<div><span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span><h1>CHAPTER X</h1></div>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>W</span><span class='sc'>hen</span> they swung round the great bend of
the Rhone, and Vienne came in sight,
Tommy uttered a cry of exultation.</p>
<p class='noindent'>“Oh Clementina, let us stay here for a week!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>When they stood an hour afterwards on the great
suspension bridge that connects Vienne with the
little town of Sainte-Colombe, and drank in the afternoon
beauty of the place, Tommy amended his
proposition.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh Clementina,” said he, “let us stay here for
ever!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Clementina sighed, and watched the broad blue
river sweeping in its majestic curve between the
wooded mountains from whose foliage peeped a
myriad human habitations, the ancient Château-Fort
de la Bâtie standing a brave and mutilated
sentinel on its dominating hill, the nestling town
with its Byzantine towers and tiled roofs, the Gothic
west front of the Cathedral framed by the pylons
of the bridge, the green boulevarded embankment and
the fort of Sainte-Colombe in its broader and more
smiling valley guarded, it too, by its grim square
tower, the laughing peace of the infinite web of afternoon
shadow and afternoon sunlight. Away up the
stream a barge moved slowly down under a sail of
burnished gold. A few moments afterwards coming
under the lee of the mountains, the sail turned into
what Tommy, who had pointed it out, called a dream-coloured
brown. From which it may be deduced
that Tommy was growing poetical.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In former times Clementina would have rebuked
so nonsensical a fancy. But now, with a nod, she
acquiesced. Nay more, she openly agreed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We who live in a sunless room in the midst of
paint-pots, know nothing of the beauty of the
world.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s true,” said Tommy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We hope, when we’re tired, that there is such
a place as the Land of Dreams, but we imagine it’s
somewhere east of the sun, and west of the moon.
We don’t realise that all we’ve got to do to get there
is to walk out of our front door.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It all depends upon the inward eye, doesn’t it?”
said the boy. “Or, perhaps, indeed, it needs a double
inward eye—two personalities, you know, harmonised
in a subtle sort of way, so as to bring it into focus.
You see what I mean? I don’t think I could get
the whole dreamy adorableness of this if I hadn’t
you beside me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you mean that, Tommy?” she asked, with
eyes fixed on the Rhone.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course I do,” he replied, earnestly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her lips worked themselves into a smile.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I never thought my personality could harmonise
with any other on God’s earth.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’ve lived a life of horrible, rank injustice.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She started, as if hurt. “Ah! don’t say that.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“To yourself, I mean, dearest Clementina. You’ve
never allowed yourself a good quality. Now you’re
beginning to find out your mistake.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“When it’s pointed out that I can harmonise with
your beautiful nature!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>At the flash of the old Clementina, Tommy laughed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m not going to deny that there’s good in me.
Why should I? If there wasn’t, I shouldn’t be here.
You wouldn’t have asked me to be your companion,”
he added quickly, fearing lest she might put a wrong
construction on his words. “When a good woman
does a man the honour of admitting him to her intimate
companionship, he knows he’s good—and it makes
him feel better.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her left elbow rested on the parapet of the bridge,
and her chin rested on the palm of her hand. Without
looking at him she stretched out the other hand and
touched him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Thank you for saying that, Tommy,” she said in
a low voice.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Their mutual relations had modified considerably
during the journey. The change, in the first place,
had come instinctively from Tommy. Hitherto,
Clementina had represented little to his ingenuous
mind but the rough-and-ready comrade, the good sort,
the stunning portrait-painter. With many of his
men friends he was on practically the same terms.
Quite unconsciously he patronised her ever so little,
as the Prince Charmings of life’s fairy-tale are apt
to patronise those who are not quite so charming or
quite so princely as themselves. When he had dined
with the proud and gorgeous he loved to strut before
her aureoled in his reflected splendour; not for a
moment remembering that had Clementina chosen to
throw off her social nonconformity she could have
sat in high places at the houses of such a proud and
gorgeous hierarchy as he, Tommy Burgrave, could not
hope, for many years, to consort with. Sometimes
he treated her as an old family nurse, who spoiled
him, sometimes as a bearded master; he teased her;
chaffed her, laid traps to catch her sharp sayings;
greeted her with “Hullo,” and parted from her with
an airy wave of the hand. But as soon as they set
off on their travels the subtle change took place,
for which the fact of his being her guest could only,
in small degree, account. Being in charge of all
arrangements, and thus asserting his masculinity,
he saw Clementina in a new light. For all her
unloveliness she was a woman; for all her lack of
convention she was a lady born and bred. She was
as much under his protection as any dame or damsel
of the proud and gorgeous to whom he might have
had the honour to act as escort; and without a
moment’s self-consciousness he began to treat Clementina
with the same courteous solicitude as he
would have treated such dame or damsel, or, for the
matter of that, any other woman of his acquaintance.
Whereas, a month or two before he would have tramped
by her side for miles without the thought of her possible
fatigue entering his honest head, now her inability
to stroll about the streets of these little provincial
towns, without physical exhaustion, caused him
grave anxiety. He administered to her comfort
in a thousand ways. He saw to the proper working
of the shutters in her room, to the smooth opening
of the drawers and presses; put the fear of God into
the hearts of chamber-maids and valets through the
medium of a terrific lingua franca of his own invention;
supplied her with flowers; rose early every morning to
scour the town for a <span class='it'>New York Herald</span> so that it could
be taken up to Clementina’s room with her coffee,
and <span class='it'>petit croissant</span>. His habit of speech, too, became
more deferential, and his discourse gained in depth
and sincerity what it lost in picturesque vernacular.
To sum up the whole of the foregoing in a phrase,
Tommy’s attitude towards Clementina grew to be that
of an extremely nice boy towards an extremely nice
maiden aunt.</p>
<p class='pindent'>This change of attitude acted very powerfully
on Clementina. As she had remarked, it was a new
sensation to be taken care of: one which she liked very
much indeed. All the sternly repressed feminine
in her—all that she called the silly fool woman—responded
to the masculine strength and delicacy of
touch. She, on her side, saw Tommy in a new light.
He had developed from the boy into the man. He was
responsible, practical, imperious in his frank, kindly,
Anglo-Saxon way. It was a new joy for the woman,
who, since girlhood, had fought single-handed for her
place in the world, to sit still and do nothing while
difficulties vanished before his bright presence just
as the crests of alarming steeps vanished before the
irresistible rush of the car.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Once when a loud report and the grinding of the
wheels announced a puncture, she cried involuntarily.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m so glad!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Tommy laughed. “Well, of all the feminine
reasons for gladness!”—Clementina basked in her
femininity like a lizard in the sun. “I suppose it’s
because you can sit in the shade and watch Johnson
and me toiling and broiling like niggers on the road.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She blushed beneath her swarthy skin. That was
just it. She loved to see him throw off his coat
and grapple like a young Hercules with the tyre.
For Johnson’s much more efficient exertions she cared
not a scrap.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her heart was full of new delights. It was a new
delight to feel essentially what she in her irony used
to term a lady; to be addressed with deference and
tenderness, to have her desires executed just that
instant before specific formulation which gives charm
and surprise. Every day she discovered a new and
unsuspected quality in Tommy, and every evening
she dwelt upon the sweetness, freshness, and strength
of his nature. The lavender fragrance, the nice
maiden-aunt-ity of her relations with Tommy, I am
afraid she missed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It gave her an odd little thrill of pleasure when
Tommy propounded his theory of the perfect focal
adjustment of the good in their natures. When he
implicitly gave her rank as angel she was deeply
moved. So she stretched out her hand and touched
him and said “Thank you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You said nothing about my proposal to stay here
for ever,” he remarked, after a while.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m quite ready,” she replied absently. “Why
shouldn’t we?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Tommy pointed out a white château that flashed
through the greenery of the hill behind the cathedral.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s the place we’ll take. We’ll fill it with
books—chiefly sermons, and flowers—chiefly poppies,
and we’ll smoke hashish instead of tobacco, and
we’ll sleep and paint dream-pictures all the rest of our
lives.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I suppose you can’t conceive life—even a dream-life—without
pictures to paint in it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Not exactly,” said he. “Can you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I shouldn’t be painting pictures in my dream-life.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What would you be doing?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Clementina did not reply. She looked at
the brave old sentinel fort glowing red in the splendour
of the westering sun. Tommy continued—“I’m
sure you would be painting. How do you think
a musician could face an existence without music?
or a golfer without golf?” and he broke into his fresh
laugh. “I wonder what dream-golf would be like?
It would be a sort of mixed arrangement, I guess, with
stars for balls and clouds for bunkers and meads of
asphodels for putting greens.” He suddenly lifted
his hands, palm facing palm, and looked through them
at the framed picture. “Clementina dear, if I don’t
get that old Tour de la Bâtie with the sunset on
it, I’ll die. It will take eternity to get it right,
and that’s why we must stay here for ever.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We’ll stay as long as you like,” said Clementina,
“and you can paint to your heart’s content.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re the dearest thing in the world,” said
Tommy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dinner time drew near. They left the bridge reluctantly,
and mounted the great broad flight of forty
steps that led to the west door of the Cathedral.
A few of the narrow side streets brought them into
the Place Miremont, where their hotel was situated.
In the lazy late afternoon warmth it looked the laziest
and most peaceful spot inhabited by man. The square,
classic Town Library, hermetically closed, its inner
mysteries hidden behind drawn blinds, stood in
its midst like a mausoleum of dead and peaceful
thoughts. Nothing living troubled it save a mongrel
dog asleep on the steps. No customer ruffled the
tranquillity of the shops around the <span class='it'>Place</span>. A red-trousered,
blue-coated little soldier—so little that he
looked like a toy soldier—and an old man in a blouse,
who walked very slowly in the direction of the café,
were the only humans on foot. Even the hotel
omnibus, rattling suddenly into the square, failed
to break the spell of quietude. For it was empty,
and its emptiness gave a pleasurable sense of distance
from the fever and the fret of life.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It is even said that Pontius Pilate found peace in
Vienne, lying, according to popular tradition, under
a comparatively modern monolith termed the Aiguille.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Are you quite sure this place isn’t too dead-and-alive
for you?” Clementina asked, as they
approached the hotel.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He slid his hand under her arm.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh no!” he cried, with a little reassuring squeeze.
“It’s heavenly.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>While she was cleansing herself for dinner,
Clementina looked in the glass. Her hair, as usual,
straggled untidily over her temples. She wore it
bunched up anyhow in a knot behind, and the resentful
hair-pins invariably failed in their office. This
evening she removed the faithful few, the saving
remnant that for the world’s good remains in all
communities, even of hair-pins, and her hair thick
and black fell about her shoulders. She combed it,
brushed it, brought it up to the top of her head and
twisting it into a neat coil held it there with her
hand, and for a moment or two studied the effect
somewhat dreamily. Then, all of a sudden, a change of
mood swept over her. She let the hair down again,
almost savagely wound it into its accustomed clump
into which she thrust hair-pins at random, and turned
away from the mirror, her mouth drawn into its old
grim lines.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Tommy found her rather uncommunicative at
dinner which was served to them at a separate side
table. At the table d’hôte in the middle of the room,
eight or nine men, habitués and commercial travellers
fed in stolid silence. She ate little. Tommy;
noticing it, openly reproached himself for having
caused her fatigue. The day in the open air—and
open air pumped into the lungs at the rate of thirty
or forty miles an hour—was of itself tiring. He ought
not to have dragged her about the town. Besides,
he added with an appearance of great wisdom, a
surfeit of beauty gave one a soul-ache. They had
feasted on nothing but beauty since they had left
Chalon-sur-Saône that morning. He, too, had a
touch of soul-ache; but luckily it did not interfere
with his carnal appetite. It ought not to interfere
with Clementina’s. Here was the whitest and tenderest
morsel of chicken that ever was and the crispest
bit of delectable salad. He helped her from the
dish which she had refused at the hands of the waiter,
and she ate meekly. But after dinner, she sent him
off to the café by himself, saying that she would read
a novel in the salon and go to bed early.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The loneliness of the salon, instead of resting
her, got on her nerves; which angered her. What
business had she, Clementina Wing, with nerves?
Or was Tommy right? Perhaps it was soul-ache
from which she was suffering. Certainly, one strove
to pack away into oneself anything of beauty,
making it a part of one’s spiritual being. One could
be a glutton and suffer from the consequences. The
soul-ache, if such it were, had nothing of origin in
the emotions that had prompted her touch on Tommy’s
arm, or the coiling of her hair on the top of her head.
Nothing at all. Besides, it was a very silly novel,
a modern French version of Daphnis and Chloe, in
which Daphnis figured as a despicable young neuropath
whom Tommy would have kicked on sight, and
Chloe, a sly hussy whom a sensible mother would
have spanked. She threw it into a corner and went
to her room to brace her mind with Tristram Shandy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She had not been long there, however, when there
came a knocking at her door. On her invitation to
enter, the door opened and Tommy stood breathless
on the threshold. His eyes were bright and he was
quivering with excitement.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do come out. Do come out and see something.
I hit upon it unawares, and it knocked me silly.
I’ve run all the way back to fetch you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Something too exquisite for words.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What about the soul-ache?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh! Let us have an orgy while we’re about it,”
he cried recklessly. “It’s worth it. Do come.
I want you to feel the thing with me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The appeal was irresistible. It was spirit summoning
spirit. Without thinking, but dimly conscious of
a quick throbbing of the heart, Clementina put on
her hat and went with Tommy out of the hotel. The
full moon blazed from a cloudless sky, flooding the
little silent square. She paused on the pavement.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, it’s beautiful,” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh—that’s only the silly old moon,” cried
Tommy. “I’ve got something much better for you
than that.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is it?” she asked again.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You wait,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He took her across the square, through two or
three turns of narrow cobble-paved streets, whirled
her swiftly round a corner and said;</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Look!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Clementina looked, and walked straight into the
living heart of the majesty that once was Rome.
There, in the midst of an open space, the modern
houses around it obscured, softened, de-characterised
by the magic-working moon, stood in its proud and
perfect beauty the Temple of Augustus and Livia.
Twenty centuries, with all their meaning, vanished
in a second. It was the heart of Rome. There was the
great Temple, perfect, imperishable, with its fluted
Corinthian columns, its entablature, its pediment,
its noble cornice throwing endless mysteries of
shadow. No ruin, from which imagination flogged
by scholarship might dimly picture forth what once
had been; but the Temple itself, untouched, haughty,
defying Time, the companion for two thousand years of
the moon that now bathed it lovingly, as a friend of
two thousand years’ standing must do, in its softest
splendour, and sharing with the moon its godlike
scorn of the hectic and transitory life of man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Clementina drew a sharp breath of wonder.
Moisture clouded her eyes. She could not speak
for the suddenness of the shock of beauty. Tommy
gently took her arm, and they stood for a long time
in silence, close together. In their artists’ sensitiveness
they were very near together, too, in spirit.
She glanced at his face in the moonlight, alive with
the joy of the thing, and her heart gave a sudden
leap. All the beauty of the day translated itself into
something even more radiant that flooded her soul,
causing the rows of fluted columns to swim before her
eyes until she shut them with a little sigh of content.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last they moved and walked slowly round the
building.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I just couldn’t help fetching you,” said Tommy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I’m glad you did. Oh so glad. Why didn’t
we know of this before we came.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Because we are two thrice-blessedly ignorant
cockneys, dear. I hate to know what I’m going to see.
It’s much better to be like stout Cortez and his men
in the poem and discover things, isn’t it? By Jove,
I shall never forget running into this.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Nor I,” said Clementina.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The moment the car turned the bend to-day I
knew something was going to happen here.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>More had happened than Tommy dreamed of in
his young philosophy. Nor did Clementina enlighten
him. She slid his arm from under hers and took it,
and leaned ever so little on it, for the first time for
many, many years a happy woman.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When they left the Temple she pleaded for an
extension of their walk. She was no longer tired.
She could go on for ever beneath such a moon.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A night made for lovers,” said Tommy, “and we
aren’t the only ones—look!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>And indeed there were couples sauntering by,
head to head, talking of the things the moon had heard
so many million times before.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I suppose they take us also for lovers,” said
Clementina foolishly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t care if they do,” said Tommy. “Let us
pretend.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” said Clementina. “Let us pretend.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They wandered thus lover-like through the town,
and came on the quay where they sat on the coping of
the parapet, and watched the moonlit Rhone and the
brave old Château-Fort on the hill.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Are you glad you came with me?” she asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It has been a sort of enchanted journey,” he
replied, seriously. “And to-night—well to-night is
just to-night. There are no words for it. I’ve
never thanked you—there are things too deep for
thanks. In return I would give you everything I’ve
got—in myself, you know—if you wanted it. In
fact,” he added, with a boyish laugh, “I’ve given
it to you already whether you want it or not.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I do want it, Tommy,” she said, with a catch
in her voice. “You don’t know how much I want it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then you have a devoted, devoted, devoted slave
for the rest of your life.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I do believe you are fond of me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Fond of you!” he cried. “Why, of course I
am. There’s not another woman like you in the
world.” He took her hand and kissed it. “Bless
you,” he said. Then he rose. “We’ve sat out here
long enough. Your hands are quite cold and you’ve
only that silly blouse on. You’ll catch a chill.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m quite warm,” said Clementina mendaciously;
but she obeyed him with surprising meekness.</p>
<p class='pindent'>If any one had had a sufficiently fantastic imagination
and sufficient audacity to prophesy to Clementina
before she started from London the effect upon
her temperament of a Roman Temple and moonshine,
she would have said things in her direct way uncomplimentary
to his intelligence. She would have
forgotten her own epigram to the effect that woman
always has her sex hanging round the neck of her
spirit. But her epigram had proved its truth. She
was feeling a peculiar graciousness in the focal adjustment
above considered, was letting her spirit soar
with its brother to planes of pure beauty, when lo!
suddenly, spirit was hurled from the empyrean into
the abyss by the thing clinging round its neck, which
took its place on the said planes with a pretty gurgle
of exultation.</p>
<p class='pindent'>That is what had happened.</p>
<p class='pindent'>And is it not all too natural? There are plants
which will keep within them a pallid life in a coal-cellar—but
put in the sun and the air and the rain
will break magically into riotous leaf and bud and
flower. Love, foolish, absurd, lunatic, reprehensible—what
you will—had come into the sun and the air
and the rain, and it had broken magically into blossom.
Of course, she had no business to bring it into the air;
she ought to have kept it in the coal-cellar; she ought
not to have let the door be opened by the wheedlings
of a captivating youth. In plain language, a woman
of six-and-thirty ought never to have fallen in love
with a boy of twenty-three. Of course not. A vehement
passionate nature is the easiest thing in the
world to keep under control. A respectable piece of
British tape ought to be strong enough leash for any
tiger of the jungle.</p>
<p class='pindent'>That Clementina, ill-favoured and dour, should
have given herself up, in the solitude of her room,
to her intoxication is, no doubt, a matter for censure.
It was mad and bad and sad, but it was sweet. It
was human. The rare ones from whom no secrets of a
woman’s pure heart are hid might say that it was
divine. But the many who pity let them not grudge
her hour of joy to a woman of barren life.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But it was only an hour. The grey dawn crept
into the sleepless room, and the glamour of the moonlight
had gone. And there was a desperate struggle
in the woman’s soul. The boy’s words rang in her
ears. He was fond of her, devoted to her, would give
up his life to her. He spoke sincerely. Why should
she not take the words at a little above their
face-value? No strong-natured woman of five-and-thirty,
with Clementina’s fame and wealth and full
great sympathy need fear rebuff from a generous lad
who professes himself to be her devoted, devoted,
devoted slave. All she has to do is to put up the
banns. Whether ultimate bliss will be achieved is
another matter. But to marry him out of hand is
as easy as lying. It did not need Clementina’s acute
intelligence for her to be fully aware of this. And
another temptation crept over her pillow to her ear,
peculiarly insidious. The boy would be free to pursue
his beloved art without sordid cares. There would
be no struggle and starvation and fringed hems to
his trousers. A woman who really loves a man
would sooner her heart were frayed than his trouser-hems.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She rose and threw wide the shutters. The little
Place Miremont looked ghostly in the white light,
and the classic Bibliothèque, with its round-headed
windows, more than ever a calm mausoleum of human
wisdom. It is strange how coldly suggestive of death
is the birth of day.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Clementina crept back to bed and, tired out, fell
asleep. The waiter bringing in the breakfast tray
awakened her. On the <span class='it'>New York Herald</span> which
Tommy had gone to the railway station to procure,
lay a dewy cluster of red and yellow roses; on a plate
a pile of letters, the top one addressed in Etta
Concannon’s great girlish scrawl.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Why in the world should a bunch of parrot-tulips
have flared before her eyes? They did. They had
marked the beginning of it. The red and yellow roses
marked the end.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Attendez un moment</span>,” she said to the waiter,
while she tore open the envelope and glanced through
Etta’s unimportant letter. “Bring me a telegraph
form.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He produced one from his pocket. If you ask
a waiter in a good French provincial hotel for anything—a
copy of Buckle’s History of Civilisation or
a boot-jack—he will produce it from his pocket.
He also handed her a pencil.</p>
<p class='pindent'>This she bit musingly for a few seconds. Then she
scribbled hastily on the telegraph form:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Join me at once. Book straight through to Lyons.
Wire train. Will meet you at station. Promise you</span>”—Her
lips twisted into a wry smile as the word she
sought entered her head—“<span class='it'>heavenly time. My guest
of course. Clementina. Hôtel du Nord, Vienne.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“By the way, <span class='it'>garçon</span>,” she said, handing him the
telegram, “why is this called the Hôtel du Nord?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Parceque, Madame, c’est ici, à Vienne, que commence
le Midi</span>,” replied the waiter.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He bowed himself out. A courtier of Versailles
at the levée of the Pompadour could not have made
his speech and exit with better grace.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Later in the day Clementina received the reply
from Etta.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>You darling, starting to-morrow. Arrive Lyons
seven o’clock morning Thursday.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Tommy, fired by the picture made by the bend of
the Rhone and the Château-Fort de la Bâtie, spent
most of the day on the quay, with the paraphernalia
of his trade, easel and canvas and box of colours and
brushes, painting delightedly, while Clementina,
beneath an uncompromising white umbrella with a
green lining, bought on her travels, sat near by reading
many tales out of one uncomprehended novel. Just
before dinner she informed him of the almost immediate
arrival of Etta Concannon.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I say!” he exclaimed in an injured voice.
“That spoils everything.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think so,” said Clementina.</p>
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