Part 44 (1/2)

”Precisely! As I married you!” he replied.

”The experiment was hardly successful!” she said with her little cold smile. ”I fear you have often regretted it!”

He looked at her, studying her beauty intently,--and the remembrance of another face, far less fair of feature, but warm and impa.s.sioned by the lovely light of sympathy and tenderness, came between his eyes and hers, like a heavenly vision.

”Had you loved me,” he said slowly, ”I might never have known what it was to need love!”

A slight tremor ran through her veins. There was a strange tone in his voice,--a soft cadence to which she was unaccustomed,--something that suggested a new emotion in his life, and a deeper experience.

”I never loved anyone in my life!” she answered calmly--”And now the days are past for loving. Humphry, however, has made up for my lack of the tender pa.s.sion!”

She turned away indifferently, and appeared to dismiss the matter altogether from her mind. The first time she saw her son, however, after hearing of his marriage, she looked at him curiously.

”And so your wife is very lovely, Humphry!” she said with a slightly derisive smile.

He was not startled by the suddenness of her observation nor put out by it.

”She is the loveliest woman I have ever seen,--not excepting yourself,”

he replied.

”It is a very foolish affair!” she continued composedly; ”But fortunately in our line of life such things are easily arranged;--and your future will not be spoiled by it. I am glad you are going abroad, as you will very soon forget!”

The Prince regarded her steadfastly with something of grave wonderment as well as compa.s.sion,--but he made no reply, and with the briefest excuse left her presence as soon as possible, in order to avoid further conversation on the subject. She, herself, however, found her mind curiously perturbed and full of conjectures concerning her son's idyllic love-story, in which all considerations for her as Queen and mother seemed omitted,--and where she, as it were, appeared to be shut outside a lover's paradise, the delights of which she had never experienced.

The King held many private conferences with her on the matter, in which sometimes Professor von Glauben was permitted to share;--and the upshot of these numerous discussions resulted in a scheme which was as astonis.h.i.+ng in its climax as it was unexpected. Over and over again it has been proved to nations as well as to individuals, that the whole course of events may be changed by the fixed determination of one resolute mind; but it is not often that the moral force of a mere girl succeeds in competing with the authority of kings and parliaments. But so it chanced on this occasion, and in the following manner.

One glorious early morning, the sun having risen without a cloud in the deep blue of the sky, and the sea being as calm as an inland lake, the King's yacht was seen to weigh anchor and steam away at her fullest speed towards The Islands. Little or no preparation had been made for her short voyage; there was no Royal party on board, and the only pa.s.senger was Professor von Glauben. He sat solitary on deck in a luxurious chair, smoking his meerschaum pipe, and dubiously considering the difficult and peculiar situation in which he was placed. He made no attempt to calculate the possible success or failure of his mission--'for,' said he very sagely, 'it all depends on a woman, and G.o.d alone knows what a woman will do! Her ways are dark and wonderful, and altogether beyond the limit of the comprehension of man!'

His journey was undertaken at the King's command; and equally by the King's command he had been compelled to keep it a secret from Prince Humphry. He had never been to The Islands since the King's 'surprise visit' there, and he was of course not aware that Gloria now knew the real rank and position of her supposed 'sailor' husband. He was at present charged to break the news to her, and bring her straightway to the palace, there to confront both the King and Queen, and learn from them the true state of affairs.

”It is a cruel ordeal,” he said, shaking his head sorrowfully; ”Yet I myself am a party to its being tried. For once in my life I have pinned my faith on the unspoilt soul of an unworldly woman. I wonder what will come of it? It rests entirely with Gloria herself, and with no one else in the world!”

As the yacht arrived at its destination and dropped anchor at some distance from the pier, owing to the shallowness of the tide at that hour of the day, The Islands presented a fair aspect in the dancing beams of the summer sunlight. Numbers of fruit trees were bursting into blossom,--the apple, the cherry, the pink almond and the orange blossom all waved together and whispered sweetness to one another in the pure air, and the full-flowering mimosa perfumed every breath of wind.

Fishermen were grouped here and there on the sh.o.r.e, mending or drying their nets; and in the fields beyond could be perceived many workers pruning the hedges or guiding the plough. The vision of a perfect Arcadia was presented to the eye; and so the Professor thought, as getting into the boat lowered for him, he was rowed from the yacht to the landing-place, and there dismissed the sailors, warning them that at the first sound of his whistle they should swiftly come for him again.

”What a pity to spoil her peace of mind--her simplicity of life!” he thought, as he walked at a slow and reluctant pace towards Ronsard's cottage; ”And I fear we shall have trouble with the old man! I wonder if his philosophy will stand hard wear and tear!”

The pretty, low timber-raftered house confronted him at the next bend in the road, and presented a charming aspect of tranquillity. The gra.s.s in front of it was smooth as velvet and emerald-green, and in one of the flower borders Ronsard himself was digging and planting. He looked up as he heard the gate open, but did not attempt to interrupt his work;--and Von Glauben advanced towards him with a considerable sense of anxiety and insecurity in his mind. Anon he paused in the very act of greeting, as the old man turned his strong, deeply-furrowed countenance upon him with a look of fierce indignation and scorn.

”So! You are here!” he said; ”Have you come to look upon the evil your Royal master has worked? Or to make dutiful obeisance to Gloria as Crown-Princess?”

Von Glauben was altogether taken aback.

”Then--you know--?” he stammered.

”Oh yes, I know!” responded Ronsard sternly and bitterly; ”I know everything! There has been full confession! If the husband of my Gloria were more prince than man, my knife would have slit his throat! But he is more man than prince!--and I have let him live--for her sake!”

”Well--that is so far good!” said Von Glauben, wiping the perspiration from his brow, and heaving a deep sigh of relief; ”And as you fully comprehend the situation, it saves me the trouble of explaining it! You are a philosopher, Ronsard! Permit me to remind you of that fact! You know, like myself, that what is done, even if it is done foolishly, cannot be undone!”

”I know it! Who should know it so well as I!” and Ronsard set a delicate rose-tree roughly in the hole he had dug for it, and began to fiercely pile in the earth around it;--”Fate is fate, and there is no gainsaying it! The law of Compensation will always have its way! Look you, man!--and listen! I, Rene Ronsard, once killed a king!--and now in my old age, the only creature I ever loved is tricked by the son of a king!

It is just! So be it!”