<br/><br/><br/><p align="center"><big><SPAN name="11a">CHAPTER XI</SPAN></big>
<br/>ALORA SPEAKS FRANKLY</p>
<p>On Saturday forenoon the Colonel engaged a carriage—a
substantial one, this time—and with Mary Louise drove to Jason
Jones' villa, so that Alora might return with them in time for lunch.
They did not see the artist, who was somewhere about the grounds but
kept out of view; but Alora was ready and waiting, her cheeks flushed
and her eyes alight, and she slipped her foreign little straw satchel
in the carriage and then quickly followed it, as if eager to be
off.</p>
<p>"Father is rather disagreeable this morning," she asserted in a
sharp voice, when they were on the highway to Sorrento. "He repented
his decision to let me go with you and almost forbade me. But I
rebelled, and——" she paused; "I have found that when I
assert myself I can usually win my way, for father is a coward at
heart."</p>
<p>It pained Mary Louise to hear so unfilial a speech from the lips of
a young girl. Colonel Hathaway's face showed that he, too, considered
it unmannerly to criticise a parent in the presence of strangers. But
both reflected that Alora's life and environments were unenviable and
that she had lacked, in these later years at least, the careful
training due one in her station in society. So they deftly changed the
subject and led the girl to speak of Italy and its delightful scenery
and romantic history. Alora knew little of the country outside of the
Sorrento peninsula, but her appreciation of nature was artistic and
innately true and she talked well and interestingly of the surrounding
country and the quaint and amusing customs of its inhabitants.</p>
<p>"How long do you expect to remain here?" asked Mary Louise.</p>
<p>"I've no idea," was the reply. "Father seems entirely satisfied with
our quarters, for he has no ambition in life beyond eating three simple
meals a day, sleeping from nine at night until nine in the morning and
reading all the romances he is able to procure. He corresponds with no
one save his banker in America and sees no one but the servants and me.
But to me the monotony of our existence is fast becoming unbearable and
I often wonder if I can stand it for three years longer—until I'm
eighteen. Then I shall be my own mistress and entitled to handle my own
money, and you may rest assured I shall make up for lost time."</p>
<p>They let that remark pass, also, but later in the afternoon, when
luncheon was over and the two girls were wandering in the lovely
gardens of the Hotel Vittoria, while the Colonel indulged in an
afternoon siesta, Mary Louise led Alora to speak freely of her past
life.</p>
<p>"My grandfather says that your mother must have left you a good deal
of money," she remarked.</p>
<p>"Yes; mamma told me it was a large fortune and that I must guard it
wisely and use it generously to help others less favored," replied
Alora thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"And she left it all in your father's keeping?"</p>
<p>"Not the principal. That is all invested, and thank goodness my
father cannot touch it in any way. But the income is paid to him
regularly, and he may do as he pleases with it. I am sure mamma
expected I would have every reasonable wish gratified, and be taught
every womanly accomplishment; but I'm treated as a mere dependent. I'm
almost destitute of proper clothing—really, Mary Louise, this is
the best dress I possess!—and I've been obliged to educate
myself, making a rather poor job of it, I fear. I read the best of
father's books, when he is done with them, and note carefully the
manner in which the characters express themselves and how they conduct
themselves in society as well as in worldly contact. I do not wish to
be wholly <i>gauché</i> when I come into my kingdom, you see, and
the books are my only salvation. I don't care much for the stories, but
some of the good writers are safe guides to follow in the matter of
dialogue and deportment. Fortunately, father's books are all in
English. He doesn't understand much Italian, although I have learned to
speak the language like a native—like our native servants, you
know."</p>
<p>Mary Louise reflected on this confession. "I'm afraid, Alora dear,
that modern novels are not prone to teach morality, or to develop a
girl's finer intuitions," she said gravely. "I think you express
yourself very well—better than I do, indeed—but you need
association with those who can convey to you the right principles of
thought and thus encourage your mental development. Culture and
refinement seem to come more from association than from books, although
there is an innate tendency in all well-born people to acquire them
spontaneously. But there! you'll accuse me of preaching and, after all,
I think you've done just splendidly under rather trying
circumstances."</p>
<p>"You don't know how trying they are," declared Alora, with a sigh.
"Father and I are wholly uncongenial and we fight on the slightest
provocation. This morning our trouble was over money. I wanted a little
to take with me, for my purse hasn't a <i>lira</i> in it; but, no! not
a <i>centisimo</i> would he give up. He insisted that if I was to be
your guest you would pay all my expenses."</p>
<p>"Of course," said Mary Louise. "But what does he do with all that
big income? Is he saving it for you?"</p>
<p>"No, indeed! he's saving it for himself. Mamma told me, the last
time I saw her before she died, that if father was good to me, and kind
and loving, I could provide for him in some way after I came into my
money. She said she would leave the manner of it to my judgment. But he
isn't kind, or loving, or good, and knows very well that when I'm of
age he'll never see another cent of my money. So now he'd hoarding my
income for future use."</p>
<p>"Isn't it strange that your mother should have trusted him so
fully?" asked Mary Louise.</p>
<p>"Yes, it does seem strange. I remember her saying that he loved
luxury and all the comfort that money will buy, and so she wanted him
to have this income to spend, because he was my father and because she
felt she had ruined his career as an artist by surrounding him with
luxuries during their early married life, and afterward had embittered
him by depriving him of them. But the man doesn't know what luxury
means, Mary Louise. His tastes are those of a peasant."</p>
<p>"Yet once your mother loved him, and believed in him."</p>
<p>"I—I think she believed in him; I'm quite sure she did."</p>
<p>"Then his nature must have changed. I can imagine, Alora, that when
your mother first knew him he was hard-working and ambitious. He was
talented, too, and that promised future fame. But when he married a
wealthy woman he lost his ambition, success being no longer necessary.
After a period of ease and comfort in the society of his lovely
wife—for Gran'pa says your mother was very lovely—he lost
both the wife and the luxuries he enjoyed. A big man, Alora, would have
developed a new ambition, but it seems your father was not big. His
return to poverty after your mother's desertion made him bitter and
reckless; perhaps it dulled his brain, and that is why he is no longer
able to do good work. He was utterly crushed, I imagine, and hadn't the
stamina to recover his former poise. He must have been ten years or so
in this condition, despairing and disinterested, when the wheel of
fortune turned and he was again in the possession of wealth. He had now
the means to live as he pleased. But those years had so changed him
that he couldn't respond to the new conditions. Doubtless he was glad,
in a way, but he was now content merely to exist. Doesn't that seem
logical, Alora?"</p>
<p>Indeed, Mary Louise was delighted with her solution of the problem.
It was in keeping with her talent for deducing the truth from meagre
facts by logically putting them together and considering them as a
whole. It was seldom she erred in these deductions. But Alora seemed
unimpressed and noting her glum look Mary Louise said again: "Doesn't
all this seem logical, dear?"</p>
<p>"No," said Alora. "Father isn't the man to be crushed by anything.
He's shrewd enough, in his <i>bourgeois</i> way. Once, long
ago—back in New York—a woman made him give her money; it
was money, you know; and I have often thought he ran away from America
to escape her further demands."</p>
<p>"Who was the woman?"</p>
<p>"My mother's nurse."</p>
<p>"Oh. Was it her wages she demanded?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps so. I may have misjudged father in that case. But it seemed
to me—I was a mere child then—that it must have been a
larger sum than wages would have amounted to. Yet, perhaps not. Anyhow,
he left America right afterward, and when we had wandered a year or so
in various countries we settled down here."</p>
<p>"Won't he have to account for all the money he has spent and given
away, when you come of age?" inquired Mary Louise.</p>
<p>"No. Mother distinctly told me I was to ask for no accounting
whatever. Her will says he is to handle the income as he sees fit, just
as if it were his own, so long as he provides properly for his daughter
and treats her with fatherly consideration. That's the only reason he
keeps me with him, guarding my person but neglecting the other
injunctions. If he set me adrift, as I'm sure he'd like to do, I could
appeal to the court and his income would cease and another guardian be
appointed. I believe there is something of that sort in the will, and
that is why he is so afraid of losing me. But he gives me no chance to
appeal to anyone, although I sometimes think I shall run away and leave
him in the lurch. If I could get to Chicago and tell Judge Bernsted, my
mother's lawyer, how I am treated, I believe he could make the court
set aside my father's guardianship. But I can't get ten miles away from
here, for lack of money."</p>
<p>"How your dear mother would grieve, if she knew her plans for your
happiness have failed!" exclaimed Mary Louise.</p>
<p>Alora frowned, and somehow that frown reminded Mary Louise of the
girl's father.</p>
<p>"My mother ought to have known my father better," she declared
sullenly. "I must not criticize her judgment, for her memory is my most
precious possession and I know she loved me devotedly. But there is one
thing in her history I can never understand."</p>
<p>"And that?" questioned Mary Louise curiously, as Alora paused.</p>
<p>"My mother was an educated woman, well-bred and refined."</p>
<p>"Yes; Gran'pa Jim told me that."</p>
<p>"Then how could she have married my father, who is not a gentleman
and never could have impressed a lady with the notion he was one?"</p>
<p>Mary Louise hesitated, for to admit this would send her deductions,
so carefully constructed, tumbling in ruins. But Alora ought to know
the man.</p>
<p>"If that is true, dear," said she, "it is the strangest part of your
story; and, of course, we can only guess the reason, for the only one
who could have explained it properly was your mother."</p>
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