"If I had done it," said Dr. Ferris, "I wouldn"t dare touch it."
"Yes, you would," said Barbara, "if you knew that you could make it better. It"s still a beginning."
"When do you expect to finish?"
"I"m going to keep on working until I know that I"ve done the best I can. We may be months on it."
Blizzard smiled secretly, and Dr. Ferris managed to conceal his annoyance.
"I wish, my dear," he said, "that I had taken you more seriously in the beginning. But it is not too late to get some advantage by studying in Paris and Rome."
"I don"t believe it"s ever too late for that," said Barbara, "and of course I"ve always been crazy for the chance, but knowing how you felt--"
"Say the word," said her father, "and you shall go to-morrow."
Blizzard"s face was like stone; he felt that his high hopes were on a more precarious footing than ever. If she had the whim, Barbara would go abroad, far beyond the reach of even his long arms.
"You could finish your bust any time," said Dr. Ferris persuasively.
But Barbara shook her head with complete decision. "A bird in the hand,"
she said, "is worth two in the bush. And--I hope I"m wrong--but I have the conviction that this head is going to be the best thing I shall ever do. I can look at it quite impersonally, because half the time it seems to model itself. _I_ think it"s going to be good. If it is good, it will be one of those lucky series of accidents that sometimes happen to undeserving but lucky people."
Dr. Ferris sighed inwardly, but the expression of his face did not change. "Do you mind if I stay?" he asked. "I think it"s time I knew what you look like when you are at work, don"t you?"
"_High_ time!" exclaimed Barbara. "I"ll just get into my ap.r.o.n." She went into the next room and closed the door.
"Your innocents abroad," said the legless man, "wasn"t a success." His face was a jeer.
XV
"Barbara," said her father when they had finished dinner, "I made a threat this morning, and I"m going to keep it. If you have no especial objection, will you come into the library?"
Her face was radiant; he had been praising her work for the tenth time.
"It sounds," she said, "as if I was going to be whipped. That wasn"t what you threatened to do, was it?"
"No," said he. "_I"m_ to be punished. I"m going to tell you about a mistake of judgment I once made. But not as a warning, or a moral lesson--merely, my dear, that you and I may learn to know each other better. First, though, I want to talk to you about your model."
"He"s rather fascinating, don"t you think?"
"He is very clever," said her father, "and when he chooses he can talk very well. He proved that this morning. To me, personally, he is most repugnant, but I admit that when he once launched out, I listened as a school-boy listens to stories of treasure and pirates. He"s lived and observed and suffered. There is no doubt about that. But I shall be greatly relieved to hear that your bust is finished. I don"t like the idea of such a man being in the same block with you. I hope that you will not feel inspired to do another head of him."
"He"s a splendid model," said Barbara. "Of course this morning he didn"t keep still--and he did talk. But then I wasn"t really working; When I wish he keeps almost as still as the clay I work with."
"Doesn"t looking at him ever give you--oh, a disagreeable creepy feeling?"
"Not any more. I"m so used to him now. No, I feel a genuine friendliness for him,"
"I thought," said her father, "that to you artists, models were absolutely impersonal--just planes and angles and--what was it you used to say?"
Barbara flushed slightly, remembering a former and very disagreeable conversation. "Your memory is much too good," she said.
Dr. Ferris frowned, "I"m not trying to interfere," he said; "you"re old enough to know what"s best for you, but if I could instil in you a proper distaste for your friend, Mr. Blizzard, I should be delighted.
Beauty and the beast do _not_ go well together."
"_Please"_ said Barbara, "don"t bother your head about me. When the bust is finished, you and I go abroad for to look, for to see, for to learn.
That"s agreed. We shall not invite Mr. Blizzard to go with us, and all will be well. There"s my hand on it!"
She laughed rosily, and they shook hands.
"Until recently," said Dr. Ferris, "I have taken, as you know, very little interest in your career as a sculptor. Haven"t you thought that rather an unnatural att.i.tude?"
"Why, yes," said Barbara, "I have."
She took a box of safety matches from a cigar-table, and kneeling, lighted the fire in the big chimney-piece.
"I hope you don"t mind," she said; "I"m shivery."
She knelt on, watching the little flames grow into big flames, and spreading her hands to the warmth. Her face, arms, throat, and the front of her white dress became golden. She looked more like some lovely vestal of fire-worship than an ambitious American girl, determined to achieve fame in the battleground of the world.
"Why, yes," she repeated, "it has seemed strange to me. When I"ve thought that I wanted to do things, you always took a lot of interest and trouble, but when I _knew_ that I wanted to do one thing, you gave me a dreadfully cold shoulder." She smiled whimsically. "I shall do an allegory in bluish-white marble--The Cold Shoulder."
She retreated a little from the fire, and sat at her father"s feet. He laid his hand on her many-colored hair.
From childhood Barbara had resented parental caresses. On the present occasion, she felt a sudden tenderness for her father, and leaned a little against him, in answer to the touch of his hand.
"Did it ever," said he, "strike you as strange that you never took any interest in _my_ career?"
"I"ve always been tremendously proud of you," she said. "You know that."
"You liked my results," he said, "the show pieces--newspaper notoriety--speech-making--the races in special trains against death.
But you don"t even know what has chiefly interested me during the last thirty years; nor the goal which I have felt I must reach before I could be resigned to parting with this life."
"No," she said gently, "I don"t. Tell me. I _want_ to be interested."
"You know, of course, that I experiment with animals."
"Yes. I have seen crates of guinea-pigs and monkeys at the laboratory door. I"m afraid it always made me a little unhappy. But I suppose it"s the only way to get certain results. And you always give them something, don"t you?"
"Always. They don"t suffer more than a man would while healing a deep clean cut. In other words, they don"t suffer at all. And they"re not unhappy, and they don"t bear malice. And still I wouldn"t do it, if I could help myself. I think, my dear, that I have been chosen for my sins to introduce a great benefit to mankind. It seems now only a question of perfecting the technique. I"ve already had extraordinary results."
"What"s the idea?"
"You know, of course, that a piece of skin from one man can be successfully grafted on another man. Well, so can a liver, a finger, a hand, a foot, an arm, a leg. I have two monkeys now: a black and a gray.
The black monkey has the gray hands and forearms, the gray monkey has the black. I made the exchange eighteen months ago. And they have developed the same strength and skill with the grafted members that they had with their own. I have a monkey who had only one eye when he came.