In the evening of the following day Charmian and Susan Fleet had just sat down to dinner, and Pierre was about to lift the lid off the soup tureen, when there was a ring at the front door bell. "What can that be?" said Charmian. She looked at Susan. "Susan, I feel as if it were somebody, or something important." Pierre raised the lid with a pathetic gesture, and went out carrying it high in his left hand. "I wonder what it is?" said Charmian. All day they had not seen Mrs. Shiffney or her party. They had passed the hours alone in the garden, talking, working, reading, but chiefly discussing Charmian's affairs. And calm had flowed upon Charmian, had enfolded her almost against her will. At the end of the day she had said: "Susan, you do me more good than anyone I know. I don't understand how it is, but you seem to purify me almost, as a breeze from the sea—when it's calm—purifies a room if you open the window to it." But now, as she waited for Pierre's return, she felt strung up and excited. "If it should be Claude come back!" she said. "Would he ring?" asked Susan. "No. But he might!" At this moment a loud murmur of talk was audible in the hall, and then a voice exclaiming: "Ca ne fait rien! Ca ne fait rien! Laissez moi passer, mon bon!" "Surely it's Monsieur Sennier!" exclaimed Charmian. As she spoke, the door opened and the composer entered, pushing past Pierre, whose thin face wore an outraged look. "Me voici!" he exclaimed. "Deserted, abandoned, I "Of course! Pierre, please lay another place. But who has abandoned you?" "Everyone—Henriette, Adelaide, even the faithful Max. They would have taken me, but I refused to go." "Where to?" "Batna, Biskra, que sais-je? Adelaide is restless as an enraged cat!" He sat down, and began greedily to eat his soup. "Ah, this is good! Your cook is to be loved. For once—may I?" Glancing up whimsically, almost like a child, he lifted his napkin toward his collar. "I may! Madame, you are an angel. You are a flock of angels. Why, I said to them, should I leave this beautiful city to throw myself into the arms of a mad librettist, who desires my blood simply because he cannot write? Must genius die because an idiot has practised on bottles with a revolver? It shall not be!" "Do you mean Monsieur Gillier? Then they are going to Constantine!" said Charmian sharply. "To Constantine, Tunis, Batna, Biskra, the Sahara—que sais-je? Adelaide is like a cat enraged! She cannot rest! And she has seduced my Henriette." He seemed perfectly contented, ate an excellent dinner, stayed till very late in the night, talked, joked, and finally, sitting down at the piano, played and sang. He was by turns a farceur, a wit, a man of emotion, a man with a touch of genius. And in everything he said and did he was almost preposterously unreserved. He seemed to be child, monkey and artist in combination. It was inconceivable that he could ever feel embarrassed or self-conscious. At first, after his unexpected entry, Charmian had been almost painfully preoccupied. Sennier, without apparently noticing this, broke her preoccupation down. He was an When Sennier sang, in a voice that scarcely existed but that charmed, she was really entranced. When he played after midnight she was excited, intensely excited. It was past one o'clock when he left reluctantly, promising to return on the morrow, to take all his meals at Djenan-el-Maqui, to live there, except for the very few hours claimed by sleep, till the "cat enraged" and his wife returned. Charmian helped him to put on his coat. He resigned himself to her hands like a child. Standing quite still, he permitted her to button the coat. He left, singing an air from an opera he was composing, arm in arm with Pierre, who was to escort him to his hotel. "I dare not go alone!" he exclaimed. "I am afraid of the Arabs! The Arabs are traitors. Gladly would they kill a genius of France!" When he was gone, when his extraordinary personality was withdrawn, Charmian's painful preoccupation returned. She had sent Claude away because she did not wish Adelaide Shiffney to meet him. It had been an instinctive action, not preceded by any train of reasoning. Adelaide was coming out of curiosity. Therefore her curiosity should not be gratified. And now she had gone to Constantine, and taken Madame Sennier with her. Charmian remembered her inadvertence of the day before when she had said, perhaps scarcely with truth, that Jacob Crayford admired Claude's talent; the Frenchwoman's almost strangely blank expression and apparent utter indifference, her own uneasiness. That uneasiness returned now, and was accentuated. But what could happen? What could either Madame Sennier or Adelaide Shiffney do to disturb her peace or interfere with her life or Claude's? Nothing surely. Yet she felt as if they were both hostile to her, were set against all she wished for. And she felt as if she had Charmian longed to say all that was in her heart to Susan Fleet. But, blaming herself for lack of self-control on the previous day, she resolved to exercise self-control now. So she only kissed Susan and wished her "Good-night." "I know I shan't sleep," she said. "Why not?" "Sennier's playing has stirred me up too much." "Resolve quietly to sleep, and I think you will." Charmian did not tell Susan that she was quite incapable at that moment of resolving quietly on anything. She lay awake nearly all night. Meanwhile Mrs. Shiffney, Madame Sennier, and Max Elliot were in the night-train travelling to Constantine. It had all been arranged with Mrs. Shiffney's usual apparently careless abruptness. In the afternoon, after a little talk with Henriette in the garden of the St. George, she had called the composer and Max Elliot on to the big terrace, and had said: "I feel dull. Nothing special to do here, is there? Let's all run away to Biskra. We can take Timgad and all the rest on the way." Max Elliot had looked at her for a moment rather sharply. Then his mind had been diverted by the lamentations of the composer, calling attention to the danger he ran in venturing near to Armand Gillier. Elliot had a very kind heart, and by its light he sometimes read clearly a human prose that did not please him. Now, as he lay in his narrow berth in the wagon-lit jolting toward Constantine, he read some of Adelaide Shiffney's prose. Faintly, for the train was noisy, he heard voices in the next compartment, where Mrs. Shiffney and Madame Sennier were talking in their berths. Mrs. Shiffney was in the top berth. That fact gave the measure of Madame Sennier's iron will. "You really believe it?" cried Madame Sennier. "How is one to know? But Crayford is moving Heaven "Jacques is forty." "If one has arrived it doesn't matter much what age one is." "You don't think Crayford can have given this man a secret commission to compose an opera?" "Oh, no. Why should he? Besides, if he had, she would have let it out. She could never have kept such a thing to herself." "Max thought his music wonderful, didn't he?" "Yes, but it was all sacred. Te Deums, and things of that sort that nobody on earth would ever listen to." "I should like to see the libretto." "What? I can't hear. I'm right up against the roof, and the noise is dreadful." "I say, I should like to see the libretto!" almost screamed Madame Sennier. "Probably it's one that Jacques refused." "No, it can't be." "What?" "No, it can't be. He never saw a libretto that was Algerian. And this one evidently is. I wonder if it's a good one." "Make him show it to you." "Gillier! He wouldn't. He hates us both." "Not Gillier, Claude Heath." "What?" Mrs. Shiffney leaned desperately out over the side of her narrow berth. "Claude Heath—or I'll make him." "I never cared very much for the one Jacques is setting for the Metropolitan. But it was the best sent in. I chose it. I read nearly a hundred. It would be just like Gillier to write something really fine, and then not to let us see it. I always knew he was clever and might succeed some day." "I'll get hold of it for you." "What?" "I'll get hold of it for you from Heath. When will Jacques be ready, do you think?" "Oh, not for ages. He works slowly, and I never inter "Do you think Charmian Heath is a fool?" At this moment the train suddenly slackened, and Mrs. Shiffney and Madame Sennier, leaning down and up, exchanged sibilant and almost simultaneous hushes. Max Elliot heard them quite distinctly. They were the only part of the conversation which reached him. He was an old friend of Adelaide, and was devoted to the Senniers and to their cause. But he did not quite like this expedition. He realized that these charming women, whom he was escorting to a barbaric city, were driven by curiosity, and that in their curiosity there was something secretly hostile. He wished they had stayed at Mustapha, and had decided to leave Claude Heath alone with his violent librettist. Elliot greatly disliked the active hostility to artists often shown by the partisans of other artists. There was no question, of course, of any rivalry between Heath, an almost unknown man, and Sennier, a man now of world-wide fame. Yet these two women were certainly on the qui vive. It was very absurd, he thought. But it was also rather disagreeable to him. He began to wish that Henriette were not so almost viciously determined to keep the path clear for her husband. The wife of a little man might well be afraid of every possible rival. But Sennier was not a little man. Elliot did not understand either the nature of Henriette's heart or the nature of her mind. Nor did he know her origin. In fact, he knew very little about her. She was just fifty, and had been for a time a governess in a merchant's family in Marseilles. This occupation she had quitted with an abruptness that had not been intentional. In fact, she had been turned out. Afterward she had remained in Marseilles, but not as a governess. Finally she had married Jacques Sennier. She was low-born, but had been very well educated, and was naturally clever. Her cleverness had throughout her life instinctively sought an outlet in intrigue. Some women intrigue when circumstances drive them to subterfuge, trickery and underhand dealing. Henriette Sennier needed no incentive of that kind. She liked intrigue for its Without the slightest uneasiness she had left him alone at Mustapha. He was the only person she trusted—for a week. She meant to be back at Mustapha within a week. After their "Hush!" she and Mrs. Shiffney decided not to talk any more. "It makes my throat ache shouting up against the roof," said Mrs. Shiffney. She had, how or why she scarcely knew, come to occupy an upper berth for the first time in her life. She resented this. And she resented it still more when Madame Sennier replied: "I wanted you to choose the lower bed, but I thought you preferred being where you are." Mrs. Shiffney made no reply, but turned carefully over till she was looking at the wall. "Why do I do things for this woman?" was her thought. She had told herself more than once that she was travelling to Constantine for Henriette. Apparently she was actually beginning to believe her own statement. She closed her eyes, opened them again, looked at the ceiling, which almost touched her nose, and at the wall, which her nose almost touched. "Why does a woman ever do anything for another woman?" she asked herself, amplifying her first thought. Adelaide Shiffney in an upper berth! It was the incredible accomplished! |