<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
<p>It was still spring, but summer had already
touched the Danube and in the middle of
the river the Palatine Island sprang into
bloom like a floating forest.</p>
<p>Anne had no presentiment that she went to
meet her own summer when one day she walked
on the bank of the Danube towards the island.
Christopher, who accompanied her, had, as usual,
been late. The party they had arranged to join
was nowhere to be found. They remained alone
on the shore, deliberating for a short time, and
then made signs to the ferryman. On the other
shore a boat moved under the boughs which
spread over the water and was rowed slowly
across the river.</p>
<p>People from town came to the pier. Anne
heard approaching voices. One person pronounced
her name; another repeated it in astonishment.</p>
<p>“Anne Ulwing....”</p>
<p>She turned round reluctantly. Christopher
raised his hat.</p>
<p>A boyish-looking slender girl came towards
them along the grey pier.</p>
<p>“Don’t you recognise me?” she asked Anne.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
“Of course it is a long time since we met. Do
you remember?”</p>
<p>Now she remembered: it was Martha Illey.</p>
<p>“The dancing lessons....”</p>
<p>These words set Anne’s eyebrows rigid and
hard. Martha Illey turned quickly sideways:
“Thomas!” and introduced her brother.</p>
<p>Anne saw a refined manly hand in the sun. It
wore an old-fashioned seal ring with a green
stone. She looked up, but the man’s face seemed
quite strange to her. Then the recollection of
her solitary meditations vibrated through her
and scared her. She felt that she was blushing.
Confusion passed over her countenance like a
cloud. It was already gone. Her charming
smile raised the corners of her mouth ironically.</p>
<p>Thomas Illey laughed too but did not look
quite sure of himself. The sun, reflected from
the water, trembled in his eyes. He turned to
Christopher.</p>
<p>“Your sister and I are not strangers to each
other. She caught me one day when I went out
of town in search of sunlight, sunshine, trees and
earth. Even then she made fun of me....”</p>
<p>Underneath the pier the ferryman landed.
Then the boat started with them towards the island.
Anne felt that all her troubles had remained
on shore and that she was light and free.
The little craft floated in molten gold and the
oars stirred up gold too. And while the water<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
carried her, it also carried her thoughts away
through its wonderful glitter.</p>
<p>“I like to hear the Danube,” said Martha Illey.
“Do you remember, Tom? We used to listen
to it at home. It murmurs just like the woods of
Ille.”</p>
<p>“I too love the Danube,” said Anne’s veiled
voice. “My ancestors come from somewhere
near its sources. From the great forests....”</p>
<p>Christopher thought uncomfortably of woodcutters
and, embarrassed, kicked his sister to stop
her from saying any more.</p>
<p>Anne smiled.</p>
<p>“They came thence, down on the banks of the
river, as if the Danube had called them.” She
reflected for an instant and then added quietly:
“I have never yet heard the murmur of forests.
It seems to me that the river sings something.
Always the same thing and when it comes to the
end of its song nobody can remember the beginning.”</p>
<p>Christopher looked attentively at the cut of
Illey’s clothes. Where did his tailor live?
Then he observed his narrow shoes and hid his
own feet under the seat. He began to copy
Illey’s gestures carefully. He also imitated the
modulation of his voice. He seemed so confident
of himself and so distinguished.</p>
<p>Illey looked over the water while he spoke:</p>
<p>“Who knows why this river is called the Blue
Danube? It does not carry the sky but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
earth. How it turns up the soil and takes its
greenish-yellow colour from it....” He leant
over the side of the little boat; the water splashed
up against the boat’s prow. “It reminds you of
the murmur of forests and of music,” he said
smilingly, “to me it sounds like cattle drinking.”</p>
<p>“Cattle?” Anne could not help laughing.</p>
<p>They reached the island. The ferryman
caught hold of the bough of a willow. The keel
of the boat slid creaking into the gravelly shore.</p>
<p>The drooping twigs brushed Anne’s face.
She caught at them with her mouth and a green
leaf remained between her teeth.</p>
<p>From the noisy, active brilliance of the river
they entered moist green quietude. The grass
was high and soft, the trees drooped low; and
under them, in the dense shade, winged flakes of
silver floated. Like a small, buzzing bell of gold,
a wild bee flew up into the air.</p>
<p>“We shall have to look for the others,” said
Anne to her brother. She became suddenly dispirited.</p>
<p>Christopher made a wry face. Martha insisted.</p>
<p>“Let us remain together,” said Thomas Illey.
His voice had nothing unusual in it, yet it had
an effect on Anne as if it caught hold of her and
held her back. Now nobody thought any more
of separation. Moss yielded softly under their
feet. The boughs, like waves, opened and shut
up again behind them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
<p>“As if we walked at the bottom of a green
lake....”</p>
<p>“The shade, too, is as cool as water.”</p>
<p>“This year summer was late. We had to wait
a long time for it.”</p>
<p>“Ever so long. But now it has come at
last.”</p>
<p>“It has come....” Anne said nothing more
and looked suddenly sideways at Illey. She felt
uneasy. He seemed again quite strange to her.
He whom she had seen in the glen behind the
cemetery had been handsomer and more attractive.
Thomas Illey’s sharp, lean face gave the
lie to her memory.</p>
<p>The trees became sparser. They came to a
meadow. Illey took his hat off. The sun shone
on his face.</p>
<p>Anne stopped, her eyes became large and blue
as if filled to the brim with the sky and her memory
melted for one instant into reality. Now
she could not understand how it had been possible
for her to think that Illey had been changed by
her imagination. He was his own self ... exactly
like the one she had not forgotten. His
dark hair shone. His noble head curved in a fine
line into his neck, like a thoroughbred’s. Anne’s
eyes caressed him timidly. That was not the
broad muscular nape of the Ulwings. The lords
of Ille had never carried heavy loads.</p>
<p>She saw what she had believed was lost. And
as she passed by his side, she felt as if a ripple of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
trembling, happy laughter pervaded her and rose
to her lips and filled her eyes.</p>
<p>The restraint in her melted away. After all,
they had known each other for a long time. They
had so much to tell each other.</p>
<p>Thomas Illey also talked more freely.</p>
<p>Anne learned that his parents were no longer
living; that he was born down south on the
banks of the Danube, on the lands of Ille. Far
away, in a big country house where one’s footsteps
echoed under old portraits. The garden
looked in through the windows. One could hear
the Danube and, in autumn mists, the horn of
the chase. In the tillage silver-white oxen with
wide horns, behind them farmer serfs of Ille as
if all had risen from the furrow.</p>
<p>All this was foreign and curious to Anne, but
she liked to listen to Illey’s voice. Only gradually
did she begin to feel that what he talked
about absorbed him entirely as if it dragged him
away from her side on the shady path. If that
were true! If he really happened to go away!
She asked him spontaneously;</p>
<p>“But you will come back from there again?”</p>
<p>“Come back?” The man stopped for an instant.
The glitter died away in his eyes. “I can
go there no more. Ille has ceased to be ours.”</p>
<p>Anne scarcely heard him. She knew only that
he would not go away, that he would stay here.
Illey smiled again. He smiled in a queer, painful
way. The girl noticed this.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
<p>“What is the matter? Nothing.... Why
do I ask? I thought a twig had hit you.”</p>
<p>“Trees won’t hurt me.”</p>
<p>He spoke of the oaks of Ille. They stood in
front of the house. They soughed in the wind.
They told each other something that the children
could not understand, just like the grown-ups
when they talked Latin in the drawing-room.
Beyond the gate of the courtyard, a row of poplars
swayed in the wind. The poplars moved
like plumes. At the bottom of the garden there
was a cherry tree with a swing on it. The ropes
had cut into the bark of a branch and left their
mark forever.</p>
<p>The face of Thomas Illey became younger as
he spoke. He looked at Anne.</p>
<p>“In the glen where we first met, there is a
cherry tree too and it resembles the one with the
swing. Here is another.”</p>
<p>He pointed to a tree with his stick.</p>
<p>Till then they had apparently been eager to
speak, as if wanting to keep in touch though their
ways had been wide apart. Now, however, their
voices failed; they had reached the present. The
dense bushes hid the other two from their sight.
They perceived that they were alone.</p>
<p>The island was silent, as if spell-bound. And
in the spell their looks met timidly.</p>
<p>Time rested for an instant, then continued its
flight.</p>
<p>The laughing face of Martha Illey peeped out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
of the dense leaves. She waved a bunch of wild
flowers over her head. Christopher had picked
them for her and she had arranged them so deftly
that the very fields could not have done better.</p>
<p>Anne looked at the nosegay. Then she cast
her eyes down on her bosom: she would have liked
to wear a nosegay there, to take it home ... but
Thomas Illey gave her no flowers.</p>
<p>Around them the bushes entangled themselves
into an impenetrable wilderness. The path became
mossy, reached some steps and disappeared.
Beneath, the worn-out centuries-old stairs; in the
overgrown hollow, gentle sacred ruins. Among
the stones a gothic window. Green, cold church
walls; the ancient monastery of St. Margaret.</p>
<p>A low-flying bird was startled out of the princess’s
cell. From the road along the water voices
became audible. There were people beyond the
ruins.</p>
<p>Anne recognised the chocolate-coloured umbrella
of Mrs. Müller, the chemist’s wife. It
was an umbrella with a spring and was now tilted
to the side like a round fan. The old-fashioned
beaver of Gárdos, the proto-medicus, was visible
too. So was Mrs. Gál’s chequered shawl and the
Miss Münsters’ forget-me-not hats.</p>
<p>“There they are!” said Anne. Christopher
caught hold of her arm and pulled her back.</p>
<p>On the road the excursionists walked in
couples, panting, hot, as if doing hard work.</p>
<p>Next to Ignace Hold his wife walked tired and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
weary. Sophie had become ugly. Only her
eyes were like of old, those beautiful soft eyes.</p>
<p>Christopher looked after her for a long time.</p>
<p>The side whiskers of the chemist floated in the
breeze from the river. Mrs. Ferdinand Müller
was holding forth on the prospects of the camomile
crops. Little hunchback Gál, the mercenary
wine-merchant, complained that less wine
was consumed now in Pest than of old.</p>
<p>“I want drunkards!” he shouted, and laughed
at his sally.</p>
<p>Behind them two shop assistants carried a
basket. Long-necked bottles protruded from it.</p>
<p>Anne looked at Thomas Illey. She was struck
by his height and proportions. His face seemed
elegant in its narrowness. She felt drawn towards
him.</p>
<p>“Let us go after them,” she said in a whisper,
as if to appease her conscience.</p>
<p>“Later on....” Christopher laughed and
went in the opposite direction. He began to
talk of Art. He said he would like to be a
painter. He would paint a landscape, a wood.
A fire would burn under the trees and in the
flames small, red-bodied fairies would sway. He
would also paint a high, white castle. On the
top of a mountain, a high, solitary mountain.
On the bastion a white woman with shaded eyes
would stand, her hair alone would be black and
float in the wind like a standard. He changed
his subject suddenly. He spoke of music: of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
Bach and Mozart. Cleverly he managed to remain
in his depth; then he started whistling the
tune of a <i>valse</i>, gently, sweetly. He casually
mentioned that it was his own composition.</p>
<p>He also spoke of travels, though he had never
made a journey, of architecture, of books he had
never read, laughing in between with childish
boisterous laughter.</p>
<p>Anne looked upon him as if he were a conjurer.
How amiable he could be when he wanted to, and
for the moment she saw in him the Christopher
of old, with his fair hair shining like silver, and
his pale face.</p>
<p>Then again Thomas Illey alone was near
Anne. At the upper point of the island it felt
like standing on an anchored ship. In front of
them a narrow pebbly strip of land, cutting the
stream in two. The river split. It ran down
gurgling on both sides. Suddenly the water
stopped and the island began to move. The
island had weighed anchor ... the ship started
carrying them towards the shoreless Infinite.</p>
<p>The sun sank behind the hills. Anne started
and gazed after it.</p>
<p>“It is going....”</p>
<p>On the cool, glasslike sky the silver sickle of
the new moon appeared.</p>
<p>They turned back, but they searched in vain
for the excursionists. Near the farm scraps of
paper and empty long-necked bottles lay on the
downtrodden lawn.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span></p>
<p>The ferryman was waiting for them among
the boughs. Christopher was tired, weary of the
rôle he had supported so long. He knew now
that he could do the trick if such were his pleasure.
The magic of the ancient name of Illey
had worn off; he ceased to be impressed by the
fact that a bearer of it had once been Assistant
Viceroy and talking to Illey gave him no more
satisfaction than talking to any of his usual club
friends.</p>
<p>Since they had got into the boat, Anne too
had become silent. It was the evening of a holiday
and to-morrow would be a workaday
again.... The bright smile died off her lips.
She glanced back to the receding island and,
taking her gloves off, put a hand into the water
as if to caress the river. The ripple lapped at
her hand.</p>
<p>Illey sat on the prow and looked into the water.
In the faint, silvery moonlight the rings glittered
on Anne’s bony, boyish little hands. A sapphire:
a blue spark; a ruby: a drop of blood.
The river could not wash them off the girl’s
finger.</p>
<p>“How the current draws,” said Anne. Half
unconsciously Illey also touched the water.
And the Danube, the common master of the destinies
of remote German forests and great Hungarian
plains, seemed for an instant to try and
sweep the hands of their children together.</p>
<p>The boat reached the shore.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
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