IN the limited understanding of PÉpin dwelt one great Fact, in the shadow of which all else shrank to insignificance, and that Fact was the existence of Comte Victor de Villersexel, the extremely tall and extraordinarily imposing person who was, first of all, Officier de la LÉgion d'Honneur, second, Membre de l'AcadÉmie FranÇaise, and, lastly, father to PÉpin himself. It must be acknowledged that to the more observing of his limited kinsfolk and extensive acquaintance the clay feet of PÉpin's idol were distinctly in evidence. How Born to the heritage of a name which his predecessors had made notable, Comte Victor was one of those whose greatness is thrust But to PÉpin the idol was an idol without flaw. Through what shrewd appreciation of occasional words and chance comments he had contrived to grasp the significance of that speck of scarlet upon the Count's lapel and that apparently simple phrase, "de l'AcadÉmie FranÇaise," which, in formal introductions, was wont to follow his father's name, must be numbered among childhood's mysteries. But before he "He is like his mother," the lÉgionnaire had muttered, as he turned away, "an imbecile—but"— PÉpin, catching the unfinished phrase, grew sick with a great discouragement, mingled with profound pity for the man before him. It must be a dreadful thing for one so famous to be the father of an imbecile! From that day on the child was more inconspicuous than before. Deliberately affected in the first instance, what was known in society as de Villersexel's "academic manner" came in course of time to be second nature. Practice made perfect the chill reserve which was originally assumed as a precaution against possible discovery of his vapidity; and as the image of what the academician had been, before his election, grew dimmer in society's recollection, his impressive solemnity, barely disguised by a veneer of superficial courtesy, did not fail of its effect. He was spoken of as a man in whom much lay below the surface, and his more recent acquaintances coupled their estimate of his character with the proverbial profundity of still waters, With all this, he was consistent, with that curious obstinacy which is sometimes made manifest in the shallowest natures. His rÔle, once assumed, was, as we have said, played to perfection and never laid aside. The domestic threshold, which is, for the majority of men, a kind of uncloaking room, saw never an alteration, even of voice or expression, in his pose. The household affairs were regulated with almost military precision, and once a day, at noon, PÉpin and his father met in the large salon,—the Comte in his tall satin stock and frock coat, and PÉpin fresh from the careful hands of his nurse. They shook hands gravely, and then waited in silence, until the maÎtre d'hÔtel announced breakfast,— "Ces messieurs sont servis!" What meals they were, to be sure, those dÉjeuners, solemnly served, and more solemnly eaten, under the rigid observation of three At the very end, as the Comte was about to push back his chair, he would invariably raise his glass of champagne and PÉpin his, wherein a few drops of red wine turned the Evian to a pale heliotrope, and together they would glance toward the full-length portrait which hung above the mantel. "Ta mÈre!" said the Comte. "Maman!" replied PÉpin. And so they drank the toast of tribute to the dead. After breakfast, the father would read for an hour to the child, and PÉpin, seated on another large chair, would listen, perfectly motionless, striving desperately to understand the long sentences which fell in flawlessly pronounced succession from the Academician's lips. De Villersexel had a fairly clear recollection of what books had been the companions Then would come a second formal handshake, and PÉpin, pausing an instant at the door to make a slow, stiff bow, would creep off down the long corridor to the nursery, and the Comte turn again to his papers with a consciousness of paternal duty done. How PÉpin contrived to spend the long hours which his daily walk and his short lessons left at his disposal, only PÉpin knew. He talked rarely with the servants,—"a thing," his father told him, "that no gentleman would wish to do;" and other children never entered at the de Villersexel door, "for," said the Comte, "children sow unfortunate ideas and spread disease." But there were compensations. One was the full-length portrait over the chimney-piece in the dining-room. PÉpin had no conception The portrait of the Comtesse de Villersexel had been one of the sensations at the Salon of seven years before. The young Brazilian was represented at the moment when the bow left the strings of her violin, and on her lips and in her eyes yet dwelt the spirit of the music she had been playing. A clinging gown of ivory-white silk emphasized rather than hid the lines of her figure, of strangely girlish slenderness, but straight and proud as that of a young empress. In its frailty lay the keynote of the portrait's charm. It was like a reflection in clear water that a touch might disturb, or a young anemone that a breath might destroy,—not a picture before which people disputed and proffered noisy opinions, but one which imposed silence, like the barely audible note of a distant Angelus. It stood before the memory of its original, as it had been a spirit, finger on lip, at the doorway of a tomb. This portrait of his mother dominated the "A stupid picture?" he stormed. "But it is my mother, do you hear, my mother! You are a wicked woman, Elizabeth!" "Le Vicomte de Villersexel," said the maÎtre d'hÔtel in a loud voice at his side, and PÉpin, seeing his father beckon to him from the group where he stood, slipped close to him through the crowd, and was surprised to find that the Comte took his hand in his, and bent forward to say in a whisper,— "You are to hear Pazzini play the violin. Like all that had gone before, what followed was to PÉpin like a dream—a beautiful dream, never to be forgotten. A great hush had settled upon the brilliant assemblage, for even in Paris there are still things which society will check its chatter to hear, and the tall, gray-bearded man, consulting with the pianist over there, was Pazzini, the great Pazzini, whose services had been more than once commanded by royalty in vain. De Villersexel had drawn PÉpin nearer to the piano in the brief interval, and as the opening chords of the introduction were struck, he found himself but a few feet from the famous violinist, his hand still linked in that of his father, his eyes fixed in wonder upon this unknown man who had been his mother's teacher. The first low note of the violin fell upon the silence like a faint, far voice, heard across a wide reach of calm water, and, as the marvelous melody swelled into the fullness of its motif, something new and strange stirred in PÉpin's heart, mounted and tightened in his throat, ran tingling to his finger-tips. Through "Ah-h!" said PÉpin. The long ripple of applause drowned the child's whisper, and for an instant the terror in his heart grew still, believing his exclamation unheard. Then it leaped to life again, for Pazzini was looking at him, his bow hovering As the applause ceased, the violinist turned to the Comte, and pointed to PÉpin with his bow. "Who is that child?" he asked. The thaw in the de Villersexel's "academic manner" had been but momentary. With the renewed hum of conversation he was himself again, pale, proud, and immovable. "It is my son, PÉpin," he replied, with stiff courtesy. "How shall I thank you for your playing? It was the essence of perfection, as it has ever been, and ever will be." But he could not know, as he turned away with PÉpin, that in his heart the violinist said, "Her boy! I understand!" The miracle of his summons to the salon that night was not, as it appeared, the actual climax of existence, for a new marvel awaited "Yesterday was Christmas," he said. PÉpin made no reply. In fact, the stupor which descended upon him at this infraction of the usual routine of life effectually deprived him, for the moment, of the power of speech. "It was Christmas," repeated the Comte, "and because of that you are invited to a—a—soirÉe to-day. Do you know the English children on the entresol?" "I have seen them," faltered PÉpin, "but we have never spoken. You told me"— "I have changed my mind," broke in his father. "Monsieur 'Ameelton"—stumbling desperately over the English name—"has asked me to let you visit them this afternoon, and I have said yes to him. Elizabeth will dress you. Now you may go." Barely conscious that PÉpin had added a timid "Merci, papa!" to his customary bow, de Villersexel turned to his writing-table, as the door closed behind the little Vicomte, and, unlocking a drawer, took therefrom a letter which had come to him that morning, and,
Prime feature of all the year to the little Hamiltons, on the entresol, was their Christmas tree. It arrived in some unknowable way in the corner of the grand salon on the morning after Christmas, and, from the moment of its advent, the doors were sealed, and only the privileged world of grown-ups went in and out, and could see the splendors within. Inch by inch the hands of the tall clock in the antichambre dragged themselves around successive circles toward the hour of revelation, and, keyed to the snapping point of frenzy, the slender figure of George and the round, squat form of John stood motionless before the inexorable timepiece, awaiting the stroke of four. This suspense was harrowing enough in itself, and only made bearable by recourse to occasional mad caperings up and down the hall, and whoops of mingled ecstasy and exasperation. The children arrived by twos and threes, shook hands limply with their elders, greeted their small hosts with embarrassed ceremony, and then, as if suddenly inoculated with the latter's madness, commenced to foam and prance in their turn before the unyielding portals. Last of all came PÉpin, all brown, who bowed at the door, and then in turn to each of those who spoke to him. Suddenly, with a shout, the children burst through the opened doorway, and gathered in voluble groups about the glistening miracle which shone like a hundred stars in the gathering twilight. For a half hour all was chaos, and PÉpin, standing a little apart, marveled and was still. Dancing figures whirled about him, bearing boxes of soldiers, toy villages, dolls, trumpets, drums. The air was full of the wailing of whistles, the cries of mechanical animals, and the clamor of childish comment. But to PÉpin even the dazzling novelty of his surroundings was as nothing, compared to one object which drew and fixed his attention from the first instant, as the needle is held rigid by the magnetic pole. High up upon the Then his attention was distracted for a moment. From the time of his entrance the eyes of Miss Lys had followed the dignified and silent little Frenchman, and where Miss Lys went Mr. Sedgely followed, so that now the two were so close that they brushed his elbow, and PÉpin, turning with an instinctive "Pardon," saw that they were watching him curiously. When, with a feeling of restlessness under their scrutiny, he looked once more towards the tree, the violin was gone! An instant later, he saw it in the madly sawing hands of George Hamilton, dancing like a faun down the room, and he was conscious of a great faintness, such as he had known but once before,—when he had cut his hand, and the doctor had sewed it, as Elizabeth sewed rips in cloth. "He makes my heart ache," answered Sedgely, slowly, "and yet I could hardly say why. Ask him what he wants off the tree." The girl was on her knees by PÉpin before the phrase was fairly finished. "What didst thou have for Christmas?" she asked, falling unconsciously into that tender second singular which slips so naturally from the lips at sight of a French child. "I?—but nothing," replied the little Vicomte, pleased out of his anguish by the sound of his own tongue amid the babel of English phrases. The girl at his side looked at him with so frank an astonishment that he felt it necessary to explain. "I have my gifts on the day of the year. Christmas is an English fÊte, and I am French. So I have nothing." "Nothing!" replied Miss Lys blankly, and then, of a sudden, slipped her arm around him, and drew his head close to her own. "What dost thou see on the tree that thou And, at the unwonted tenderness of her question, the floodgates of PÉpin's reserve suddenly gave way. Placing his hands upon the girl's shoulders, he searched her face with his eyes. "If there were another violin"—he began, and, faltering, stopped, and turned away to hide the tears that would come, strive as he might to hold them back. "Did you hear him—and see him?" queried Miss Lys, a minute after, furiously backing Sedgely into a corner by the lapels of his frock coat. "You did—you know you did! And you are still here? Lord! What a man!" Sedgely shrugged his shoulders with a pretense of utter bewilderment. "What must I do?" he inquired, blankly. "Do?" stormed Miss Lys. "Do? Why, scour Paris till you find a violin precisely like that one George is doing his best to saw in half. Here! ClÉment is at the door with the trois-quarts. Tell him to drive you like mad to the Printemps—to the big place opposite the Grand Hotel—to the Louvre—to the When Sedgely returned, thirty minutes later, violin in hand, Ethel met him at the door. "They are all at tea," she said. "We'll call PÉpin out." She placed the violin in the hands of the Vicomte without a word, and without a word PÉpin took it from her. The instrument slid to his cheek as if impelled by its own desire. "Canst thou play?" she asked him. "No," said PÉpin, "and, besides, it is but a toy. I do not want to hear it. But I like to feel it—here." And he moved his cheek caressingly against the cheap varnish. "Don't you think you might"—began Sedgely, and then found himself on the other side of the door, and Miss Lys facing him with an air of hopeless resignation. "I—act-u-ally—be-lieve," she said, with an effort at calm, "that you were going to ask him to thank me for it!" "Why not?" said Sedgely. "Lord! What a man!" said Miss Lys. In the dining-room of the de Villersexel "How did it happen?" he asked, after a time. "Shall I ever know?" broke out de Villersexel irritably. "PÉpin had been to a children's party below there on the entresol, at the English lawyer's. He and his imbecile of a bonne were entering the ascenseur. She goes from spasm to spasm, so there is no telling. But it seems they had given PÉpin a toy—the English—and she wished to carry it and he refused. So between them—God knows how!—it slipped from their hands as the ascenseur cleared the gate—and PÉpin stooped to catch it—and fell. He died at midnight." There was a long silence, broken only by the snapping of the logs in the fireplace and the "He was his mother's son," said Pazzini. "And mine," replied the other. "The last of the de Villersexel." He paused abruptly by a little table, and took up a handful of splintered wood and tangled catgut. "The toy that killed him," he added in a low voice, and hurled the fragments over Pazzini's shoulder into the embers. A thin tongue of flame caught at them as they fell, and broke into a brilliant blaze. Pazzini leaned forward suddenly and peered at the little conflagration. "A violin," he said. "A violin," echoed the Comte. "Think of dying for a violin!" Pazzini made no reply. His eyes had met those of the portrait over the chimney—and he was smiling. |