"You intend to speak of--"
"I speak of my engagement with Anton Trendellsohn. I do so with you because I know that you have heard of it. You tell me that Jews and Christians cannot come together in Prague, but I mean to marry a Jew. A Jew is my lover. If you will say that you will be my friend, I will love you indeed. Ruth Jacobi is my friend; but then Ruth is so young."
"Yes, Ruth is very young. She is a child. She knows nothing."
"A child"s friendship is better than none."
"Ruth is very young. She cannot understand. I too love Ruth Jacobi. I have known her since she was born. I knew and loved her mother. You do not remember Ruth Trendellsohn. No; your acquaintance with them is only of the other day."
"Ruth"s mother has been dead seven years," said Nina.
"And what are seven years? I have known them for four-and-twenty."
"Nay; that cannot be."
"But I have. That is my age, and I was born, so to say, in their arms.
Ruth Trendellsohn was ten years older than I--only ten."
"And Anton?"
"Anton was a year older than his sister; but you know Anton"s age. Has he never told you his age?"
"I never asked him; but I know it. There are things one knows as a matter of course. I remember his birthday always."
"It has been a short always."
"No, not so short. Two years is not a short time to know a friend."
"But he has not been betrothed to you for two years?"
"No; not betrothed to me."
"Nor has he loved you so long; nor you him?"
"For him, I can only speak of the time when he first told me so."
"And that was but the other day--but the other day, as I count the time." To this Nina made no answer. She could not claim to have known her lover from so early a date as Rebecca Loth had done, who had been, as she said, born in the arms of his family. But what of that? Men do not always love best those women whom they have known the longest.
Anton Trendellsohn had known her long enough to find that he loved her best. Why then should this Jewish girl come to her and throw in her teeth the shortness of her intimacy with the man who was to be her husband? If she, Nina, had also been a Jewess, Rebecca Loth would not then have spoken in such a way. As she thought of this she turned her face away from the stranger, and looked out among the sparrows who were still pecking among the dust in the court. She had told Rebecca at the beginning of their interview that she would be delighted to find a friend in a Jewess, but now she felt sorry that the girl had come to her. For Anton"s sake she would bear with much from one whom he had known so long. But for that thought she would have answered her visitor with short courtesy. As it was, she sat silent and looked out upon the birds.
"I have come to you now," said Rebecca Loth, "to say a few words to you about Anton Trendellsohn. I hope you will not refuse to listen."
"That will depend on what you say."
"Do you think it will be for his good to marry a Christian?"
"I shall leave him to judge of that," replied Nina, sharply.
"It cannot be that you do not think of it. I am sure you would not willingly do an injury to the man you love."
"I would die for him, if that would serve him."
"You can serve him without dying. If he takes you for his wife, all his people will turn against him. His own father will become his enemy."
"How can that be? His father knows of it, and yet he is not my enemy."
"It is as I tell you. His father will disinherit him. Every Jew in Prague will turn his back upon him. He knows it now. Anton knows it himself, but he cannot be the first to say the word that shall put an end to your engagement."
"Jews have married Christians in Prague before now," said Nina, pleading her own cause with all the strength she had.
"But not such a one as Anton Trendellsohn. An unconsidered man may do that which is not permitted to those who are more in note."
"There is no law against it now."
"That is true. There is no law. But there are habits stronger than law.
In your own case, do you not know that all the friends you have in the world will turn their backs upon you? And so it would be with him. You two would be alone--neither as Jews nor as Christians--with none to aid you, with no friend to love you."
"For myself I care nothing," said Nina. "They may say, if they like, that I am no Christian."
"But how will it be with him? Can you ever be happy if you have been the cause of ruin to your husband?"
Nina was again silent for a while, sitting with her face turned altogether away from the Jewess. Then she rose suddenly from her chair, and, facing round almost fiercely upon the other girl, asked a question, which came from the fulness of her heart, "And you--you yourself, what is it that you intend to do? Do you wish to marry him?"
"I do," said Rebecca, bearing Nina"s gaze without dropping her own eyes for a moment. "I do. I do wish to be the wife of Anton Trendellsohn."
"Then you shall never have your wish--never. He loves me, and me only.
Ask him, and he will tell you so."
"I have asked him, and he has told me so." There was something so serious, so sad, and so determined in the manner of the young Jewess, that it almost cowed Nina--almost drove her to yield before her visitor. "If he has told you so," she said--then she stopped, not wishing to triumph over her rival.
"He has told me so; but I knew it without his telling. We all know it.
I have not come here to deceive you, or to create false suspicions. He does love you. He cares nothing for me, and he does love you. But is he therefore to be ruined? Which had he better lose? All that he has in the world, or the girl that has taken his fancy?"
"I would sooner lose the world twice over than lose him."
"Yes; but you are only a woman. Think of his position. There is not a Jew in all Prague respected among us as he is respected. He knows more, can do more, has more of wit and cleverness, than any of us. We look to him to win for the Jews in Prague something of the freedom which Jews have elsewhere--in Paris and in London. If he takes a Christian for his wife, all this will be destroyed."
"But all will be well if he were to marry you!"
Now it was Rebecca"s turn to pause; but it was not for long. "I love him dearly," she said; "with a love as warm as yours."
"And therefore I am to be untrue to him," said Nina, again seating herself.
"And were I to become his wife," continued Rebecca, not regarding the interruption, "it would be well with him in a worldly point of view.
All our people would be glad, because there has been friendship between the families from of old. His father would be pleased, and he would become rich; and I also am not without some wealth of my own."
"While I am poor," said Nina; "so poor that--look here, I can only mend my rags. There, look at my shoes. I have not another pair to my feet.
But if he likes me, poor and ragged, better than he likes you, rich--"
She got so far, raising her voice as she spoke; but she could get no farther, for her sobs stopped her voice.