Part 54 (1/2)

”I call it a picture,” Dumont a.s.serted, dryly.

”I call it a practical joke,” said Hazelton. ”One does not paint pictures with the tongue in one's cheek. I know how one paints pictures.”

”How one paints pictures makes no difference,” Dumont replied, impatiently. ”Who cares if you had your tongue in your cheek? You had your brush in your hand. The result is that which matters. This work has completeness.”

Hazelton slapped his thigh with a mighty blow. ”Mon Dieu!” he cried. ”If this fools you, there are others it will fool as well-and I need the money! And from that bubbling artesian well from which this sprang I can see a million others like it-like it, but not like it. _Hein, mon vieux?_ Come, come, my child, to Mercier's, who will sell it for me. The day of glory has arrived!”

A sardonic malice sparkled on Hazelton's ugly face, and his nose, which jutted out with a sudden truculency, was redder than ever. He took the picture up and danced solemnly around the studio.

It was in this indecorous fas.h.i.+on, to the echo of Hazelton's bitter laughter, that his second manner was born, and that he achieved his first success, for his second manner was approved by the public.

Three years went past. Hazelton was medaled. He was well hung now, he sold moderately, but he never sold the work which he respected. At last his constant failure with what he called ”his own pictures” had made him so sensitive that he no longer exposed them.

Hazelton's position was that of the parent in the old-fas.h.i.+oned fairy tale who had two children, one beautiful and dark-haired, whom he despised and ill-treated and made work that the child of light might thrive. That, in his good-tempered moments, was how he explained the matter to his friends.

Dumont explained to Hazelton that he had two personalities and that he had no cause to be ashamed of this second and subjective one, even though he had discovered it by chance and in a moment of mockery.

”You have an artistic integrity that is proof even against yourself,”

was his a.n.a.lysis.

The insistence of the public and of Dumont, in whose critical judgment he had believed, gave him something like respect for his foster-child.

His belief in his judgment was subtly undermined.

”I shall leave you,” he told Dumont. ”I shall secrete myself in the country undefiled by the artist's paintbrush and there I will paint a _chef d'uvre_ ent.i.tled 'Le Mal du Ventre.' On its proceeds I will return to my blond.”

While engaged on this work, which later became Hazelton's most successful picture, Hazelton met Raoul de Vilmarte. This young man was a poor painter, but a delightful companion, and he endeared himself to Hazelton at once by his nave enthusiasm for Hazelton's former pictures.

”What grace they had-what beauty-what light! What an extraordinary irony that you should throw away a gift that I should so have cherished!” he exclaimed.

His words were to Hazelton like rain to a dying plant. He stopped work on ”Le Mal du Ventre,” and began to paint to ”suit himself” again. He had a childish delight in surprising De Vilmarte with his new picture.

”Why, why,” cried his new friend, ”do you permit yourself to bury this supreme talent? No one has painted sunlight as well! Compared with this, darkness enshrouds the canvases of all other masters! Why do you not claim your position as the apostle of light?”

Hazelton explained that critics and the public had forced these canvases into obscurity.

”Another name signed to them-a Frenchman preferably-and we might hear a different story,” he added.

A sudden idea came to De Vilmarte. ”Listen!” he said. ”I have exposed nothing for two years. Indeed, I have been doubtful as to whether I should expose again. I know well enough that were my family unknown and were not certain members of the jury my masters, and others friends of my family, I might never have been accepted at all-it has been a sensitive point with me. Unfortunately, my mother and my friends believe me to be a genius-”

”Well?” said Hazelton, seeing some plan moving darkly through De Vilmarte's talk.

”Well,” said De Vilmarte, slowly, ”we might play a joke upon the critics of France. There is a gap between this and my work-immeasurable-one I could never bridge-and yet it is plausible-” He glanced from a sketch of his he was carrying to Hazelton's picture.

Hazelton looked from one to the other. Compared, a gulf was there, fixed, unbridgable, and yet- He twisted his small, nervous hands together. Malice sparkled from his eyes.

”It _is_ plausible!” he agreed. He held out his hand. A sparkle of his malice gleamed in De Vilmarte's pale eyes. They said no more. They shook hands. Later it seemed to Hazelton the ultimate irony that they should have entered into their sinister alliance with levity.

The second phase of the joke seemed as little menacing. You can imagine the three of them outside the Rotonde, Hazelton and De Vilmarte listening to Dumont's praise of De Vilmarte's picture. You can enter into the feelings of cynicism, of disillusion, that filled the hearts of the two _farceurs_. De Vilmarte's picture had been accepted, hung well, then medaled. The critics had acclaimed him!