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Complete Works of F Marion Crawford

Page 1346

by F. Marion Crawford


  “Pa-pa!”

  The shadow turned suddenly bright, and out of the brightness the beautiful brown glass eyes were turned up happily to his, while the rosy mouth smiled so divinely that the phantom doll looked almost like a little angel just then.

  “A little girl was brought in soon after ten o’clock,” said the quiet voice of the hospital doorkeeper. “I think they thought she was only stunned. She was holding a big brown-paper box against her, and they could not get it out of her arms. She had a long plait of brown hair that hung down as they carried her.”

  “She is my little girl,” said Mr. Puckler, but he hardly heard his own voice.

  He leaned over Else’s face in the gentle light of the children’s ward, and when he had stood there a minute the beautiful brown eyes opened and looked up to his.

  “Pa-pa!” cried Else, softly, “I knew you would come!”

  Then Mr. Puckler did not know what he did or said for a moment, and what he felt was worth all the fear and terror and despair that had almost killed him that night. But by and by Else was telling her story, and the nurse let her speak, for there were only two other children in the room, who were getting well and were sound asleep.

  “They were big boys with bad faces,” said Else, “and they tried to get Nina away from me, but I held on and fought as well as I could till one of them hit me with something, and I don’t remember any more, for I tumbled down, and I suppose the boys ran away, and somebody found me there. But I’m afraid Nina is all smashed.”

  “Here is the box,” said the nurse. “We could not take it out of her arms till she came to herself. Should you like to see if the doll is broken?”

  And she undid the string cleverly, but Nina was all smashed to pieces. Only the gentle light of the children’s ward made a pale green sheen in the folds of the little Mother Hubbard frock.

  The King’s Messenger

  It was a rather dim daylight dinner I remember that quite distinctly, for I could see the glow of the sunset over the trees in the park, through the high window at the west end of the dining-room. I had expected to find a larger party, I believe, for I recollect being a little surprised at seeing only a dozen people assembled at table. It seemed to me that in old times, ever so long ago, when I had last stayed in that house, there had been as many as thirty or forty guests. I recognized some of them among a number of beautiful portraits that hung on the walls. There was room for a great many because there was only one huge window, at one end, and one large door at the other. I was very much surprised, too, to see a portrait of myself, evidently painted about twenty years ago by Lenbach. It seemed very strange that I should have so completely forgotten the picture, and that I should not be able to remember having sat for it. We were good friends, it is true, and he might have painted it from memory, without my knowledge, but it was certainly strange that he should never have told me about it. The portraits that hung in the dining-room were all very good indeed and all, I should say, by the best painters of that time.

  My left-hand neighbor was a lovely young girl whose name I had forgotten, though I had known her long, and I fancied that she looked a little disappointed when she saw that I was beside her. On my right there was a vacant seat, and beyond it sat an elderly woman with features as hard as the overwhelmingly splendid diamonds she wore. Her eyes made me think of grey glass marbles cemented into a stone mask. It was odd that her name should have escaped me, too, for I had often met her.

  The table looked irregular, and I counted the guests mechanically while I ate my soup. We were only twelve, but the empty chair beside me was the thirteenth place.

  I suppose it was not very tactful of me to mention this, but I wanted to say something to the beautiful girl on my left, and no other subject for a general remark suggested itself. Just as I was going to speak I remembered who she was.

  “Miss Lorna,” I said, to attract her attention, for she was looking away from me toward the door. “I hope you are not superstitious about there being thirteen at table, are you?”

  “We are only twelve,” she said, in the sweetest voice in the world.

  “Yes; but some one else is coming. There’s an empty chair here beside me.”

  “Oh, he doesn’t count,” said Miss Lorna quietly. “At least, not for everybody. When did you get here? Just in time for dinner, I suppose.”

  “Yes,” I answered. “I’m in luck to be beside you. It seems an age since we were last here together.”

  “It does indeed,” Miss Lorna sighed and looked at the pictures on the opposite wall. “I’ve lived a lifetime since I saw you last.”

  I smiled at the exaggeration. “When you are thirty, you won’t talk of having your life behind you, I said.

  “I shall never be thirty,” Miss Lorna answered, with such an odd little air of conviction that I did not think of anything to say. “Besides, life isn’t made up of years or months or hours, or of anything that has to do with time,” she continued. “You ought to know that. Our bodies are something better than mere clocks, wound up to show just how old we are at every moment, by our hair turning grey and our teeth falling out and our faces getting wrinkled and yellow, or puffy and red. Look at your own portrait over there. I don’t mind saying that you must have been twenty years younger when that was painted, but I’m sure you are just the same man today, improved by age, perhaps.”

  I heard a sweet little echoing laugh that seemed very far away; and indeed I could not have sworn that it rippled from Miss Lorna’s beautiful lips, for though they were parted and smiling, my impression is that they did not move, even as little as most women’s lips are moved by laughter.

  “Thank you for thinking me improved,” I said. “I find you a little changed, too. I was just going to say that you seem sadder, but you laughed just then.”

  “Did I? I suppose that’s the right thing to do when the play is over, isn’t it?”

  “If it has been an amusing play,” I answered, humoring her.

  The wonderful violet eyes turned to me, full of light. “It’s not been a bad play. I don’t complain.”

  “Why do you speak of it as over?”

  “I’ll tell you, because I’m sure you will keep my secret. You will, won’t you? We were always such good friends, you and I, even two years ago when I was young and silly. Will you promise not to tell anyone till I’m gone?”

  “Gone?”

  “Yes. Will you promise?”

  “Of course I will. But...” I did not finish the sentence, because Miss Lorna bent nearer to me, so as to speak in a much lower tone. While I listened, I felt her sweet young breath on my cheek. “I’m going away tonight with the man who is to sit at your other side,” she said. “He’s a little late; he often is, for he is tremendously busy; but he’ll come presently, and after dinner we shall just stroll out into the garden and never come back. That’s my secret. You won’t betray me, will you?” Again, as she looked at me, I heard that far-off silver laugh, sweet and low — I was almost too much surprise by what she had told me to notice how still her parted lips were, but that comes back to me now, with many other details.

  “My dear Miss Lorna,” I said, “do think of your parents before taking such a step.”

  “I have thought of them,” she answered. “Of course they would never consent, and I am very sorry to leave them, but it can’t be helped.”

  At this moment, as often happens when two people are talking in low tones at a large dinner-table, there was a momentary lull in the general conversation, and I was spared the trouble of making any further answer to what Miss Lorna had told me so unexpectedly, and with such profound confidence in my discretion.

  To tell the truth, she would very probably not have listened, whether my words expressed sympathy or protest, for she had turned suddenly pale, and her eyes were wide and dark. The lull in the talk at table was due to the appearance of the man who was to occupy the vacant place beside me.

  He had entered the room very quietly, and he made no elabor
ate apology for being late, as he sat down, bending his head courteously to our hostess and her husband, and smiling in a gentle sort of way as he nodded to the others.

  “Please forgive me,” he said quietly. “I was detained by a funeral and missed the train.”

  It was not until he had taken his place that he looked across me at Miss Lorna and exchanged a glance of recognition with her. I noticed that the lady with the hard face and the splendid diamonds, who was at his other side, drew away from him a little, as if not wishing even to let his sleeve brush against her bare arm. It occurred to me at the same time that Miss Lorna must be wishing me anywhere else than between her and the man with whom she was just about to run away, and I wished for their sake and mine that I could change places with him. He was certainly not like other men, and though few people would have called him handsome there was something about him that instantly fixed the attention; rarely beautiful though Miss Lorna was, almost everyone would have noticed him first on entering the room, and most people, I think, would have been more interested by his face than by hers. I could well imagine that some women might love him, even to distraction, though it was just as easy to understand that others might be strongly repelled by him, and might even fear him.

  For my part, I shall not try to describe him as one describes an ordinary man, with a dozen or so adjectives that leave nothing to the imagination but yet offer it no picture that it can grasp. My instinct was to fear him rather than think of him as a possible friend, but I could not help feeling instant admiration for him, as one does at first sight for anything that is very complete, harmonious, and strong. He was dark, and pale with a shadowy pallor I never saw in any other face; the features of thrice-great Hermes were not modeled in more perfect symmetry, his luminous eyes were not unkind, but there was something fateful in them, and they were set very deep under the grand white brow. His age I could not guess, but I should have called him young; standing, I had seen that he was tall and sinewy, and now that he was seated, he had the unmistakable look of a man accustomed to be in authority, to be heard and to be obeyed. His hands were white, his fingers straight, lean, and very strong.

  Everyone at the table seemed to know him, but as often happens among civilized people no one called him by name in speaking to him.

  “We were beginning to be afraid that you might not get here,” said our host.

  “Really?” The Thirteenth Guest smiled quietly, but shook his head. “Did you ever know me to break an engagement, under any circumstances?”

  The master of the house laughed, though not very cordially, I thought. “No,” he answered. “Your reputation for keeping your appointments is proverbial. Even your enemies must admit that.”

  The Guest nodded and smiled again. Miss Lorna bent toward me.

  “What do you think of him?” she asked, almost in a whisper.

  “Very striking sort of man,” I answered, in a low tone. “But I’m inclined to be a little afraid of him.”

  “So was I, at first,” she said, and I heard the silver laugh again. “But that soon wears off,” she went on. “You’ll know him better some day.”

  “Shall I?”

  “Yes; I’m quite sure you will. Oh, I don’t pretend that I fell in love with him at first sight. I went through a phase of feeling afraid of him, as almost everyone does. You see, when people first meet him they cannot possibly know how kind and gentle he can be, though he is so tremendously strong. I’ve heard him called cruel and ruthless and cold, but it’s not true. Indeed it’s not. He can be as gentle as a woman, and he’ s the truest friend in all the world.”

  I was going to ask her to tell me his name, but just then I saw that she was looking at him, across me, and I sat as far back in my chair as I could, so that they might speak to each other if they wished to. Their eyes met, and there was a longing light in both. I could not help glancing from one to the other; and Miss Lorna’s sweet lips moved almost imperceptibly, though no sound came from them. I have seen young lovers make that small sign to each other even across a room, the signal of a kiss given and returned in the heart’s thoughts.

  If she had been less beautiful and young, if the man she loved had not been so magnificently manly, it would have irritated me, but it seemed natural that they should love and not be ashamed of it, and I only hoped that no one else at the table had noticed the tenderly quivering little contraction of the young girl’s exquisite mouth.

  “You remembered,” said the man quietly. “I got your message this morning. Thank you.”

  “I hope it’s not going to be very hard,” murmured Miss Lorna, smiling. “Not that it would make any great difference if it were,” she added more thoughtfully.

  “It’s the easiest thing in life,” he said, “And I promise that you shall never regret it.”

  “I trust you,” the young girl answered simply.

  Then she turned away, for she no doubt felt the awkwardness of talking to him across me of a secret which she had confided to me without letting him know that she had done so. Instinctively I turned to him, feeling that the moment had come for disregarding formality and making his acquaintance, since we were neighbors at table in a friend’s house and I had known Miss Lorna so long. Besides, it is always interesting to talk with a man who is just going to do something very dangerous or dramatic and who does not guess that you know what he is about.

  “I suppose you motored here from town, as you said you missed the train,” I said. “It’s a good road, isn’t it?”

  “Yes, I literally flew,” replied the dark man, with his gentle smile. “I hope you’re not superstitious about thirteen at table?”

  “Not in the least,” I answered. “In the first place, I’m a fatalist about everything that doesn’t depend on my own free will. As I have not the slightest intention of doing anything to shorten my life, it will certainly not come to an abrupt end by any autosuggestion arising from a silly superstition like that about thirteen.”

  “Autosuggestion? That’s rather a new light on the old beliefs.”

  “And secondly,” I continued, “I don’t believe in death. There is no such thing.”

  “Really?” My neighbor seemed greatly surprised. “How do you mean?” he asked. “I don’t think I understand you.”

  “I’m sure I don’t,” put in Miss Lorna, and the silver laugh followed. She had overheard the conversation, and some of the others were listening, too.

  “You don’t kill a book by translating it,” I said, rather glad to expound my views. “Death is only a translation of life into another language. That’s what I mean.”

  “That’s a most interesting point of view,” observed the Thirteenth Guest thoughtfully. “I never thought of the matter in that way before, though I’ve often seen the expression ‘translated’ in epitaphs. Are you sure that you are not indulging in a little paronomasia?”

  “What’s that?” inquired the hard-faced lady, with all the contempt which a scholarly word deserves in polite society.

  “It means punning,” I answered. “No, I am not making a pun. Grave subjects do not lend themselves to low forms of humor. I assure you, I am quite in earnest. Death, in the ordinary sense, is not a real phenomenon at all, so long as there is any life in the universe. It’s a name we apply to a change we only partly understand.”

  “Learned discussions are an awful bore,” said the hard-faced lady very audibly.

  “I don’t advise you to argue the question too sharply with your neighbor there,” laughed the master of the house, leaning forward and speaking to me. “He’ll get the better of you. He’s an expert at what you call ‘translating people into another language.’”

  If the man beside me was a famous surgeon, as our host perhaps meant, it seemed to me that the remark was not in very good taste. He looked more like a soldier.

  “Does our friend mean that you are in the army, and that you are a dangerous person?” I asked of him.

  “No,” he answered quietly. “I’m only a King�
�s Messenger, and in my own opinion I’m not at all dangerous.”

  “It must be rather an active life,” I said, in order to say something; “constantly coming and going, I suppose?”

  “Yes, constantly.”

  I felt that Miss Lorna was watching and listening, and I turned to her, only to find that she was again looking beyond me, at my neighbor, though he did not see her. I remember her face very distinctly as it was just then; the recollection is, in fact the last impression I retain of her matchless beauty, for I never saw her after that evening.

  It is something to have seen one of the most beautiful women in the world gazing at the man who was more to her than life and all it held, it is something I cannot forget. But he did not return her look just then, for he had joined in the general conversation, and very soon afterward he practically absorbed it.

  THE END

  The Non-Fiction

  Vesuvius overlooking Sorrento and the Bay of Naples — Crawford spent his final years living in Sorrento.

  Crawford’s home in Sorrento, Villa Crawford. When the writer bought the villa in 1887, it was a simple farmhouse surrounded by a large garden. Enjoying the peace of the villa, he wrote many of the novels that made him famous here; he also made extensive alterations to the original building, rendering it a beautiful stately home.

  Today Villa Crawford operates as a guest house.

  Our Silver

  CONTENTS

  I.

  II.

  I.

  THE CHIEF POINT in which this country differs from others in regard to the question of currency lies in the fact that, whereas other countries are, generally speaking, under the necessity of importing their currency in the first instance, on the other hand America produces her own bullion; and not only she produces a sufficient quantity to supply her own present requirements, but also a large amount which goes ultimately to supply the circulation of other countries. So great, however, is the productiveness of American mines that even after they have supplied the United States and many other countries with the amounts required at home and abroad, it has hitherto been found impracticable to force the circulation up to the figure which represents the home coinage; or, in other words, to keep the demand for coined dollars in any sort of equilibrium with the supply. At the present time the excess of the supply of silver dollars over the demand is roughly reckoned at $77,000,000, which are lying in the Treasury vaults without any apparent prospect of coming into circulation, but rather having an evident tendency to increase. The question which now presents itself to financiers is: What steps are necessary to restore the equilibrium between the supply of silver produced by American mines and the demand for silver in the United States and abroad? It must be apparent to the most superficial observer what the consequences must be if this question is not very shortly answered, and if the remedy which must be supposed embodied in that answer is not immediately applied. For, if things continue in their present state, the supply exceeding the demand, it is clear that the inactive surplus of coined money will continue increasing, the value of silver will fall, and will only cease to fall when the point is reached at which a large number of mines will cease to be worked; in accordance with the well-known law, that the price of any product depends upon the cost of production where it is produced under the most disadvantageous circumstances, and its corollary, that no product will continue to be produced for any length of time under circumstances which do not admit of obtaining the ordinary rate of profit on the capital employed in production. The owners of all mines in which the cost of production exceeds a certain limit (and the number of such mines will soon become very great) will be obliged to stop work until, in the course of years, the surplus of inactive bullion has been sufficiently drawn off by wear and tear or other means to admit of those mines being again worked so as to afford at least the ordinary rate of profit on the capital employed. In practice, owing to speculation in stocks, mines frequently continue to be worked some time after they cease to be profitable.

 

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