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<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<p>It was affirmed at an early stage of this narrative that he was a young
man of a contemplative and speculative turn, and he had perhaps never been
more true to his character than during an hour or two that evening as he
sat by himself on the terrace of the Conversation-house, surrounded by the
crowd of its frequenters, but lost in his meditations. The place was full
of movement and sound, but he had tilted back his chair against the great
green box of an orange-tree, and in this easy attitude, vaguely and
agreeably conscious of the music, he directed his gaze to the
star-sprinkled vault of the night. There were people coming and going whom
he knew, but he said nothing to any one—he preferred to be alone; he
found his own company quite absorbing. He felt very happy, very much
amused, very curiously preoccupied. The feeling was a singular one. It
partook of the nature of intellectual excitement. He had a sense of having
received carte blanche for the expenditure of his wits. Bernard liked to
feel his intelligence at play; this is, perhaps, the highest luxury of a
clever man. It played at present over the whole field of Angela Vivian’s
oddities of conduct—for, since his visit in the afternoon, Bernard
had felt that the spectacle was considerably enlarged. He had come to
feel, also, that poor Gordon’s predicament was by no means an unnatural
one. Longueville had begun to take his friend’s dilemma very seriously
indeed. The girl was certainly a curious study.</p>
<p>The evening drew to a close and the crowd of Bernard’s fellow-loungers
dispersed. The lighted windows of the Kursaal still glittered in the bosky
darkness, and the lamps along the terrace had not been extinguished; but
the great promenade was almost deserted; here and there only a lingering
couple—the red tip of a cigar and the vague radiance of a light
dress—gave animation to the place. But Bernard sat there still in
his tilted chair, beneath his orange-tree; his imagination had wandered
very far and he was awaiting its return to the fold. He was on the point
of rising, however, when he saw three figures come down the empty vista of
the terrace—figures which even at a distance had a familiar air. He
immediately left his seat and, taking a dozen steps, recognized Angela
Vivian, Blanche Evers and Captain Lovelock. In a moment he met them in the
middle of the terrace.</p>
<p>Blanche immediately announced that they had come for a midnight walk.</p>
<p>“And if you think it ‘s improper,” she exclaimed, “it ‘s not my invention—it
‘s Miss Vivian’s.”</p>
<p>“I beg pardon—it ‘s mine,” said Captain Lovelock. “I desire the
credit of it. I started the idea; you never would have come without me.”</p>
<p>“I think it would have been more proper to come without you than with
you,” Blanche declared. “You know you ‘re a dreadful character.”</p>
<p>“I ‘m much worse when I ‘m away from you than when I ‘m with you,” said
Lovelock. “You keep me in order.”</p>
<p>The young girl gave a little cry.</p>
<p>“I don’t know what you call order! You can’t be worse than you have been
to-night.”</p>
<p>Angela was not listening to this; she turned away a little, looking about
at the empty garden.</p>
<p>“This is the third time to-day that you have contradicted yourself,” he
said. Though he spoke softly he went nearer to her; but she appeared not
to hear him—she looked away.</p>
<p>“You ought to have been there, Mr. Longueville,” Blanche went on. “We have
had a most lovely night; we sat all the evening on Mrs. Vivian’s balcony,
eating ices. To sit on a balcony, eating ices—that ‘s my idea of
heaven.”</p>
<p>“With an angel by your side,” said Captain Lovelock.</p>
<p>“You are not my idea of an angel,” retorted Blanche.</p>
<p>“I ‘m afraid you ‘ll never learn what the angels are really like,” said
the Captain. “That ‘s why Miss Evers got Mrs. Vivian to take rooms over
the baker’s—so that she could have ices sent up several times a day.
Well, I ‘m bound to say the baker’s ices are not bad.”</p>
<p>“Considering that they have been baked! But they affect the mind,” Blanche
went on. “They would have affected Captain Lovelock’s—only he has
n’t any. They certainly affected Angela’s—putting it into her head,
at eleven o’clock, to come out to walk.”</p>
<p>Angela did nothing whatever to defend herself against this ingenious
sally; she simply stood there in graceful abstraction. Bernard was vaguely
vexed at her neither looking at him nor speaking to him; her indifference
seemed a contravention of that right of criticism which Gordon had
bequeathed to him.</p>
<p>“I supposed people went to bed at eleven o’clock,” he said.</p>
<p>Angela glanced about her, without meeting his eye.</p>
<p>“They seem to have gone.”</p>
<p>Miss Evers strolled on, and her Captain of course kept pace with her; so
that Bernard and Miss Vivian were left standing together. He looked at her
a moment in silence, but her eye still avoided his own.</p>
<p>“You are remarkably inconsistent,” Bernard presently said. “You take a
solemn vow of seclusion this afternoon, and no sooner have you taken it
than you proceed to break it in this outrageous manner.”</p>
<p>She looked at him now—a long time—longer than she had ever
done before.</p>
<p>“This is part of the examination, I suppose,” she said.</p>
<p>Bernard hesitated an instant.</p>
<p>“What examination?”</p>
<p>“The one you have undertaken—on Mr. Wright’s behalf.”</p>
<p>“What do you know about that?”</p>
<p>“Ah, you admit it then?” the girl exclaimed, with an eager laugh.</p>
<p>“I don’t in the least admit it,” said Bernard, conscious only for the
moment of the duty of loyalty to his friend and feeling that negation here
was simply a point of honor.</p>
<p>“I trust more to my own conviction than to your denial. You have engaged
to bring your superior wisdom and your immense experience to bear upon me!
That ‘s the understanding.”</p>
<p>“You must think us a pretty pair of wiseacres,” said Bernard.</p>
<p>“There it is—you already begin to answer for what I think. When Mr.
Wright comes back you will be able to tell him that I am ‘outrageous’!”
And she turned away and walked on, slowly following her companions.</p>
<p>“What do you care what I tell him?” Bernard asked. “You don’t care a
straw.”</p>
<p>She said nothing for a moment, then, suddenly, she stopped again, dropping
her eyes.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” she said, very gently; “I care a great deal. It ‘s as
well that you should know that.”</p>
<p>Bernard stood looking at her; her eyes were still lowered.</p>
<p>“Do you know what I shall tell him? I shall tell him that about eleven
o’clock at night you become peculiarly attractive.”</p>
<p>She went on again a few steps; Miss Evers and Captain Lovelock had turned
round and were coming toward her.</p>
<p>“It is very true that I am outrageous,” she said; “it was extremely silly
and in very bad taste to come out at this hour. Mamma was not at all
pleased, and I was very unkind to her. I only wanted to take a turn, and
now we will go back.” On the others coming up she announced this
resolution, and though Captain Lovelock and his companion made a great
outcry, she carried her point. Bernard offered no opposition. He contented
himself with walking back to her mother’s lodging with her almost in
silence. The little winding streets were still and empty; there was no
sound but the chatter and laughter of Blanche and her attendant swain.
Angela said nothing.</p>
<p>This incident presented itself at first to Bernard’s mind as a sort of
declaration of war. The girl had guessed that she was to be made a subject
of speculative scrutiny. The idea was not agreeable to her independent
spirit, and she placed herself boldly on the defensive. She took her stand
upon her right to defeat his purpose by every possible means—to
perplex, elude, deceive him—in plain English, to make a fool of him.
This was the construction which for several days Bernard put upon her
deportment, at the same time that he thought it immensely clever of her to
have guessed what had been going on in his mind. She made him feel very
much ashamed of his critical attitude, and he did everything he could
think of to put her off her guard and persuade her that for the moment he
had ceased to be an observer. His position at moments seemed to him an
odious one, for he was firmly resolved that between him and the woman to
whom his friend had proposed there should be nothing in the way of a
vulgar flirtation. Under the circumstances, it savoured both of flirtation
and of vulgarity that they should even fall out with each other—a
consummation which appeared to be more or less definitely impending.
Bernard remarked to himself that his own only reasonable line of conduct
would be instantly to leave Baden, but I am almost ashamed to mention the
fact which led him to modify this decision. It was simply that he was
induced to make the reflection that he had really succeeded in putting
Miss Vivian off her guard. How he had done so he would have found it
difficult to explain, inasmuch as in one way or another, for a week, he
had spent several hours in talk with her. The most effective way of
putting her off her guard would have been to leave her alone, to forswear
the privilege of conversation with her, to pass the days in other society.
This course would have had the drawback of not enabling him to measure the
operation of so ingenious a policy, and Bernard liked, of all the things
in the world, to know when he was successful. He believed, at all events,
that he was successful now, and that the virtue of his conversation itself
had persuaded this keen and brilliant girl that he was thinking of
anything in the world but herself. He flattered himself that the civil
indifference of his manner, the abstract character of the topics he
selected, the irrelevancy of his allusions and the laxity of his
attention, all contributed to this result.</p>
<p>Such a result was certainly a remarkable one, for it is almost superfluous
to intimate that Miss Vivian was, in fact, perpetually in his thoughts. He
made it a point of conscience not to think of her, but he was thinking of
her most when his conscience was most lively. Bernard had a conscience—a
conscience which, though a little irregular in its motions, gave itself in
the long run a great deal of exercise; but nothing could have been more
natural than that, curious, imaginative, audacious as he was, and
delighting, as I have said, in the play of his singularly nimble
intelligence, he should have given himself up to a sort of unconscious
experimentation. “I will leave her alone—I will be hanged if I
attempt to draw her out!” he said to himself; and meanwhile he was roaming
afield and plucking personal impressions in great fragrant handfuls. All
this, as I say, was natural, given the man and the situation; the only
oddity is that he should have fancied himself able to persuade the person
most interested that he had renounced his advantage.</p>
<p>He remembered her telling him that she cared very much what he should say
of her on Gordon Wright’s return, and he felt that this declaration had a
particular significance. After this, of her own movement, she never spoke
of Gordon, and Bernard made up his mind that she had promised her mother
to accept him if he should repeat his proposal, and that as her heart was
not in the matter she preferred to drop a veil over the prospect. “She is
going to marry him for his money,” he said, “because her mother has
brought out the advantages of the thing. Mrs. Vivian’s persuasive powers
have carried the day, and the girl has made herself believe that it does
n’t matter that she does n’t love him. Perhaps it does n’t—to her;
it ‘s hard, in such a case, to put one’s self in the woman’s point of
view. But I should think it would matter, some day or other, to poor
Gordon. She herself can’t help suspecting it may make a difference in his
happiness, and she therefore does n’t wish to seem any worse to him than
is necessary. She wants me to speak well of her; if she intends to deceive
him she expects me to back her up. The wish is doubtless natural, but for
a proud girl it is rather an odd favor to ask. Oh yes, she ‘s a proud
girl, even though she has been able to arrange it with her conscience to
make a mercenary marriage. To expect me to help her is perhaps to treat me
as a friend; but she ought to remember—or at least I ought to
remember—that Gordon is an older friend than she. Inviting me to
help her as against my oldest friend—is n’t there a grain of
impudence in that?”</p>
<p>It will be gathered that Bernard’s meditations were not on the whole
favorable to this young lady, and it must be affirmed that he was forcibly
struck with an element of cynicism in her conduct. On the evening of her
so-called midnight visit to the Kursaal she had suddenly sounded a note of
sweet submissiveness which re-appeared again at frequent intervals. She
was gentle, accessible, tenderly gracious, expressive, demonstrative,
almost flattering. From his own personal point of view Bernard had no
complaint to make of this maidenly urbanity, but he kept reminding himself
that he was not in question and that everything must be looked at in the
light of Gordon’s requirements. There was all this time an absurd logical
twist in his view of things. In the first place he was not to judge at
all; and in the second he was to judge strictly on Gordon’s behalf. This
latter clause always served as a justification when the former had failed
to serve as a deterrent. When Bernard reproached himself for thinking too
much of the girl, he drew comfort from the reflection that he was not
thinking well. To let it gradually filter into one’s mind, through a
superficial complexity of more reverent preconceptions, that she was an
extremely clever coquette—this, surely, was not to think well!
Bernard had luminous glimpses of another situation, in which Angela
Vivian’s coquetry should meet with a different appreciation; but just now
it was not an item to be entered on the credit side of Wright’s account.
Bernard wiped his pen, mentally speaking, as he made this reflection, and
felt like a grizzled old book-keeper, of incorruptible probity. He saw
her, as I have said, very often; she continued to break her vow of
shutting herself up, and at the end of a fortnight she had reduced it to
imperceptible particles. On four different occasions, presenting himself
at Mrs. Vivian’s lodgings, Bernard found Angela there alone. She made him
welcome, receiving him as an American girl, in such circumstances, is free
to receive the most gallant of visitors. She smiled and talked and gave
herself up to charming gayety, so that there was nothing for Bernard to
say but that now at least she was off her guard with a vengeance. Happily
he was on his own! He flattered himself that he remained so on occasions
that were even more insidiously relaxing—when, in the evening, she
strolled away with him to parts of the grounds of the Conversation-house,
where the music sank to sweeter softness and the murmur of the tree-tops
of the Black Forest, stirred by the warm night-air, became almost audible;
or when, in the long afternoons, they wandered in the woods apart from the
others—from Mrs. Vivian and the amiable object of her more avowed
solicitude, the object of the sportive adoration of the irrepressible, the
ever-present Lovelock. They were constantly having parties in the woods at
this time—driving over the hills to points of interest which Bernard
had looked out in the guide-book. Bernard, in such matters, was extremely
alert and considerate; he developed an unexpected talent for arranging
excursions, and he had taken regularly into his service the
red-waistcoated proprietor of a big Teutonic landau, which had a courier’s
seat behind and was always at the service of the ladies. The functionary
in the red waistcoat was a capital charioteer; he was constantly proposing
new drives, and he introduced our little party to treasures of romantic
scenery.</p>
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