for it was in september that, upon the threshold of the golden pomegranate, at manneville in poictesme, monsieur louis quillan paused, and gave the contented little laugh which had of late become habitual with him. "we are en fête to-night, it appears. has the king, then, by any chance dropped in to supper with us, nelchen?"
silently the girl bestowed a provisional pat upon one fold of the white table-cloth and regarded the result with critical approval. all being in blameless order, she moved one of the candlesticks the width of a needle. the table was now garnished to the last resource of the golden pomegranate: the napery was snow, the glassware and the cutlery shone with a frosty glitter, and the great bowl of crimson roses afforded the exact splurge of vainglorious color and glow she had designed. accordingly, being now at leisure, nelchen now came toward monsieur quillan, lifting her lips to his precisely as a child might have done.
"not quite the king, my louis. none the less i am sure that monseigneur is an illustrious person. he arrived not two hours ago—" she told how monseigneur had come in a coach, very splendid; even his lackeys were resplendent. monseigneur would stay overnight and would to-morrow push on, to beauséant. he had talked with her,—a kindly old gentleman, but so stately that all the while she had been the tiniest thought afraid of him. he must be some exalted nobleman, nelchen considered,—a marquis at the very least.
meantime diminutive louis quillan had led her to the window-seat beneath the corridor, and sat holding one plump trifle of a hand, the, while her speech fluttered bird-like from this topic to that; and be regarded nelchen thorn with an abysmal content. the fates, he considered, had been commendably generous to him.
so he leaned back from her a little, laughing gently, and marked what a quaint and eager child it was. he rejoiced that she was beautiful, and triumphed still more to know that even if she had not been beautiful it would have made slight difference to him. the soul of nelchen was enough. yet, too, it was desirable this soul should be appropriately clad, that she should have, for instance, these big and lustrous eyes,—plaintive eyes, such as a hamadryad would conceivably possess, since they were beyond doubt the candid and appraising eyes of some woodland creature, and always seemed to find the world not precisely intimidating, perhaps, yet in the ultimate a very curious place where one trod gingerly. still, this nelchen was a practical body, prone to laughter,—as in nature, any person would be whose mouth was all rotund and tiny scarlet curves. why, it was, to a dimple, the mouth which françois boucher bestowed on his sleek goddesses! louis quillan was sorry for poor boucher painting away yonder at a noisy garish versailles, where he would never see that perfect mouth the artist had so often dreamed of. no, not in the sweet flesh at least; lips such as these were unknown at versailles….
and but four months ago he had fancied himself to be in love with hélène de puysange, he remembered; and, by and large, he still considered hélène a delightful person. yes, hélène had made him quite happy last spring: and when they found she was with child, and their first plan failed, she had very adroitly played out their comedy to win back gaston in time to avoid scandal. yes, you could not but admire hélène, yet, even so….
"—and he asked me, oh, so many questions about you, louis—"
"about me?" said louis quillan, blankly. he was all circumspection now.
"about my lover, you stupid person. monseigneur assumed, somehow, that i would have a lover or two. you perceive that he at least is not a stupid person." and nelchen tossed her head, with a touch of the provocative.
louis quillan did what seemed advisable. "—and, furthermore, your stupidity is no excuse for rumpling my hair," said nelchen, by and by.
"then you should not pout," replied monsieur quillan. "sanity is entirely too much to require of any man when you pout. besides, your eyes are so big and so bright they bewilder one. in common charity you ought to wear spectacles, nelchen,—in sheer compassion toward mankind."
"monseigneur, also, has wonderful eyes, louis. they are like the stars,—very brilliant and cool and incurious, yet always looking at you as though you were so insignificant that the mere fact of your presuming to exist at all was a trifle interesting."
"like the stars!" louis quillan had flung back the shutter. it was a tranquil evening in september, with no moon as yet, but with a great multitude of lesser lights overhead. "incurious like the stars! they do dwarf one, rather. yet just now i protest to you, infinitesimal man that i am, i half-believe le bon dieu loves us so utterly that he has kindled all those pretty tapers solely for our diversion. he wishes us to be happy, nelchen; and so he has given us the big, fruitful, sweet-smelling world to live in, and our astonishing human bodies to live in, with contented hearts, and with no more vain desires, no loneliness—why, in a word, he has given us each other. oh, beyond doubt, he loves us, my nelchen!"
for a long while the girl was silent. presently she spoke, half-hushed, like one in the presence of sanctity. "i am happy. for these three months i have been more happy than i had thought was permissible on earth. and yet, louis, you tell me that those stars are worlds perhaps like ours,—think of it, my dear, millions and millions of worlds like ours, and on each world perhaps a million of lovers like us! it is true that among them all no woman loves as i do, for that would be impossible. yet think of it, mon ami, how inconsiderable a thing is the happiness of one man and of one woman in this immensity! why, we are less than nothing, you and i! ohé, i am afraid, hideously afraid, louis,—for we are such little folk and the universe is so big. and always the storms go about it, and its lightnings thrust at us, and the waters of it are clutching at our feet, and its laws are not to be changed—oh, it is big and cruel, my dear, and we are adrift in it, we who are so little!"
he again put forth his hand toward her. "what a morbid child it is!" said louis quillan. "i can assure you i have resided in this same universe just twice as long as you, and i find that upon the whole the establishment is very creditably conducted. there arrives, to be sure, an occasional tornado, or perhaps an earthquake, each with its incidental inconveniences. on the other hand, there is every evening a lavishly arranged sunset, like gratis fireworks, and each morning (i am credibly informed) a sunrise of which poets and energetic people are pleased to speak highly; while every year spring comes in, like a cosmical upholsterer, and refurnishes the entire place, and makes us glad to live. nay, i protest to you, this is an excellent world, my nelchen! and likewise i protest to you that in its history there was never a luckier nor a happier man than i."
nelchen considered. "well," she generously conceded; "perhaps, after all, the stars are more like diamonds."
louis quillan chuckled. "and since when were you a connoisseur of diamonds, my dear?"
"of course i have never actually seen any. i would like to, though—yes, louis, what i would really like would be to have a bushelful or so of diamonds, and to marry a duke—only the duke would have to be you, of course,—and to go to court, and to have all the fine ladies very jealous of me, and for them to be very much in love with you, and for you not to care a sou for them, of course, and for us both to see the king." nelchen paused, quite out of breath after this ambitious career in the imaginative.
"to see the king, indeed!" scoffed little louis quillan. "why, we would see only a very disreputable pockmarked wornout lecher if we did."
"still," she pointed out, "i would like to see a king. simply because i never have done so before, you conceive."
"at times, my nelchen, you are effeminate. eve ate the apple for that identical reason. yet what you say is odd, because—do you know?—i once had a friend who was by way of being a sort of king."
nelchen gave a squeal of delight. "and you never told me about him! i loathe you."
louis quillan did what seemed advisable. "—and, furthermore, your loathsomeness is no excuse for rumpling my hair," said nelchen, by and by.
"but there is so little to tell. his father had married the grand duke of noumaria's daughter,—over yonder between silesia and badenburg, you may remember. and so last spring when the grand duke and the prince were both killed in that horrible fire, my friend quite unexpectedly became a king—oh, king of a mere celery-patch, but still a sort of king. figure to yourself, nelchen! they were going to make my poor friend marry the elector of badenburg's daughter,—and victoria von uhm has perfection stamped upon her face in all its odious immaculacy,—and force him to devote the rest of his existence to heading processions and reviewing troops, and signing proclamations, and guzzling beer and sauerkraut. why, he would have been like ovid among the goths, my nelchen!"
"but he could have worn such splendid uniforms!" said nelchen. "and diamonds!"
"you mercenary wretch!" said he. louis quillan then did what seemed advisable; and presently he added, "in any event, the horrified man ran away."
"that was silly of him," said nelchen thorn. "but where did he run to?"
louis quillan considered. "to paradise," he at last decided. "and there he found a disengaged angel, who very imprudently lowered herself to the point of marrying him. and so he lived happily ever afterward. and so, till the day of his death, he preached the doctrine that silliness is the supreme wisdom."
"and he regretted nothing?" nelchen said, after a meditative while.
louis quillan began to laugh. "oh, yes! at times he profoundly regretted
victoria von uhm."
then nelchen gave him a surprise, for the girl bent toward him and leaned one hand upon each shoulder. "diamonds are not all, are they, louis? i thank you, dear, for telling me of what means so much to you. i can understand, i think, because for a long while i have tried to know and care for everything that concerns you."
the little man had risen to his feet. "nelchen—!"
"hush!" said nelchen thorn; "monseigneur is coming down to his supper."