<h2 class="main">CHAPTER V</h2>
<p class="first">One evening Cornélie made the acquaintance of
the Dutch family beside whom the Marchesa had first wished to place her
at table: Mrs. van der Staal and her two daughters. They too were
spending the whole winter in Rome: they had friends there and went out
visiting. The conversation flowed smoothly; and mevrouw invited
Cornélie to come and have a chat in her sitting-room. Next day
she accompanied her new acquaintances to the Vatican and heard that
mevrouw was expecting her son, who was coming to Rome from Florence to
continue his archæological studies.</p>
<p>Cornélie was glad to meet at the hotel a Dutch element that
was not antipathetic. She thought it pleasant to talk Dutch again and
she confessed as much. In a day or two she had become intimate with
Mrs. van der Staal and the two girls; and on the evening when young Van
der Staal arrived she opened her heart more than she had ever thought
that she could do to strangers whom she had known for barely a few
days.</p>
<p>They were sitting in the Van der Staal’s sitting-room,
Cornélie in a low chair by the blazing log-fire, for the evening
was chilly. They had been talking about the Hague, about her divorce;
and she was now speaking of Italy, of herself:</p>
<p>“I no longer see anything,” she confessed. “Rome
has quite bewildered me. I can’t distinguish a colour, an
outline. I don’t recognize people. They all seem to whirl round
me. Sometimes I feel a need to sit alone for hours in my bird-cage
upstairs, to recollect myself. This morning, in the
Vatican, I don’t know: I remember nothing. It is all grey and
fuzzy around me. Then the people in the boarding-house: the same faces
every day. I see them and yet I don’t see them. I see ... I see
Madame von Rothkirch and her daughter, I see the fair Urania ... and
Rudyard ... and the little Englishwoman, Miss Taylor, who is always so
tired with sight-seeing and who thinks everything most exquisite. But
my memory is so bad that, when I am alone, I have to think to myself:
Madame von Rothkirch is tall and stately, with the smile of the German
Empress—she is rather like her—talking fast and yet with
indifference, as though the words just fell indifferently from her
lips....”</p>
<p>“You’re a good observer,” said Van der Staal.</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t say that!” said Cornélie, almost
vexed. “I see nothing and I can’t remember. I receive no
impressions. Everything around me is colourless. I really don’t
know why I have come abroad.... When I am alone, I think of the people
whom I meet. I know Madame von Rothkirch now and I know Else. Such a
round, merry face, with arched eyebrows, and always a joke or a
witticism: I find it tiring sometimes, she makes me laugh so. Still
they are very nice. And the fair Urania. She tells me everything. She
is as communicative ... as I am at this moment. And Rudyard: I see him
before me too.”</p>
<p>“Rudyard!” smiled mevrouw and the girls.</p>
<p>“What is he?” Cornélie asked, inquisitively.
“He is so civil, he ordered my wine for me, he can always get one
all sorts of cards.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you know what Rudyard is?” asked Mrs. van
der Staal.</p>
<p>“No; and Mrs. von Rothkirch doesn’t know either.”
</p>
<p>“Then you had better be careful,” laughed the girls.</p>
<p>“Are you a Catholic?” asked mevrouw.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Nor the fair Urania either? Nor Mrs. von
Rothkirch?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, that is why la Belloni put Rudyard at your table.
Rudyard is a Jesuit. Every <i>pension</i> in Rome has a Jesuit who
lives there free of charge, if the proprietor is a good friend of the
Church, and who tries to win souls by making himself especially
agreeable.”</p>
<p>Cornélie refused to believe it.</p>
<p>“You can take my word for it,” mevrouw continued,
“that in a <i>pension</i> like this, a first-class
<i>pension</i>, a <i>pension</i> with a reputation, a great deal of
intrigue goes on.”</p>
<p>“La Belloni?” Cornélie enquired.</p>
<p>“Our marchesa is a thorough-paced <i>intrigante</i>. Last
winter, three English sisters were converted here.”</p>
<p>“By Rudyard?”</p>
<p>“No, by another priest. Rudyard is here for the first time
this winter.”</p>
<p>“Rudyard walked quite a long way with me in the street this
morning,” said young Van der Staal. “I let him talk, I
heard all he had to say.”</p>
<p>Cornélie fell back in her chair:</p>
<p>“I am tired of people,” she said, with the strange
sincerity which was hers. “I should like to sleep for a month,
without seeing anybody.”</p>
<p>And, after a short pause, she got up, said goodnight and went to
bed, while everything swam before her eyes. </p>
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