The Queen of Sheba, and My Cousin the Colonel - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"And now I want you"--
"What, another favor?"
"Of course. Who ever heard of one favor?"
"To be sure! What is the second?"
"I want that you should be a little sorry when all this comes to an end."
"You mean when we leave Chamouni?"
"Yes."
"I shall be sorry then," said Miss Ruth frankly, "but I am not going to be sorry beforehand."
There was something very sweet to Lynde in her candor, but there was also something that restrained him for the moment from being as explicit as he had intended. He rode on awhile without speaking, watching the girl as the mule now and then turned the sharp angle of the path and began a new ascent. This movement always brought her face to face with him a moment--she on the grade above, and he below. Miss Ruth had grown accustomed to the novel situation, and no longer held on by the pommel of the saddle. She sat with her hands folded in her lap, pliantly lending herself to the awkward motion of the animal. Over her usual travelling-habit she had thrown the long waterproof which reached to her feet. As she sat there in a half-listless att.i.tude, she was the very picture of the Queen of Sheba seated upon Deacon Twombly's mare.
Lynde could not help seeing it; but he was schooling himself by degrees to this fortuitous resemblance. It was painful, but it was inevitable, and he would get used to it in time. "Perhaps," he mused, "if I had never had that adventure with the poor insane girl, I might not have looked twice at Miss Denham when we met--and loved her. It was the poor little queen who shaped my destiny, and I oughtn't to be ungrateful."
He determined to tell the story to Miss Ruth some time when a fitting occasion offered.
It was only when the likeness flashed upon Lynde suddenly, as it had done in the grove the previous day, that it now had the power to startle him. At the present moment it did not even seriously annoy him.
In an idle, pensive way he noted the coincidence of the man leading the mule. The man was Morton and the mule was Mary! Lynde smiled to himself at the reflection that Mary would probably not accept the a.n.a.logy with very good grace if she knew about it. This carried him to Rivermouth; then he thought of Cinderella's slipper, packed away in the old hair-trunk in the closet, and how perfectly the slipper would fit one of those feet which a floating fold of the waterproof that instant revealed to him--and he was in Switzerland again.
"Miss Ruth," he said, looking up quickly and urging his mule as closely behind hers as was practicable, "what are your plans to be when your uncle comes?"
"When my uncle comes we shall have no plans--aunt Gertrude and I. Uncle Denham always plans for everybody."
"I don't imagine he will plan for me," said Lynde gloomily. "I wish he would, for I shall not know what to do with myself."
"I thought you were going to St. Petersburg."
"I have given that up."
"It's to be Northern Germany, then?"
"No, I have dropped that idea, too. Will Mr. Denham remain here any time?"
"Probably not long."
"What is to become of me after you are gone!" exclaimed Lynde. "When I think of Mr. Denham sweeping down on Chamouni to carry you off, I am tempted to drive this mule straight over the brink of one of these precipices!"
The girl leaned forward, looking at the rocky wall of the Flegere through an opening in the pines, and made no reply.
"Miss Ruth," said Lynde, "I must speak!"
"Do not speak," she said, turning upon him with a half-imperious, half-appealing gesture, "I forbid you;" and then, more gently, "We have four or five days, perhaps a week, to be together; we are true, frank friends. Let us be just that to the end."
"Those are mercifully cruel words," returned the young man, with a dull pain at his heart. "It is a sweet way of saying a bitter thing."
"It is a way of saying that your friends.h.i.+p is very dear to me, Mr.
Lynde," she replied, sitting erect in the saddle, with the brightness and the blackness deepening in her eyes. "I wonder if I can make you understand how I prize it. My life has not been quite like that of other girls, partly because I have lived much abroad, and partly because I have been very delicate ever since my childhood; I had a serious lung trouble then, which has never left me. You would not think it, to look at me. Perhaps it is the anxiety I have given aunt Gertrude which has made her so tenacious of my affection that I have scarcely been permitted to form even those intimacies which girls form among themselves. I have never known any one--any gentleman--as intimately as I have known you. She has let me have you for my friend."
"But Miss Ruth"--
"Mr. Lynde," she said, interrupting him, "it was solely to your friends.h.i.+p that my aunt confided me to-day. I should be deceiving her if I allowed you to speak as--as you were speaking."
Lynde saw his mistake. He should have addressed himself in the first instance to the aunt. He had been lacking in proper regard for the convenances, forgetting that Ruth's education had been different from that of American girls. At home, if you love a girl you tell her so; over here, you go and tell her grandmother. Lynde dropped his head and remained silent, resolving to secure an interview with Mrs. Denham that night if possible. After a moment or two he raised his face. "Miss Ruth," said he, "if I had to choose, I would rather be your friend than any other woman's lover."
"That is settled, then," she returned, with heightened color. "We will not refer to this again;" and she brushed away a b.u.t.terfly that was fluttering about her conceitedly in its new golden corselet.
Meanwhile the guide marched on stolidly with Ruth's reins thrown loosely over the crook of his elbow. In his summer courses up and down the mountain, the man, with his four languages, had probably a.s.sisted dumbly at much fugitive love-making and many a conjugal pa.s.sage-at-arms. He took slight note of the conversation between the two young folks; he was clearly more interested in a strip of black cloud that had come within the half hour and hung itself over the Aiguille du Dru.
The foot-path and the bridle-road from Chamouni unite at the Caillet, a spring of fresh water halfway up the mountain. There the riders dismounted and rested five or six minutes at a rude hut perched like a brown bird under the cliff.
"I've the fancy to go on foot the rest of the distance," Lynde remarked, as he a.s.sisted Ruth into the saddle again.
"Then I'll let you lead the mule, if you will," said Ruth. "I'm not the least afraid."
"That is an excellent idea! Why did you not think of it sooner? I shall expect a buonamano, like a real guide, you know."
"I will give it you in advance," she said gayly, reaching forward and pretending to hold a coin between her thumb and finger.
Lynde caught her hand and retained it an instant, but did not dare to press it. He was in mortal fear of a thing which he could have crushed like a flower in his palm.
The young man drew the reins over his arm and moved forward, glancing behind him at intervals to a.s.sure himself that his charge was all right. As they approached the summit of the mountain the path took abrupter turns, and was crossed in numberless places by the channels of winter avalanches, which had mown down great pines as if they had been blades of gra.s.s. Here and there a dry water-course stretched like a wrinkle along the scarred face of the hill.
"Look at that, Miss Ruth!" cried Lynde, checking the mule and pointing to a slope far below them.
Nature, who loves to do a gentle thing even in her most savage moods, had taken one of those empty water-courses and filled it from end to end with forget-me-nots. As the wind ruffled the millions of petals, this bed of flowers, only a few inches wide but nearly a quarter of a mile in length, looked like a flas.h.i.+ng stream of heavenly blue water rus.h.i.+ng down the mountain side.
By and by the faint kling-kling of a cowbell sounding far up the height told the travellers that they were nearing the plateau. Occasionally they descried a herdsman's chalet, pitched at an angle against the wind on the edge of an arete, or clinging like a wasp's-nest to some jutting cornice of rock. After making four or five short turns, the party pa.s.sed through a clump of scraggy, wind-swept pines, and suddenly found themselves at the top of Montanvert.
A few paces brought them to the Pavilion, a small inn kept by the guide Couttet. Here the mules were turned over to the hostler, and Miss Ruth and Lynde took a quarter of an hour's rest, examining the collection of crystals and moss-agates and horn-carvings which M. Couttet has for show in the apartment that serves him as salon, cafe, and museum. Then the two set out for the rocks overlooking the glacier.
The cliff rises precipitously two hundred and fifty feet above the frozen sea, whose windings can be followed, for a distance of five miles, to the walls of the Grandes and Pet.i.tes Jora.s.ses. Surveyed from this height, the Mer de Glace presents the appearance of an immense ploughed field covered by a fall of snow that has become dingy. The peculiar corrugation of the surface is scarcely discernible, and one sees nothing of the wonderful creva.s.ses, those narrow and often fathomless partings of the ice, to look into which is like looking into a split sapphire. The first view from the cliff is disappointing, but presently the marvel of it all a.s.sails and possesses one.
"I should like to go down on the ice," said Ruth, after regarding the scene for several minutes in silence.
"We must defer that to another day," said Lynde. "The descent of the moraine from this point is very arduous, and is seldom attempted by ladies. Besides, if we do anything we ought to cross the glacier and go home by the way of the Mauvais Pas. We will do that yet. Let us sit upon this boulder and talk."
"What shall we talk about? I don't feel like talking."
"I'll talk to you. I don't know of what... I will tell you a story."
"A story, Mr. Lynde? I like stories as if I were only six years old.
But I don't like those stories which begin with 'Once there was a little girl,' who always turns out to be the little girl that is listening."
"Mine is not of that kind," replied Lynde, with a smile, steadying Miss Ruth by the hand as she seated herself on the boulder; "and yet it touches on you indirectly. It all happened long ago."
"It concerns me, and happened long ago? I am interested already. Begin!"