The Cardinal's Snuff Box - Page 75/133

"It's as strange as anything I have ever heard," she said,

"it's furiously strange--and romantic--and interesting. But

--but--" She frowned a little, hesitating between a choice of

questions.

"Oh, it's a story all compact of 'buts,'" Peter threw out

laughing.

She let the remark pass her--she had settled upon her question.

"But how could he endure such a situation?" she asked. "How

could he sit still under it? Did n't he try in any way--did

n't he make any effort at all--to--to find her out--to discover

who she was--to get introduced to her? I should think he could

never have rested--I should think he would have moved heaven

and earth."

"What could he do? Tell me a single thing he could have done,"

said Peter. "Society has made no provision for a case like

his. It 's absurd--but there it is. You see a woman

somewhere; you long to make her acquaintance; and there's no

natural bar to your doing so--you 're a presentable man she's

what they call a lady--you're both, more or less, of the same

monde. Yet there 's positively no way known by which you can

contrive it--unless chance, mere fortuitous chance, just

happens to drop a common acquaintance between you, at the right

time and place. Chance, in Wildmay's case, happened to drop

all the common acquaintances they may possibly have had at a

deplorable distance. He was alone on each of the occasions

when he saw her. There was no one he could ask to introduce

him; there was no one he could apply to for information

concerning her. He could n't very well follow her carriage

through the streets--dog her to her lair, like a detective.

Well--what then?"

The Duchessa was playing with her fan again.

"No," she agreed; "I suppose it was hopeless. But it seems

rather hard on the poor man--rather baffling and tantalising."

"The poor man thought it so, to be sure," said Peter; "he

fretted and fumed a good deal, and kicked against the pricks.

Here, there, now, anon, he would enjoy his brief little vision

of her--then she would vanish into the deep inane. So, in the

end--he had to take it out in something--he took it out in

writing a book about her. He propped up a mental portrait of

her on his desk before him, and translated it into the

character of Pauline. In that way he was able to spend long

delightful hours alone with her every day, in a kind of

metaphysical intimacy. He had never heard her voice--but now

he heard it as often as Pauline opened her lips. He owned her

--he possessed her--she lived under his roof--she was always

waiting for him in his study. She is real to you? She was

inexpressibly, miraculously real to him. He saw her, knew her,

felt her, realised her, in every detail of her mind, her soul,

her person--down to the very intonations of her speech--down to

the veins in her hands, the rings on her fingers--down to her

very furs and laces, the frou-frou of her skirts, the scent

upon her pocket-handkerchief. He had numbered the hairs of her

head, almost."