<h2 class='c007'>XXI</h2></div>
<div class='c005'>
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<p class='drop-capi0_5'>
Thus it came about that
the next morning, not long
after dawn, Catalina was
leaning out of her garden
window humming a Spanish
air when Over pushed
aside his curtain and looked up expectantly.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Coffee?” he whispered. She nodded.
He pointed down to a little table in the
window in the wall. They stole like conspirators
through the dark house and down
to the garden. Over was first at the tryst,
and never had he greeted her with such
effusion. He held her hand a moment and
gazed solicitously into her eyes with an entire
absence of humor as he tenderly demanded
if she had been ill or only tired the
night before, and assured her of his disappointment
in being cheated of their walk.
His conscience hurt him, and he felt the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>more penitent as he saw that disapproval
in any of its varied manifestations was not
to be his portion. For Catalina looked
nothing short of angelic. Her eyes were a
trifle heavy, as if with pain, but her beautiful
mouth curled and wreathed with sweetness.
She wore for the first time a white
blouse and a duck skirt, and about her
throat she had knotted a scarlet ribbon.
The fine, soft masses of her hair looked as if
spread with a golden net that caught the
fire of the mounting sun, and she looked
several years younger, fresher, more ingenuous
than Miss Holmes, though older
than herself.</p>
<p class='c000'>She ground the coffee while he boiled the
water, and when he alluded, with an enthusiasm
that was almost sentimental, to their
first coffee-making in Tarragona, recalling
the solitary palm against the blue sea, her
face lit up and her lips parted. So, all in a
night, had their attitude of almost excessive
naturalness towards each other dissolved
into the historic duel of the man and the
maid. Both were acutely sensible of the
change, yet neither resented it, for it heralded
<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>the new chapter and its unfolded mysteries.
Catalina had the advantage, for she understood
and he did not; he only felt the subtle
change, and the conviction that she was
even more provocative than during the
episode of the mantilla.</p>
<p class='c000'>“No one in the world can make such good
coffee,” she said, politely, as she sipped hers
and looked through the bars at the dark
arbors of the park. “I still had rather a
headache when I awoke, but this is all I
need. Did you go for a walk last night?”</p>
<p class='c000'>She held her breath, but he replied,
promptly: “I walked round a bit with Miss
Holmes—that fair girl who sat at the head
of the table. But the moon rises late and
there was nothing to see. I was in bed by
ten o’clock. I hope you will be quite fit
to-night so that we can see the Alhambra
by moonlight together. I am very keen on
that.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“So am I,” and she gave him an enchanting
smile, but without a trace of self-consciousness.
“How do you find Miss Holmes?
I long to meet her. She attracts me very
much.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>“Oh, she is very jolly. Can talk about
anything and has the knack of your race
and sex for putting a fellow quite at his
ease. You are certain to like her. She
has given up her home life and wanders
about Europe for the sake of her sister,
who is an artist; has a deuced fine nature,
I should say. What?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Nothing. Shall we take a walk? We
can’t get the cards for the palace for an hour
or two yet.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I hoped you would feel like a jolly long
walk this morning. We really had no exercise
yesterday, and after that ride from
Madrid I feel as if I’d like to be on my legs
for a week.”</p>
<p class='c000'>They walked for two hours along one of
the country roads behind the Alhambra,
racing occasionally, glimpsing many beautiful
vistas, lingering for a while before the
Generalife, the summer palace of the Moorish
kings; Catalina gloating over the profusion
and variety of the flowers, not only in the
famous garden, but cropping out of every
crevice of the walls themselves. As they
sat in the warm sunshine of one of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>terraces she gave him another little lecture
on the history of Granada in a curiously exultant
voice that made him oblivious of the
useful information she imparted. Never
had he been so attractive to her as in this
new rôle of the mere man endeavoring to
propitiate his goddess, and happiness bubbled
and sparkled within her; if by chance
their eyes met her lashes played havoc with
the expression of hers. She radiantly felt
that he belonged to her; she obliterated the
future and forgot the seductress. She informed
Over that it was Granada, Spain,
the golden morning, that made her happy,
and was careful to remove any impression
he might harbor that she was making an
effort to please him; for pride and a diabolical
cunning stood her in the stead of
experience. She merely had put her moody,
undisciplined side to rest and exhibited in
high relief her luminous, exultant girlhood;
and Over stared and said little.</p>
<p class='c000'>But she was determined that if he did
address her it should not be in direct sequence
to her wiles, for she had a passionate wish
to be sought, to be pursued. She would
<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>continue to dazzle him with the jewels of
her nature and make him forget the weeds
and clay that had inspired him with uneasiness,
but she would go no further.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Come!” she exclaimed, springing to her
feet. “We can get into the Alhambra now,
and I simply cannot wait any longer.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Do you know,” she said, as they walked
down the hill towards the fortress, “I have
had an uneasy sense of being watched ever
since I came here? I was conscious of it
several times while we were exploring yesterday,
and last night as I sat by my window
for a few moments before I went to
bed”—she stammered, caught her breath,
and went on—“I felt it again; and in the
night I woke up and heard two men talking
under my window. I suppose there was
nothing remarkable in that, but they stood
there a long time, and one of the voices,
although it was pitched very low, sounded
dimly familiar. This morning, just before
we reached the high-road I had again the
sense of being watched—I am very sensitive
to a powerful gaze.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Over, who was probably afraid of nothing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>under the sun, was looking at her in alarm.
“You know I have always said that you
must not go out alone in Spain,” he said,
authoritatively. “And there is danger quite
aside from your beauty. Not only are all
Americans supposed by the ignorant, rapacious
lower classes of Europe to be phenomenally
wealthy, but Californians in particular.
And doubtless California is a legend
with the Spaniard. I am not given to
melodrama, but there is a desperate lot
over in the Albaicin.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I don’t see what could happen to me in
broad daylight, and certainly I am not going
to run after you or ‘Lolly’ every time I want
to go out. What a bore!”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Not for me. I wish you would promise—”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well, I’ll be careful,” she said, lightly.
“I have no desire for adventures of that
sort. They must be horribly dirty over in
the Albaicin, and after our experience with
Spanish banks it might be some time before
I could be ransomed.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The Albaicin might be dirty and abandoned
to wickedness, but they decided, as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>they leaned over the parapet of the Plaza
de los Aljibes before entering the palace,
there was no doubt of its picturesqueness.
Far beneath them sparkled the Darro, and
beyond it, parallel with the Alhambra Hill,
rising from the plain almost to the very top
of the steep mountain spur, was another
vast roof of pinkish-gray tiles. But here
they could distinguish one or two narrow
streets, mere cuts in a bed of rock, from their
perch, and high balconies full of flowers between
the Moorish arches, a glimpse of
bright interiors, the towers and patios of a
great convent where the nuns walked among
the orange-trees and the pomegranates, the
roses and geraniums. Not a sound rose
from the ancient city; it might have been as
dead as the turbulent race that made its
history. It lay steeping, swimming, in the
pink light that seemed to rise like a vapor
from its roofs. It looked like some huge
stone tablet of antiquity, with hieroglyphics
raised that the blind might read.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I shall come and look at this in every
light,” said Catalina, “so if I disappear you
will know where to find me.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>They entered the palace through the little
door in the non-committal wall, and, after
bribing the guide to let them alone, lingered
for a time in the Court of Myrtles, where the
orange-trees no longer grow beside the pool,
but where the arcades and overhanging
gallery are as graceful as when the court
was the centre of life of the Comares Palace,
first in this group of palaces. Then, through
an arcade that abutted into a fairy-like
pavilion, they entered the Court of Lions.</p>
<p class='c000'>Probably the Alhambra is the one ruin in
the world where the most ardent expectations
are gratified. From a reasonable distance
the restored arabesque patterns on the
walls, like Oriental carpets of many colors,
and raised in stucco, present the illusion
of originals; and all else, except the tiles
gaudy in the primal colors, on the many
roofs which project over the arcades into
the courts, and the marble floors, are as the
Africans left it. The twelve hideous lions
upholding the double fountain in the famous
court must have been designed by
artists that had never penetrated the African
jungle nor visited a menagerie, and, as the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>only ugly objects amid so much light and
graceful beauty, serve as an accent rather
than a blot. Upholding the arches of the
arcades that surround the court are 128
pillars so light and slender, so mellowed
by time, that they look far more like
old ivory than marble. Above the arches
the multicellular carving again looks like
old ivory, and through them are seen the
gay convolutions of the arabesques on the
walls of the corridor. Above the cluster
of shafts at the eastern end, which forms
one of the two pavilions, the florid roofs
multiply and rise to a dome of all the
colors. Overhanging the north side of the
court—in the second story—is a long line
of low windows. They once gave light and
glimpses of history to the captives of the
king’s harem.</p>
<p class='c000'>“You must half close your eyes and imagine
silken curtains waving between those
slender pillars, which were meant to simulate
tent-poles,” said Catalina. “And Oriental
rugs and divans in those arcades, and
the lounging gentlemen of the court, and
turbaned soldiers keeping guard, and women
<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>eternally peeping through the jalousies
above. They must have seen this court red
a thousand times: Muley Aben Hassan had
two of his sons beheaded by this very fountain
to please a new sultana; and when they
weren’t beheading under orders they were
flying into passions and killing one another.
And the women could look straight into
that room over there where Boabdil had the
Abencerrages killed because one of them,
as I told you, fell in love with his sultana.
Do you see it all?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I confess I don’t,” said Over, laughing.
“But I see quite enough—too much would
make me apprehensive. How would you
have liked that life?” he asked, curiously,
as they crossed to the Hall of the Abencerrages.
“I mean to have been the sultana
of the moment, of course, not one of those
captives up there.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I should probably have been nothing
but devil,” replied Catalina, dryly. “It
would have given me some pleasure to stick
a knife into Muley Aben Hassan, and to
have applied a sharp stick to Boabdil.”</p>
<p class='c000'>They stood for a few moments in the lofty
<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>room with its domed ceiling like a cave of
stalactites, its fountain and ugly brown
stains, and then Catalina shuddered and
ran out.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I can stand courts where murder has
been done,” she said, “for the sky always
seems to clean things up. But that room
is full of a sinister atmosphere. I should
commit murder myself if I stayed in it too
long.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The impression vanished and she moved
her head slowly on the long column of her
throat, smiling with her eyes, which met
Over’s.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I hate ugly fancies and atmospheres,”
she said, softly. “And the rest of the
palace looks like a pleasure house; only I
wish there were furniture and curtains—it
seems to me they could be reproduced as
successfully as the arabesques and roofs.
Now one receives the impression that they
slept and sat on the floor.”</p>
<p class='c000'>They were entering the Room of the two
Sisters, opposite the Hall of the Abencerrages,
once the chief room of the sultana’s
winter suite. There are two slabs of marble
<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>in the floor that look like recumbent tombstones.
What their original purpose was
legend sayeth not, unless it was to give an
easy designation to a room which needs no
such trivial spur to the memory. For the
ceiling of this great apartment is one of the
curiosities of the world. The dome is like
a vast bee-hive, its 5000 cells wrought
with the very colors of the flowers from
which the ambitious builders brought their
honey sweets. It might be a sort of Moorish
heaven for the souls of bees, those tiny
amazons who alone have demonstrated the
superiority of the female over the male.</p>
<p class='c000'>Catalina mentioned this conceit, and Over
laughed grimly.</p>
<p class='c000'>“When women are willing to do all the
work—” he began, and then lifted his hat.
Miss Holmes entered the room from the sala
beyond.</p>
<p class='c000'>She came forward with a smile of welcome,
her manner quite that of a chatelaine welcoming
the stranger to the halls of her
ancestors.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I am so glad I happen to be here,” she
said, “I know you are people whom guides
<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>only bore. I have lived in the Alhambra
three weeks now, and am thinking of offering
my services at the office; but you may
have them for nothing.” She included Catalina
in her smiling gaze. “I hope your
headache is better,” she added, politely.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Yes, thank you,” replied Catalina, who
longed to scratch her. She reminded herself
of her new rôle, however, and gave her
a dazzling smile that filled her eyes with
warmth and accented the gray coldness of
the orbs, which, like her own, faced Over.
“How I envy you for having been here three
weeks!” she said. “I feel as if I couldn’t
wait to know, to be familiar with it all.
Do you live in Spain?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“If you call boarding in pensions frequented
by artists of all the nationalities,
living in a country, I have been here a
year.”</p>
<p class='c000'>She piloted them through the rooms, reciting
the information that lies in Baedeker,
adroitly compelled by Catalina’s intelligent
questions to address the lecture to her. By
the time they reached the queen’s boudoir
in the Torre del Peinador, Catalina noted
<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>that the guide chafed visibly at being compelled
to ignore the man, and it was evident
by her wandering glances and the inflections
of her voice that she not only admired
the Englishman’s good looks, but appreciated
his social superiority over the gentlemen
of the brush who so often were her
portion at pensions. Here, however, it was
obviously the woman who would be interested
in the perforated stone slab in a corner
of the floor, which may have been built to
perfume a queen or merely to warm her,
and as she and Catalina disputed amiably,
Over leaned on the stone wall of the narrow
balcony and looked at the splendid view of
Albaicin and mountain.</p>
<p class='c000'>Then Catalina whimsically determined to
give the girl the opportunity she craved.
Her interest in the conversation perceptibly
waning, Miss Holmes was enabled to transfer
her attentions to the man, and, with battery
of eye and glance, convey to him her
pleasure in dropping history for human nature.
When his attention was absorbed Catalina
descended softly into the long arcade
which overhangs the Darro, and, after wandering
<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>about at its extremity for a few moments
and getting her bearings, sat down on
the window-seat that looks upon the Patio
de la Reja, with its neglected fountain and
cypresses. They must pass her on their way
to the Sala de los Embajadores. She was not
sorry to be alone, and felt happy and secure,
experiencing a passing moment of contempt
for men in general, so easy were they to
manage—a mood which assails every charming
woman at times, and even on the heels
of doubt and despair. But Catalina’s spirit
was too buoyant not to comprehend ideality
in its flight, and she stared unseeingly at
the dead walls and saw only what she had
divined in Over.</p>
<p class='c000'>She waited a long while. Coming out of
her reverie with a start, she wondered how
long it was and drew out her watch. It was
half-past eleven, and, making a rapid calculation,
she was driven to conclude that her
cavalier had been absorbed by the enchantress
for fully an hour.</p>
<p class='c000'>She was too proud to go after them, but
her fingers curved round the window-seat in
the effort to restrain herself, and her spirits
<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>plunged into an abyss of dull despair, emerging
only on jealous and torturing wings to
drop again. She realized the mistake she
had made in the exuberance of her happy
self-confidence; for a girl like Miss Holmes
can make heavy running in an hour. On
the steamer and in the various pensions
where the Moultons had lingered she had
often seen what no doubt was this same
type of girl retire into a corner with the man
she had marked for her own and talk—or
listen—hour after hour; and Catalina had
speculated upon their subjects, wondering
that one human being could interest another
for so long a time without the exterior
aids of travel. The man had always
looked as engrossed as the girl, and Catalina
was forced to conclude that the mysterious
arts were effective, and wished it were not
forbidden to listen behind a curtain, but
only that curiosity might be satisfied—she
scorned arts herself. Now she wondered
distractedly what this ashen-haired houri
was talking about to make Over forget his
very manners; but none of the long, desultory
conversations, followed by the longer
<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>silences peculiar to her experience with him,
threw light on the weapons of this accomplished
ruler of hearts; although the bare
idea that they might be leaning over the
parapet side by side in a familiar silence
brought Catalina to her feet and turned her
sharply towards the arcade. But at that
moment she saw them coming.</p>
<p class='c000'>Over was a little ahead of his companion,
who was smiling with her lips, and he came
forward with some anxiety in his eyes.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I only just missed you,” he said. “I
thought you were there in the room lost in
one of your silent moods. When did you
come down?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Only a little while ago,” said Catalina,
sweetly, and she saw the eyes of the other
girl flash with something like fear. She also
noted that her cheeks were flushed.</p>
<p class='c000'>“You have got a little sunburned,” she
said, with concern for a fine complexion in
her voice. “It is much cooler down here.
Have we time to go into the Sala de los Embajadores?”</p>
<p class='c000'>And Over was made subtly aware of the
second-rate quality of Miss Holmes’s accent.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>They entered the immense room, whose
dome is like a mighty jewel hollowed and
carved within, where Boabdil drew his last
breath as king of Granada; and before Miss
Holmes could open her lips, Catalina, with
all the picturesqueness of vocabulary she
could command at will, described several
of the scenes of which this most historical
room in the Alhambra was the theatre; not
only throwing into low relief the academic
meagreness of the other girl’s knowledge,
but insinuating its supererogation. Meanwhile
she missed nothing. She saw the girl’s
color fade, her expression of almost supercilious
self-confidence give place to anxiety, and
as she turned away and stared out of one of
the deep windows, it rushed over Catalina
sickeningly that Over, in the span of an hour,
had captivated her heart as well as her fancy.
He must have made himself very fascinating!
Catalina bungled her centuries; Miss Holmes
in love would make a formidable rival.</p>
<p class='c000'>The girl turned suddenly with mouth
wholly supercilious and the light of war in
her eyes. Catalina’s face was as impassive
as a mask. Miss Holmes walked deliberately
<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>towards Over, her mouth relaxing and
humor in her eye, but Catalina was too
quick for her. She might be an infant in
the eyes of this accomplished flirt, but she
had imagination and a brain capable under
stress of abnormal rapidity of action. She
had pulled out her watch and was facing Over.</p>
<p class='c000'>“The palace closes at twelve—for the
morning.” she said, without a quiver of
nervousness in her voice. “It wants but a
few minutes of twelve, and we never care for
luncheon until one. Would you care to go
down and make the usual futile attempt at
the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">poste restante</span>—or are you tired?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Tired? Let us go, by all means. I
have had exactly one letter since I arrived
in Spain. There surely is a batch here.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“I expect rather important ones.” She
turned to Miss Holmes. “Good-morning,”
she said, gayly. “And thank you so much.
We are the hungriest people in the world
for knowledge.” And she marshalled the
unconscious Over out, he lifting his hat
mechanically to Miss Holmes, while admiring
the sparkle in Catalina’s eyes and
the unusual color in her cheeks.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>
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