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The Laughing Girl

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"Do you mean me?"



"Haven't you practically just thanked God you are not like other men?"



"What have I done to deserve this, Thusis? I'm trying to be patient – "



"You don't need to be. Heaven deliver me from a patient man!"



Then I blew up: "You listen to me, you little idiot," I said in a low, enraged tone; "I'm in love with you and you can't help it whatever you choose to do about it. You came here as a servant and I fell in love with you as a servant. You are probably something else – God knows what – and I'm more in love than ever with God-knows-what! I don't care what you are, servant, bourgeoise, actress, princess, or demi-mondaine – "



"

What!

"



"I tell you I wouldn't care. I love you. I want to marry you – "



"Marry me if I were – a demi – "



"Yes!" I said violently; "yes! yes! yes! It's too late to have whatever you are make any difference to me. I'm an O'Ryan and I love only once."



"Do you suppose I'm flattered by what you've just shouted at me? You'd marry me – or you'd do the same for a demi – "



"Confound it!" I exclaimed, "it's you, whatever you are! Can't you understand – "



"Certainly I can. All men are men first, last, all the time. That Serbian married Draga; any man will do as much for any drab if he can't have her otherwise. I've seen enough of men, I tell you. Royal, noble, landed gentry, bourgeoisie, peasantry – all are men first, last, all the time; and all are exactly alike!"



She clenched her hand and confronted me with scornful eyes:



"And why any honest woman should ever fall in love with one of them is one of those ignoble mysteries which I have never cared to fathom!"



Her contempt and my own fury almost paralyzed me.



I said, finally, in a very quiet voice, not my own:



"Very well, Thusis, expect nothing more of me than you expect of any man – including those royal gentlemen out yonder. And I'll not disappoint you."



I stepped nearer, forcing a smile:



"You've succeeded in slaying any consideration I entertained for your sex. You've enlightened me. In future I'll take them as I find them, easily, lightly, good-humoredly, with gaiety, with gratitude to the old time gods when they send a pretty one my way."



And I smiled at Thusis who looked darkly back at me with the faintest hint of uncertainty in her eyes.



"It is wonderful," said I, "how a word or two from a woman sometimes clears up the most serious situations. Your revelations concerning my sex in general have opened my eyes. I take your word for it that man is always man, as you explain so convincingly, and that he is, first, last, and all the time, merely a jackass endowed with speech."



I emptied my coffee cup and set it upon the tray which she held in her left hand.



"I had," said I, "something else to tell you – and which had nothing whatever to do with love. But, on second thoughts, I am so certain that a self-sufficient girl like yourself is amply able to look out for herself, that I shall not bother to say what I had intended saying."



Her gray eyes became intently fixed on mine while her color came and went under the sting of irony.



But I made up my mind to let matters take their course. If she tried to body-snatch this Greek and Bulgarian carrion, let her! If Smith interfered, let him! What was it to me after all? I was becoming fed up on love and feminine caprice – on kings and queens and shocking manners, – on intrigue and treachery and counter plot.



Suddenly, as I stood there, a wave of disgust swept over me. I was sick of Switzerland; sick of the ridiculous property which was causing me all this trouble and discomfort; sick of the grotesque whim of Fate which had yanked me out of an orderly, unaccented life and a peaceful profession in Manhattan and had slammed me down here in the midst of love and Alps and kings!



"I'll chuck the estate and go home!" I exclaimed. "I'll go now, to-night!" And then I remembered the accursed avalanche.



She was watching me intently, curiously, and I noticed she had lost some of her colour.



"Do you suppose," said I, "that there is any way of climbing over that mass of snow? – any way of my getting out of this valley to-night?"



"Would you go if you could?" she asked in a rather colorless voice.



"Yes, I would," said I savagely. "I've had enough."



"I'm sorry."



"Sorry that I've had enough?" I sneered.



"Sorry you cannot leave the valley to-night," she said quietly.



"Then it is not possible?"



"I'm afraid not… If it were, I also would leave this valley to-night."



"With a bagful of kings," I added.



"Yes," she said simply.



"Oh, no, you wouldn't," said I with unworthy satisfaction in my knowledge of Smith's mission. "And let me tell you a thing or two, Thusis. You seem to resemble, more or less, a very naughty little girl, spoiled but precocious, who has run away from school and is raising the devil out of bounds, throwing stones and ringing door-bells and defying policemen with derisive tongue. Pretty soon you'll be caught and led home and soundly spanked. And," I added fervently, "I'd like to be in the vicinity of that wood-shed when discipline begins."



My laughter was fairly genuine. I lighted a cigarette and, gazing at this girl who had so outrageously maligned me, felt so much better that a macabre sort of gaiety verging upon frivolity invaded me.



"All women," said I, "are women, first, last, and all the time."



Thusis flushed.



"I am wondering," said I airily, "whether the rôle of Adonis might suit me."



"What!" she exclaimed.



"Adonis," I repeated. "He was that poor fish of an amateur who played opposite Aphrodite. And got the hook. But the rôle is all right and it's a no-character part if you play it straight… I'm wondering – " And I smiled at my own thoughts and blew three rings of smoke up at the sun-lit grape leaves overhead.



Suddenly Thusis unclosed her soft, fresh lips, which seemed a trifle tremulous:



"That woman," she said breathlessly, "is notorious in Vienna! And if you are – sufficiently abandoned – to d-degrade yourself by – an affair – with her – "



"But what do you care, Thusis?"



Her face flamed. "I care —

that

!" she said, snapping her white fingers. And turned swiftly on her heel.



XVI

THE COUNTESS

I was very unhappy. I was not only madly in love with Thusis but also mad enough to spank her. And I sat down in the arbor once more a prey to mixed emotions.



The two silent little birds had gone to bed. Soft mauve shadows lay across the scrubby foreland; snow peaks assumed the hue of pink pearls; a wavering light played through the valley so that the world seemed to quiver in primrose tints.



Then, through the pale yellow glory, a girl came drifting as though part of the delicate beauty of it all, – her frail, primrose evening gown and scarf scarcely outlined – scarcely detached from the golden clarity about her. It was as though she were lost in the monotone of living light the only accent the dusky symmetry of her head.



I had not realized that the Countess Manntrapp was so pretty.



I was not sure that she had discovered me at all until she turned her head en passant and sent me one of those vague smiles calculated to stir the dead bones of saints.



"I suppose," she said, "you only look lonely, but really you are not."



I was lonely and sore at heart. Possibly she read in my forced smile something of my state of mind, for she paused leisurely by the arbor and glanced about her at the grape leaves.



"Evidently," she said, "this spot is sacred to Bacchus. But I was not looking for gods or half-gods… Do you prefer your own company, Mr. O'Ryan?"



"No, I don't," said I. So she entered the arbor and seated herself. There was only that one seat. With strictest economy it could accommodate two; but I had not thought of attempting it until she carelessly suggested it.



"How heavenly still it is," she murmured, an absent expression in her dark eyes. "Are you fond of stillness and solitude?"



"Not very," said I. "Are you, Countess?"



She said, dreamily, that she was, but her side glance belied her. Never did the goddess of mischief look at me out of two human eyes as audaciously as she was doing now. And it was so transparent a challenge, so utterly without disguise, that we both laughed.



I don't know why I laughed unless the soreness in mind and heart had provoked their natural reaction. A listless endurance of suffering is the first symptom of indifference – that blessed anodyne with which instinct inoculates unhappy hearts when the bitterness which was sorrow wears away and leaves only dull resignation.



"At dinner," she said, "I made up my mind that you are an interesting man. I am wondering."



"I came to a similar conclusion concerning you," said I. "But I'm no longer wondering how near right I am."



"Such a pretty compliment! Also it dissipates any doubts regarding you."



"Did you have any, Countess?"



"Well, you know what I asked you at dinner. You understood? You read lips, don't you?"



"I read yours."



"I wasn't sure. You gave me no answer."



We laughed lightly. "What answer can a mortal make when Aphrodite commands?" said I.



"Then you are willing to play Adonis?"



"Quite as willing – as was that young gentleman."



"That isn't kind of you, Mr. O'Ryan. He wasn't very willing, was he?"



"Not very. But possibly he had a premonition of the tragic consequences," said I, laughing. "One doesn't frivol with a goddess with impunity."



"Are you afraid?"



She turned in the narrow seat. She was altogether too near, but I couldn't help it. And I was much disturbed to find our fingers had become very lightly intertwined.

 



She was smiling when I kissed her. But after I had done it her smile faded, and the gay confidence in her expression altered.



I had never expected to see in her eyes any hint of confusion, but it was there, and a sort of shamed surprise, too – odd emotions for a hardened coquette with the reputation she enjoyed.



"You proceed too rapidly," she said, the bright but subtly changed smile still stamped on her lips. "There seems to be no finesse about Americans – no leisurely technique that masters the intricacies of the ante-climax. Did you not know that hesitation is an art; that the only perfect happiness is in suspense?"



"Didn't you want to be kissed?" I asked bluntly. "I had perhaps surmised that it might not be a disagreeable sensation. Was it?"



She seemed to have recovered her careless audacity, and now she laughed.



"At all events," she said, "I shall not repeat the experiment … this evening." She laid one soft hand in mine with a gay little smile: "Let us enjoy our new friendship serenely and without undue emotion," she said. "And let me tell you how you have made me laugh at what you said to those absurd Prussians!"



We both laughed, but I was now on my guard with this girl who had come here in such company.



"No Prussian ever born ever knew how to make a friend," she said. "To-day they have the whole world against them – even your country – "



"I am Chilean," said I pleasantly.



"Are you

really

?"



"I think you and your friends are quite sure of that," said I drily.



"Suppose," she said in a lower voice, "I tell you that they are not my friends?"



I smiled.



"You wouldn't believe me?" she asked.



"What I believe and do not believe, dear Countess, should not disturb you in the slightest."



"I thought we were friends."



"Do you

really

 think so?"



"I hope so. I wish it – if you do. And friendship does not fear confidences."



"Neutrals have no confidences to make. My country is not at war."



"Is not your heart enlisted?" she asked, smilingly.



"Is yours?"



"Yes, it is! See how my friendship refuses no confidence when you ask?

I

 do not hesitate."



"On which side," said I, warily, "is your heart enlisted?"



"Shall I tell you?"



"If you care to."



She sat looking at me intently, her soft hand in mine. Then, with a pretty gesture, she placed the other hand over it, and her shoulder came into contact with mine.



"I am Russian," she said. "Is that not an answer?"



"So is Puppsky," I remarked.



For a second an odd expression came over her face and it turned quite white. Then she laughed.



"I'll tell you something," she said. "I have a girl friend. I love her dearly. I have a country. I love it still more dearly. The girl I love is Adelaide, Grand Duchess of Luxemburg. Prussia has practically annexed it. The country I love is Russia. Prussia holds it… Do you still doubt me?"



"Good Lord," thought I, "how this girl can lie!" But I said: "Tell me about Luxemburg, Countess. Is it true that Prince Ruprecht of Bavaria means to marry the seventeen-year-old sister of the Grand Duchess Adelaide?"



"Yes," she said. And I distinctly heard her teeth snap.



"What sort of man is Ruprecht?" I inquired, to steer the conversation toward easier ground.



"Ruprecht! Did you ever see him?"



"No."



"Well, he has the manners of the barn-yard and the distinction of a scullion! Picture to yourself a man of fifty-seven with a head as square as a battered bullet and the bodily grace of a new-born camel. He is the stupidest, coarsest, commonest vulgarian in Europe.



"Why, the man is ridiculous! He once set all Munich laughing by appearing in the English Garden on skates wearing his spurs and saber. And all his military suite had to do likewise. Picture the result – and Ruprecht scarcely knew how to stand on the ice! Why their swords got between their legs and their spurs did the rest, and the entire lake resounded with the incessant crash of falling warriors."



She threw back her head and laughed; and I laughed too.



"Such a brute," she said. "His first wife, daughter of that kindly and philanthropic oculist, Karl Theodore of Tegernsee, died of his neglect and ill treatment. And now, at fifty-seven, he rolls his hog's eyes in his freckled face and smirks at a seventeen-year-old child – God help her!"



I gazed in amazement at the Countess Manntrapp. This was acting with a vengeance. Such perfection, such flawless interpretation of the rôle she was playing for my benefit, I had never dreamed possible. No emotion could appear more genuine, no sincerity more perfectly mimicked. Here was an actress without equal in my entire experience.



Suddenly I caught her eye, and turned very red.



"You don't believe me," she said calmly, and dropped her head.



There was a painful silence between us. Presently she looked up at me, flushed, curious, amused:



"You take me for a Hun, don't you?"



"If you are not pro-German," said I, much embarrassed, "what are you doing with those people?"



"Watching them. And you don't believe that, either?"



"I'm sorry, Countess."



"Why do you doubt me?"



"Because only a pro-German would confide to a stranger that she is not one. Were you really in the Allied service you'd keep your own council. Secret agents don't betray themselves to strangers. You have no means of knowing where my sympathies lie. How do you know I am not pro-German?"



"By your letters."



"My letters?"



"I opened several," she said naïvely.



"Where!"



"In Berne."



"You stole my letters?"



"Yes, I had to."



"How did you do it?"



"The postman is in my pay."



"That," said I angrily, "is a most outrageous confession, Countess."



"But I had to know what your politics are," she explained gently. "Besides, if I had not stolen all your letters the Swiss authorities would have opened them and found out that you are pro-Ally in sentiment. And then you would not have been permitted to come here and live in this house. And all these people would not have come here either. And I should have had nobody to help me while keeping these people under surveillance."



"You count on me to help you?" I demanded, too astonished to remain angry.



"May I not?" she asked sweetly.



"So that's the reason," said I, "that you let me kiss you."



"I must be honest, it is."



With every atom of conceit knocked out of me, wincing, chagrined, I found nothing to say to this pretty woman who sat so close beside me and looked at me with a half smile hovering on her lips and out of sweet, dark eyes that seemed utterly honest – God help her.



"It is only your vanity that is smarting a little," she said, smiling, "not your heart. I haven't touched that at all."



"How do you know?" I retorted.



"Because you are in love with somebody else, Mr. O'Ryan."



"With whom?" I demanded defiantly.



"I don't know. But you are in love. A woman can tell."



"I am

not

 in love," said I with angry emphasis, recollecting the treatment meted out to me by Thusis. "I'm not in love with anybody." I caught her doubting but interested eyes fixed intently on me – "unless," I added recklessly, "I'm in love with you."



"But you're not."



We looked at each other curiously, almost searchingly, not inclined to laugh yet ready, perhaps, for further mischief. Why not preoccupy my mind with this amusing and pretty woman, and slay in my heart all regard for Thusis?



So I kissed her with that object in view. She said nothing – scarcely defended herself – sitting with pretty head lowered and white jeweled hands tightly folded in her lap.



"I'll take you trout-fishing," said I, determined to exterminate and root out all tender memories of Thusis.



She looked up: "May I ask you a question?"



"What is it?" I returned, suspiciously, instantly on my guard again.



"Who is Mr. Smith?"



"A Norwegian." And I explained Smith's business with the Swiss government.



She nodded absently. Probably she did not believe this. As far as that was concerned, neither did I.



"Answer me a question, will you, Countess?" said I in my turn. She smiled: "What is it?"



"Is your kiss really worth the information you extract from me?"



In spite of her light laughter she turned quite pink, and when I bent toward her again, she laid her arm across her lips, defending them.



Then, as I was preparing for further indiscretion, the door behind us opened and was closed again instantly. I knew it was Thusis. The certainty chilled my very bones.



"Who was it?" I asked carelessly.



"Only the waitress," said she.



"The red-haired one?"



"I believe so. Is she Swiss?"



I did not answer.



The Countess looked up and repeated the question. "Where did you find her?" she added.



There was a short silence. An almost imperceptible change came over her features. Then, daintily, and by degrees, she inclined her head a little nearer.



But it was not in me to betray Thusis for a kiss. Slowly, however, I became aware that I was betraying myself.



Presently the Countess rose in the gathering dusk, and I stood up immediately.



She inspected me steadily for a full minute, then that almost imperceptible smile edged her lips again and she gave me my congé with a gentle nod.



XVII

MORE MYSTERY

I discovered Smith sitting on the rim of the fountain all alone in the dusk.



"Good heavens!" I blurted out, "was any man ever so completely entangled in the web of intrigue as I am? Plot, counterplot, camouflage, mystery – I'm in the very middle of the whole mess!



"I don't know who anybody is or what they're up to! Who is Thusis? Who is Clelia? Who is Josephine Vannis? Raoul? The Countess Manntrapp? And who are you, for that matter? I don't know! I don't pretend to guess."



"What's the trouble?" he asked, amused.



"Trouble! I don't know. There's all kinds of trouble lying around. I'm in several varieties of it. Where is the traveling circus?"



"In Tsar Ferdie's apartments."



"Probably conspiring," I added.



"Probably."



"What are you doing out here?"



"Oh, I'm not conspiring," he said, laughing, "I'm no saint to converse with the fishes in your fountain."



"Where is Clelia?"



He said he didn't know but somehow I gathered the impression that she was somewhere behind the lighted kitchen windows and that Smith was hanging around in hopes she might come out to take the air by starlight.



"Have you seen Thusis?" I asked guiltily. And felt my ears burning in the dark.



"Why, yes," he said. "She walked down the road a few moments ago."



"Alone?"



"Yes."



"Probably she went to take a look at the snow blockade," said I.



He nodded.



"Perhaps," I added carelessly, "I had better saunter down that way."



"No," he said, "you'd better not."



"Why?" I asked sharply.



"Starlight and Thusis might go to a young man's head."



"I'm no longer in love," said I in the most solemn tones I had ever used. "I am now able to contemplate Thusis without the stormy emotions which once assailed me, Smith. All that is over. To me she is merely an interesting and rather pathetic woman. I feel kindly toward Thusis. I wish her well. I would willingly do anything I could to – "



"Piffle."



"What the devil do you mean by that?" I demanded.



"What the devil do you mean by kidding yourself?"



"Haven't I just explained?"



"You've given yourself away. A man doesn't utter pious sentiments about a girl he no longer cares for. He doesn't bother to explain his regenerated attitude toward her. He doesn't trouble himself to talk about her at all. Nor does he go roaming after her by starlight. If you really care for her no longer, let her alone. If you do care you'll get mad at what I say – as you're doing – and start off to find her in the starlight – as you're doing – "



But I was too exasperated to listen to such stuff.



I discovered her, finally, in the starlight just ahead of me, – a slim shadow on the high-road, outlined against a stupendous mass of snow which choked the valley like a glacier.



She heard my steps on the hard stone road, looked over her shoulder, then turned sharply, paying me no further attention, even when I came up beside her.



"Gracious!" said I, attempting an easy tone and manner; "what a tremendous fall was here!"



"I have known greater falls," she said very quietly.

 



"Really?"



"Yes; I once had a friend whose fall was greater."



"Poor fellow! He fell off a precipice, I presume."



"He fell from his high estate, Mr. O'Ryan."



"Oh. Did he also have an estate in the Alps?"



She said scornfully: "He fell in my esteem – deep, Mr. O'Ryan – into depths so terrible that, even if I leaned over to look, I could never again perceive him."



"Poor fellow," I muttered, chilled to the bone again.



"Yes." she said calmly, "it was tragic."



"D-did you care for him, Thusis?" I ventured, scared half to death.



"I trusted him."



"D-don't you trust him any more?"



"He is dead – to me," she said coldly.



There ensued a silence which presently I became unable to endure.



"You know, Thusis, that man isn't dead – "



"He might better be!"



"You don't understand him!"



"I no longer wish to."



"He loves you!"



"He does

not

!" she cried in tones so fierce that I almost jumped.



"Thusis," said I in a miserable voice, "you hurt and wounded that man until he was almost out of his senses – "



"And he lost no time in consoling himself with another woman!"



"He didn't know what he was doing – "



"He seemed to! … So did

she

!"



"Thusis – "



"

Did

 you kiss her?"



"I – "



"Did you?"



"Yes."



I was so scared that my teeth chattered when Thusis turned on me in the starlight.



Her gray eyes were aflame; her little hands were tightly clenched. I hoped she would upper-cut me and mercifully put me to sleep, for this scene was like a nightmare to me.



Then, of a sudden, the slender figure seemed to wilt before my eyes, – shrink, bend, stand swaying with desperate hands covering the face.



"Michael," she whispered. "Michael!" – and her voice ended in a sigh.



Scared as I was I took her in my arms. She rested her face against my shoulder.



"You – you don't really care," I stammered, "do you, Thusis?

Do

 you, my darling – "



"Oh, I don't know – I don't know. You've hurt me, Michael; I'm all hurt and – and quivering with your wound. I don't know! – I don't understand myself. My heart is sore – all raw and sore. So is my mind – the blow you dealt hurts me there, too – "



"But, Thusis dear!

You

 wounded me, too – "



"Oh, I know… I scarcely knew what I said. I don't know now what I'm saying – what I'm doing – here in your arms – " She tried to release herself, and, failing, buried her face against my shoulder with a convulsive little shudder.



"You

must

 love me," I whispered unsteadily. "I can't live without you, Thusis."



"But I can't love you, Michael."



"Can't you find it in your heart to care for me?"



"In my heart, perhaps… But not in my mind."



"What do you mean?"



"I mean exactly that… I can't consult my – my heart alone… I must not. I dare not. I am obliged to consult my senses, too. And – dear Michael – my senses tell me that I may not care for you – must not fall in love – with you – "



"Why?"



After a silence she lifted her lovely head and looked up at me out of beautiful, distressed eyes that dumbly asked indulgence.



"Well, then, you need not tell me, Thusis."



"You'll know, some day."



"I'll know, some day, why I won you in spite of everything."



She gently shook her head.



"Yes," said I, "I shall win you, Thusis."



"My heart – perhaps."



"Your mind, too."



We remained so, for a while, not speaking lest the spell be broken. And at last she slowly disengaged herself from my arms, then, confronting me, placed both her hands in mine with a sudden impulse that thrilled me.



"Let it remain this way, then," she said. "Win my heart, if you care to. I don't mind going through life with my heart in your kind keeping, Michael. I had rather it were so. I should be less unhappy."



"Unhappy?"



"Yes – because I am going to be unhappy anyway. And if I knew that you once cared, it would be easier for me – in after years… Michael – "



"Yes?"



"Would you care for that much of me?"



I drew her nearer.



"You must not kiss me," she whispered.



"I – "



"Please… It is a sign of troth plighted… And is desecration else… Troth plighted is a holy thing. And that cannot be between us, Michael. That cannot happen… And so, you must not touch my lips with yours – dear Michael… Only my hand – if you do care for me – "



I kissed her hand – then, slowly, each finger and the fragrant palm, until it seemed to disconcert her and she withdrew it.



"Now take me back," she said in an uncertain voice that trembled slightly, "and remain my dear, frank, boyish friend… And let me plague you a little, Michael. Won't you? And not be angry?" She asked so sweetly that I began to laugh – covered her hand with kisses – and laughed again.



"You little girl," I exclaimed – "oddly mature in some ways – a child in others – you may torment me and laugh at me now to your heart's content. Isn't laughter, after all, your heaven born privilege?"



"Why do you say that?"



"Oh, Thusis! Thusis! I am more convinced than ever of what I have half believed. Before I ever set eyes on you I had begun to care for you. Before I ever heard your voice I had begun to fall in love with you. Thusis – my Thusis – loveliest – most wonderful of God's miracles since Eden bloomed —

you

 are The Laughing Girl!"



"Michael – "



"You

are

!"



Suddenly, as she walked lightly beside me, resting on my arm, she flung up her head with a reckless, delicious little laugh: "I am The Laughing Girl!"



A slight yet exquisite shock went clean through me as I realized that even to the instant of her avowal I had not been absolutely convinced of her identity with the picture.



"And I wish to tell you," she went on, her smile changing, "that when the photograph – which unhappily has become so notorious – was taken, I never dreamed that it would be stolen, reproduced in thousands, and sold in every city of Europe!"



"Stolen!"



"Certainly! Do you imagine that I would have permitted its publicity and sale? Never has such an exasperating incident occurred in my life! And I am helpless. I can't prevent it."



"Who stole it?"



"I haven't the slightest idea. It was this way, Michael; it happened in my own home on the island of Naxos, and my sister Clelia and I were amusing ourselves with our cameras, dressing each other up and posing each other.



"And she dressed me – or rather almost

un

-dressed me – that way – isn't it enough to make a saint swear – for when I had developed the plate and had started to print, somebody stole the plate from the sill of the open window. And the next thing we knew about it was when all Europe was flooded with my picture under which was printed that dubious caption – 'The Laughing Girl.' Can you imagine my astonishment and rage? Could anything more utterly horrid happen to a girl? Had I at least been fully dressed – but no: there I was in every shop window among actresses, queens, demi-mondaines, and dissipated dukes just as Clelia had posed me in the intimacy of our own rooms, all over jewels, some of me mercifully veiled in a silk scarf, audaciously at ease in my apparent effrontery – oh, Michael, it nearly killed me!"



"Didn't you do anything about it?"



"Indeed I did! But where these photographs were being printed we never could find out. All we were able to do was to forbid their importation into Italy."



"How did you manage that?" I asked curiously.



She hesitated, then carelessly: "We had some slight influence at court – "



"

Influence?

"



"Possibly it amounted to that," she said indifferently.



"You are known at court, Thusis?"



She shrugged: "We are not, I believe, completely unknown." She walked on beside me in silence for a few moments, then:



"I do not wish to convey to you that I am

persona grata

 in Italian court circles."



"But if you are known at court, dear Thusis, how can you be otherwise than welcome there?"



"I am

not

 welcome there."



"That is impossible."



"You adorable boy," she laughed, "I must beg of you to occupy yourself with your own affairs and not continue to occupy yourself with mine."



"That's a heartless snub, Thusis."



"I don't mean it so," she said, her hand tightening impulsively on my arm. "But, Michael dear, I don't wish you to speculate about my affairs. It does no good. Besides, the situation in which I find myself is fearfully complex, and you couldn't help me out of it."



"Perhaps I can, Thusis."



She laughed: "You are delightfully romantic. You almost resemble one of the old time cloak-and-sword lovers of that dear Romance which died so long ago on the printed page as well as in human hearts."



"It is not dead in my b