The Lighted Match - Page 78/142

Following the semicircle of the bay, the eye commands that other

eminence where the King's Palace shuts itself in austerely at the very

center of the arc. Through the clustered, tea-sipping loungers on the

galleries and terraces Benton made his way several days later, wearing

the studiously affected unconcern of the tourist; an unconcern which he

found it desperately difficult to assume in Puntal.

Driven by a growing and intense desire to put distance between himself

and all alien humanity, he turned into a narrow, steeply climbing street

which ran twisting between toy-houses and vine-cumbered garden-walls,

until at last it lost its right to be called a street and became merely

a narrow, trail-like path up the mountain-side. The wanderer climbed

interminably. He took no thought of destination and satisfied himself

with the physical exertion of the laborious going.

His heart pounded faster as he attained the altitude of the pine woods

where he seemed to have left humanity behind him. Once or twice he saw a

shy, half-wild child who fled from its task of gathering fagots at his

approach, to gaze at him out of startled eyes from a safe distance.

Occasionally he would stop to look down, from some coign of vantage, at

cascading threads of water tumbling into the gorge below, or at a

châlet-like house perched far beneath in its trim patch of agriculture.

Finally he stretched himself indolently on a carpet of pine needles at

the brink of a drop to the valley. Then, with a sense of recognition, he

saw the tumbled-down gate of the King's driveway below him to the left,

and his face became set and miserable as memory began its work of

tearing open wounds not yet old.

Suddenly there drifted up a chorus of children's laughter. He sat up

suddenly and looked about, but no one was in sight. Again he heard an

unmistakable peal of shrill, childish merriment, seemingly close at

hand. He lay flat and looked over the ledge, holding on to a root of a

gnarled pine that grew far out at the marge.

Under him, not more than twenty yards below, on a similar natural

platform, sat a circle of peasant children, their eyes large with

wonderment and interest. In their center, also seated on the earth, was

the Queen of Galavia. She was dressed in a short walking skirt and a

blue jersey, and as the man gripped the pine root to which he held, and

gazed over, she lifted an outstretched finger of a gauntleted hand in

illustration of some particularly wonderful point of what was palpably a

particularly wonderful fairy story. A third burst of delight came from

the listening and responsive auditors, who had no idea by whom they were

being entertained.

The peasants of Galavia speak Portuguese. As Benton shifted his position

so that he could eavesdrop without being discovered, he found that he

could catch some of the words.