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<h2> CHAPTER XIX </h2>
<p>I have called it a stale expedient on Bernard Longueville’s part to “go to
Europe” again, like the most commonplace American; and it is certain that,
as our young man stood and looked out of the window of his inn at Havre,
an hour after his arrival at that sea-port, his adventure did not strike
him as having any great freshness. He had no plans nor intentions; he had
not even any very definite desires. He had felt the impulse to come back
to Europe, and he had obeyed it; but now that he had arrived, his impulse
seemed to have little more to say to him. He perceived it, indeed—mentally—in
the attitude of a small street-boy playing upon his nose with that vulgar
gesture which is supposed to represent the elation of successful fraud.
There was a large blank wall before his window, painted a dirty yellow and
much discolored by the weather; a broad patch of summer sunlight rested
upon it and brought out the full vulgarity of its complexion. Bernard
stared a while at this blank wall, which struck him in some degree as a
symbol of his own present moral prospect. Then suddenly he turned away,
with the declaration that, whatever truth there might be in symbolism, he,
at any rate, had not come to Europe to spend the precious remnant of his
youth in a malodorous Norman sea-port. The weather was very hot, and
neither the hotel nor the town at large appeared to form an attractive
sejour for persons of an irritable nostril. To go to Paris, however, was
hardly more attractive than to remain at Havre, for Bernard had a lively
vision of the heated bitumen and the glaring frontages of the French
capital. But if a Norman town was close and dull, the Norman country was
notoriously fresh and entertaining, and the next morning Bernard got into
a caleche, with his luggage, and bade its proprietor drive him along the
coast. Once he had begun to rumble through this charming landscape, he was
in much better humor with his situation; the air was freshened by a breeze
from the sea; the blooming country, without walls or fences, lay open to
the traveller’s eye; the grain-fields and copses were shimmering in the
summer wind; the pink-faced cottages peeped through the ripening
orchard-boughs, and the gray towers of the old churches were silvered by
the morning-light of France.</p>
<p>At the end of some three hours, Bernard arrived at a little watering-place
which lay close upon the shore, in the embrace of a pair of white-armed
cliffs. It had a quaint and primitive aspect and a natural picturesqueness
which commended it to Bernard’s taste. There was evidently a great deal of
nature about it, and at this moment, nature, embodied in the clear, gay
sunshine, in the blue and quiet sea, in the daisied grass of the
high-shouldered downs, had an air of inviting the intelligent observer to
postpone his difficulties. Blanquais-les-Galets, as Bernard learned the
name of this unfashionable resort to be, was twenty miles from a railway,
and the place wore an expression of unaffected rusticity. Bernard stopped
at an inn for his noonday breakfast, and then, with his appreciation
quickened by the homely felicity of this repast, determined to go no
further. He engaged a room at the inn, dismissed his vehicle, and gave
himself up to the contemplation of French sea-side manners. These were
chiefly to be observed upon a pebbly strand which lay along the front of
the village and served as the gathering-point of its idler inhabitants.
Bathing in the sea was the chief occupation of these good people,
including, as it did, prolonged spectatorship of the process and infinite
conversation upon its mysteries. The little world of Blanquais appeared to
form a large family party, of highly developed amphibious habits, which
sat gossiping all day upon the warm pebbles, occasionally dipping into the
sea and drying itself in the sun, without any relaxation of personal
intimacy. All this was very amusing to Bernard, who in the course of the
day took a bath with the rest. The ocean was, after all, very large, and
when one took one’s plunge one seemed to have it quite to one’s self. When
he had dressed himself again, Bernard stretched himself on the beach,
feeling happier than he had done in a long time, and pulled his hat over
his eyes. The feeling of happiness was an odd one; it had come over him
suddenly, without visible cause; but, such as it was, our hero made the
most of it. As he lay there it seemed to deepen; his immersion and his
exercise in the salt water had given him an agreeable languor. This
presently became a drowsiness which was not less agreeable, and Bernard
felt himself going to sleep. There were sounds in the air above his head—sounds
of the crunching and rattling of the loose, smooth stones as his neighbors
moved about on them; of high-pitched French voices exchanging colloquial
cries; of the plash of the bathers in the distant water, and the short,
soft breaking of the waves. But these things came to his ears more vaguely
and remotely, and at last they faded away. Bernard enjoyed half an hour of
that light and easy slumber which is apt to overtake idle people in
recumbent attitudes in the open air on August afternoons. It brought with
it an exquisite sense of rest, and the rest was not spoiled by the fact
that it was animated by a charming dream. Dreams are vague things, and
this one had the defects of its species; but it was somehow concerned with
the image of a young lady whom Bernard had formerly known, and who had
beautiful eyes, into which—in the dream—he found himself
looking. He waked up to find himself looking into the crown of his hat,
which had been resting on the bridge of his nose. He removed it, and half
raised himself, resting on his elbow and preparing to taste, in another
position, of a little more of that exquisite rest of which mention has
just been made. The world about him was still amusing and charming; the
chatter of his companions, losing itself in the large sea-presence, the
plash of the divers and swimmers, the deep blue of the ocean and the
silvery white of the cliff, had that striking air of indifference to the
fact that his mind had been absent from them which we are apt to find in
mundane things on emerging from a nap. The same people were sitting near
him on the beach—the same, and yet not quite the same. He found
himself noticing a person whom he had not noticed before—a young
lady, who was seated in a low portable chair, some dozen yards off, with
her eyes bent upon a book. Her head was in shade; her large parasol made,
indeed, an awning for her whole person, which in this way, in the quiet
attitude of perusal, seemed to abstract itself from the glare and murmur
of the beach. The clear shadow of her umbrella—it was lined with
blue—was deep upon her face; but it was not deep enough to prevent
Bernard from recognizing a profile that he knew. He suddenly sat upright,
with an intensely quickened vision. Was he dreaming still, or had he
waked? In a moment he felt that he was acutely awake; he heard her, across
the interval, turn the page of her book. For a single instant, as she did
so, she looked with level brows at the glittering ocean; then, lowering
her eyes, she went on with her reading. In this barely perceptible
movement he saw Angela Vivian; it was wonderful how well he remembered
her. She was evidently reading very seriously; she was much interested in
her book. She was alone; Bernard looked about for her mother, but Mrs.
Vivian was not in sight. By this time Bernard had become aware that he was
agitated; the exquisite rest of a few moments before had passed away. His
agitation struck him as unreasonable; in a few minutes he made up his mind
that it was absurd. He had done her an injury—yes; but as she sat
there losing herself in a French novel—Bernard could see it was a
French novel—he could not make out that she was the worse for it. It
had not affected her appearance; Miss Vivian was still a handsome girl.
Bernard hoped she would not look toward him or recognize him; he wished to
look at her at his ease; to think it over; to make up his mind. The idea
of meeting Angela Vivian again had often come into his thoughts; I may,
indeed, say that it was a tolerably familiar presence there; but the fact,
nevertheless, now presented itself with all the violence of an accident
for which he was totally unprepared. He had often asked himself what he
should say to her, how he should carry himself, and how he should probably
find the young lady; but, with whatever ingenuity he might at the moment
have answered these questions, his intelligence at present felt decidedly
overtaxed. She was a very pretty girl to whom he had done a wrong; this
was the final attitude into which, with a good deal of preliminary
shifting and wavering, she had settled in his recollection. The wrong was
a right, doubtless, from certain points of view; but from the girl’s own
it could only seem an injury to which its having been inflicted by a
clever young man with whom she had been on agreeable terms, necessarily
added a touch of baseness.</p>
<p>In every disadvantage that a woman suffers at the hands of a man, there is
inevitably, in what concerns the man, an element of cowardice. When I say
“inevitably,” I mean that this is what the woman sees in it. This is what
Bernard believed that Angela Vivian saw in the fact that by giving his
friend a bad account of her he had prevented her making an opulent
marriage. At first he had said to himself that, whether he had held his
tongue or spoken, she had already lost her chance; but with time, somehow,
this reflection had lost its weight in the scale. It conveyed little
re-assurance to his irritated conscience—it had become imponderable
and impertinent. At the moment of which I speak it entirely failed to
present itself, even for form’s sake; and as he sat looking at this
superior creature who came back to him out of an episode of his past, he
thought of her simply as an unprotected woman toward whom he had been
indelicate. It is not an agreeable thing for a delicate man like Bernard
Longueville to have to accommodate himself to such an accident, but this
is nevertheless what it seemed needful that he should do. If she bore him
a grudge he must think it natural; if she had vowed him a hatred he must
allow her the comfort of it. He had done the only thing possible, but that
made it no better for her. He had wronged her. The circumstances mattered
nothing, and as he could not make it up to her, the only reasonable thing
was to keep out of her way. He had stepped into her path now, and the
proper thing was to step out of it. If it could give her no pleasure to
see him again, it could certainly do him no good to see her. He had seen
her by this time pretty well—as far as mere seeing went, and as yet,
apparently, he was none the worse for that; but his hope that he should
himself escape unperceived had now become acute. It is singular that this
hope should not have led him instantly to turn his back and move away; but
the explanation of his imprudent delay is simply that he wished to see a
little more of Miss Vivian. He was unable to bring himself to the point.
Those clever things that he might have said to her quite faded away. The
only good taste was to take himself off, and spare her the trouble of
inventing civilities that she could not feel. And yet he continued to sit
there from moment to moment, arrested, detained, fascinated, by the
accident of her not looking round—of her having let him watch her so
long. She turned another page, and another, and her reading absorbed her
still. He was so near her that he could have touched her dress with the
point of his umbrella. At last she raised her eyes and rested them a while
on the blue horizon, straight in front of her, but as yet without turning
them aside. This, however, augmented the danger of her doing so, and
Bernard, with a good deal of an effort, rose to his feet. The effort,
doubtless, kept the movement from being either as light or as swift as it
might have been, and it vaguely attracted his neighbor’s attention. She
turned her head and glanced at him, with a glance that evidently expected
but to touch him and pass. It touched him, and it was on the point of
passing; then it suddenly checked itself; she had recognized him. She
looked at him, straight and open-eyed, out of the shadow of her parasol,
and Bernard stood there—motionless now—receiving her gaze. How
long it lasted need not be narrated. It was probably a matter of a few
seconds, but to Bernard it seemed a little eternity. He met her eyes, he
looked straight into her face; now that she had seen him he could do
nothing else. Bernard’s little eternity, however, came to an end; Miss
Vivian dropped her eyes upon her book again. She let them rest upon it
only a moment; then she closed it and slowly rose from her chair, turning
away from Bernard. He still stood looking at her—stupidly,
foolishly, helplessly enough, as it seemed to him; no sign of recognition
had been exchanged. Angela Vivian hesitated a minute; she now had her back
turned to him, and he fancied her light, flexible figure was agitated by
her indecision. She looked along the sunny beach which stretched its
shallow curve to where the little bay ended and the white wall of the
cliffs began. She looked down toward the sea, and up toward the little
Casino which was perched on a low embankment, communicating with the beach
at two or three points by a short flight of steps. Bernard saw—or
supposed he saw—that she was asking herself whither she had best
turn to avoid him. He had not blushed when she looked at him—he had
rather turned a little pale; but he blushed now, for it really seemed
odious to have literally driven the poor girl to bay. Miss Vivian decided
to take refuge in the Casino, and she passed along one of the little
pathways of planks that were laid here and there across the beach, and
directed herself to the nearest flight of steps. Before she had gone two
paces a complete change came over Bernard’s feeling; his only wish now was
to speak to her—to explain—to tell her he would go away. There
was another row of steps at a short distance behind him; he rapidly
ascended them and reached the little terrace of the Casino. Miss Vivian
stood there; she was apparently hesitating again which way to turn.
Bernard came straight up to her, with a gallant smile and a greeting. The
comparison is a coarse one, but he felt that he was taking the bull by the
horns. Angela Vivian stood watching him arrive.</p>
<p>“You did n’t recognize me,” he said, “and your not recognizing me made me—made
me hesitate.”</p>
<p>For a moment she said nothing, and then—</p>
<p>“You are more timid than you used to be!” she answered.</p>
<p>He could hardly have said what expression he had expected to find in her
face; his apprehension had, perhaps, not painted her obtrusively pale and
haughty, aggressively cold and stern; but it had figured something
different from the look he encountered. Miss Vivian was simply blushing—that
was what Bernard mainly perceived; he saw that her surprise had been
extreme—complete. Her blush was re-assuring; it contradicted the
idea of impatient resentment, and Bernard took some satisfaction in noting
that it was prolonged.</p>
<p>“Yes, I am more timid than I used to be,” he said.</p>
<p>In spite of her blush, she continued to look at him very directly; but she
had always done that—she always met one’s eye; and Bernard now
instantly found all the beauty that he had ever found before in her pure,
unevasive glance.</p>
<p>“I don’t know whether I am more brave,” she said; “but I must tell the
truth—I instantly recognized you.”</p>
<p>“You gave no sign!”</p>
<p>“I supposed I gave a striking one—in getting up and going away.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Bernard, “as I say, I am more timid than I was, and I did n’t
venture to interpret that as a sign of recognition.”</p>
<p>“It was a sign of surprise.”</p>
<p>“Not of pleasure!” said Bernard. He felt this to be a venturesome, and
from the point of view of taste perhaps a reprehensible, remark; but he
made it because he was now feeling his ground, and it seemed better to
make it gravely than with assumed jocosity.</p>
<p>“Great surprises are to me never pleasures,” Angela answered; “I am not
fond of shocks of any kind. The pleasure is another matter. I have not yet
got over my surprise.”</p>
<p>“If I had known you were here, I would have written to you beforehand,”
said Bernard, laughing.</p>
<p>Miss Vivian, beneath her expanded parasol, gave a little shrug of her
shoulders.</p>
<p>“Even that would have been a surprise.”</p>
<p>“You mean a shock, eh? Did you suppose I was dead?”</p>
<p>Now, at last, she lowered her eyes, and her blush slowly died away.</p>
<p>“I knew nothing about it.”</p>
<p>“Of course you could n’t know, and we are all mortal. It was natural that
you should n’t expect—simply on turning your head—to find me
lying on the pebbles at Blanquais-les-Galets. You were a great surprise to
me, as well; but I differ from you—I like surprises.”</p>
<p>“It is rather refreshing to hear that one is a surprise,” said the girl.</p>
<p>“Especially when in that capacity one is liked!” Bernard exclaimed.</p>
<p>“I don’t say that—because such sensations pass away. I am now
beginning to get over mine.”</p>
<p>The light mockery of her tone struck him as the echo of an unforgotten
air. He looked at her a moment, and then he said—</p>
<p>“You are not changed; I find you quite the same.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry for that!” And she turned away.</p>
<p>“What are you doing?” he asked. “Where are you going?”</p>
<p>She looked about her, without answering, up and down the little terrace.
The Casino at Blanquais was a much more modest place of reunion than the
Conversation-house at Baden-Baden. It was a small, low structure of
brightly painted wood, containing but three or four rooms, and furnished
all along its front with a narrow covered gallery, which offered a
delusive shelter from the rougher moods of the fine, fresh weather. It was
somewhat rude and shabby—the subscription for the season was low—but
it had a simple picturesqueness. Its little terrace was a very convenient
place for a stroll, and the great view of the ocean and of the
marble-white crags that formed the broad gate-way of the shallow bay, was
a sufficient compensation for the absence of luxuries. There were a few
people sitting in the gallery, and a few others scattered upon the
terrace; but the pleasure-seekers of Blanquais were, for the most part,
immersed in the salt water or disseminated on the grassy downs.</p>
<p>“I am looking for my mother,” said Angela Vivian.</p>
<p>“I hope your mother is well.”</p>
<p>“Very well, thank you.”</p>
<p>“May I help you to look for her?” Bernard asked.</p>
<p>Her eyes paused in their quest, and rested a moment upon her companion.</p>
<p>“She is not here,” she said presently. “She has gone home.”</p>
<p>“What do you call home?” Bernard demanded.</p>
<p>“The sort of place that we always call home; a bad little house that we
have taken for a month.”</p>
<p>“Will you let me come and see it?”</p>
<p>“It ‘s nothing to see.”</p>
<p>Bernard hesitated a moment.</p>
<p>“Is that a refusal?”</p>
<p>“I should never think of giving it so fine a name.”</p>
<p>“There would be nothing fine in forbidding me your door. Don’t think
that!” said Bernard, with rather a forced laugh.</p>
<p>It was difficult to know what the girl thought; but she said, in a moment—</p>
<p>“We shall be very happy to see you. I am going home.”</p>
<p>“May I walk with you so far?” asked Bernard.</p>
<p>“It is not far; it ‘s only three minutes.” And Angela moved slowly to the
gate of the Casino.</p>
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