ONE afternoon I was sitting outside the
Café de la Paix, watching the splendour and shabbiness of Parisian life, and
wondering over my vermouth at the strange panorama of pride and poverty that
was passing before me, when I heard some one call my name. I turned round, and
saw Lord Murchison. We had not met since we had been at college together,
nearly ten years before, so I was delighted to come across him again, and we
shook hands warmly. At Oxford we had been great friends. I had liked him
immensely, he was so handsome, so high-spirited, and so honourable. We used to
say of him that he would be the best of fellows, if he did not always speak the
truth, but I think we really admired him all the more for his frankness. I
found him a good deal changed. He looked anxious and puzzled, and seemed to be
in doubt about something. I felt it could not be modern scepticism, for
Murchison was the stoutest of Tories, and believed in the Pentateuch as firmly
as he believed in the House of Peers; so I concluded that it was a woman, and
asked him if he was married yet.
`I don't understand women well enough,' he answered.
`My dear Gerald,' I said, `women are meant to be loved, not
to be understood.'
`I cannot love where I cannot trust,' he replied.
`I believe you have a mystery in your life, Gerald,' I
exclaimed; `tell me about it.'
`Let us go for a drive,' he answered, `it is too crowded
here. No, not a yellow carriage, any other colour - there, that dark-green one
will do;' and in a few moments we were trotting down the boulevard in the
direction of the Madeleine.
`Where shall we go to?' I said.
`Oh, anywhere you like!' he answered - `to the restaurant in
the Bois; we will dine there, and you shall tell me all about yourself.'
`I want to hear about you first,' I said. `Tell me your
mystery.'
He took from his pocket a little silver-clasped morocco
case, and handed it to me. I opened it. Inside there was the photograph of a
woman. She was tall and slight, and strangely picturesque with her large vague
eyes and loosened hair. She looked like a clairvoyante,
and was wrapped in rich furs.
`What do you think of that face?' he said; `is it truthful?'
I examined it carefully. It seemed to me the face of some
one who had a secret, but whether that secret was good or evil I could not say.
Its beauty was a beauty moulded out of many mysteries - the beauty, in fact,
which is psychological, not plastic - and the faint smile that just played
across the lips was far too subtle to be really sweet.
`Well,' he cried impatiently, `what do you say?'
`She is the Gioconda in sables,' I answered. `Let me know
all about her.'
`Not now,' he said; `after dinner;' and began to talk of
other things.
When the waiter brought us our coffee and cigarettes I
reminded Gerald of his promise. He rose from his seat, walked two or three
times up and down the room, and, sinking into an armchair, told me the
following story: - `One evening,' he said, `I was walking down Bond Street
about five o'clock. There was a terrific crush of carriages, and the traffic
was almost stopped. Close to the pavement was standing a little yellow
brougham, which, for some reason or other, attracted my attention. As I passed
by there looked out from it the face I showed you this afternoon. It fascinated
me immediately. All that night I kept thinking of it, and all the next day. I
wandered up and down that wretched Row, peering into every carriage, and
waiting for the yellow brougham; but I could not find ma belle inconnue, and at last I began
to think she was merely a dream. About
a week afterwards I was dining with Madame de Rastail. Dinner was for eight
o'clock; but at half-past eight we were still waiting in the drawing-room.
Finally the servant threw open the door, and announced Lady Alroy. It was the
woman I had been looking for. She came in very slowly, looking like a moonbeam
in grey lace, and, to my intense delight, I was asked to take her in to dinner.
After we had sat down I remarked quite innocently, "I think I caught sight
of you in Bond Street some time ago, Lady Alroy." She grew very pale, and
said to me in a low voice, "Pray do not talk so loud; you may be
overheard." I felt miserable at having made such a bad beginning, and
plunged recklessly into the subject of the French plays. She spoke very little,
always in the same low musical voice, and seemed as if she was afraid of some
one listening. I fell passionately, stupidly in love, and the indefinable
atmosphere of mystery that surrounded her excited my most ardent curiosity.
When she was going away, which she did very soon after dinner, I asked her if I
might call and see her. She hesitated for a moment, glanced round to see if any
one was near us, and then said, "Yes; to-morrow at a quarter to
five." I begged Madame de Rastail to tell me about her; but all that I
could learn was that she was a widow with a beautiful house in Park Lane, and
as some scientific bore began a dissertation on widows, as exemplifying the
survival of the matrimonially fittest, I left and went home.
`The next day I arrived at Park Lane punctual to the moment,
but was told by the butler that Lady Alroy had just gone out. I went down to
the club quite unhappy and very much puzzled, and after long consideration
wrote her a letter, asking if I might be allowed to try my chance some other
afternoon. I had no answer for several days, but at last I got a little note
saying she would be at home on Sunday at four, and with this extraordinary
postscript: "Please do not write to me here again; I will explain when I see
you." On Sunday she received me, and was perfectly charming; but when I
was going away she begged of me if I ever had occasion to write to her again,
to address my letter to "Mrs. Knox, care of Whittaker's Library, Green
Street." "There are reasons," she said, "why I cannot
receive letters in my own house."
`All through the season I saw a great deal of her, and the
atmosphere of mystery never left her. Sometimes I thought that she was in the
power of some man, but she looked so unapproachable that I could not believe
it. It was really very difficult for me to come to any conclusion, for she was
like one of those strange crystals that one sees in museums, which are at one
moment clear, and at another clouded. At last I determined to ask her to be my
wife: I was sick and tired of the incessant secrecy that she imposed on all my
visits, and on the few letters I sent her. I wrote to her at the library to ask
her if she could see me the following Monday at six. She answered yes, and I
was in the seventh heaven of delight. I was infatuated with her: in spite of
the mystery, I thought then - in consequence of it, I see now. No; it was the
woman herself I loved. The mystery troubled me, maddened me. Why did chance put
me in its track?'
`You discovered it, then?' I cried.
`I fear so,' he answered. `You can judge for yourself.'
`When Monday came round I went to lunch with my uncle, and
about four o'clock found myself in the Marylebone Road. My uncle, you know,
lives in Regents Park. I wanted to get to Piccadilly, and took a short cut
through a lot of shabby little streets. Suddenly I saw in front of me Lady
Alroy, deeply veiled and walking very fast. On coming to the last house in the
street, she went up the steps, took out a latch- key, and let herself in.
"Here is the mystery," I said to myself; and I hurried on and
examined the house. It seemed a sort of place for letting lodgings. On the
doorstep lay her handkerchief which she had dropped. I picked it up and put it
in my pocket. Then I began to consider what I should do. I came to the
conclusion that I had no right to spy on her, and I drove down to the club. At
six I called to see her. She was lying on a sofa, in a tea-gown of silver
tissue looped up by some strange moonstones that she always wore. She was
looking quite lovely. "I am so glad to see you," she said; "I
have not been out all day." I stared at her in amazement, and pulling the
handkerchief out of my pocket, handed it to her. "You dropped this in
Cumnor Street this afternoon, Lady Alroy," I said very calmly. She looked
at me in terror, but made no attempt to take the handkerchief. "What were
you doing there?" I asked. "What right have you to question me?"
she answered. "The right of a man who loves you," I replied; "I
came here to ask you to be my wife." She hid her face in her hands, and
burst into floods of tears. "You must tell me," I continued.
She stood up, and, looking me straight
in the face, said, "Lord Murchison, there is nothing to tell you." -
"You went to meet some one," I cried; "this is your mystery."
She grew dreadfully white, and said, "I went to meet no one." -
"Can't you tell the truth?" I exclaimed. "I have told it,"
she replied. I was mad, frantic; I don't know what I said, but I said terrible
things to her. Finally I rushed out of the house. She wrote me a letter the
next day; I sent it back unopened, and started for Norway with Alan Colville.
After a month I came back, and the first thing I saw in the Morning Post was
the death of Lady Alroy. She had caught a chill at the Opera, and had died in
five days of congestion of the lungs. I shut myself up and saw no one. I had
loved her so much, I had loved her so madly. Good God! how I had loved that
woman!'
`You went to the street, to the house in it?' I said.
`Yes,' he answered.
`One day I went to Cumnor Street. I could not help it; I was
tortured with doubt. I knocked at the door, and a respectable-looking woman
opened it to me. I asked her if she had any rooms to let. "Well,
sir," she replied, "the drawing-rooms are supposed to be let; but I
have not seen the lady for three months, and as rent is owing on them, you can
have them." - "Is this the lady?" I said, showing the
photograph. "That's her sure enough," she exclaimed; "and when
is she coming back, sir?" - "The lady is dead," I replied.
"Oh, sir, I hope not! said the woman; `she was my best lodger. She paid me
three guineas a week merely to sit in my drawing-rooms now and then." -
"She met some one here?" I said; but the woman assured me that it was
not so, that she always came alone, and saw no one. "What on earth did she
do here?" I cried. "She simply sat in the drawing-room, sir, reading
books, and sometimes had tea," the woman answered. I did not know what to
say, so I gave her a sovereign and went away. Now, what do you think it all
meant? You don't believe the woman was telling the truth?'
`I do.'
`Then why did Lady Alroy go there?'
`My dear Gerald,' I answered, `Lady Alroy was simply a woman
with a mania for mystery. She took these rooms for the pleasure of going there
with her veil down, and imagining she was a heroine. She had a passion for
secrecy, but she herself was merely a Sphinx without a secret.'
`Do you really think so?'
`I am sure of it,' I replied.
He took out the morocco case, opened it, and looked at the
photograph. `I wonder?' he said at last.
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