free book ebook online reading
eBook Title
Madcap
Author Language Character Set
George Gibbs English Latin1


You are here --- [ Home / Author Index G / George Gibbs / Madcap / Page #10 ]

see him at her hotel, a third from Trouville, assuming the miscarriage
of the other two--cool, friendly notes, tinetured with a nonchalance
she was far from feeling, had failed of their purpose, and save for a
brief letter telling of his departure form Rouen, he had not given the
slightest evidence of his appreciation of her efforts toward a platonic
reconciliation.  She had not despaired of him and did not despair of
him now, for it was one of her maxims that a clever woman--a woman as
clever as she was--could have any man in the world if she set her cap
for him.

Her self-esteem was at stake.  She consoled herself with the thought
that all she needed was opportunity, which being offered, she would
succeed in her object, by fair means if she could, by other means if
she must.  She smiled a little as she thought how easily she could have
conquered him had she chosen to be less scrupulous in the use of her
weapons.  She could have won him at "Wake Robin" if some silly
Quixotism hadn't steeled her breast against him--more than tat, she
knew that in spite of herself she would have won him if it hadn't been
for Hermia.  Hermia had discovered a remarkable faculty for
unconsciously interfering with her affairs.  Unconsciously?  It seemed
so--and yet--

The slipper on the floor tapped more rapidly for a moment and then
stopped.  Olga rose, her lips parting in a slow smile.  It was curious
about Hermia--there were moments when Olga had caught herself wondering
whether Hermia wasn't more than casually interested in her elusive
philosopher.  Hermia's decision to follow her to Europe had been made
with a suddenness which left her motives open to suspicion.  Olga had
learned from Georgette, who had got it from Titine, that notes had
passed between Hermia and Markham, for Georgette, whatever the
indifference of her successes as a hairdresser, had a useful skill at
surreptitious investigation.  This morning Georgette had received a
note from Titine who was in Paris where she had been left by her
mistress to do some shopping and to await Hermia's return.  Titine had
expressed bewilderment at the disappearance of her mistress, who had
left Paris in her new machine with the avowed intention of reaching
Trouville by night.  Georgette had imparted this information to Madame
while she was doing her hair in the morning, and as the hours passed
Olga found her mind dwelling more insistently on the possible reasons
for Hermia's change of plans.  Where was she?  And who was with her?
Olga ran rapidly through her mental list of Hermia's acquaintances and
seemed to be able to account for the where-abouts or engagements of all
those who might have been her companions.

What if--  She started impatiently, walked across the room and looked
out into the Duchesse's rose garden.  Really, Markham's importance in
her scheme of things was getting to be intolerable.  It infuriated her
that this obsession was warping her judgment to the point of imagining
impossibilities.  Hermia and Markham?  The idea was absurd.  And yet
somehow it persisted.  She turned on her heel and paced the floor of
the room rapidly two or three times.  She paused for a moment at her
dressing-table and then with a quick air of resolution rang for her
maid.

"Georgette," she announced, "I shall have no need of you for a day or
two.  I would like you to go to Paris,"

Georgette smiled demurely, concealing her delight with difficulty.  To
invite a French maid to go to Paris is like beckoning her within the
gates of Paradise.

"_Oui, Madame_."

"I need two hats, a parasol and some shoes.  You are to go at once."

"_Bien, Madame_."

"You know what I desire?"

"_Oh, oui, parfaitement, Madam_--a hat for the green afternoon robe and
one of white--"

"And a parasol of the same color, shoes--of suede with the new heel,
dancing slippers of white satin and a pair of pumps."

"I comprehend perfectly."

"You are to return her to-morrow.  The train leaves in an hour.  That
is all."

Georgette withdrew to the door but as she was about to lay her hand
upon the knob she paused.

"And, Georgette," her mistress was saying lazily, "you will see Titine,
will you not?"

"If I have the time, Madame--"

"If you should see Titine, Georgette, will you not inquire where and
with whom Miss Challoner has gone automobiling?"

The eyes of the maid showed a look of comprehension, quickly veiled.
"I shall make it a point to do so, Madame."

Olga yawned and looked out the window.

"Oh, it isn't so important as that--but, Georgette, if you
could--discreetly, Georgette--"

"I comprehend, Madame."

When she was gone Olga threw herself on a couch upon the terrace and
read a French Play just published.  There was a heroine with a past who
loved quite madly a young man with a future and she succeeded in
killing his love for her by the simple expedient of telling him the
truth.  At this point Olga dropped the book upon the flagging and sat
up abruptly, her face set in rigid lines.

Silly fool!  What more right had he to her past than she had to his.
The world had changed since _that_ had been the code of life.  That
code was a relic of the dark ages when the Tree of Knowledge grew only
in the Garden of Eden.  Now the Tree of Knowledge grew in every man's
garden and in every woman's.

She marveled that a dramatist of modern France could have gone back
into the past for such a theme.  It was the desire to seem original, of
course, to be different from other writers--an affectation of
na•vetŽ, quite out of keeping with the spirit of the
hour--unintelligent as well as uninteresting.  (You see Olga didn't
believe in the double standard.)

She got up, spurning the guilty volume with her foot and walked out
into the rose garden.  But their odor made her unhappy and she went
indoors.  She began now to regret that she had not gone down to the
house party of Madeleine de Cahors at Alenon.  At least Pierre de
Folligny would have been there--Chandler Cushing, and the Renauds--a
jolly crowd of people among whom there was never time to think of one's
troubles--still less to brood over them as she had been doing to-day.

The return of her maid from Paris added something to the sum of her
information.  Miss Challoner had left her hotel at ten in the morning
in her new machine with an intention of making a record to Trouville.
Titine was to follow her there when the shopping should be finished.
In the meanwhile a telegram had come dated at Passy, telling of the
change in plans, with orders for Titine to remain in Paris until
further notice.  Several days had passed and Titine still waited in
Miss Challoner's apartment at the hotel which was costing, so Titine
related, three hundred francs a day.  It was all quite mystifying and
Titine was worried, but then Mademoiselle was no longer a child and, of
course, Titine had only to obey orders.

Olga listened carelessly, examining Georgette's purchases, and when the
maid had gone she sat for a long time in her chair by the window
thinking.

At last she got up suddenly, went down into the library and found the
paper booklet of the _Chemins de Fer de l'ƒtat.  In this there was a
map of Normandy and Brittany and after a long search she found the name
she was looking for--Passy--south from Evreux on the road to
Dreux--this was the town from which Hermia's telegram to Titine had
been sent.

Olga's long polished finger nail shuttled back and forth.  Here was
Paris, there Rouen, here Evreux--there Alenon.  Curious!  Hermia with
her machine doing in half a day from Paris what John Markham had taken
four days from Rouen to do afoot.  What more improbable?  And yet
entirely possible!

She took the _livret_ to her room where she could examine it at her
ease and sent to the garage for a road map which had been left in the
car of the Duchesse.  The _livret_ and map she compared, and diligently
studied, arriving, toward the middle of the afternoon, at a sudden
resolution.


CHAPTER XVII

PERE GUEGOU'S ROSES

Had Yvonne needed encouragement in her career as a bread-winner her
success of the morning had filled her with confidence.  She had earned
the right to live for this day at least, and looked forward to the
morrow with joyous enthusiasm.  Philidor, who still confessed to the
possession of a few francs of their original capital, was for putting
up at a small hotel or inn and paying for this accommodation out of
principal.  But Yvonne would not have it so.  The sum they had earned
for the _ragožt_ had filled her with pride and cupidity, had
developed a niggardly desire to hoard their sous against a rainy day.
They had earned the right to lunch.  They must also earn the right to
dine and sleep!

Late in the afternoon they came to a small village where a crowd of
idlers soon surrounded them.  Philidor unpacked Clarissa and recited in
a loud tone the now familiar inventory of their artistic achievements
and Yvonne, smiling, donned her orchestra, tuned her mandolin and
played.  The audience jested and paid her pretty compliments, and
joined with a good will in the familiar choruses.  And for his part,
Philidor made a lightning sketch of an _ancien_ who stood by, leaning
upon his stick, which brought him several other commissions at ten sous
the portrait.  "Reduced rates!" he cried.  "_Bien entendu_!"  For
to-morrow at Verneuil would the people not pay him two francs fifty?
This final argument was convincing to their frugal souls, and he sat
upon a chair until sunset making VallŽcy immortal.  Philidor was too
busy even to pass the hat for the musical part of the performances, so
Yvonne did it herself, returning with two francs, all in coppers.  When
this was added to the earnings of Philidor, they found that in just two
hours the princely sum of six francs had been earned.

"To-night," whispered Philidor, "you shall sleep in a chamber once
occupied by the Grand Monarch at the very least.  We are tasting
success, Yvonne."

"Yes--and it's good--but I've learned a healthy scorn of beds.  You, of
course shall rest where you please, but as for me--I've an ungovernable
desire to sleep in a hay-mow."

"But hay-mows are not for those who can earn six francs in two hours.
We are rich," he cried, "and who knows what to-morrow may bring
besides!"

They compromised.  The _ancien_ to whom Markham applied in this
difficulty offered them bed and board for the small sum of two francs
each, and accordingly they made way to his house.  The _ancien_ was a
person of some substance in the community as they soon discovered, for
his house, the last one at the end of the street, was a two storied
affair and boasted of a wall at the side which inclosed a vegetable
patch and a small flower garden at the back.  Mre
GuŽgou, a woman younger than her lord, looked at them askance
until her good man exhibited the portrait by Monsieur Philidor, when
she burst into smiles and hospitality.

_Oui, bien sžr_, there were rooms.  This was no _auberge_, that
was understood, but the house was very large for two old people.  Yes,
they rented the spare rooms by the month.  Just now they were
fortunately empty.  Did Monsieur desire two rooms or one?

"Two," said Philidor promptly.  "We will pay of course."

He hesitated and Mre GuŽgou examined them with new
interest, but Yvonne, with great presence of mind, flew to the rescue.

"We--we are not married yet, Madam," she said flushing adorably.  "One
day--perhaps--"

"Soon--Madame," put in Philidor, rising to the situation with alacrity.
"We shall be married soon."

Madame GuŽgou beamed with delight.

"_Tiens!  C'est joli, a!  GuŽgou!_" she called.  "We
must kill a chicken and cut some haricots and a lettuce.  They shall
dine well in VallŽcy--these two."

GuŽgou grinned toothlessly from the doorway of the shed where
he was stabling Clarissa, and then hobbled his way up to the garden.

When Mre GuŽgou went into the kitchen to prepare the
dinner, Yvonne and Philidor walked through the garden to a small
rustic arbor at the end which looked down over a meadow and a stream.

"I hope the _bon Dieu_ will forgive me that fib," she laughed.

"It was no fib at all."  And as her eyes widened, "You merely said that
we hadn't been married yet.  We haven't you know," he laughed.

Her look passed his face and sought the saffron heavens across which
the swallows were wheeling high above the tree tops.

"Obviously," she said coolly.  "Nowadays one only marries when every
other possibility of existence is exhausted."

He examined her gravely.

"The _bon Dieu_ will not forgive you _that_," he said slowly.

"Why not?"

"Because you don't mean what you say.  Whatever Hermia was--Yvonne at
least is honest.  She knows as I do that she will not marry for the
reasons you mention."

She accepted his reproof smilingly and thrust out her hand--a browner
hand now, a ringless, earnest little hand--and put it into his.

"You are right, Philidor, I shall marry--if I may--for love.  Or--I
shall not marry at all."

He turned his palm upward, but before he could seize her fingers she
had eluded him.

"But I'm not ready yet, Philidor," she laughed, "and when I am I shall
not seek a husband on the highroads of Vagabondia."

Her speech puzzled him for a moment.  In it were mingled craft and
artlessness with a touch of dignity to make it unassailable.  But in a
moment she was laughing gaily.  "Whom shall it be?  Cleofonte is
married.  Luigi?  He has a temper--"

"Marry _me_!  You might do worse," he said suddenly.

Her face changed  color and the laughter died on her lips.

"_You_?  O Philidor!"

She turned away from him and looked up at the sky.

"I--I mean it," he repeated.  "I think you had better."

He sought her hand and she trembled under his touch.

"Fate has thrown us together--twice.  Its intention is obvious.  Let
Fate look after the rest--"

"You, Philidor.  Oh--"

She buried her head in her arms still quivering, but he only held her
hand more tightly.

"Don't child.  I did not mean to frighten you.  I would not hurt you
for anything in the world.  I thought you needed me--"

At that she straightened quickly, turned a flushed face toward him and
he saw that she was shaking, not with sobs, but with merriment.

"O Philidor--_such_ a wooing!  You'd marry me because I need you.  Was
ever a dependent female in such a position!"  And she began laughing
again, her whole figure shaking.  "I need you--forsooth!  How do you
know I do?  Have I told you so?" she asked scornfully.

"You need me," he repeated doggedly.

"And that is why I should marry you?  You who preach the gospel of
sincerity and love for love's sake?"

"I--I love you," he stammered.

But she only laughed at him the more.

"_You_.  You wear your passion lightly.  _Such_ a tempestuous wooing!
You ask me to marry you because you fear I might do worse--because you
believe that I'm irresponsible, and that without you I'll end in
spiritual beggary.  I appreciate your motives.  They're large,
ingenuous and heroic.  Thanks.  Love is not a matter of expediency or
marriage a search for a guardian.  If they were, _mon ami_, I should
have long ago married my Trust Company.  _You_--John Markham!"

He sat silent under her mockery, his long fingers clasped over his
knees, his gaze upon the field below them, his mind recalling
unpleasantly a similar incident in his unromantic career. Hermia had
stopped laughing, had left him suddenly and was now picking one of
Pre GuŽgou's yellow roses.  Her irony had cut him to
the quick, as Olga's had, her mockery dulled his wits and rendered him
incapable of reply, but curiously enough he now felt neither anger nor
chagrin at her contempt--only a deep dismay that he had spoken the
words that had risen unbidden to his lips, that placed in jeopardy the
joy of their fellowship which had owed its very existence to the free,
unsentimental character of their relations.  He knew that, however
awkwardly he had expressed it, he had spoken the truth.  He loved her,
had loved her since Thimble Island, when she had spoiled his
foreground by eliminating every detail of foreground and background by
becoming both.  Since then to him she had always been Joy, Gayety,
Innocence, Enchantment and he adored her in secret.

Since they had met in France he had guarded the secret carefully--often
by an air of indifference which fitted him well, a relic of his years
of seclusion, and a native awkwardness which was always more or less in
evidence before women.  Whatever his secret misgivings, he had blessed
the opportunity which chance and her own wild will had thrown in his
way.  And now--she would leave him, of course.  There was nothing left
for her to do.

Slowly, fearfully, he raised his eyes until she came within the range
of their vision, first to her shoes, then to her stockings, her skirt,
gaudy jacket and at last met her eyes, which were smiling at him
saucily over the rosebud which she was holding to her lips.  But he
only sat glowering stupidly at her.

"O Philidor!" she cried.  "You look just as you did on the night when I
slipped down through the pergola."

"Hermia!" He rose and approached her.  "I forbid you."

She retreated slowly, brandishing the blossom beneath his nose.

"Without--er--the face powder!"

"You have no right to speak of that."

"Oh, haven't I?  You've just given it to me."

"How?"

"By proving to me that I wasn't mistaken in you.  O Philidor, did you
propose to her, too, from purely philanthropic--"

"Stop!"  He seized her by both wrists and held her straight in front of
him, while he looked squarely into her eyes.  "You _shall_ not speak--"

"Or was it because she 'needed' you, Philidor, as I do?"

"There's nothing between Olga and me," he said violently.  "There never
was--"

"Face powder," she repeated.

"Listen to me.  You shall," fiercely.  "You've got to know the truth
now.  There's no other woman in the world but you.  There never has
been another.  There won't be.  I love you, child.  I always have--from
the first.  I wanted to keep it form you because I didn't want to make
you unhappy, because I wanted you here--in Vagabondia.  When the chance
came to take you, I welcomed it, though I knew I was doing you a wrong.
I wanted to meet you on even terms, away from the reek of your
fashionable set--to see the woman in you bud and blossom under the open
skies away from the hothouse plants of your vicious circle.  Even there
at 'Wake Robin,' I wanted to tear you away from them.  They were not
your kind.  In the end you would have been the same as they.  That was
the pity of it.  Perhaps it was pity that first taught me how much you
were to me--how much you were worth saving from them--from yourself.  I
seemed impossible.  I was nothing to you then--less than I am now--a
queer sort of an amphibious beast that had left its more familiar
element and taken to walks abroad among the elect of the earth.  But I
loved you then, Hermia, I love you now, and I've told you so.  I hadn't
meant to, but I'm not sorry.  I'm glad that you know it--even though
your smiles deride me; even though I know I've spoiled your idyl here
and made a mockery of my own Fool's Paradise."

Her head was lowered now and he could not see her eyes, but he was sure
they must be still laughing at him.  When he had finished he released
her and turned away.

"To-morrow we shall be in Verneuil," he said quietly.  "I will give you
money to buy clothes and put you on the train for Paris."

There was a long silence, broken by the sound of Pre
GuŽgou's chickens flapping to their roosting bars.  The saffron
heavens had changed to purple, and in the spire of the village
campanile a bell tolled solemnly the strokes of Philidor's doom.  He
did not see her face.  He had not dared to look at it.  But when the
bell stopped ringing, Hermia's voice was speaking softly.

"Do you want me to go, Philidor?"

Her tone still mocked and he did not turn toward her.

"No--but you had better," he murmured.

"Suppose I refused to go to Paris.  What would you do?"

He did not reply.

"Could you treat me so?  Is it _my_ fault that you--you fell in love
with me?  _I'm_ not responsible for that--am I?  I didn't _make_ you do
it, did I?  Would you have me give up all this?  Think a moment,
Philidor.  Wouldn't it be cruel of you--after letting me be what I
am--after letting me know what I _can_ be--after giving me an ego, an
individuality, and making me a success in life--to send me back to
Paris to be a mere nonentity?  You couldn't, I'll not go."

Her voice, half mocking, half tender, rose at the end in a note of
stubbornness.

"Of course, you will do as you please," he muttered.

He felt rather than heard her coming toward him.

"Don't be cross with me," she pleaded.  "I--I don't want to go
away--from this--from _you_, Philidor."

He turned quickly--but she thrust out her hand with a frank gesture
which he could not misinterpret.

"You're the best friend I have in the world," she said.

He took her hand in both of his and held it a moment.

"That's something," he muttered.  "I'll try to be--to deserve your
faith in me."

He looked so woebegone that her heat went out to him, but she only
laughed gaily.

"You'll not be rid of me so easily, Monsieur.  I'm not going, do you
hear?"

He shrugged and smiled.

"There!" she smiled.  "I knew you wouldn't refuse me.  You're an angel,
Philidor, and I shall reward you."

She touched Pre GuŽgou's blossom to her lips, then put it deftly
into the lapel of his coat.

"It is the Order of the Golden Rose, _mon ami_, and its motto is
_Sincere et Constanter_.  You will remember that motto, Philidor, and
however mad, however inconsistent or incomprehensible I may be, know
that I am bound to you, apprenticed to learn the trade of living and
that not until you send me away will I ever leave you."

He smiled and lifted the blossom to his lips.

"Friendship?" he asked.

"Yes, that always--whatever else--"

She stopped suddenly as his eyes eagerly alight sought her face, and
then turning quickly she fled to the kitchen of Mre
GuŽgou and upstairs away from him.

The GuŽgou family made good its promise, and they supped upon
the fat of VallŽcy, Mre GuŽgou waiting upon
them, her good man bringing from the cellar a cob-webbed bottle which
dated from a vintage which was still spoken of in the valley with
reverence.  A brave wine it was, such as one remembers in after days,
and a brave night for Philidor whose heart was singing.

"Ah!  _la jeunesse_!" sighed Madame GuŽgou, setting down her glass
when the healths were drunk.  "I, too, Mademoiselle, was once young."

Yvonne patted her cheek gently.

"Age is only in the heart, Madame," she said.

"_Non, ma belle_," cackled GuŽgou from his corner.  "It's in the
joints."

"_Tais-toi_, Jules," scolded his wife.  "What should lovers care about
thy joints."

"My joints are my joints," he creaked stubbornly.  "When one has ninety
years--"

"Ninety!" cried Yvonne.  "Monsieur carries his years lightly.  I should
not have said that he had over sixty."

"Say no more, Mademoiselle," put in Mre GuŽgou.  "You
will render him conceited."

Indeed it seemed that the old man had already forgotten his joints, for
he poured out another glass of wine and was pledging Yvonne with
toothless gayety.

"_Vos beaux yeux_, Mademoiselle," he creaked gallantly, "and to your
good fortune, Monsieur Philidor."

"To your roses, Monsieur GuŽgou," replied Philidor.  "In the
whole of the _Eure et Oise_ there are not such roses.  To your
omelette, Madame.  In the country there is not such another!"

With these compliments and in others like them the minutes passed
quickly. Yvonne's eyes avoided Philidor's, though he frequently sought
them.  Nor was he dismayed when, in response to Madame GuŽgou's
interest query as to when they would marry, Yvonne shrugged her
shoulders indifferently and sighed.

"Oh, I do not know, Madame.  Often I think--never.  One marries and
that is the end of romance.  One lover--pouf!  When one may have many."

She tossed her chin in the direction of Philidor, who looked at her
over his chicken bone.

"If one has but one lover," she went on, "he must have all the virtues
of the many and none of the faults.  He must sing when we are gay, weep
when we are sad, and make love to us while doing either.  _Enfin_, he
must be what no man is.  _Voyez-vous_?" and she pointed the finger of
scorn at Philidor.  "He eats just as you or I."

Madame GuŽgou laughed.

"What you require is no man at all.  Mademoiselle Yvonne, but a saint."

"Perhaps," she finished, yawning.  "But, _bien entendu_, I'm in no
hurry."

When the dinner was finished, Yvonne helped Mre GuŽgou
with the dishes, and when that was done went straightway to her room,
with no other word for Philidor than a "_Bon soir_," and a nod of the
head.

Philidor sat for a long while in the arbor smoking a pipe.  He had much
to think about.  One by one the lights went out, and the village grew
quiet.  The moon rose over the forest on the hilltop beyond the stream,
and he stretched his limbs and smiled at it in drowsy content.  He was
so wrapped in his reflections that he hardly heard a voice which came
to him over the yellow roses.

"_Bonne nuit_, Philidor."

"Hermia!"

"You're to go to bed--at once."

"I couldn't.  Imagine a saint going to bed."

"You're _not_ a saint.  You're a prowler."

"Let me prowl.  I'm happy."

"Why should you be?"

"I love you."

The shutter above him closed abruptly.  He waited in the shadow of the
wall looking upward.  There was no sound.


CHAPTER XVIII

A PHILOSOPHER IN A QUANDARY

Clarissa carried a double burden the next day, but she breasted the
keen morning air so briskly that whatever her own thoughts upon the
subject she gave no sign of her increasing responsibilities.  Yet Cupid
sat perched upon the pack which Philidor had been at such pains to
fasten.  Yvonne alone of the three was out of humor and she moved along
silently, suppressing the joyous mood of her companion by answers in
monosyllables and a forbidding expression which defied conciliation.
As nothing seemed to please her, Philidor, too, relapsed into silence
and swinging his stick, walked on ahead, whistling gaily.  But that
only provoked her mood the more, and when she overtook him she made him
stop.

His silence seemed even more exasperating.

"Oh, if you have nothing to say to me," she said petulantly at last,
"I'd much rather you whistled."

He glanced at her before replying.

"You motto of the Golden Rose needs amending," he said.

"What would you add?"

"Patience," he laughed.

"Clarissa is patient," she sniffed.  "The _bon Dieu_ preserve me from
the patient man."

It was clear that she meant to affront him and she succeeded admirably,
for Philidor flushed to the brows.  Then catching her in his arms
without more ado, he kissed her full on the lips.

"I'm no more patient that I should be," he said.

She flung away from him, pale and red by turns, struggling between
anger and incomprehension.
    
<<Page 9   |   Page 10   |   Page 11>>
Go to Page Index for Madcap

You are here --- [ Home / Author Index G / George Gibbs / Madcap / Page #10 ]