<h2 class='c007'>XIX</h2></div>
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They found the guests of
the pension at dinner in
the garden. There were
ten or twelve people at
the table, and Over and
Catalina were conscious of
a conspicuous entrance; and a certain familiar
lighting of the eye in those facing the
door heralded them as a distinguished young
couple on their honeymoon. Catalina, whose
spirits had ebbed far out, frowned and took
the vacant chair beside Mrs. Rothe, that at
least she might not be obliged to talk to a
man, and Over sat himself beside the husband.
In a moment Catalina saw her mistake;
there was but one person between her
cavalier and the blonde young woman who
had inspired her with distrust.</p>
<p class='c000'>The American girl sat at the head of the
table with the air of a hostess entertaining
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>her guests. She was perhaps twenty-six,
but she had the aplomb of a woman who not
only has been a gracious hostess for many
years, but has exacted and received much
tribute. She wore a thin black gown which
became her fairness marvellously well, and
had dressed her smooth, ashen hair both
high and low. Her long back was straight
without effort, and if her shoulders were a
shade too broad her waist and hips were less
mature. Everybody else looked dowdy in
comparison, even Mrs. Rothe suffering an
eclipse.</p>
<p class='c000'>But if her toilette was triumphant, her
manner was more so. On one side of her
sat a Frenchman, on the other a Spaniard,
opposite Captain Over a German, and she
addressed each in his language, taking care
that none should suffer at the expense of
the other; and it was manifest that they all
adored her. She was, in fact, a brilliant
figure, and if her sweet smile was somewhat
mechanical, and her fine, gray eyes keen and
passionless, her swains were too dazzled by
her manner and her handsome appearance
to detect the flaws.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>Catalina cocked her ears, but found neither
wisdom nor cleverness in the remarks that
fell from the thin, well-cut lips. It was the
girl’s linguistic accomplishment, her bright
manner of saying nothing, and willingness
to hear men talk, that were responsible for
the delusion that she was a brilliant woman.
Catalina’s curiosity could no longer contain
itself, and she turned abruptly to Mrs.
Rothe and spoke for the first time.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Who is she?” she asked. “Have you
heard?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Her name is Holmes, and I heard her
sister, that dowdy little artist over there,
call her Edith.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I wonder who—what—she is?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Nobody in particular, I should think.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“But she—she—dominates everything.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“That is the American girl—a certain
type. You’ll see a great many of them if
you go about enough. This specimen was
born with a respectable amount of good
looks, a high opinion of herself, and some
magnetism. On her way through life she
has acquired what some call <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">autorité</span>, others
bluff. She probably has no position to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>speak of at home—she never would wear
her hair in that Florodora lump on her forehead
if she had—but she has made a great
deal of running in summer and winter resorts,
and in Europe. The study of her life
is twofold: dress and how to please men—while
deluding them that they are graciously
permitted to please her. Her knack for
languages stands her in good stead, her tact
is almost—never quite—perfect; for she too
often makes the mistake of snubbing women.
She knows the value of every glance,
she has a genius for small talk and dress—probably
she has not an income of a hundred
and fifty dollars a month, and her sister has
to dress like a sweep to help her out—and I
should be willing to stake all I have that
she dances to perfection. She is the sort
of girl that men delight to make a belle of,
not only because she flatters them and is
always ‘all there,’ but because she does
them so much credit. But they usually are
quite content to swell her train, and forget
to propose. What she is on the lookout for,
of course, is a rich husband; but every year
she becomes more and more the veteran
<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>flirt, more polished and mechanical, and less
seductive, and will end by taking any one she
can get.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“She is a type, then. I fancied her
unique.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Dear me! There are hundreds like her.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“All the same, I can’t take my eyes off
her. She fascinates me. I don’t like her—but
I think I’d like to be like her.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Heaven forbid! She is a very second-rate
person, my dear, and your beauty is
real, while hers is only a matter of effect.
She fascinates you because she is young and
successful, and you see her like for the first
time. But she is nothing in the world but
a man’s woman, and while as chaste as an
Amazon—I suppose Amazons were chaste—has
probably been engaged several times—the
type is sentimental—I might add, experimental.
I caught Lolly hanging over
her this afternoon, and she will doubtless
put him through his paces. It won’t hurt
him; she is not the type that men die for—not
even what the French call an <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">allumeuse</span>—just
a plain American flirt.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“She has style,” sighed Catalina.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>“Of a sort,” said the New-Yorker, indifferently.
Then she turned suddenly to
Catalina with the charming sympathy of
glance and manner that blinded her friends
to the poor ruin of her face. “How you
could rout her if you would!” she said.
“Don’t you know, my dear, that the woman
who receives that sort of promiscuous adulation
is always the woman who wants it,
who works for it? Given a decent amount
of natural charm, and any determined
woman can be a belle. But it means more
work and self-repression, more patience with
bores as well as with the wary, than you
would ever give to it. And it means popularity
with men and nothing more; no depth
of accomplishment or interest in anything
vital; and under that assumption of glorified
independence she is really a slave, afraid to
relax her vigilance lest she lose her hold,
never daring to be absent-minded or careless
in her dress. Of all the girls I have ever
known you have the least reason to envy
any one—so banish the cloud!”</p>
<p class='c000'>Catalina glowed, and reminded herself
of the opportunities thrust upon her to be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>the belle of a season that she had spurned
with less than politeness; but in a moment
her brows met and she lost her appetite.
Over had been drawn into the magnetic current
at the head of the table. Miss Holmes
was leaning forward as if graciously permitting
the stranger to enter, yet herself lured
by the wisdom—it was a comment on the
narrowness of Moorish streets—that flowed
from his lips.</p>
<p class='c000'>“What idiots men are!” thought Catalina,
viciously. “I suppose if I hung on his
words like that he’d not hesitate a minute
about being in love with me. But I’d like
to see myself!”</p>
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<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
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