Part 12 (2/2)

Pierre, who was sitting near the mother, glanced across and smiled. Eva did not smile in reply; she was looking vaguely at the blackened silver; but when he came over to see for himself the miracle, then she smiled very pleasantly.

Pierre was evidently deeply in love; he took no pains to conceal it; but during the two hours he spent there he made no effort to lure the young girl into the drawing-room, or even as far as the parapet. He was very well bred. At present he stood beside her and beside Mark Ferguson, and talked about the statuette. ”It seems to me old Vienna,” he said.

”Signor Bartalama,” announced Angelo, Mrs. Churchill's man-servant, appearing at the long window of the drawing-room which served as one of the terrace doors; he held the lace curtains apart eagerly, with the smiling Italian welcome.

f.a.n.n.y had looked up, puzzled. But when her eyes fell upon the figure emerging from the lace she recognized it instantly. ”Horace Bartholomew!

Now from what quarter of the heavens do you drop _this_ time?”

”So glad you call it heaven,” said the new-comer, as she gave him her hand. ”But from heaven indeed this time, Mrs. Churchill--I say so emphatically; from our own great, grand country--with the permission of the present company be it spoken.” And he bowed slightly to the Englishman and Pierre, his discriminating glance including even the little French governess, who smiled (though non-comprehendingly) in reply. ”May I present to you a compatriot, Mrs. Churchill?” he went on.

”I have taken the liberty of bringing him without waiting for formal permission; he is, in fact, in your drawing-room now. His credentials, however, are small and puny; they consist entirely of the one item--that I like him.”

”That will do perfectly,” said f.a.n.n.y, smiling.

Bartholomew went back to the window and parted the curtains. ”Come,” he said. A tall man appeared. ”Mrs. Churchill, let me present to you Mr.

David Rod.”

Mrs. Churchill was gracious to the stranger; she offered him a chair near hers, which he accepted; a cup of tea, which he declined; and the usual small questions of a first meeting, which only very original minds are bold enough to jump over. The stranger answered the questions promptly; he was evidently not original. He had arrived two days before; this was his first visit to Italy; the Bay of Naples was beautiful; he had not been up Vesuvius; he had not visited Pompeii; he was not afraid of fever; and he had met Horace Bartholomew in Florida the year before.

”I am told they are beginning to go a great deal to Florida,” remarked f.a.n.n.y.

”I don't go there; I live there,” Rod answered.

”Indeed! in what part?” (She brought forward the only names she knew.) ”St. Augustine, perhaps? Or Tallaha.s.see?”

”No; I live on the southern coast; at Punta Palmas?”

”How Spanish that is! Perhaps you have one of those old Spanish plantations?” She had now exhausted all her knowledge of the State save a vague memory of her school geography: ”Where are the Everglades?”

”They are in the southern part of Florida. They are shallow lakes filled with trees.” But the stranger could hardly live in such a place as that.

”No,” answered Rod; ”my plantation isn't old and it isn't Spanish; it's a farm, and quite new. I am over here now to get hands for it.”

”Hands?”

”Yes, laborers--Italians. They work very well in Florida.”

Eva and Mademoiselle Legrand had turned with Pierre to look at the magnificent sunset. ”Did you receive the flowers I sent this morning?”

said Pierre, bending his head so that if Eva should glance up when she answered, he should be able to look into her eyes.

”Yes; they were beautiful,” said Eva, giving the hoped-for glance.

”Yet they are not in the drawing-room.”

”You noticed that?” she said, smiling. ”They are in the music-room; Mademoiselle put them there.”

”They are the flowers for Mozart, are they not?” said Mademoiselle--”heliotrope and white lilies; and we have been studying Mozart this morning. The drawing-room, as you know, Monsieur le Comte, is always full of roses.”

”And how do you come on with Mozart?” asked Pierre.

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