Mais voilà!</i> there was no charm
to withstand. He was sullen, moody, with a frown scarcely
veiled enough for politeness. Some one had once compared
him, not very originally, to a Greek god. He looked it
more than ever to-night, if one can imagine a Greek god
in the sulks. What was the matter with him, Marcia could
only guess. Perhaps, as his cousin had affirmed, he was
like a cat and needed stroking the right way of the fur. At
any rate, she found the new mood rather taking, and she
somewhat weakly allowed herself to stroke him the right
way. By the time they rose from the table he was, if not
exactly purring, at least not showing his claws.</p>
<p class='c007' >At the Royston girls’ suggestion, they put on evening
wraps and repaired to the terrace—except the two elder
ladies, who preferred the more tempered atmosphere of the
salon. Mrs. Copley delegated her husband and Sybert to
act as chaperons—a position which Sybert accepted with
a bow, to the accompaniment of a slightly puzzled smile
on Eleanor’s part. She could not exactly make out the
gentleman’s footing in the household. They seated themselves
in a group about the balustrade, with the exception
of Eleanor and Sybert, who strolled back and forth the
length of the flagging. Eleanor was doing her best to-night,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_143' id='Page_143'>143</SPAN></span>
and her best was very good; she appeared to have
wakened a spark in even his indifference. Marcia, with her
eyes on the two, thought again how well they went together,
and M. Benoit was a second time on the verge of calling her
<i>distraite</i>.</p>
<p class='c007' >The two strollers after a time joined the group, Eleanor
humming under her breath a little French <i>chanson</i> that
had been going the rounds of the Paris cafés that spring.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, sing something we all know,’ said Margaret, and
with a laughing curtesy toward Sybert she struck into
‘Fair Harvard.’ The other girls joined her. Their
voices, rising high and clear, filled the night with the swinging
melody. It seemed strangely out of place there, in the
midst of the Sabine hills, with the old villa behind them
and the Roman Campagna at their feet. As their voices
died away Sybert laughed softly.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I swear I’d forgotten it!’</p>
<p class='c007' >Margaret shook her head in mock reproof. ‘Forgotten
it!’ she cried. ‘A man ought to be ashamed to acknowledge
it if he had forgotten his Alma Mater song. It’s like
forgetting his country.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I suspect,’ said Eleanor, ‘that it’s time for you to go
back to America and be naturalized, Mr. Sybert.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, well, Miss Royston,’ he objected, ‘I suppose in time
one outgrows his college, just as one outgrows his kindergarten.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And his country,’ Marcia added, as much for Paul
Dessart’s benefit as for his own.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >Margaret, searching for diversion, presently suggested
that they visit the ghost. Marcia objected that the ghost
was visible only during the full moon, but the objection
was overruled. There was some moon at least, and a wild
night like this, with flying clouds and waving branches,
was just the time for a ghost to think of his sins. Mr.
Copley, in the office of chaperon, remonstrated that the
grass would be damp; but there were rubbers, he was told.
Marcia acquiesced in the expedition without any marked
enthusiasm; she foresaw a possible <i>tête-à-tête</i> with Paul
Dessart. As they set out, however, she found herself walking
beside M. Benoit, with Paul contentedly strolling on
ahead at the side of his younger cousin, while Eleanor and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_144' id='Page_144'>144</SPAN></span>
the two chaperons brought up the rear. As they came to
the end of the laurel path and approached the region of the
ruins, Margaret paused with her finger on her lips and in a
conspiratorial whisper impressed silence on the group.
They laughingly fell into the spirit of the play, and the
whole party stole along with the elaborate caution of ten-year-old
boys ambuscading Indians.</p>
<p class='c007' >The ruins in the dim light looked a fit harbour for ghosts.
The crumbling piles of masonry were almost hidden by the
dark foliage, but the empty fountain stood out clearly in a
little open space between the trees.</p>
<p class='c007' >The group paused on the edge of the trees and stood
with eyes turned half expectantly toward the fountain.
As they looked, they saw, with a tremor of surprise, the
dim figure of a man rise from the coping and dissolve into
the surrounding shadows. For a moment no one uttered
a sound beyond a quick gasp of astonishment, and an
excited giggle from Margaret Royston. Paul was the first
to rise to the occasion with the muffled assertion that he
recognized the fair and warlike form in which the majesty
of buried Denmark did sometime march. Before any of
them had recovered sufficiently to follow the apparition, a
second ghost rose from the coping and stood wavering in
apparent hesitancy whether to recede or advance. This
was more than tradition demanded, and with a quick
exclamation both Copley and Sybert sprang forward to
solve the mystery.</p>
<p class='c007' >A babble of noisy expostulation burst forth. The ghost
was vociferous in his apologies. He had finished his work
and had desired to take the air. It was a beautiful night.
He came to talk with a friend. He did not know that the
signore ever came here, or he would never have ventured.</p>
<p class='c007' >The tones were familiar, and a little sigh of disillusionment
swept through the group. The two men came back laughing,
and Paul apostrophized tragically:</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Another lost illusion! If all the ghosts turned out to
be butlers, how unromantic the world would be!’</p>
<p class='c007' >The young Frenchman took up the tale of mourning.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘But the true ghost, Monsieur le Prince, whom I was
preparing to paint; after this he will not deign to poke
his nose from the grave. It is an infamy! An infamy!’
he declared.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_145' id='Page_145'>145</SPAN></span>
They laughingly turned back toward the villa, and Marcia
discovered that she was walking beside Paul. It had
come about quite naturally, without any apparent interposition
on his part; but she did not doubt, since he had
the chance, that he would take advantage of it to demand
an answer, and she prepared herself to parry what he might
choose to say. He strolled along, whistling softly, apparently
in no hurry to say anything. When he did break the
silence it was to remark that the tree-toads were infernally
noisy to-night. He went on to observe that he wasn’t
particularly taken with her butler; the fellow protested
too much in the wrong place, and not enough in the right.
From that he passed to a flying criticism of villa architecture.
Villa Vivalanti was a daisy except for the eastern
wing, and that was ‘way off in style and broke the lines.
Those gingerbread French villas at Frascati, he thought,
ought to be razed to the ground by act of parliament.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia responded rather lamely to his remarks, as she
puzzled her brains to think whether she had done anything
to offend him. He seemed entirely good-humoured, however,
and chatted along as genially as the first time they
had met. She could not comprehend this new attitude,
and though it was just what she had wished for—such is
the contrariness of human nature—she vaguely resented it.
Had M. Benoit seen her just then he might have accused
her, for the third time, of being <i>distraite</i>.</p>
<p class='c007' >The ghost-hunters, upon their return, shortly retired for
the night, as the festa at Genazzano would demand an
early start. Before going upstairs, Marcia waited to give
orders about an open-air breakfast-party she was planning
for the morrow. In searching for Pietro she also found
her uncle. Mr. Copley, very stern, was engaged in telling
the butler that if it occurred again he would be discharged;
and the butler, very humble, was assuring the signore that
in the future his commands should be implicitly obeyed.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Uncle Howard,’ Marcia remonstrated, ‘you surely aren’t
scolding the poor fellow because of to-night? What difference
does it make if he does entertain his friends in the
grounds of the old villa? We never go near the place.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It is this particular friend I am objecting to.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Who was it?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Gervasio’s stepfather.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_146' id='Page_146'>146</SPAN></span>
‘Oh, you don’t suppose,’ she cried, ‘that he is trying to
steal the child back again?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I should like to see him do it!’ said Mr. Copley, with
decision. ‘He doesn’t want the boy,’ he added. ‘What
he wants is money, but he isn’t going to get any. I won’t
have him hanging about the place, and the servants may
as well understand it first as last.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia, having outlined her plan for the breakfast to a
somewhat unresponsive Pietro, finally gained her room;
and setting her candle down on the table, she dropped into
the first chair she came to with a sigh of relief that the
evening was over. She was tired, not only in body, but in
mind as well.</p>
<p class='c007' >The evening was not quite ended, however. A gentle
tap came on the door, and she opened it to find Eleanor
and Margaret in loose silk dressing-gowns. ‘Let us in
quick,’ said Margaret. ‘We’ve just met a man in the hall.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The ubiquitous Pietro shutting up windows,’ added
Eleanor. ‘If I were you, I’d discharge that man and get
a more companionable butler. It’s uncanny for an Italian
servant to be as grave as an English one.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Poor Pietro has just had a scolding, which, I suppose,
accounts for his gravity. It’s funny,’ she added, ‘that’s
exactly the advice that Paul gave me to-night.’ The
‘Paul’ was out before she could catch it, and she reddened
apprehensively, but the girls let it pass without challenging.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘We’ve come to talk,’ said Margaret, possessing herself
of the couch and settling the cushions behind her. ‘I hope
you’re not sleepy.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘<i>Very</i>,’ said Marcia; ‘but I dare say I shan’t be ten
minutes from now.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You needn’t worry; this isn’t going to be an all-night
session,’ drawled Eleanor from the lazy depths of an easy-chair.
‘We start at nine for the Madonna’s festa.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You’d better appreciate us now that you’ve got us,’
added Margaret. ‘We should by rights have slept in Rome
to-night.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘How did you manage it?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Paul took mamma down to the Forum to look at some
inscriptions they’ve just dug up; and while she was gone
Eleanor and I scrambled around and packed the trunks for
Perugia. By the time she came back we had everything
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_147' id='Page_147'>147</SPAN></span>
ready to come out here, and our hats on waiting to start.
She didn’t recover her breath until we were in the train,
and then she couldn’t say anything before Mr. Copley.
When it comes to starting on Journeys,’ Margaret added,
‘mamma is not what you’d call impulsive.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Not often,’ assented Eleanor; ‘but there have been
instances. By the way,’ she added, ‘I wish you’d explain
about Mr. Sybert; I confess I don’t quite grasp his standing
in the family. How do you come to be taking such lengthy
horseback rides with a young man and no groom? You
never did that when my mother was chaperoning you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘No,’ acquiesced Marcia; ‘I didn’t. But Mr. Sybert’s
a little different. He’s not exactly a young man, you know;
he’s a friend of Uncle Howard’s. He happened to be
available this afternoon, and Angelo didn’t happen to be,
so he came instead.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘As a sort of sub-groom?’ Eleanor asked. ‘I should
think he might object to the position.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He couldn’t help himself!’ she laughed. ‘Aunt
Katherine forced him into it.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Eleanor regarded Marcia with a still puzzled smile.
‘You talk about Mr. Sybert as if he were a contemporary
of your grandfather. How old is he, may I ask?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I don’t know. He’s nearly as old as Uncle Howard.
Thirty-five or thirty-six, I should say.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘A man isn’t worth talking to under thirty-five.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, nonsense!’ Margaret objected. ‘I never heard
any one in my life talk better than Paul, and he’s exactly
twenty-five.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Paul talks words; he doesn’t talk ideas,’ said her sister.</p>
<p class='c007' >There was a pause, in which Eleanor leaned forward to
examine some bits of green and blue iridescent glass lying
in a little tray on the table. ‘What are these?’ she
inquired.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Pieces of perfume-bottles that the grave-digger in
Palestrina found in an old Etruscan tomb. There were
some bronze mirrors, and the most wonderful gold necklace—I
wanted it dreadfully, but he didn’t dare sell it; it’s
gone to a museum in Rome. Aren’t these pieces of glass
lovely, though? I am going to have them set in gold and
made into pins.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Here’s a little bottle that’s scarcely broken.’ Eleanor
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_148' id='Page_148'>148</SPAN></span>
held it up before the candle and let the light play upon its
surface. ‘Who do you suppose owned it before you,
Marcia?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Some girl who turned to dust centuries ago.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And her necklaces and mirrors and perfume-bottles
still exist. What a commentary!’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Thank goodness, they don’t put such things in one’s
coffin nowadays,’ said Marcia; ‘or twenty-five hundred
years from now some other girl would be saying the same
of us.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Twenty-five hundred years,’ Eleanor murmured. ‘I
declare, my nine seasons sink into insignificance!’ She
dropped the bottle into its tray and leaned back in her chair
with a little laugh. ‘America is a bit tame, isn’t it, after
Italy? One doesn’t get so many emotions.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m not sure but one gets too many in Italy,’ said Marcia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘How long are you going to stay over?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I don’t know. It’s so much easier not to make up one’s
mind. I shall probably stay a year or so longer with Uncle
Howard.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I like your uncle, Marcia. He has a very taking way
of saying funny things without smiling.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Ah,’ sighed Marcia, ‘he has!’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And as for Mr. Sybert——’ Margaret put in mockingly.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I think he’s about the most interesting man I’ve met
in Europe,’ Eleanor agreed imperturbably.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The most interesting man you’ve met in Europe?’
Marcia opened her eyes. The statement was sweeping, and
Eleanor had had experience. ‘How do you mean?’ she
asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Well,’ said Eleanor, with the judicial air of a connoisseur,
‘for one thing, he has a striking face. I don’t know whether
you ever noticed it, but he has eyes exactly like that portrait
of Filippino Lippi in the Uffizi. I kept thinking about
it all the time I was talking to him—sleepy sort of Italian
eyes, you know—and an American mouth. It makes an
interesting combination; you keep wondering what a man
like that will do.’</p>
<p class='c007' >As Marcia made no comment, she continued:</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He has an awfully interesting history. We met him
at a reception last week, and Mr. Melville told me all about
him afterward. He was born in Genoa—his father was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_149' id='Page_149'>149</SPAN></span>
United States consul—and he was brought up in the midst
of the excitement during the fight for Italian unity. Politics
was in the air he breathed. He knows more about the
Italians than they know about themselves. He speaks the
language like a native, and he never——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, I know what Mr. Melville told you,’ Marcia interrupted.
‘He likes him.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Don’t most people?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Ask your cousin about him. Ask Mr. Carthrope, the
English sculptor. Ask anybody you please—barring my
uncle—and see what you’ll hear.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What shall I hear?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘A different story from every person.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Well, really! He’s worth knowing.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I detest him!’ Marcia made the statement as much
from habit as conviction.</p>
<p class='c007' >Eleanor regarded her a moment rather narrowly, and
then she observed: ‘I will tell you one thing, Marcia
Copley; and that is, that interesting men are mighty
scarce in this world. I don’t remember ever having met
more than half a dozen.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And you’ve had experience,’ suggested Marcia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Nine seasons.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Who were they—the half-dozen?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘One was a Kansas politician who wrote poetry. A
most amazing mixture of crudeness and tact—remarkably
bright in some ways, but unexpectedly lacking in others.
He’d never read <i>Hamlet</i>; said he’d heard of it, though.
Another was a super-civilized Russian. I met him in Cairo.
He spoke seven languages, and didn’t find any of them full
enough to express his thoughts. Another was——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The engineer,’ suggested Marcia. She had heard of the
engineer both from Eleanor and her mother.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes,’ agreed Eleanor, ‘the chief engineer on the Claytons’
yacht. I cruised around with them two years ago on
the Mediterranean, and the only interesting man on board
was the engineer. He was English, and he’d lived in India
and Burma, and in—oh, hundreds of nameless places. I
couldn’t get much out of him at first; he was pretty shy.
English people are, you know. But when he saw that one
was really interested he would tell the most astonishing
tales. I didn’t have much chance to talk to him—he didn’t
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_150' id='Page_150'>150</SPAN></span>
appeal to mamma. That was one of the times that mamma
was impetuous,’ she added with a laugh. ‘Instead of
keeping on to Port Said with the boat, we disembarked at
Alexandria and ran up to Cairo for the rest of the winter.
It was there I met the Russian. He was stopping at
<i>Shepheard’s</i>.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Eleanor paused, and her gaze became reminiscent as
she sat toying with the little Etruscan perfume-bottle.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And the others?’ Marcia prompted.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Well, let me see,’ Eleanor laughed. ‘I once knew a
professor of psychology in a little speck of a New England
college. He spent his whole life in thinking, and he’d
arrived at some very queer conclusions. He was most
entertaining—he knew absolutely nothing about the world.’
A shade of something like remorse crossed her face, and
she hastily abandoned the professor. ‘Did I say there
were any more? I can’t think who the fifth can be, unless
I include the blacksmith who married my maid. I never
knew him personally; I merely judge from her report of
him. He beats her, I believe, when he gets angry; but
he’s so apologetic afterward that she enjoys it. If you’ve
ever read <i>Wuthering Heights</i> he’s exactly like Heathcliff.
I’d really like to know him. He’d be worth studying.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘That’s the trouble,’ complained Marcia. ‘If you’re
a man you can go around and get acquainted with any one
you please, whether he’s a blacksmith or a prince; but
if you’re a girl you have to wait till you’re introduced at a
tea. And the interesting ones never are introduced at teas.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes,’ agreed Eleanor; ‘that’s partly true. But, on
the other hand, I think you really get to know people better
if you’re a girl—what they’re really like inside, I mean.
Men are remarkably confidential creatures.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Did you find Mr. Sybert confidential?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘N-no. I can’t say that I did. He’s queer, isn’t he?
You have the feeling that he doesn’t talk about what he
thinks about—that’s why I should like to know him. It’s
not what a man does that makes him interesting; it’s what
he thinks. It’s his potentialities.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Margaret rose with something of a yawn. ‘If you’re
going to discuss potentialities, I’m going to bed. Come
on, Eleanor. To-morrow’s the festa of Our Lady of Good
Counsel, and we start at nine o’clock.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_151' id='Page_151'>151</SPAN></span>
Eleanor rose reluctantly. ‘I wish we weren’t going to
Perugia on Wednesday. I should much rather stay here
with Marcia.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And Mr. Sybert,’ Margaret laughed.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, yes, Mr. Sybert,’ Eleanor acquiesced. ‘He annoys
you until you get him settled.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He’s like one of those problems in algebra,’ suggested
Marcia. ‘Given a lot of things, to find the value of x.
You work it exactly right and x won’t come.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Margaret paused by the door and gathered her wrapper
around her like a toga.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘While you’re talking about interesting people,’ she
threw back, ‘I know one who isn’t appreciated, and that’s
Paul. He’s a mighty nice boy.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘That’s just what he is,’ said Eleanor. ‘A nice boy—<i>et
c’est tout</i>. Good night, Marcia. When we come back
from Perugia we’ll sit up all night talking about interesting
men. It’s an interesting subject.’</p>
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