The Quest of Glory by Marjorie Bowen (book recommendations based on other books .txt) đź“•
The air was oppressive with the powerful perfume of strong incense, and yet even more bitterly cold than the outer night; the light was dim, flickering, rich, and luxurious, and came wholly from hanging lamps of yellow, blue, and red glass. In what appeared the extreme distance, the altar sparkled in the gleam of two huge candles of painted wax, and behind and about it showed green translucent, unsubstantial shapes of arches and pillars rising up and disappearing in the great darkness of the roof, which was as impenetrable as a starless heaven.
The church was bare of chair or pew or stool; the straight sweep of the nave was broken only by the dark outlines of princely tombs where lay the dust of former Bohemian kings and queens: their reclining figures so much above and beyond humanity, yet so startlingly like life, could be seen in
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quivering and his eyes filled with tears. “You could never understand—”
He laid his hand very lightly on her cloak; she looked up suddenly and
said almost fiercely—
“Do not kiss me—do not touch me.”
He would as soon have thought of trying to clasp the rainbow or press
his lips to a moonbeam. He started, and flushed, and winced.
“Not you,” she continued. “I could so easily hate you if you were to
bring it to that. I also have had my dreams.”
She was suddenly stripped of glory; her voice was even a little harsh;
her attitude of shrinking distaste had nothing of the divine in it. Luc
stared at her with a sudden terror; she seemed to be changing under his
very eyes.
She rose again, drooping yet stately, and drew her cloak about her.
“Nothing has happened!” she exclaimed vehemently. “Do you hear—nothing
has happened!”
“Why do you deny yourself?” cried Luc. “Why are you lying to me?”
“Nothing has happened!” she repeated; “nothing. Keep your dreams.”
It seemed to Luc that she, while she spoke, was looking beyond him at
some one else, and with a throbbing brain he turned and gazed towards
the gloomy back of the house.
There was, as he had expected, a man coming slowly towards them.
Luc stiffened and narrowed his eyes.
“This is the man who will be useful to you,” said Carola, in an ordinary
tone.
The stranger, who wore a black velvet mantle and a hat with a high white
plumage fastened by a steel loop and button that glittered in the strong
sun, approached at an easy gait. When he uncovered to the Countess, Luc
recognized, with an angry heart, M. de Richelieu.
The Duke marked him with instant and unmistakeable surprise.
“Is this your friend, Madame?” he said, in no pleased tone.
“You know each other?” asked Carola.
“We have a slight acquaintance,” answered the Duke grandly.
“One I shall not presume on, Monsieur,” said Luc, burning to think that
perhaps M. de Richelieu thought he wished to solicit the benefits he had
once refused.
“You did not expect to see me nor I you,” replied M. de Richelieu,
absolutely composed and courteous, “but our previous knowledge of each
other need not interfere with the matter on hand now.”
Luc bowed, not at all satisfied. He did not desire any favour, direct or
indirect, from M. de Richelieu; he did not like to see him on these
terms of intimacy with the Countess; he did not wish such a man
introduced into his life.
The only thing that kept him from proudly taking his leave was the
conviction that both Carola and the Duke had been quite innocent of
planning the situation, she being ignorant that M. de Richelieu and he
had met before, and the Duke being unaware that her protégé was M. de
Vauvenargues.
Therefore Luc felt that his refusal to listen to their proposals would
be ungrateful to Carola, and put him in a foolish position towards the
Duke, who had already gracefully carried off the encounter.
The Countess on her part appeared confused; she obviously wondered when
these two had met, and why Luc had not mentioned his acquaintance with
the Duke.
“You know M. le Maréchal!” she exclaimed. “Then my task—to bring you to
an understanding of each other—is the lighter.”
“I understand M. de Vauvenargues perfectly,” answered M. de Richelieu;
and, as if unwilling to prolong the conversation, he turned back towards
the house.
Luc, regarding him with an habitually keen observation, noticed that he
was considerably older than he had appeared on either of the two
previous occasions on which Luc had seen him.
In the lurid lights of the barn, in the shadowed softness of his own
luxurious apartment, he had seemed in his first youth; but now the
direct sunbeams that showed the red powder on Carola’s fine skin
revealed the face of M. de Richelieu as that of a man of middle age,
despite his slender, upright figure and careful dressing. His charm was
none the less; his slightly broad countenance wore the same expression
of almost irresistible daring gaiety and serene self-confidence. Luc
smiled at him in his heart, and so was half won.
The three entered the house by a side door and ascended a back
staircase. Luc thought the place seemed little used, a great mansion
often shut up. He neither saw nor heard servants.
Carola went ahead with M. de Richelieu; he, as if disdainful of being
overheard, said in a voice hardly lowered—
“You have chosen the wrong man, Madame; but if you wish to go on with
the comedy, I shall not interfere.”
Carola’s reply was such a mere murmur that Luc did not hear; nor did he
care what she said. He was content to leave this doubtful adventure in
her hands—whichever way it ended, he would come to some issue with her
before he left.
They entered upon a long wide corridor, the heavy candelabra and
gilt-legged furniture covered with linen on which the dust lay thickly;
the floor was of black and white squares of marble, the windows were
shuttered, the air struck musty and yet chill.
Carola opened a high door half-way down this corridor, and the two men
followed her into an ornately furnished room, where the sun streamed in
a melancholy fashion over silk screens, silk-hung walls, carved chairs,
and Eastern rugs. The room had an air of having been long deserted or
only used casually; the sunbeams showed dust everywhere, and one of the
wings of the elaborate shutters was still closed.
On a long crimson-striped sofa lay Carola’s hat, gloves, and cane. She
seated herself near on a fantastic chair of a Chinese pattern; behind
her was a picture covered by a faded pink curtain.
Luc looked at her and at nothing else. The presence of M. de Richelieu
was no longer anything to him; he was waiting for the explanation of
this mystery,—Carola Koklinska,—an explanation that had seemed on the
point of being revealed in the garden. What was she?—did she or did she
not fulfil his ideal of the spiritual power of perfect woman?—did he
love her as he knew he was capable of loving? He stood against the
closed shutter with his grave hazel eyes on her face. She was colourless
save for the false blush on her cheeks: he disliked that artificial
glow, and thought of her as she was among the Bohemian snows, haggard
and disfigured, yet more pleasing to him then than now.
M. de Richelieu glanced from one to the other with an eye of hawk-like
brightness.
“Do you wish me to speak?” he asked Carola, and cast his hat on to a
little tulip-wood table.
She bent her head, and the Duke turned with a quiet magnificence of
manner to Luc.
“Monsieur le Marquis, may I have—for a little—your attention?”
With an effort Luc took his eyes from Carola; he was not concerned with
what M. de Richelieu had to say.
In an even voice, with the air of one who courteously, but without
conviction, discharges a duty, the Duke began speaking. He related, from
the inside, politics that Luc knew already from the outside; he gave
details of the present state of affairs between the Courts of France,
Austria, England, and Prussia; he indicated the web of intrigues that
was continually being spun beyond the scrutiny of the public eye. Luc
listened without interest; he had already guessed that M. de Richelieu
intended, through the influence of the Countess, to offer him some
adventurous chance in politics, and he had already resolved to
refuse—he began, in fact, to understand.
Even while the Duke was speaking, Luc’s mind was still busy with the
problem of Carola. Once or twice he allowed his glance to rest on her:
she was seated with her pallid face supported between her long ringless
hands; her cloak had fallen apart, and a crystal heart that hung round
her neck by a thin silver chain swung and twinkled above her knees.
M. de Richelieu proceeded to unfold a plan for the confusion of Maria
Theresa. A young man had been prepared and instructed for the principal
rĂ´le in this intrigue, but unfortunately had lost his life in a duel;
and Madame la Comtesse having declared she knew of some one to take his
place—The Duke paused.
“What is the task you wish me to undertake, Monsieur?” asked Luc,
without raising his head; while the Duke was speaking, a great many
things had become slowly plain.
M. de Richelieu told him with an almost crude brevity. He was to go to
the Austrian Court and proclaim himself neglected by his country; he was
to offer to serve Maria, the unfortunate Empress-Queen; he was to creep
into her confidences, and forward them to the French Ministers. “Madame
la Comtesse is going to Austria,” finished the Duke; “you would work in
collusion.”
An extraordinary calmness came over Luc. He slightly moved his attitude
against the shutter.
“In what capacity, Madame, are you going to the Court of Austria?” he
asked.
She made no answer.
The Duke looked steadily at Luc.
“You refuse, of course?” he said.
The Marquis smiled.
“I thank you, Monsieur, for the compliment. Your position is
awkward—and I am grateful for your courtesy.” He pressed his
handkerchief to his pale but firm lips.
The Duke gave a little bow.
“You did not understand?”
“No—but now I do.”
Carola, still holding her head in her hands, looked with great tragic
eyes from one to another. M. de Richelieu crossed over to her and laid
his hand on her shoulder.
“I always promised you, Madame, that you should have your own way in
your whims—and I have done what you asked me to. Unfortunately,
Monsieur de Vauvenargues .refuses.”
“He has had no time to consider,” she said, without changing her
attitude.
Luc stepped from the window.
“One word, M. le Duc—this is your house?”
“Yes,” answered M. de Richelieu, with the slightest lift of his delicate
brows.
“You know that,” breathed Carola; “from the first you must have known—”
“No,” said Luc. “I am from the provinces.”
The Duke’s clear glance went from one to another; he spoke very gravely,
with an even pride.
“I told Madame she had made a mistake. Perhaps Madame will explain?”
He picked up his hat.
“Shall I leave you to explain?” he insisted, looking full at Carola.
“Leave me to solve my enigma,” said Luc, with a smile. “Give me five
minutes, M. le Duc—”
“Are you so quick?” responded M. de Richelieu. “I will give you half an
hour in which to weary of guessing your riddle.”
His charming face relaxed into a soft and fleeting smile, he bowed low
to the haggard lady on the sofa, and left her alone with Luc.
Carola moved her long hands so that they covered her face.
“What are you?” asked Luc dreamily. “What are you?”
She dropped her hands and looked at him.
“I do not know. Whatever men label me, I think. To you at least I was a
beacon of pure flame—was I not?”
“You have quenched that light now, Madame,” he answered quietly.
“I could not believe that you had not found out—till you came to-day,”
she said. “And yet I wondered, too—for you are one
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