Part 19 (2/2)

Mrs. Lander had their dinner brought to their apartment. She cheered up, and she was in some danger of eating too much, but with Clementina's help she denied herself. Their short evening was one of the gayest; Clementina declared she was not the least sleepy, but she went to bed at nine, and slept till nine the next day.

Mrs. Lander, the doctor confessed, the second morning, was more shaken up by, her little attack than he had expected; but she decided to see the gentleman who had asked to call on Clementina. Lord Lioncourt did not come quite so soon as she was afraid he might, and when he came he talked mostly to Clementina. He did not get to Mrs. Lander until just before he was going. She hospitably asked him what his hurry was, and then he said that he was off for Rome, that evening at seven. He was nice about hoping she was comfortable in the hotel, and he sympathized with her in her wish that there was a set-bowl in her room; she told him that she always tried to have one, and he agreed that it must be very convenient where any one was, as she said, sick so much.

Mr. Hinkle came a day later; and then it appeared that he had a mother whose complaints almost exactly matched Mrs. Lander's. He had her photograph with him, and showed it; he said if you had no wife to carry round a photograph of, you had better carry your mother's; and Mrs.

Lander praised him for being a good son. A good son, she added, always made a good husband; and he said that was just what he told the young ladies himself, but it did not seem to make much impression on them. He kept Clementina laughing; and he pretended that he was going to bring a diagram of his patent right for her to see, because she would be interested in a gleaner like that; and he said he wished her father could see it, for it would be sure to interest the kind of man Mrs.

Lander described him to be. ”I'll be along up there just about the time you get home, Miss Clementina. Then did you say it would be?”

”I don't know; pretty ea'ly in the spring, I guess.”

She looked at Mrs. Lander, who said, ”Well, it depends upon how I git up my health. I couldn't bea' the voyage now.”

Mr. Hinkle said, ”No, best look out for your health, if it takes all summer. I shouldn't want you to hurry on my account. Your time is my time. All I want is for Miss Clementina, here, to personally conduct me to her father. If I could get him to take hold of my gleaner in New England, we could make the blueberry crop worth twice what it is.”

Mrs. Lander perceived that he was joking; and she asked what he wanted to run away for when the young Russian's card came up. He said, ”Oh, give every man a chance,” and he promised that he would look in every few days, and see how she was getting along. He opened the door after he had gone out, and put his head in to say in confidence to Mrs. Lander, but so loud that Clementina could hear, ”I suppose she's told you who the belle of the ball was, the other night? Went out to supper with a lord!” He seemed to think a lord was such a good joke that if you mentioned one you had to laugh.

The Russian's card bore the name Baron Belsky, with the baron crossed out in pencil, and he began to attack in Mrs. Lander the demerits of the American character, as he had divined them. He instructed her that her countrymen existed chiefly to make money; that they were more shopkeepers than the English and worse sn.o.bs; that their women were trivial and their men sordid; that their ambition was to unite their families with the European aristocracies; and their doctrine of liberty and equality was a shameless hypocrisy. This followed hard upon her asking, as she did very promptly, why he had scratched out the t.i.tle on his card. He told her that he wished to be known solely as an artist, and he had to explain to her that he was not a painter, but was going to be a novelist. She taxed him with never having been in America, but he contended that as all America came to Europe he had the materials for a study of the national character at hand, without the trouble of crossing the ocean. In return she told him that she had not been the least sea-sick during the voyage, and that it was no trouble at all; then he abruptly left her and went over to beg a cup of tea from Clementina, who sat behind the kettle by the window.

”I have heard this morning from that American I met in Pompeii” he began. ”He is coming northward, and I am going down to meet him in Rome.”

Mrs. Lander caught the word, and called across the room, ”Why, a'n't that whe'e that lo'd's gone?”

Clementina said yes, and while the kettle boiled, she asked if Baron Belsky were going soon.

”Oh, in a week or ten days, perhaps. I shall know when he arrives. Then I shall go. We write to each other every day.” He drew a letter from his breast pocket. ”This will give you the idea of his character,” and he read, ”If we believe that the hand of G.o.d directs all our actions, how can we set up our theories of conduct against what we feel to be his inspiration?”

”What do you think of that?” he demanded.

”I don't believe that G.o.d directs our wrong actions,” said Clementina.

”How! Is there anything outside of G.o.d?

”I don't know whether there is or not. But there is something that tempts me to do wrong, sometimes, and I don't believe that is G.o.d.”

The Russian seemed struck. ”I will write that to him!”

”No,” said Clementina, ”I don't want you to say anything about me to him.”

”No, no!” said Baron Belsky, waving his band rea.s.suringly. ”I would not mention your name!”

Mr. Ewins came in, and the Russian said he must go. Mrs. Lander tried to detain him, too, as she had tried to keep Mr. Hinkle, but he was inexorable. Mr. Ewins looked at the door when it had closed upon him.

Mrs. Lander said, ”That is one of the gentlemen that Clementina met the otha night at the dance. He is a baron, but he scratches it out. You'd ought to head him go on about Americans.”

”Yes,” said Mr. Ewins coldly. ”He's at our hotel, and he airs his peculiar opinions at the table d'hote pretty freely. He's a revolutionist of some kind, I fancy.” He p.r.o.nounced the epithet with an abhorrence befitting the citizen of a state born of revolution and a city that had cradled the revolt. ”He's a Nihilist, I believe.”

Mrs. Lander wished to know what that was, and he explained that it was a Russian who wanted to overthrow the Czar, and set up a government of the people, when they were not prepared for liberty.

”Then, maybe he isn't a baron at all,” said Mrs. Lander.

<script>