Part 18 (1/2)
[Ill.u.s.tration: ”SHE SAT DOWN AND GATHERED HER CHILD TO HER BREAST”]
On the second day, in the afternoon, she discovered that Eva had disappeared. The girl had been on the terrace with Mademoiselle; Mademoiselle had gone to her room for a moment, and when she returned her pupil could not be found. She had not pa.s.sed through the drawing-room, where f.a.n.n.y was sitting with her pretended industry; nor through the other door, for Rosine was at work there, and had seen nothing of her. There remained only the rock stairway to the beach.
Mademoiselle ran down it swiftly: no one. But there was a small boat not far off, she said. f.a.n.n.y, who was near-sighted, got the gla.s.s. In a little boat with a broad sail there were two figures; one was certainly David Rod, and the other--yes, the other was Eva. There was a breeze, the boat was rapidly going westward round the cliffs; in two minutes more it was out of sight.
f.a.n.n.y wrung her hands. The French woman, to whom the event wore a much darker hue than it did to the American mother, turned yellowly pale.
At this moment Horace Bartholomew came out on the terrace; uneasy, for f.a.n.n.y's missive had explained nothing, he had followed his letter himself. ”What is it?” he said, as he saw the agitation of the two women.
”Your friend--_yours_--the man you brought here, has Eva with him at this moment out on the bay!” said f.a.n.n.y, vehemently.
”Well, what of that? You must look at it with Punta Palmas eyes, f.a.n.n.y; at Punta Palmas it would be an ordinary event.”
”But my Eva is not a Punta Palmas girl, Horace Bartholomew!”
”She is as innocent as one, and I'll answer for Rod. Come, be sensible, f.a.n.n.y. They will be back before sunset, and no one in Sorrento--if that is what is troubling you so--need be any the wiser.”
”You do not know all,” said f.a.n.n.y. ”Oh, Horace--I must tell somebody--she fancies she cares for that man!” She wrung her hands again. ”Couldn't we follow them? Get a boat.”
”It would take an hour. And it would be a very conspicuous thing to do.
Leave them alone--it's much better; I tell you I'll answer for Rod.
Fancies she cares for him, does she? Well, he is a fine fellow; on the whole, the finest I know.”
The mother's eyes flashed through her tears. ”This from _you_?”
”I can't help it; he is. Of course you do not think so. He has got no money; he has never been anywhere that you call anywhere; he doesn't know anything about the only life you care for nor the things you think important. All the same, he is a man in a million. He is a man--not a puppet.”
Gentle Mrs. Churchill appeared for the moment transformed. She looked as though she could strike him. ”Never mind your Quixotic ideas. Tell me whether he is in love with Eva; it all depends upon that.”
”I don't know, I am sure,” answered Bartholomew. He began to think. ”I can't say at all; he would conceal it from me.”
”Because he felt his inferiority. I am glad he has that grace.”
”He wouldn't be conscious of any inferiority save that he is poor. It would be that, probably, if anything; of course he supposes that Eva is rich.”
”Would to Heaven she were!” said the mother. ”Added to every other horror of it, poverty, miserable poverty, for my poor child!” She sat down and hid her face.
”It may not be as bad as you fear, nor anything like it. Do cheer up a little, f.a.n.n.y. When Eva comes back, ten to one you will find that nothing at all has happened--that it has been a mere ordinary excursion.
And I promise you I will take Rod away with me to-morrow.”
Mrs. Churchill rose and began to pace to and fro, biting her lips, and watching the water. Mademoiselle, who was still hovering near, she waved impatiently away. ”Let no one in,” she called to her.
There seemed, indeed, to be nothing else to do, as Bartholomew had said, save to wait. He sat down and discussed the matter a little.
f.a.n.n.y paid no attention to what he was saying. Every now and then broken phrases of her own burst from her: ”How much good will her perfect French and Italian, her German, Spanish, and even Russian, do her down in that barbarous wilderness?”--”In her life she has never even b.u.t.toned her boots. Do they think she can make bread?”--”And there was Gino. And poor Pierre.” Then, suddenly, ”But it _shall_ not be!”
”I have been wondering why you did not take that tone from the first,”
said Bartholomew. ”She is very young. She has been brought up to obey you implicitly. It would be easy enough, I should fancy, if you could once make up your mind to it.”
”Make up my mind to save her, you mean,” said the mother, bitterly. She did not tell him that she was afraid of her daughter. ”Should you expect _me_ to live at Punta Palmas?” she demanded, contemptuously, of her companion.