The scene-painter appeared to be puzzled by the
vehement energy
of the language addressed to him. 'The room is as fresh and sweet
as a room can be,' he answered. As he spoke, he looked back with
astonishment at Francis Westwick,
standing outside in the corridor,
and eyeing the
interior of the bedchamber with an expression
of undisguised disgust.
The Parisian
director approached his English
colleague, and looked
at him with grave and
anxious scrutiny.
'You see, my friend, here are two of us, with as good noses as yours,
who smell nothing. If you want evidence from more noses, look there!'
He
pointed to two little English girls, at play in the corridor.
'The door of my room is wide open--and you know how fast a smell
can travel. Now listen, while I
appeal to these
innocent noses,
in the language of their own
dismal island. My little loves,
do you sniff a nasty smell here--ha?' The children burst out laughing,
and answered
emphatically, 'No.' 'My good Westwick,' the Frenchman
resumed, in his own language, 'the
conclusion is surely plain?
There is something wrong, very wrong, with your own nose. I
recommend you
to see a
medical man.'
Having given that advice, he returned to his room, and shut
out the
horrid fresh air with a loud
exclamation of relief.
Francis left the hotel, by the lanes that led to the Square of St. Mark.
The night-breeze soon
revived him. He was able to light a cigar,
and to think quietly over what had happened.
CHAPTER XIX
Avoiding the crowd under the colonnades, Francis walked slowly up
and down the noble open space of the square, bathed in the light
of the rising moon.
Without being aware of it himself, he was a
thorough materialist.
The strange effect produced on him by the room--following on the other
strange effects produced on the other relatives of his dead brother--
exercised no perplexing influence over the mind of this
sensible man.
'Perhaps,' he reflected, 'my
temperament" target="_blank" title="n.气质;性格">
temperament is more
imaginative than I
supposed it to be--and this is a trick played on me by my own fancy?
Or, perhaps, my friend is right; something is
physically amiss with me?
I don't feel ill, certainly. But that is no safe criterion sometimes.
I am not going to sleep in that
abominable room to-night--
I can well wait till to-morrow to decide whether I shall speak
to a doctor or not. In the mean time, the hotel doesn't seem likely
to supply me with the subject of a piece. A terrible smell from an
in
visible ghost is a
perfectly new idea. But it has one drawback.
If I realise it on the stage, I shall drive the
audience out of
the theatre.'
As his strong common sense arrived at this facetious
conclusion,
he became aware of a lady, dressed entirely in black, who was
observing him with marked attention. 'Am I right in supposing
you to be Mr. Francis Westwick?' the lady asked, at the moment
when he looked at her.
'That is my name, madam. May I inquire to whom I have the honour
of
speaking?'
'We have only met once,' she answered a little evasively, 'when your late
brother introduced me to the members of his family. I wonder if you
have quite forgotten my big black eyes and my
hideous complexion?'
She lifted her veil as she spoke, and turned so that the
moonlightrested on her face.
Francis recognised at a glance the woman of all others whom
he most
cordially disliked--the widow of his dead brother,
the first Lord Montbarry. He frowned as he looked at her.
His experience on the stage, gathered at
innumerable rehearsals
with actresses who had
sorely tried his
temper, had accustomed
him to speak
roughly to women who were
distasteful to him.
'I remember you,' he said. 'I thought you were in America!'
She took no notice of his un
gracious tone and manner; she simply
stopped him when he lifted his hat, and turned to leave her.
'Let me walk with you for a few minutes,' she quietly replied.
'I have something to say to you.'
He showed her his cigar. 'I am smoking,'he said.
'I don't mind smoking.'
After that, there was nothing to be done (short of
downright brutality)
but to yield. He did it with the worst possible grace.
'Well?' he resumed. 'What do you want of me?'
'You shall hear directly, Mr. Westwick. Let me first
tell you what my position is. I am alone in the world.
To the loss of my husband has now been added another bereavement,
the loss of my
companion in America, my brother--Baron Rivar.'
The
reputation of the Baron, and the doubt which
scandal had thrown on
his assumed
relationship to the Countess, were well known to Francis.
'Shot in a gambling-saloon?' he asked brutally.
'The question is a
perfectly natural one on your part,' she said,
with the impenetrably ironical manner which she could assume on
certain occasions. 'As a native of horse-racing England, you belong
to a nation of gamblers. My brother died no
extraordinary death,
Mr. Westwick. He sank, with many other
unfortunate people,
under a fever
prevalent in a Western city which we happened to visit.
The
calamity of his loss made the United States unendurable to me.
I left by the first
steamer that sailed from New York--a French vessel
which brought me to Havre. I continued my
lonely journey to the South
of France. And then I went on to Venice.'
'What does all this matter to me?' Francis thought to himself.
She paused,
evidently expecting him to say something. 'So you have come
to Venice?' he said
carelessly" target="_blank" title="ad.粗心地;疏忽地">
carelessly. 'Why?'
'Because I couldn't help it,' she answered.
Francis looked at her with
cynicalcuriosity. 'That sounds odd,'
he remarked. 'Why couldn't you help it?'
'Women are accustomed to act on
impulse,' she explained.
'Suppose we say that an
impulse has directed my journey? And yet,
this is the last place in the world that I wish to find myself in.
Associations that I
detest are connected with it in my mind.
If I had a will of my own, I would never see it again.
I hate Venice. As you see, however, I am here. When did you
meet with such an
unreasonable woman before? Never, I am sure!'
She stopped, eyed him for a moment, and suddenly altered her tone.
'When is Miss Agnes Lockwood expected to be in Venice?'
she asked.
It was not easy to throw Francis off his balance,
but that
extraordinary question did it. 'How the
devil did you know that Miss Lockwood was coming to Venice?' he exclaimed.
She laughed--a bitter mocking laugh. 'Say, I guessed it!'
Something in her tone, or perhaps something in the audacious
defiance of her eyes as they rested on him, roused the quick
temper that was in Francis Warwick. 'Lady Montbarry--!' he began.
'Stop there!' she interposed. 'Your brother Stephen's wife calls
herself Lady Montbarry now. I share my title with no woman.
Call me by my name before I committed the fatal mistake of marrying
your brother. Address me, if you please, as Countess Narona.'
'Countess Narona,' Francis resumed, 'if your object in claiming
my
acquaintance is to mystify me, you have come to the wrong man.
Speak
plainly, or permit me to wish you good evening.'
'If your object is to keep Miss Lockwood's
arrival in Venice a secret,'
she retorted, 'speak
plainly, Mr. Westwick, on your side,
and say so.'
Her
intention was
evidently to
irritate him; and she succeeded.
'Nonsense!' he broke out petulantly. 'My brother's travelling
arrangements are secrets to nobody. He brings Miss Lockwood here,
with Lady Montbarry and the children. As you seem so well informed,
perhaps you know why she is coming to Venice?'
The Countess had suddenly become grave and
thoughtful. She made no reply.
The two
strangely associated
companions, having reached one extremity
of the square, were now
standing before the church of St. Mark.
The
moonlight was bright enough to show the architecture
of the grand
cathedral in its wonderful
variety of detail.
Even the pigeons of St. Mark were
visible, in dark closely packed rows,