Widdershins Part 29
You’re reading novel Widdershins Part 29 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!
"A moment ago I said a fellow like Rangon leads a restricted sort of life in those parts. I saw this more clearly as dinner went on. We dined by an open window, from which we could see the stream with the planks across it where the women washed clothes during the day and a.s.sembled in the evening for gossip. There were a dozen or so of them there as we dined, laughing and chatting in low tones--they all seemed pretty--it was quickly falling dusk--all the girls are pretty then, and are quite conscious of it--_you_ know, Marsham. Behind them, at the end of the street, one of these great cypress wind-screens showed black against the sky, a ragged edge something like the line the needle draws on a rainfall chart; and you could only tell whether they were men or women under the plantains by their voices rippling and chattering and suddenly a deeper note.... Once I heard a m.u.f.fled scuffle and a sound like a kiss.... It was then that Rangon's little trouble came out....
"It seemed that he didn't know any girls--wasn't allowed to know any girls. The girls of the village were pretty enough, but you see how it was--he'd a position to keep up--appearances to maintain--couldn't be familiar during the year with the girls who gathered his grapes for him in the autumn.... And as soon as Carroll gave him a chance, _he_ began to ask _us_ questions, about England, English girls, the liberty they had, and so on.
"Of course, we couldn't tell him much he hadn't heard already, but that made no difference; he could stand any amount of that, our strapping young _vigneron_; and he asked us questions by the dozen, that we both tried to answer at once. And his delight and envy!... What! In England did the young men see the young women of their own cla.s.s without restraint--the sisters of their friends _meme_--even at the house? Was it permitted that they drank tea with them in the afternoon, or went without invitation to pa.s.s the _soiree_?... He had all the later Prevosts in his room, he told us (I don't doubt he had the earlier ones also); Prevost and the Disestablishment between them must be playing the mischief with the convent system of education for young girls; and our young man was--what d'you call it?--'Co-ed'--co-educationalist--by Jove, yes!... He seemed to marvel that we should have left a country so blessed as England to visit his dusty, wild-lavender-smelling, girl-less Provence.... You don't know half your luck, Marsham....
"Well, we talked after this fas.h.i.+on--we'd left the dining-room of the restaurant and had planted ourselves on a bench outside with Rangon between us--when Rangon suddenly looked at his watch and said it was time he was off to see this agent of his. Would we take a walk, he asked us, and meet him again there? he said.... But as his agent lived in the direction of his own home, we said we'd meet him at the house in an hour or so. Off he went, envying every Englishman who stepped, I don't doubt.... I told you how old--how young--we were.... Heigho!...
"Well, off goes Rangon, and Carroll and I got up, stretched ourselves, and took a walk. We walked a mile or so, until it began to get pretty dark, and then turned; and it was as we came into the blackness of one of these cypress hedges that the thing I'm telling you of happened. The hedge took a sharp turn at that point; as we came round the angle we saw a couple of women's figures hardly more than twenty yards ahead--don't know how they got there so suddenly, I'm sure; and that same moment I found my foot on something small and white and glimmering on the gra.s.s.
"I picked it up. It was a handkerchief--a woman's--embroidered--
"The two figures ahead of us were walking in our direction; there was every probability that the handkerchief belonged to one of them; so we stepped out....
"At my 'Pardon, madame,' and lifted hat one of the figures turned her head; then, to my surprise, she spoke in English--cultivated English.
I held out the handkerchief. It belonged to the elder lady of the two, the one who had spoken, a very gentle-voiced old lady, older by very many years than her companion. She took the handkerchief and thanked me....
"Somebody--Sterne, isn't it?--says that Englishmen don't travel to see Englishmen. I don't know whether he'd stand to that in the case of Englishwomen; Carroll and I didn't.... We were walking rather slowly along, four abreast across the road; we asked permission to introduce ourselves, did so, and received some name in return which, strangely enough, I've entirely forgotten--I only remember that the ladies were aunt and niece, and lived at Darbisson. They shook their heads when I mentioned M. Rangon's name and said we were visiting him. They didn't know him....
"I'd never been in Darbisson before, and I haven't been since, so I don't know the map of the village very well. But the place isn't very big, and the house at which we stopped in twenty minutes or so is probably there yet. It had a large double door--a double door in two senses, for it was a big _porte-cochere_ with a smaller door inside it, and an iron grille shutting in the whole. The gentle-voiced old lady had already taken a key from her reticule and was thanking us again for the little service of the handkerchief; then, with the little gesture one makes when one has found oneself on the point of omitting a courtesy, she gave a little musical laugh.
"'But,' she said with a little movement of invitation, 'one sees so few compatriots here--if you have the time to come in and smoke a cigarette ... also the cigarette,' she added, with another rippling laugh, 'for we have few callers, and live alone--'
"Hastily as I was about to accept, Carroll was before me, professing a nostalgia for the sound of the English tongue that made his recent protestations about Provencal a shameless hypocrisy. Persuasive young rascal, Carroll Was--poor chap ... So the elder lady opened the grille and the wooden door beyond it, and we entered.
"By the light of the candle which the younger lady took from a bracket just within the door we saw that we were in a handsome hall or vestibule; and my wonder that Rangon had made no mention of what was apparently a considerable establishment was increased by the fact that its tenants must be known to be English and could be seen to be entirely charming. I couldn't understand it, and I'm afraid hypotheses rushed into my head that cast doubts on the Rangons--you know--whether _they_ were all right.
We knew nothing about our young planter, you see....
"I looked about me. There were tubs here and there against the walls, gaily painted, with glossy-leaved aloes and palms in them--one of the aloes, I remember, was flowering; a little fountain in the middle made a tinkling noise; we put our caps on a carved and gilt console table; and before us rose a broad staircase with shallow steps of spotless stone and a beautiful wrought-iron handrail. At the top of the staircase were more palms and aloes, and double doors painted in a clear grey.
"We followed our hostesses up the staircase. I can hear yet the sharp clean click our boots made on that hard s.h.i.+ny stone--see the lights of the candle gleaming on the handrail ... The young girl--she was not much more than a girl--pushed at the doors, and we went in.
"The room we entered was all of a piece with the rest for rather old-fas.h.i.+oned fineness. It was large, lofty, beautifully kept. Carroll went round for Miss ... whatever her name was ... lighting candles in sconces; and as the flames crept up they glimmered on a beautifully polished floor, which was bare except for an Eastern rug here and there.
The elder lady had sat down in a gilt chair, Louis Fourteenth I should say, with a striped rep of the colour of a petunia; and I really don't know--don't smile, Smith--what induced me to lead her to it by the finger-tips, bending over her hand for a moment as she sat down. There was an old tambour-frame behind her chair, I remember, and a vast oval mirror with cl.u.s.tered candle-brackets filled the greater part of the farther wall, the brightest and clearest gla.s.s I've ever seen...."
He paused, looking at my cigarette case, which he had taken into his hand again. He smiled at some recollection or other, and it was a minute or so before he continued.
"I must admit that I found it a little annoying, after what we'd been talking about at dinner an hour before, that Rangon wasn't with us. I still couldn't understand how he could have neighbours so charming without knowing about them, but I didn't care to insist on this to the old lady, who for all I knew might have her own reasons for keeping to herself. And, after all, it was our place to return Rangon's hospitality in London if he ever came there, not, so to speak, on his own doorstep.... So presently I forgot all about Rangon, and I'm pretty sure that Carroll, who was talking to his companion of some Felibrige junketing or other and having the air of Gounod's _Mireille_ hummed softly over to him, didn't waste a thought on him either. Soon Carroll--you remember what a pretty crooning, humming voice he had--soon Carroll was murmuring what they call 'seconds,' but so low that the sound hardly came across the room; and I came in with a soft ba.s.s note from time to time. No instrument, you know; just an unaccompanied murmur no louder than an Aeolian harp; and it sounded infinitely sweet and plaintive and--what shall I say?--weak--attenuated--faint--'pale' you might almost say--in that formal, rather old-fas.h.i.+oned _salon_, with that great clear oval mirror throwing back the still flames of the candles in the sconces on the walls. Outside the wind had now fallen completely; all was very quiet; and suddenly in a voice not much louder than a sigh, Carroll's companion was singing _Oft in the Stilly Night_--you know it...."
He broke off again to murmur the beginning of the air. Then, with a little laugh for which we saw no reason, he went on again:
"Well, I'm not going to try to convince you of such a special and delicate thing as the charm of that hour--it wasn't more than an hour--it would be all about an hour we stayed. Things like that just have to be said and left; you destroy them the moment you begin to insist on them; we've every one of us had experiences like that, and don't say much about them. I was as much in love with my old lady as Carroll evidently was with his young one--I can't tell you why--being in love has just to be taken for granted too, I suppose... Marsham understands.... We smoked our cigarettes, and sang again, once more filling that clear-painted, quiet apartment with a murmuring no louder than if a light breeze found that the bells of a bed of flowers were really bells and played on 'em. The old lady moved her fingers gently on the round table by the side of her chair,.. oh, infinitely pretty it was.... Then Carroll wandered off into the _Que Cantes_--awfully pretty--'It is not for myself I sing, but for my friend who is near me'--and I can't tell you how like four old friends we were, those two so oddly met ladies and Carroll and myself.... And so to _Oft in the Stilly Night_ again....
"But for all the sweetness and the glamour of it, we couldn't stay on indefinitely, and I wondered what time it was, but didn't ask--anything to do with clocks and watches would have seemed a cold and mechanical sort of thing just then.... And when presently we both got up neither Carroll nor I asked to be allowed to call again in the morning to thank them for a charming hour.... And they seemed to feel the same as we did about it. There was no 'hoping that we should meet again in London'--neither an au revoir nor a good-bye--just a tacit understanding that that hour should remain isolated, accepted like a good gift without looking the gift-horse in the mouth, single, unattached to any hours before or after--I don't know whether you see what I mean.... Give me a match somebody....
"And so we left, with no more than looks exchanged and finger-tips resting between the back of our hands and our lips for a moment. We found our way out by ourselves, down that shallow-stepped staircase with the handsome handrail, and let ourselves out of the double door and grille, closing it softly. We made for the village without speaking a word.... Heigho!..."
Loder had picked up the cigarette case again, but for all the way his eyes rested on it I doubt whether he really saw it. I'm pretty sure he didn't; I knew when he did by the glance he shot at me, as much as to say "I see you're wondering where the cigarette case comes in."... He resumed with another little laugh.
"Well," he continued, "we got back to Rangon's house. I really don't blame Rangon for the way he took it when we told him, you know--he thought we were pulling his leg, of course, and he wasn't having any; not he! There were no English ladies in Darbisson, he said.... We told him as nearly as we could just where the house was--we weren't very precise, I'm afraid, for the village had been in darkness as we had come through it, and I had to admit that the cypress hedge I tried to describe where we'd met our friends was a good deal like other cypress hedges--and, as I say, Rangon wasn't taking any. I myself was rather annoyed that he should think we were returning his hospitality by trying to get at him, and it wasn't very easy either to explain in my French and Carroll's Provencal that we were going to let the thing stand as it was and weren't going to call on our charming friends again.... The end of it was that Rangon just laughed and yawned....
"'I knew it was good, my wine,' he said, 'but--' a shrug said the rest.
'Not so good as all that,' he meant....
"Then he gave us our candles, showed us to our rooms, shook hands, and marched off to his own room and the Prevosts.
"I dreamed of my old lady half the night.
"After coffee the next morning I put my hand into my pocket for my cigarette case and didn't find it. I went through all my pockets, and then I asked Carroll if he'd got it.
"'No,' he replied.... 'Think you left it behind at that place last night?'
"'Yes; did you?' Rangon popped in with a twinkle.
"I went through all my pockets again. No cigarette case....
"Of course, it was possible that I'd left it behind, and I was annoyed again. I didn't want to go back, you see.... But, on the other hand, I didn't want to lose the case--it was a present--and Rangon's smile nettled me a good deal, too. It was both a challenge to our truthfulness and a testimonial to that very good wine of his....
"'Might have done,' I grunted.... 'Well, in that case we'll go and get it.'
"'If one tried the restaurant first--?' Rangon suggested, smiling again.
"'By all means,' said I stuffily, though I remembered having the case after we'd left the restaurant.
"We were round at the restaurant by half-past nine. The case wasn't there. I'd known jolly well beforehand it wasn't, and I saw Rangon's mouth twitching with amus.e.m.e.nt.
"'So we now seek the abode of these English ladies, _hein_?' he said.
"'Yes,' said I; and we left the restaurant and strode through the village by the way we'd taken the evening before....
"That vigneron's smile became more and more irritating to me.... 'It is then the next village?' he said presently, as we left the last house and came out into the open plain.
"We went back....
"I was irritated because we were two to one, you see, and Carroll backed me up. 'A double door, with a grille in front of it,' he repeated for the fiftieth time.... Rangon merely replied that it wasn't our good faith he doubted. He didn't actually use the word 'drunk.'...
"'_Mais tiens_,' he said suddenly, trying to conceal his mirth. '_Si c'est possible... si c'est possible_... a double door with a grille? But perhaps that I know it, the domicile of these so elusive ladies.... Come this way.'
"He took us back along a plantain-groved street, and suddenly turned up an alley that was little more than two gutters and a crack of sky overhead between two broken-tiled roofs. It was a dilapidated, deserted _ruelle_, and I was positively angry when Rangon pointed to a blistered old _porte-cochere_ with a half-unhinged railing in front of it.
"'Is it that, your house?' he asked.
"'No,' says I, and 'No,' says Carroll ... and off we started again....
"But another half-hour brought us back to the same place, and Carroll scratched his head.
"'Who lives there, anyway?' he said, glowering at the _porte-cochere_, chin forward, hands in pockets.
"'n.o.body,' says Rangon, as much as to say 'look at it!' 'M'sieu then meditates taking it?'...
Widdershins Part 29
You're reading novel Widdershins Part 29 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.
Widdershins Part 29 summary
You're reading Widdershins Part 29. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Oliver Onions already has 567 views.
It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.
LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com
- Related chapter:
- Widdershins Part 28
- Widdershins Part 30