Part 4 (1/2)
”This is a place fit for a king--or even an emperor,” Sylvia said, with demure graciousness, when the bare-kneed young man had offered her a seat and crossed the room to open the closed cupboard under the dresser. He was stooping as she spoke, but at her last words looked quickly round over his shoulder.
”We peasants are not afraid of a little work when it is for our own comfort,” he responded, ”And most of the things you see are homemade during the long winters.”
”Then you are all very clever. But, tell me, has the Emperor ever been your guest? I have read--let me see, could it have been in a guide-book, or perhaps in some society paper?--that he comes occasionally to the mountains here.”
”Oh yes; the Kaiser has been at this hut--once, twice, perhaps.” Her host laid a loaf of black bread, a cut cheese, and a knuckle of ham on the table. He then glanced at his guest, expecting her to come forward; but she sat still on her throne of antlers, her little feet in their strong mountain boots, daintily crossed under the short tweed skirt.
”I hear your Kaiser is a good chamois-hunter,” she leisurely remarked.
”But that, perhaps, is only the flattery which makes the atmosphere of kings. No doubt, you could give him many points in chamois-hunting?”
The young man smiled. ”The Emperor is not a bad shot,” he returned.
”For an amateur. But you are a professional. I wager now that you would not change places with the Emperor?”
How the chamois-hunter laughed and showed his white teeth! There were those in the towns he scorned, who would have been astonished at his levity.
”Change places with the Emperor? Not--unless I were obliged, _gna'
Fraulein_. Not _now_, at all events,” with a meaning bow and glance.
”Thank you. You are quite a courtier. One of the things they say of him in England is that he dislikes women. But perhaps he does not understand them?”
”Indeed, lady? I had not heard that they were so difficult of comprehension.”
”Ah, that shows how little you chamois-hunters know them. Why, we can't even understand ourselves! Though--a very odd thing--we have no difficulty in reading one another, and knowing all each other's faults.”
”That would seem to say a man should get a woman to choose his wife for him.”
”I'm not so sure. Yet the Emperor, we hear, will let his Chancellor choose his.”
”Ah! Were you told this also in England?”
”Yes. For the gossip is that she's an English Princess. Now, what is the good of being an Emperor if he can't even pick out a wife to please himself?”
”I know little about such high matters, _gna' Fraulein_. But I fancied that Royal folk chose wives to please the people rather than themselves. If the lady be of good blood, virtuous, of the right religion, and pleasant to look at, why--those are the princ.i.p.al things, I suppose.”
”So should I not suppose, if I were a man--and an emperor. I should want to fall in love.”
”Safer not; he might fall in love with the wrong woman.” And the chamois-hunter looked with a certain intentness into his guest's deep eyes.
She flushed under the gaze, and answered at random, ”I doubt it he _could_ fall in love. A man who would let his Chancellor choose! He can have no heart at all.”
”He has perhaps found other things more important in life than women.”
”Chamois, for instance. _You_ would sympathize there.”
”Chamois give good sport. They are hard to find; hard to hit when you have found them.”
”So are the best types of women. Those who, like the chamois (and the plant I spoke of), live only in high places. Oh, for the sake of my s.e.x, I hope that one day your Emperor will be forced to change his mind--that a _woman_ will make him change it!”
”Perhaps a woman has--already.”
Sylvia grew pale. Was she too late? Or was this a hidden compliment which the chamois-hunter did not guess she had the clue to understand?