"I believe I know," she said, at last. "Yes, that was my thought, or almost."
"When?"
She hesitated, looking at him, not altogether doubtfully, but with a shadow of reserve, which might easily, he fancied, grow deeper, or fade entirely away. He saw the resolve to speak come quietly into her mind.
"You know, Monsieur Emile, I love watching the sea," she said, rather slowly and carefully. "Especially at dawn, and in the evening before it is dark. And it always seems to me as if at dawn it is more heavenly than it is after the day has happened, though it is so very lovely then.
And sometimes that has made me feel that our dawn is our most beautiful time--as if we were nearest the truth then. And, of course, that is when we are most ignorant, isn"t it? So I suppose I have been thinking a little bit like you. Haven"t I?"
She asked it earnestly. Artois had never heard her speak quite like this before, with a curious deliberation that was nevertheless without self-consciousness. Before he could answer she added, abruptly, as if correcting, or even almost condemning herself:
"I can put it much better than that. I have."
Artois leaned forward. Something, he did not quite know what, made him feel suddenly a deep interest in what Vere said--a strong curiosity even.
"You have put it much better?" he said.
Vere suddenly looked conscious. A faint wave of red went over her face and down to her small neck. Her hands moved and parted. She seemed half ashamed of something for a minute.
"Madre doesn"t know," she murmured, as if she were giving him a reason for something. "It isn"t interesting," she added. "Except, of course, to me."
Artois was watching her.
"I think you really want to tell me," he said now.
"Oh yes, in a way I do. I have been half wanting to for a long time--but only half."
"And now?"
She looked at him, but almost instantly looked down again, with a sort of shyness he had never seen in her before. And her eyes had been full of a strange and beautiful sensitiveness.
"Never mind, Vere," he said quickly, obedient to those eyes, and responding to their delicate subtlety. "We all have our righteous secrets, and should all respect the righteous secrets of others."
"Yes, I think we should. And I know you would be the very last, at least Madre and you, to--I think I"m being rather absurd, really." The last words were said with a sudden change of tone to determination, as if Vere were taking herself to task. "I"m making a lot of almost nothing.
You see, if I am a woman, as Gaspare is making out, I"m at any rate a very young one, am I not?"
"The youngest that exists."
As he said that Artois thought, "Mon Dieu! If the Marchesino could only see her now!"
"If humor is cruel, Monsieur Emile," Vere continued, "you will laugh at me. For I am sure, if I tell you--and I know now I"m going to--you will think this fuss is as ridiculous as the German"s cold in the head, and poor legs, and all. I wrote that about the sea."
She said the last sentence with a sort of childish defiance.
"Wait," said Artois. "Now I begin to understand."
"What?"
"All those hours spent in your room. Your mother thought you were reading."
"No," she said, still rather defiantly; "I"ve been writing that, and other things--about the sea."
"How? In prose?"
"No. That"s the worst of it, I suppose."
And again the faint wave of color went over her face to her neck.
"Do you really feel so criminal? Then what ought I to feel?"
"You? Now that is really cruel!" she cried, getting up quickly, almost as if she meant to hurry away.
But she only stood there in front of him, near the window.
"Never mind!" she said. "Only you remember that Madre tried. She had never said much about it to me. But now and then from just a word I know that she feels bad, that she wishes very much she could do something.
Only the other day she said to me, "We have the instinct, men the vocabulary." She was meaning that you had. She even told me to ask you something that I had asked her, and she said, "I feel all the things that he can explain." And there was something in her voice that hurt me--for her. And Madre is so clever. Isn"t she clever?"
"Yes."
"And if Madre can"t do things, you can imagine that I feel rather absurd now that I"m telling you."
"Yes, being just as you are, Vere, I can quite imagine that you do. But we can have sweet feelings of absurdity that only arise from something moral within us, a moral delicacy. However, would you like me to look at what you have been writing about the sea?"
"Yes, if you can do it quite seriously."
"I could not do it in any other way."
"Then--thank you."
She went out of the room, not without a sort of simple dignity that was utterly removed from conceit or pretentiousness.
What a strange end, this, to their laughter!
Vere was away several minutes, during which at first Artois sat quite still, leaning back, with his great frame stretched out, and his hands once more behind his head. His intellect was certainly very much awake now, and he was setting a guard upon it, to watch it carefully, lest it should be ruthless, even with Vere. And was he not setting also another guard to watch the softness of his nature, lest it should betray him into foolish kindness?
Yet, after a minute, he said to himself that he was wasting his time in both these proceedings. For Vere"s eyes were surely a touchstone to discover honesty. There is something merciless in the purity of untarnished youth. What can it not divine at moments?
Artois poured out another cup of tea and drank it, considering the little funny situation. Vere and he with a secret from Hermione shared between them! Vere submitting verses to his judgment! He remembered Hermione"s half-concealed tragedy, which, of course, had been patent to him in its uttermost nakedness. Even Vere had guessed something of it. Do we ever really hide anything from every one? And yet each one breathes mystery too. The a.s.sertive man is the last of fools. Of that at least Artois just then felt certain.
If Vere should really have talent! He did not expect it, although he had said that there was intellectual force in the girl. There was intellectual force in Hermione, but she could not create. And Vere! He smiled as he thought of her rush into the room with her hair streaming down, of her shrieks of laughter over his absurdity. But she was full of changes.
The door opened, and Vere came in holding some ma.n.u.script in her hand.
She had done up her hair while she had been away. When Artois saw that he heaved himself up from the sofa.
"I must smoke," he said.
"Oh yes. I"ll get the Khali Targas."
"No. I must have a pipe. And you prefer that, I know."