Behind him, at a respectful
distance, was the travelling servant who, at a signal, had brought it up to
him; below, in the bend of the mountain road, stood the light and elegant
carriage which had carried him thus far on his travels.
Scarcely
more than a year had passed since he had waved a farewell to New York from the deck of the packet-ship headed
down the bay; yet, to the young man confidently facing Mont Blanc, nothing seemed left in him of that fluid
and insubstantial being, the former Lewis Raycie, save a lurking and abeyant
fear of Mr. Raycie senior. Even that, however, was so attenuated by distance
and time, so far sunk below the horizon, and anchored on the far side of the globe, that it stirred in its sleep only when a handsomely
folded and wafered letter in his parent’s writing was handed out across the
desk of some continental counting-house. Mr. Raycie senior did not write often,
and when he did it was in a bland and stilted strain. He felt at a disadvantage
on paper, and his natural sarcasm was swamped in the rolling periods which it
cost him hours of labour to bring forth; so that the dreaded quality lurked for
his son only in the curve of certain letters, and in a positively awful way of
writing out, at full length, the word “Esquire”.
It
was not that Lewis had broken with all the memories of his past of a year ago.
Many still lingered in him, or rather had been transferred to the new man he
had become—as for instance his tenderness for Treeshy Kent, which, somewhat to
his surprise, had obstinately resisted all the assaults of English keepsake
beauties and almond-eyed houris of the East. It startled him at times, to find
Treeshy’s short dusky face, with its round forehead, the widely spaced eyes and
the high cheek-bones, starting out at him suddenly in the street of some
legendary town, or in a landscape of languid beauty, just as he had now and
again been arrested in an exotic garden by the very scent of the verbena under
the verandah at home. His travels had confirmed rather than weakened the family
view of Treeshy’s plainness; she could not be made to fit into any of the
patterns of female beauty so far submitted to him; yet there she was, ensconced
in his new heart and mind as deeply as in the old, though her kisses seemed
less vivid, and the peculiar rough notes of her voice hardly reached him.
Sometimes, half irritably, he said to himself that with an effort he could
disperse her once for all; yet she lived on in him, unseen yet ineffaceable, like
the image on a daguerreotype plate, no less there because so often invisible.
To
the new Lewis, however, the whole business was less important than he had once
thought it. His suddenly acquired maturity made Treeshy seem a petted child
rather than the guide, the Beatrice, he had once considered her; and he
promised himself, with an elderly smile, that as soon as he got to Italy he
would write her the long letter for which he was now considerably in her debt.
His
travels had first carried him to England. There he spent some weeks in collecting
letters and recommendations for his tour, in purchasing his travelling-carriage
and its numerous appurtenances, and in driving in it from cathedral town to
storied castle, omitting nothing, from Abbotsford to Kenilworth, which deserved the attention of a
cultivated mind. From England he crossed to Calais, moving slowly southward to the Mediterranean; and there, taking ship for the Piraeus, he plunged into pure romance, and the
tourist became a Giaour.
It
was the East which had made him into a new Lewis Raycie; the East, so squalid
and splendid, so pestilent and so poetic, so full of knavery and romance and
fleas and nightingales, and so different, alike in its glories and its dirt,
from what his studious youth had dreamed. After Smyrna and the bazaars, after Damascus and Palmyra, the Acropolis, Mytilene and Sunium, what
could be left in his mind of Canal Street and the lawn above the Sound? Even the
mosquitoes, which seemed at first the only connecting link, were different,
because he fought with them in scenes so different; and a young gentleman who
had journeyed across the desert in Arabian dress, slept under goats’-hair
tents, been attacked by robbers in the Peloponnesus and despoiled by his own
escort at Baalbek, and by customs’ officials everywhere, could not but look
with a smile on the terrors that walk New York and the Hudson River. Encased in
security and monotony, that other Lewis Raycie, when his little figure bobbed
up to the surface, seemed like a new-born babe preserved in alcohol. Even Mr.
Raycie senior’s thunders were now no more than the far-off murmur of summer
lightning on a perfect evening. Had Mr. Raycie ever really frightened Lewis?
Why, now he was not even frightened by Mont Blanc!
He
was still gazing with a sense of easy equality at its awful pinnacles when
another travelling-carriage paused near his own, and a young man, eagerly
jumping from it, and also followed by a servant with a cloak, began to mount
the slope. Lewis at once recognized the carriage, and the light springing
figure of the young man, his blue coat and swelling stock, and the scar
slightly distorting his handsome and eloquent mouth. It was the Englishman who
had arrived at the Montanvert inn the night before with a valet, a guide, and
such a cargo of books, maps and sketching materials as threatened to overshadow
even Lewis’s outfit.
Lewis,
at first, had not been greatly drawn to the newcomer, who, seated aloof in the
dining-room, seemed not to see his fellow-traveller. The truth was that Lewis
was dying for a little conversation. His astonishing experiences were so
tightly packed in him (with no outlet save the meagre trickle of his nightly
diary) that he felt they would soon melt into the vague blur of other people’s
travels unless he could give them fresh reality by talking them over. And the
stranger with the deep-blue eyes that matched his coat, the scarred cheek and
eloquent lip, seemed to Lewis a worthy listener. The Englishman appeared to
think otherwise. He preserved an air of moody abstraction, which Lewis’s vanity
imagined him to have put on as the gods becloud themselves for their secret
errands; and the curtness of his goodnight was (Lewis flattered himself)
surpassed only by the young New Yorker’s.
But
today all was different. The stranger advanced affably, raised his hat from his
tossed statue-like hair, and enquired with a smile: “Are you by any chance
interested in the forms of cirrous clouds?”
His
voice was as sweet as his smile, and the two were reinforced by a glance so
winning that it made the odd question seem not only pertinent but natural.
Lewis, though surprised, was not disconcerted. He merely coloured with the
unwonted sense of his ignorance, and replied ingenuously: “I believe, sir, I am
interested in everything.”
“A
noble answer!” cried the other, and held out his hand.
“But
I must add,” Lewis continued with courageous honesty, “that I have never as yet
had occasion to occupy myself particularly with the
form of cirrous clouds.”
His
companion looked at him merrily. “That,” he said, “is no reason why you
shouldn’t begin to do so now!” To which Lewis as merrily agreed. “For in order
to be interested in things,” the other continued more gravely, “it is only
necessary to see them; and I believe I am not wrong in saying that you are one
of the privileged beings to whom the seeing eye has been given.”
Lewis
blushed his agreement, and his interlocutor continued:
“You are one of those who have been on the road to Damascus.”
“On the road? I’ve been to the place itself!” the wanderer
exclaimed, bursting with the particulars of his travels; and then blushed more
deeply at the perception that the other’s use of the name had of course been
figurative.
The
young Englishman’s face lit up. “You’ve been to Damascus—literally been there yourself? But that may
be almost as interesting, in its quite different way, as the formation of
clouds or lichens. For the present,” he continued with a gesture toward the
mountain, “I must devote myself to the extremely inadequate rendering of some
of those delicate aiguilles; a bit of drudgery not likely to interest you in
the face of so sublime a scene. But perhaps this evening—if, as I think, we are
staying in the same inn—you will give me a few minutes of your society, and
tell me something of your travels.
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