<p>It was like some haunted spot, shunned of men. The twisted ivy stems
clambered everywhere, hiding everything away beneath a luxuriant green
mantle. Moss and lichens, brown and gray, yellow and red, covered the
trees with fantastic patches of color, grew upon the benches in the
garden, overran the roof and the walls of the house. The window-sashes
were weather-worn and warped with age, the balconies were dropping to
pieces, the terraces in ruins. Here and there the folding shutters hung
by a single hinge. The crazy doors would have given way at the first
attempt to force an entrance.</p>
<p>Out in the orchard the neglected fruit-trees were running to wood, the
rambling branches bore no fruit save the glistening mistletoe berries,
and tall plants were growing in the garden walks. All this forlornness
shed a charm across the picture that wrought on the spectator's mind
with an influence like that of some enchanting poem, filling his
soul with dreamy fancies. A poet must have lingered there in deep and
melancholy musings, marveling at the harmony of this wilderness, where
decay had a certain grace of its own.</p>
<p>In a moment a few gleams of sunlight struggled through a rift in the
clouds, and a shower of colored light fell over the wild garden. The
brown tiles of the roof glowed in the light, the mosses took bright
hues, strange shadows played over the grass beneath the trees; the dead
autumn tints grew vivid, bright unexpected contrasts were evoked by the
light, every leaf stood out sharply in the clear, thin air. Then all
at once the sunlight died away, and the landscape that seemed to have
spoken grew silent and gloomy again, or rather, it took gray soft tones
like the tenderest hues of autumn dusk.</p>
<p>"It is the palace of the Sleeping Beauty," the Councillor said to
himself (he had already begun to look at the place from the point of
view of an owner of property). "Whom can the place belong to, I wonder.
He must be a great fool not to live on such a charming little estate!"</p>
<p>Just at that moment, a woman sprang out from under a walnut tree on
the right-hand side of the gateway, and passed before the Councillor as
noiselessly and swiftly as the shadow of a cloud. This apparition struck
him dumb with amazement.</p>
<p>"Hallo, d'Albon, what is the matter?" asked the Colonel.</p>
<p>"I am rubbing my eyes to find out whether I am awake or asleep,"
answered the magistrate, whose countenance was pressed against the
grating in the hope of catching a second glimpse of the ghost.</p>
<p>"In all probability she is under that fig-tree," he went on, indicating,
for Philip's benefit, some branches that over-topped the wall on the
left-hand side of the gateway.</p>
<p>"She? Who?"</p>
<p>"Eh! how should I know?" answered M. d'Albon. "A strange-looking woman
sprang up there under my very eyes just now," he added, in a low voice;
"she looked to me more like a ghost than a living being. She was so
slender, light and shadowy that she might be transparent. Her face was
as white as milk, her hair, her eyes, and her dress were black. She gave
me a glance as she flitted by. I am not easily frightened, but that cold
stony stare of hers froze the blood in my veins."</p>
<p>"Was she pretty?" inquired Philip.</p>
<p>"I don't know. I saw nothing but those eyes in her head."</p>
<p>"The devil take dinner at Cassan!" exclaimed the Colonel; "let us stay
here. I am as eager as a boy to see the inside of this queer place. The
window-sashes are painted red, do you see? There is a red line round
the panels of the doors and the edges of the shutters. It might be the
devil's own dwelling; perhaps he took it over when the monks went out.
Now, then, let us give chase to the black and white lady; come along!"
cried Philip, with forced gaiety.</p>
<p>He had scarcely finished speaking when the two sportsmen heard a cry as
if some bird had been taken in a snare. They listened. There was a sound
like the murmur of rippling water, as something forced its way through
the bushes; but diligently as they lent their ears, there was no
footfall on the path, the earth kept the secret of the mysterious
woman's passage, if indeed she had moved from her hiding-place.</p>
<p>"This is very strange!" cried Philip.</p>
<p>Following the wall of the path, the two friends reached before long
a forest road leading to the village of Chauvry; they went along this
track in the direction of the highway to Paris, and reached another
large gateway. Through the railings they had a complete view of
the facade of the mysterious house. From this point of view, the
dilapidation was still more apparent. Huge cracks had riven the walls
of the main body of the house built round three sides of a square.
Evidently the place was allowed to fall to ruin; there were holes in
the roof, broken slates and tiles lay about below. Fallen fruit from the
orchard trees was left to rot on the ground; a cow was grazing over
the bowling-green and trampling the flowers in the garden beds; a goat
browsed on the green grapes and young vine-shoots on the trellis.</p>
<p>"It is all of a piece," remarked the Colonel. "The neglect is in a
fashion systematic." He laid his hand on the chain of the bell-pull, but
the bell had lost its clapper. The two friends heard no sound save the
peculiar grating creak of the rusty spring. A little door in the wall
beside the gateway, though ruinous, held good against all their efforts
to force it open.</p>
<p>"Oho! all this is growing very interesting," Philip said to his
companion.</p>
<p>"If I were not a magistrate," returned M. d'Albon, "I should think that
the woman in black is a witch."</p>
<p>The words were scarcely out of his mouth when the cow came up to the
railings and held out her warm damp nose, as if she were glad of human
society. Then a woman, if so indescribable a being could be called a
woman, sprang up from the bushes, and pulled at the cord about the cow's
neck. From beneath the crimson handkerchief about the woman's head, fair
matted hair escaped, something as tow hangs about a spindle. She wore
no kerchief at the throat. A coarse black-and-gray striped woolen
petticoat, too short by several inches, left her legs bare. She might
have belonged to some tribe of Redskins in Fenimore Cooper's novels; for
her neck, arms, and ankles looked as if they had been painted brick-red.
There was no spark of intelligence in her featureless face; her pale,
bluish eyes looked out dull and expressionless from beneath the eyebrows
with one or two straggling white hairs on them. Her teeth were prominent
and uneven, but white as a dog's.</p>
<p>"Hallo, good woman," called M. de Sucy.</p>
<p>She came slowly up to the railing, and stared at the two sportsmen with
a contorted smile painful to see.</p>
<p>"Where are we? What is the name of the house yonder? Whom does it belong
to? Who are you? Do you come from hereabouts?"</p>
<p>To these questions, and to a host of others poured out in succession
upon her by the two friends, she made no answer save gurgling sounds
in the throat, more like animal sounds than anything uttered by a human
voice.</p>
<p>"Don't you see that she is deaf and dumb?" said M. d'Albon.</p>
<p>"<i>Minorites</i>!" the peasant woman said at last.</p>
<p>"Ah! she is right. The house looks as though it might once have been a
Minorite convent," he went on.</p>
<p>Again they plied the peasant woman with questions, but, like a wayward
child, she colored up, fidgeted with her sabot, twisted the rope by
which she held the cow that had fallen to grazing again, stared at the
sportsmen, and scrutinized every article of clothing upon them; she
gibbered, grunted, and clucked, but no articulate word did she utter.</p>
<p>"Your name?" asked Philip, fixing her with his eyes as if he were trying
to bewitch the woman.</p>
<p>"Genevieve," she answered, with an empty laugh.</p>
<p>"The cow is the most intelligent creature we have seen so far,"
exclaimed the magistrate. "I shall fire a shot, that ought to bring
somebody out."</p>
<p>D'Albon had just taken up his rifle when the Colonel put out a hand
to stop him, and pointed out the mysterious woman who had aroused such
lively curiosity in them. She seemed to be absorbed in deep thought, as
she went along a green alley some little distance away, so slowly that
the friends had time to take a good look at her. She wore a threadbare
black satin gown, her long hair curled thickly over her forehead, and
fell like a shawl about her shoulders below her waist. Doubtless she was
accustomed to the dishevelment of her locks, for she seldom put back
the hair on either side of her brows; but when she did so, she shook her
head with a sudden jerk that had not to be repeated to shake away
the thick veil from her eyes or forehead. In everything that she
did, moreover, there was a wonderful certainty in the working of the
mechanism, an unerring swiftness and precision, like that of an animal,
well-nigh marvelous in a woman.</p>
<p>The two sportsmen were amazed to see her spring up into an apple-tree
and cling to a bough lightly as a bird. She snatched at the fruit, ate
it, and dropped to the ground with the same supple grace that charms
us in a squirrel. The elasticity of her limbs took all appearance of
awkwardness or effort from her movements. She played about upon the
grass, rolling in it as a young child might have done; then, on a
sudden, she lay still and stretched out her feet and hands, with the
languid natural grace of a kitten dozing in the sun.</p>
<p>There was a threatening growl of thunder far away, and at this she
started up on all fours and listened, like a dog who hears a strange
footstep. One result of this strange attitude was to separate her thick
black hair into two masses, that fell away on either side of her face
and left her shoulders bare; the two witnesses of this singular scene
wondered at the whiteness of the skin that shone like a meadow daisy,
and at the neck that indicated the perfection of the rest of her form.</p>
<p>A wailing cry broke from her; she rose to her feet, and stood upright.
Every successive movement was made so lightly, so gracefully, so easily,
that she seemed to be no human being, but one of Ossian's maids of the
mist. She went across the grass to one of the pools of water, deftly
shook off her shoe, and seemed to enjoy dipping her foot, white as
marble, in the spring; doubtless it pleased her to make the circling
ripples, and watch them glitter like gems. She knelt down by the brink,
and played there like a child, dabbling her long tresses in the water,
and flinging them loose again to see the water drip from the ends, like
a string of pearls in the sunless light.</p>
<p>"She is mad!" cried the Councillor.</p>
<p>A hoarse cry rang through the air; it came from Genevieve, and seemed
to be meant for the mysterious woman. She rose to her feet in a moment,
flinging back the hair from her face, and then the Colonel and d'Albon
could see her features distinctly. As soon as she saw the two friends
she bounded to the railings with the swiftness of a fawn.</p>
<p>"<i>Farewell</i>!" she said in low, musical tones, but they could not
discover the least trace of feeling, the least idea in the sweet sounds
that they had awaited impatiently.</p>
<p>M. d'Albon admired the long lashes, the thick, dark eyebrows, the
dazzling fairness of skin untinged by any trace of red. Only the
delicate blue veins contrasted with that uniform whiteness.</p>
<p>But when the Marquis turned to communicate his surprise at the sight of
so strange an apparition, he saw the Colonel stretched on the grass like
one dead. M. d'Albon fired his gun into the air, shouted for help, and
tried to raise his friend. At the sound of the shot, the strange lady,
who had stood motionless by the gate, fled away, crying out like a
wounded wild creature, circling round and round in the meadow, with
every sign of unspeakable terror.</p>
<p>M. d'Albon heard a carriage rolling along the road to l'Isle-Adam, and
waved his handkerchief to implore help. The carriage immediately came
towards the Minorite convent, and M. d'Albon recognized neighbors, M.
and Mme. de Grandville, who hastened to alight and put their carriage at
his disposal. Colonel de Sucy inhaled the salts which Mme. de Grandville
happened to have with her; he opened his eyes, looked towards the
mysterious figure that still fled wailing through the meadow, and a
faint cry of horror broke from him; he closed his eyes again, with
a dumb gesture of entreaty to his friends to take him away from this
scene. M. and Mme. de Grandville begged the Councillor to make use of
their carriage, adding very obligingly that they themselves would walk.</p>
<p>"Who can the lady be?" inquired the magistrate, looking towards the
strange figure.</p>
<p>"People think that she comes from Moulins," answered M. de Grandville.
"She is a Comtesse de Vandieres; she is said to be mad; but as she has
only been here for two months, I cannot vouch for the truth of all this
hearsay talk."</p>
<p>M. d'Albon thanked M. and Mme. de Grandville, and they set out for
Cassan.</p>
<p>"It is she!" cried Philip, coming to himself.</p>
<p>"She? who?" asked d'Albon.</p>
<p>"Stephanie.... Ah! dead and yet living still; still alive, but her mind
is gone! I thought the sight would kill me."</p>
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