<h2 class='c007'>XVIII</h2></div>
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<p class='drop-capi0_5'>
“This is Granada—Granada—Granada—and
we are living
in the Alhambra—somehow
I always pictured the
Alhambra as a mere palace,
not as a whole military
town where thousands lived; and to be
actually domiciled in one of its old streets—its
old, steep, narrow, crooked streets—I
don’t quite realize it, do you?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I shall feel more romantic when I have
cleaned up—and some one has stolen my
pipe.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Oh, I hate you!” said Catalina, but she
forgot him in a moment.</p>
<p class='c000'>She had persuaded Mrs. Rothe to go to a
pension instead of a hotel—she had heard
of one frequented mainly by artists—and
with less difficulty than she had anticipated,
for it was the season of travelling Americans,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>and her erring but sensitive chaperon was
weary of being stared at. The front windows
of the pension looked upon a street
whose paving-stones and walls had echoed
the tramp of Moorish feet for nearly 1000
years, and are still as eloquent of that indomitable
race as if the Spanish conquerors
had never passed under the Gate of Justice.
In an angle at the back of the house was a
garden with a long, latticed window in its
high wall, and beyond were the great shade-trees
of Alhambra Park. There was a sound
of running water and the hum of drowsy
insects, but it seemed as quiet as a necropolis
after the long flight from the station behind
the jingling mules into Granada, and the
following drive over the rough streets of the
city up to the heights of the Alhambra.</p>
<p class='c000'>Catalina’s room had windows on both
street and garden, and she could look down
into Over’s room in the other side of the
angle, on the floor below. The garden, although
the kitchen opened upon it, was full
of sweet-smelling flowers and rustic chairs,
and at one end was a long table where a
man sat painting. There were no palms
<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>here, for Granada is 2000 feet above the
Mediterranean and the eternal snows are
on the Sierras behind her.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I suppose, then,” said Catalina, after a
half-hour’s dreaming, “that you don’t mind
if I go for a walk without you?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Oh, do wait! I’m quite fit now.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I’ll meet you down in the street.”</p>
<p class='c000'>On her way through the quaint, irregular
house she met a tall, fine-looking girl, who
half smiled and bowed as if welcoming her
to the pension. For a moment Catalina
wondered if by any chance her family could
have bought out the Spanish proprietors,
but dismissed the thought. The girl was
not only unmistakably American, but of the
independent class. She wore a blue veil
about the edge of her large hat, and her
ashen hair in a single deep curve on her
forehead. Her white shirt-waist and white
duck skirt were adjusted with a perfection
of detail that suggested the habit of a maid
or of time and concentrated thought. Her
features were good, and in spite of a hint of
selfishness and rigidity about the mouth,
and a pair of rather cold gray eyes, her smile
<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>was very sweet. But her claim to distinction
was in her grooming, her beauty mien, and
in her subtle air of gracious patronage.</p>
<p class='c000'>“She looks like a princess and yet not
quite like a lady,” thought Catalina. “What
can she be?”</p>
<p class='c000'>Over joined her, and as the two gray,
harmonious figures walked down the street
Catalina turned suddenly and looked at the
pension. The girl in white was leaning from
one of the upper windows. But this time
the cool gray eyes had no message for one
of her own sex. They dwelt upon the Englishman’s
military and distinguished back.
Catalina thrilled to the vague music of unrest
deep in some unexplored nook of her
being. The second response was a snapping
eye which she turned upon Over.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I met an American girl as I was coming
out that I have taken a dislike to,” she announced.
“She has a most absurd patronizing
manner, and looks as if she were trying
to be the great lady but couldn’t quite make
it. I prefer the Moultons, who are frankly
suburban.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I thought the Moultons very jolly—poor
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>souls. I suppose they have reached the
haven of an Atlantic liner by this.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Did you see that girl?” asked Catalina,
sharply.</p>
<p class='c000'>“What girl? Oh, in the pension, just
now. I passed a rather stunning girl on
the stairs—but there are so many girls!
Shall we wander about outside a bit before
getting the tickets?”</p>
<p class='c000'>The great red towers of the Alhambra
were before them, and Catalina forgot the
Unknown. There happened to be no one
else in the Plaza de los Aljibes as they entered
it, and the afternoon was very warm
and still. They lingered between the hedges
of myrtle, the flower best beloved of the
Moor, and disdaining the upstart palace of
Charles V. looked wonderingly at the featureless
wall that hid so much beauty, and in
its time had secluded from the vulgar the
daily life and gorgeous state of the most
picturesque court in Europe, and such
harems of varied loveliness as never will be
seen again. Only the Tower of Comares,
rising sheer from the northern wall of the
Assabica Hill, is as visible from the plaza, as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>from the courts, of whose life it was once a
part.</p>
<p class='c000'>“It was from that window that the Sultana
Ayxa la Horra, the mother of Boabdil
el Chico, let him down to the Darro with a
rope made of shawls so that he could escape
from Granada before his dreadful old father
murdered him,” volunteered Catalina. “But
of course you have read all about it—there
never was a more delicious book than <cite>The
Conquest of Granada</cite>.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Never heard of it, and am densely ignorant
of the whole thing. You will have
to coach me, as usual.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Then I suppose you don’t know that we
should have no Alhambra to-day—hardly one
stone on another—if it hadn’t been for Irving—an
American! How do you like that?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“You know I have no race jealousy, and I
had just as lief it had been Irving as any
other Johnny. What difference does it
make, anyhow? We have the Alhambra.
It’s like bothering about who wrote Shakespeare’s
plays.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“That doesn’t interest you?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Not a bit. The plays don’t much, for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>that matter. I’m glad our literature has
them, but all that sort of speculation seems
to me a crying waste of time and mental
energy. Let’s have the lecture. What did
you say your black’s name was?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Black! Boabdil had beautiful golden
hair and blue eyes.” And she sketched the
vacillating fate of that ill-starred young
monarch while they sat on a bench opposite
the great façade of the Alcazaba, that
once impregnable citadel swarming with
turbaned Moors. To Catalina they were
almost visible to-day, so vivid was her historical
sense; and, as ever, she caught Over
in the rush of her enthusiasm. He always
invited these little disquisitions, less for the
information, which he usually forgot, than
for the pleasure of watching the changing
glow on Catalina’s so often immobile face.
Moreover, she was invariably amiable when
roaming through history. Her voice, in
spite of its little Western accent, was soft
and rich and lingered in his ear long after
she had fallen into a silence which presented
a contemptuous front to such masculine artfulness
as he possessed.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>To-day, after they had passed through
the little door of the Alcazaba, she fell
abruptly from garrulity into a state of apparent
dumbness; but Over walked contentedly
beside her in the warm and fragrant
silence of the ruin. Except for the
ramparts and the two great watch-towers
where the Moor had contemplated for so
many anxious months the vast army and
glittering camp of Ferdinand and Isabella
on the vega beyond Granada, and the sheer
sides of the rock on which the fortress was
built, there was little to suggest that it had
once been the warlike guardian of the palace.
It rather looked as if it had been the pleasure-gardens
of a pampered harem, with its
winding walks between terraces of bright
flowers, its fountains, overgrown, like the
fragments of wall, with ivy, and its grottos,
always cool, and of a delicious fragrance;
while from every point there was a glimpse
of snow mountain or sunburned plain.</p>
<p class='c000'>After they had rambled in silence for an
hour Catalina emerged from her centres and
suggested that they go up to the platform of
the Torre de la Vela. From that high point,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>famous for having been the first in Granada
to fly the pennons of Aragon and Castile,
they saw the perfect rim of hills and mountains
that curve about the city and its vega.
On the tremendous ridges and peaks of the
Sierras, no less than on the blooming slopes
of the lower ranges, there once were watch-towers
and fortified towns, the outer rind
of the pomegranate which the Spaniards
stripped off bit by bit until they reached
the luscious pith that so aptly symbolized
the delights of the Moorish stronghold. The
fortresses are gone, but the eternal snows
still glitter, the Xenil is as silvery as of yore,
while the sloping city of Granada itself presents
an indescribably ancient appearance,
with its millions of tiles, baked and faded
by the centuries into a soft, pinkish gray, its
streets so narrow that one seems to look
down upon a vast roof, from which crosses
and towers rise like strange growths that
mar the harmony of a scene otherwise perfect
in line and delicate color. The solitary
tower of the cathedral rises from the mass
of roofs like a mere monument above the
tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, who, for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>all they lie in consecrated stone, have ever
about them the phantom of the ancient
mosque.</p>
<p class='c000'>Above the roofs the very air was pink;
and out on the shimmering vega to the
western hills the sun was seeking to pay his
evening visit. On the right, or north, of the
Alhambra, across the river Darro, was the
Albaicin on a steep mountain spur, once
both sister and rival of the palace hill,
“the whole surrounded by high walls three
leagues in circuit, with twelve gates, and
fortified by 1030 towers.” It was, in general,
faithful to Boabdil el Chico, Catalina
informed her companion, thirsty for
knowledge, and was the scene of terrific
battles between that whim of destiny and
his unrighteous old father Muley Aben
Hassan. To-day it is given over to thousands
of gypsies, who are faithful to nothing
but their nefarious and ofttimes murderous
instincts. But by far the most imposing objects
in the extensive panorama, after the
snow mountains, were the ruined towers
of the Alhambra itself. Besides the three
in the foreground, and Comares, or romantic
<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>memories, was a line in varying stages of
picturesque decay, extending along the precipitous
bluff overhanging the Darro. Between
were gardens of glowing flowers, narrow
streets, ruined walls, wild patches of
wood where the cliff-side jutted; and on the
south side of the Alhambra hill, parallel
with the Darro, the dense park of elms
planted by the Duke of Wellington.</p>
<p class='c000'>“There is the town of Santa Fé,” said
Catalina, pointing to a speck on the edge
of the vega. “Ferdinand and Isabella caused
it to be built when they were in camp. The
articles of Granada’s capitulation were signed
there, and their contract with Columbus.
Over there in the Sierras, somewhere, is
the spot where Boabdil turned to take a last
look at Granada, and was reproached by his
mother—who was far more of a man than
he was—for weeping like a woman for what
he could not defend like a man. When I
was a child my mother used to sing me to
sleep with ‘The Last Sigh of the Moor.’”</p>
<p class='c000'>And she suddenly trilled forth with an
abandonment of sorrow which startled Over
more than any phase she had yet exhibited.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>“<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">‘Ay, nunca, nunca, nunca mas veré!’</span>
That means, ‘Aye, never, never, never more
to see,’” she translated, practically. “How
close it brings the island of Santa Catalina,
undiscovered by the tourist then, and our
lonely little inn! My mother always sang
me to sleep in a big rocking-chair, and my
father sat by a student-lamp and read,
frowning until she had finished. It all
seems a thousand years ago.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Did you miss your parents much?”
asked Over, curiously.</p>
<p class='c000'>For a second it seemed to him that he saw
a window open in the depths of her eyes.
Then she turned her back on him. “I
don’t live in the past,” she said. “Let us
go down into the park. It will be dusk in a
few moments, and the nightingales will
sing.”</p>
<p class='c000'>They lingered awhile among the terraces
watching the sun go down, then descended
through the Gate of Justice into the park.
There the steep aisles were dim, there was
the murmur of running water, and in a few
moments the nightingales burst forth into
song.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>Over and Catalina sat down on a grassy
bank. There appeared to be no one in the
park but themselves. The man looked up,
half expecting to see turbaned heads and
flashing eyes on the towers and ramparts
above; or the glittering cavalcade of Ferdinand
and Isabella crowding through the Gate
of Justice; or the faithless wife of Boabdil
stealing out to her fatal tryst with Hammet
of the Abencerrages. In the warm duskiness
of the wood under the watch-towers
and ramparts, and the fountain of Charles V.
beside them, the music of nightingale and
distant waters thrilling the soft, voluptuous
air, it was easy to imagine that the walls
of Granada had yielded to neither the Spaniard
nor to time. They were the most
romantic moments he had ever known; and
the Alhambra is the most romantic ruin on
earth, the one where the modern world
seems but a bit of prophetic history, and
400 years are as naught.</p>
<p class='c000'>But there came a moment when he retraced
his flight and stole a glance at Catalina.
If she were as thrilled with the sense
of his nearness as he with hers in these glades
<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>of teeming memories, she gave no sign.
With her head thrown back and eyes half
closed she appeared to be drinking in the
delicious notes of the nightingales. She
was quite as beautiful as any of the captive
sultanas who had whiled away the hours for
their fierce lords in the mysterious apartments
above—and startlingly like. Such
women, white of skin, dark and sphinxlike
of eye, with delicate features and tender
forms, were sought throughout the East to
tempt the sated appetite of the Moorish tyrants.
Just so had women with wistful, upturned
profiles listened to the dulcet notes
of the nightingale floating down from the
trees beside Comares into the spacious courts
beneath their narrow windows, dreaming of
the lovers they would never see. How like
she was! In looks, yes; but he laughed outright
as his fancy pictured Catalina as even
the reigning favorite of a harem where a
mistaken monarch sought to filch her of
her liberty and bend her will. His abrupt,
half-conscious laughter rent the spell of
the evening, and Catalina sprang to her
feet.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>“I forgot to ask the dinner-hour,” she
said. “But it must be time. I am starved.”</p>
<p class='c000'>She walked rapidly up the hill, and Over
followed, conscious that he had thrown away
one of the exquisite moments of life, and
hardly knowing, now that the intoxication
had passed, whether he would have it so or
not.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>
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