The American paused. He had evidently lost his way. For the last
half hour he had been wandering in a medieval town, in a profound
medieval dream. Only a few days had elapsed since he had left the
steamship that carried him hither; and the accents of his own
tongue, the idioms of his own people, and the sympathetic community
of New World tastes and expressions still filled his mind until he
woke up, or rather, as it seemed to him, was falling asleep in the
past of this Old World town which had once held his ancestors.
Although a republican, he had liked to think of them in quaint
distinctive garb, representing state and importance--perhaps even
aristocratic pre-eminence--content to let the responsibility of
such "bad eminence" rest with them entirely, but a habit of
conscientiousness and love for historic truth eventually led him
also to regard an honest BAUER standing beside his cattle in the
quaint market place, or a kindly-faced black-eyed DIENSTMADCHEN in
a doorway, with a timid, respectful interest, as a possible type of
his progenitors. For, unlike some of his traveling countrymen in
Europe, he was not a snob, and it struck him--as an American--that
it was, perhaps, better to think of his race as having improved
than as having degenerated. In these ingenuous meditations he had
passed the long rows of quaint, high houses, whose sagging roofs
and unpatched dilapidations were yet far removed from squalor,
until he had reached the road bordered by poplars, all so unlike
his own country's waysides--and knew that he had wandered far from
his hotel.
He did not care, however, to retrace his steps and return by the
way he had come. There was, he reasoned, some other street or
turning that would eventually bring him to the market place and his
hotel, and yet extend his experience of the town. He turned at
right angles into a narrow grass lane, which was, however, as
neatly kept and apparently as public as the highway. A few
moments' walking convinced him that it was not a thoroughfare and
that it led to the open gates of a park. This had something of a
public look, which suggested that his intrusion might be at least a
pardonable trespass, and he relied, like most strangers, on the
exonerating quality of a stranger's ignorance. The park lay in the
direction he wished to go, and yet it struck him as singular that a
park of such extent should be still allowed to occupy such valuable
urban space. Indeed, its length seemed to be illimitable as he
wandered on, until he became conscious that he must have again lost
his way, and he diverged toward the only boundary, a high, thickset
hedge to the right, whose line he had been following.
As he neared it he heard the sound of voices on the other side,
speaking in German, with which he was unfamiliar. Having, as yet,
met no one, and being now impressed with the fact that for a public
place the park was singularly deserted, he was conscious that his
position was getting serious, and he determined to take this only
chance of inquiring his way. The hedge was thinner in some places
than in others, and at times he could see not only the light
through it but even the moving figures of the speakers, and the
occasional white flash of a summer gown. At last he determined to
penetrate it, and with little difficulty emerged on the other side.
But here he paused motionless. He found himself behind a somewhat
formal and symmetrical group of figures with their backs toward
him, but all stiffened into attitudes as motionless as his own, and
all gazing with a monotonous intensity in the direction of a
handsome building, which had been invisible above the hedge but
which now seemed to arise suddenly before him. Some of the figures
were in uniform. Immediately before him, but so slightly separated
from the others that he was enabled to see the house between her
and her companions, he was confronted by the pretty back,
shoulders, and blond braids of a young girl of twenty. Convinced
that he had unwittingly intruded upon some august ceremonial, he
instantly slipped back into the hedge, but so silently that his
momentary presence was evidently undetected. When he regained the
park side he glanced back through the interstices; there was no
movement of the figures nor break in the silence to indicate that
his intrusion had been observed. With a long breath of relief he
hurried from the park.
It was late when he finally got back to his hotel. But his little
modern adventure had, I fear, quite outrun his previous medieval
reflections, and almost his first inquiry of the silver-chained
porter in the courtyard was in regard to the park. There was no
public park in Alstadt! The Herr possibly alluded to the Hof
Gardens--the Schloss, which was in the direction he indicated. The
Schloss was the residency of the hereditary Grand Duke. JA WOHL!
He was stopping there with several Hoheiten. There was naturally a
party there--a family reunion. But it was a private enclosure. At
times, when the Grand Duke was not in residence," it was open to
the public. In point of fact, at such times tickets of admission
were to be had at the hotel for fifty pfennige each. There was
not, of truth, much to see except a model farm and dairy--the
pretty toy of a previous Grand Duchess.
But he seemed destined to come into closer collision with the
modern life of Alstadt. On entering the hotel, wearied by his long
walk, he passed the landlord and a man in half-military uniform on
the landing near his room. As he entered his apartment he had a
vague impression, without exactly knowing why, that the landlord
and the military stranger had just left it. This feeling was
deepened by the evident disarrangement of certain articles in his
unlocked portmanteau and the disorganization of his writing case.
A wave of indignation passed over him. It was followed by a knock
at the door, and the landlord blandly appeared with the stranger.
"A thousand pardons," said the former, smilingly, "but Herr
Sanderman, the Ober-Inspector of Police, wishes to speak with you.
I hope we are not intruding?"
"I have to ask only a few formal questions," said the Ober-
Inspector in excellent but somewhat precise English, "to supplement
the report which, as a stranger, you may not know is required by
the police from the landlord in regard to the names and quality of
his guests who are foreign to the town. You have a passport?"
"I have," said the American still more dryly. "But I do not keep
it in an unlocked portmanteau or an open writing case."
"An admirable precaution," said Sanderman, with unmoved politeness.
"May I see it? Thanks," he added, glancing over the document which
the American produced from his pocket. "I see that you are a born
American citizen--and an earlier knowledge of that fact would have
prevented this little contretemps. You are aware, Mr. Hoffman,
that your name is German?"
"It was borne by my ancestors, who came from this country two
centuries ago," said Hoffman, curtly.
"We are indeed honored by your return to it," returned Sanderman
suavely, "but it was the circumstance of your name being a local
one, and the possibility of your still being a German citizen
liable to unperformed military duty, which has caused the trouble."
His manner was clearly civil and courteous, but Hoffman felt that
all the time his own face and features were undergoing a profound
scrutiny from the speaker.
"And you are making sure that you will know me again?" said
Hoffman, with a smile.
"I trust, indeed, both," returned Sanderman, with a bow, "although
you will permit me to say that your description here," pointing to
the passport, "scarcely does you justice. ACH GOTT! it is the same
in all countries; the official eye is not that of the young DAMEN."
Hoffman, though not conceited, had not lived twenty years without
knowing that he was very good-looking, yet there was something in
the remark that caused him to color with a new uneasiness.
The Ober-Inspector rose with another bow, and moved toward the
door. "I hope you will let me make amends for this intrusion by
doing anything I can to render your visit here a pleasant one.
Perhaps," he added, "it is not for long."
But Hoffman evaded the evident question, as he resented what he
imagined was a possible sneer.
"I have not yet determined my movements," he said.
The Ober-Inspector brought his heels together in a somewhat stiffer
military salute and departed.
Nothing, however, could have exceeded the later almost servile
urbanity of the landlord, who seemed to have been proud of the
official visit to his guest. He was profuse in his attentions, and
even introduced him to a singularly artistic-looking man of middle
age, wearing an order in his buttonhole, whom he met casually in
the hall.
"Our Court photographer," explained the landlord with some fervor,
"at whose studio, only a few houses distant, most of the Hoheiten
and Prinzessinen of Germany have sat for their likenesses."
"I should feel honored if the distinguished American Herr would
give me a visit," said the stranger gravely, as he gazed at Hoffman
with an intensity which recalled the previous scrutiny of the
Police Inspector, "and I would be charmed if he would avail himself
of my poor skill to transmit his picturesque features to my unique
collection."
Hoffman returned a polite evasion to this invitation, although he
was conscious of being struck with this second examination of his
face, and the allusion to his personality.
The next morning the porter met him with a mysterious air. The
Herr would still like to see the Schloss? Hoffman, who had quite
forgotten his adventure in the park, looked vacant. JA WOHL--the
Hof authorities had no doubt heard of his visit and had intimated
to the hotel proprietor that he might have permission to visit the
model farm and dairy. As the American still looked indifferent the
porter pointed out with some importance that it was a Ducal
courtesy not to be lightly treated; that few, indeed, of the
burghers themselves had ever been admitted to this eccentric whim
of the late Grand Duchess. He would, of course, be silent about
it; the Court would not like it known that they had made an
exception to their rules in favor of a foreigner; he would enter
quickly and boldly alone. There would be a housekeeper or a
dairymaid to show him over the place.
More amused at this important mystery over what he, as an American,
was inclined to classify as a "free pass" to a somewhat heavy "side
show," he gravely accepted the permission, and the next morning
after breakfast set out to visit the model farm and dairy.
Dismissing his driver, as he had been instructed, Hoffman entered
the gateway with a mingling of expectancy and a certain amusement
over the "boldness" which the porter had suggested should
characterize his entrance. Before him was a beautifully kept lane
bordered by arbored and trellised roses, which seemed to sink into
the distance. He was instinctively following it when he became
aware that he was mysteriously accompanied by a man in the livery
of a chasseur, who was walking among the trees almost abreast of
him, keeping pace with his step, and after the first introductory
military salute preserving a ceremonious silence. There was
something so ludicrous in this solemn procession toward a peaceful,
rural industry that by the time they had reached the bottom of the
lane the American had quite recovered his good humor. But here a
new astonishment awaited him. Nestling before him in a green
amphitheater lay a little wooden farm-yard and outbuildings, which
irresistibly suggested that it had been recently unpacked and set
up from a box of Nuremberg toys. The symmetrical trees, the
galleried houses with preternaturally glazed windows, even the
spotty, disproportionately sized cows in the white-fenced barnyards
were all unreal, wooden and toylike.
Crossing a miniature bridge over a little stream, from which he was
quite prepared to hook metallic fish with a magnet their own size,
he looked about him for some real being to dispel the illusion.
The mysterious chasseur had disappeared. But under the arch of an
arbor, which seemed to be composed of silk ribbons, green glass,
and pink tissue paper, stood a quaint but delightful figure.
At first it seemed as if he had only dispelled one illusion for
another. For the figure before him might have been made of Dresden
china--so daintily delicate and unique it was in color and
arrangement. It was that of a young girl dressed in some forgotten
medieval peasant garb of velvet braids, silver-staylaced corsage,
lace sleeves, and helmeted metallic comb. But, after the Dresden
method, the pale yellow of her hair was repeated in her bodice, the
pink of her cheeks was in the roses of her chintz overskirt. The
blue of her eyes was the blue of her petticoat; the dazzling
whiteness of her neck shone again in the sleeves and stockings.
Nevertheless she was real and human, for the pink deepened in her
cheeks as Hoffman's hat flew from his head, and she recognized the
civility with a grave little curtsy.
"You have come to see the dairy," she said in quaintly accurate
English; "I will show you the way."
"But what?" she said, facing him suddenly with absolutely
astonished eyes.
Hoffman looked into them so long that their frank wonder presently
contracted into an ominous mingling of restraint and resentment.
Nothing daunted, however, he went on:
The look of wonder returned. "Shake all that?" she repeated. "I
do not understand."
"Well! I'm not positively aching to see cows, and you must be sick
of showing them. I think, too, I've about sized the whole show.
Wouldn't it be better if we sat down in that arbor--supposing it
won't fall down--and you told me all about the lot? It would save
you a heap of trouble and keep your pretty frock cleaner than
trapesing round. Of course," he said, with a quick transition to
the gentlest courtesy, "if you're conscientious about this thing
we'll go on and not spare a cow. Consider me in it with you for
the whole morning."
She looked at him again, and then suddenly broke into a charming
laugh. It revealed a set of strong white teeth, as well as a
certain barbaric trace in its cadence which civilized restraint had
not entirely overlaid.
"I suppose she really is a peasant, in spite of that pretty frock,"
he said to himself as he laughed too.
But her face presently took a shade of reserve, and with a gentle
but singular significance she said:
Hoffman's hat was in his hand with a vivacity that tumbled the
brown curls on his forehead. "By all means," he said instantly,
and began walking by her side in modest but easy silence. Now that
he thought her a conscientious peasant he was quiet and respectful.
Presently she lifted her eyes, which, despite her gravity, had not
entirely lost their previous mirthfulness, and said:
"But you Americans--in your rich and prosperous country, with your
large lands and your great harvests--you must know all about
farming."
"Never was in a dairy in my life," said Hoffman gravely. "I'm from
the city of New York, where the cows give swill milk, and are kept
in cellars."
Her eyebrows contracted prettily in an effort to understand. Then
she apparently gave it up, and said with a slanting glint of
mischief in her eyes:
"Then you come here like the other Americans in hope to see the
Grand Duke and Duchess and the Princesses?"
"No. The fact is I almost tumbled into a lot of 'em--standing like
wax figures--the other side of the park lodge, the other day--and
got away as soon as I could. I think I prefer the cows."
Her head was slightly turned away. He had to content himself with
looking down upon the strong feet in their serviceable but smartly
buckled shoes that uplifted her upright figure as she moved beside
him.
"Of course," he added with boyish but unmistakable courtesy, "if
it's part of your show to trot out the family, why I'm in that,
too. I dare say you could make them interesting."
"But why," she said with her head still slightly turned away toward
a figure--a sturdy-looking woman, which, for the first time,
Hoffman perceived was walking in a line with them as the chasseur
had done--"why did you come here at all?"
"The first time was a fool accident," he returned frankly. "I was
making a short cut through what I thought was a public park. The
second time was because I had been rude to a Police Inspector whom
I found going through my things, but who apologized--as I suppose--
by getting me an invitation from the Grand Duke to come here, and I
thought it only the square thing to both of 'em to accept it. But
I'm mighty glad I came; I wouldn't have missed YOU for a thousand
dollars. You see I haven't struck anyone I cared to talk to
since." Here he suddenly remarked that she hadn't looked at him,
and that the delicate whiteness of her neck was quite suffused with
pink, and stopped instantly. Presently he said quite easily:
"Yes. She's watching us as if she didn't quite approve, you know--
just as if she didn't catch on."
"She's the head housekeeper of the farm. Perhaps you would prefer
to have her show you the dairy; shall I call her?"
The figure in question was very short and stout, with voluminous
petticoats.
"Please don't; I'll stay without your setting that paperweight on
me. But here's the dairy. Don't let her come inside among those
pans of fresh milk with that smile, or there'll be trouble."
The young girl paused too, made a slight gesture with her hand, and
the figure passed on as they entered the dairy. It was beautifully
clean and fresh. With a persistence that he quickly recognized as
mischievous and ironical, and with his characteristic adaptability
accepted with even greater gravity and assumption of interest, she
showed him all the details. From thence they passed to the
farmyard, where he hung with breathless attention over the names of
the cows and made her repeat them. Although she was evidently
familiar with the subject, he could see that her zeal was fitful
and impatient.
"Suppose we sit down," he said, pointing to an ostentatious rustic
seat in the center of the green.
She laughed again with a slight expression of relief. They had
entered the copse and were walking in dense shadow when she
suddenly stopped and sat down upon a rustic bench. To his surprise
he found that they were quite alone.
"Tell me about these relatives," she said, slightly drawing aside
her skirt to make room for him on the seat.
He did not require a second invitation. He not only told her all
about his ancestral progenitors, but, I fear, even about those more
recent and more nearly related to him; about his own life, his
vocation--he was a clever newspaper correspondent with a roving
commission--his ambitions, his beliefs and his romance.
"And then, perhaps, of this visit--you will also make 'copy'?"
He smiled at her quick adaptation of his professional slang, but
shook his head.
"No," he said gravely. "No--this is YOU. The CHICAGO INTERVIEWER
is big pay and is rich, but it hasn't capital enough to buy you
from me.
He gently slid his hand toward hers and slipped his fingers softly
around it. She made a slight movement of withdrawal, but even
then--as if in forgetfulness or indifference--permitted her hand to
rest unresponsively in his. It was scarcely an encouragement to
gallantry, neither was it a rejection of an unconscious
familiarity.
"But you haven't told me about yourself," he said.
"Oh, I"--she returned, with her first approach to coquetry in a
laugh and a sidelong glance, "of what importance is that to you?
It is the Grand Duchess and Her Highness the Princess that you
Americans seek to know. I am--what I am--as you see."
"What?" She had moved in her seat so as to half-face him with eyes
in which curiosity, mischief, and a certain seriousness alternated,
but for the first time seemed conscious of his hand, and accented
her words with a slight pressure.
"You are to return to your hotel presently, and say to your
landlord: 'Pack up my luggage. I have finished with this old town
and my ancestors, and the Grand Duke, whom I do not care to see,
and I shall leave Alstadt tomorrow!'"
"Of what necessity should you? I have said it. That should be
enough for a chivalrous American like you." She again
significantly looked down at her hand.
"If you mean that you know the extent of the favor you ask of me, I
can say no more," he said seriously; "but give me some reason for
it."
"Ah so!" she said, with a slight shrug of her shoulders. "Then 1
must tell you. You say you do not know the Grand Duke and Duchess.
Well! THEY KNOW YOU. The day before yesterday you were wandering
in the park, as you admit. You say, also, you got through the
hedge and interrupted some ceremony. That ceremony was not a Court
function, Mr. Hoffman, but something equally sacred--the
photographing of the Ducal family before the Schloss. You say that
you instantly withdrew. But after the photograph was taken the
plate revealed a stranger standing actually by the side of the
Princess Alexandrine, and even taking the PAS of the Grand Duke
himself. That stranger was you!"
"And the picture was spoiled," said the American, with a quiet
laugh.
"I should not say that," returned the lady, with a demure glance at
her companion's handsome face, "and I do not believe that the
Princess--who first saw the photograph--thought so either. But she
is very young and willful, and has the reputation of being very
indiscreet, and unfortunately she begged the photographer not to
destroy the plate, but to give it to her, and to say nothing about
it, except that the plate was defective, and to take another.
Still it would have ended there if her curiosity had not led her to
confide a description of the stranger to the Police Inspector, with
the result you know."
"Then I am expected to leave town because I accidentally stumbled
into a family group that was being photographed?"
"Because a certain Princess was indiscreet enough to show her
curiosity about you," corrected the fair stranger.
"But look here! I'll apologize to the Princess, and offer to pay
for the plate."
"Then you do want to see the Princess?" said the young girl
smiling; "you are like the others."
"Bother the Princess! I want to see YOU. And I don't see how they
can prevent it if I choose to remain."
"Very easily. You will find that there is something wrong with
your passport, and you will be sent on to Pumpernickel for
examination. You will unwittingly transgress some of the laws of
the town and be ordered to leave it. You will be shadowed by the
police until you quarrel with them--like a free American--and you
are conducted to the frontier. Perhaps you will strike an officer
who has insulted you, and then you are finished on the spot."
The American's crest rose palpably until it cocked his straw hat
over his curls.
"Suppose I am content to risk it--having first laid the whole
matter and its trivial cause before the American Minister, so that
he could make it hot for this whole caboodle of a country if they
happened to 'down me.' By Jove! I shouldn't mind being the martyr
of an international episode if they'd spare me long enough to let
me get the first 'copy' over to the other side." His eyes
sparkled.
"You could expose them, but they would then deny the whole story,
and you have no evidence. They would demand to know your
informant, and I should be disgraced, and the Princess, who is
already talked about, made a subject of scandal. But no matter!
It is right that an American's independence shall not be interfered
with."
She raised the hem of her handkerchief to her blue eyes and
slightly turned her head aside. Hoffman gently drew the
handkerchief away, and in so doing possessed himself of her other
hand.
"Look here, Miss--Miss--Elsbeth. You know I wouldn't give you
away, whatever happened. But couldn't I get hold of that
photographer--I saw him, he wanted me to sit to him--and make him
tell me?"
"He wanted you to sit to him," she said hurriedly, "and did you?"
"No," he replied. "He was a little too fresh and previous, though
I thought he fancied some resemblance in me to somebody else."
"Ah!" She said something to herself in German which he did not
understand, and then added aloud:
"You did well; he is a bad man, this photographer. Promise me you
shall not sit for him."
"How can I if I'm fired out of the place like this?" He added
ruefully, "But I'd like to make him give himself away to me
somehow."
"He will not, and if he did he would deny it afterward. Do not go
near him nor see him. Be careful that he does not photograph you
with his instantaneous instrument when you are passing. Now you
must go. I must see the Princess."
"Let me go, too. I will explain it to her," said Hoffman.
She stopped, looked at him keenly, and attempted to withdraw her
hands. "Ah, then it IS so. It is the Princess you wish to see.
You are curious--you, too; you wish to see this lady who is
interested in you. I ought to have known it. You are all alike."
He met her gaze with laughing frankness, accepting her outburst as
a charming feminine weakness, half jealousy, half coquetry--but
retained her hands.
"Nonsense," he said. "I wish to see her that I may have the right
to see you--that you shall not lose your place here through me;
that I may come again."
"Then you must come where I am. We will meet somewhere when you
have an afternoon off. You shall show me the town--the houses of
my ancestors--their tombs; possibly--if the Grand Duke rampages--
the probable site of my own."
She looked into his laughing eyes with her clear, stedfast, gravely
questioning blue ones. "Do not you Americans know that it is not
the fashion here, in Germany, for the young men and the young women
to walk together--unless they are VERLOBT?"
It was easy to draw her closer by simply lowering her still captive
hands. Then he suddenly kissed her coldly startled lips, and
instantly released her. She as instantly vanished.
Her now really frightened face reappeared with a heightened color
from the dense foliage--quite to his astonishment.
"Hush," she said, with her finger on her lips. "Are you mad?"
"I only wanted to remind you to square me with the Princess," he
laughed as her head disappeared.
He strolled back toward the gate. Scarcely had he quitted the
shrubbery before the same chasseur made his appearance with
precisely the same salute; and, keeping exactly the same distance,
accompanied him to the gate. At the corner of the street he hailed
a droshky and was driven to his hotel.
The landlord came up smiling. He trusted that the Herr had greatly
enjoyed himself at the Schloss. It was a distinguished honor--in
fact, quite unprecedented. Hoffman, while he determined not to
commit himself, nor his late fair companion, was nevertheless
anxious to learn something more of her relations to the Schloss.
So pretty, so characteristic, and marked a figure must be well
known to sightseers. Indeed, once or twice the idea had crossed
his mind with a slightly jealous twinge that left him more
conscious of the impression she had made on him than he had deemed
possible. He asked if the model farm and dairy were always shown
by the same attendants.
"ACH GOTT! no doubt, yes; His Royal Highness had quite a retinue
when he was in residence."
"There was undoubtedly a livery for the servants."
Hoffman felt a slight republican irritation at the epithet--he knew
not why. But this costume was rather a historical one; surely it
was not entrusted to everyday menials--and he briefly described it.
His host's blank curiosity suddenly changed to a look of mysterious
and arch intelligence.
"ACH GOTT! yes!" He remembered now (with his finger on his nose)
that when there was a fest at the Schloss the farm and dairy were
filled with shepherdesses, in quaint costume worn by the ladies of
the Grand Duke's own theatrical company, who assumed the characters
with great vivacity. Surely it was the same, and the Grand Duke
had treated the Herr to this special courtesy. Yes--there was one
pretty, blonde young lady--the Fraulein Wimpfenbuttel, a most
popular soubrette, who would play it to the life! And the
description fitted her to a hair! Ah, there was no doubt of it;
many persons, indeed, had been so deceived.
But happily, now that he had given him the wink, the Herr could
corroborate it himself by going to the theater tonight. Ah, it
would be a great joke--quite colossal! if he took a front seat
where she could see him. And the good man rubbed his hands in
gleeful anticipation.
Hoffman had listened to him with a slow repugnance that was only
equal to his gradual conviction that the explanation was a true
one, and that he himself had been ridiculously deceived. The
mystery of his fair companion's costume, which he had accepted as
part of the "show"; the inconsistency of her manner and her evident
occupation; her undeniable wish to terminate the whole episode with
that single interview; her mingling of worldly aplomb and rustic
innocence; her perfect self-control and experienced acceptance of
his gallantry under the simulated attitude of simplicity--all now
struck him as perfectly comprehensible. He recalled the actress's
inimitable touch in certain picturesque realistic details in the
dairy--which she had not spared him; he recognized it now even in
their bowered confidences (how like a pretty ballet scene their
whole interview on the rustic bench was!), and it breathed through
their entire conversation--to their theatrical parting at the
close! And the whole story of the photograph was, no doubt, as
pure a dramatic invention as the rest! The Princess's romantic
interest in him--that Princess who had never appeared (why had he
not detected the old, well-worn, sentimental situation here?)--was
all a part of it. The dark, mysterious hint of his persecution by
the police was a necessary culmination to the little farce. Thank
Heaven! he had not "risen" at the Princess, even if he had given
himself away to the clever actress in her own humble role. Then
the humor of the whole situation predominated and he laughed until
the tears came to his eyes, and his forgotten ancestors might have
turned over in their graves without his heeding them. And with
this humanizing influence upon him he went to the theater.
It was capacious even for the town, and although the performance
was a special one he had no difficulty in getting a whole box to
himself. He tried to avoid this public isolation by sitting close
to the next box, where there was a solitary occupant--an officer--
apparently as lonely as himself. He had made up his mind that when
his fair deceiver appeared he would let her see by his significant
applause that he recognized her, but bore no malice for the trick
she had played on him. After all, he had kissed her--he had no
right to complain. If she should recognize him, and this
recognition led to a withdrawal of her prohibition, and their
better acquaintance, he would be a fool to cavil at her pleasant
artifice. Her vocation was certainly a more independent and
original one than that he had supposed; for its social quality and
inequality he cared nothing. He found himself longing for the
glance of her calm blue eyes, for the pleasant smile that broke the
seriousness of her sweetly restrained lips. There was no doubt
that he should know her even as the heroine of DER CZAR UND DER
ZIMMERMANN on the bill before him. He was becoming impatient. And
the performance evidently was waiting. A stir in the outer
gallery, the clatter of sabers, the filing of uniforms into the
royal box, and a triumphant burst from the orchestra showed the
cause. As a few ladies and gentlemen in full evening dress emerged
from the background of uniforms and took their places in the front
of the box, Hoffman looked with some interest for the romantic
Princess. Suddenly he saw a face and shoulders in a glitter of
diamonds that startled him, and then a glance that transfixed him.
He leaned over to his neighbor. "Who is the young lady in the
box?"
He sat silently looking at the rising curtain and the stage. Then
be rose quietly, gathered his hat and coat, and left the box. When
he reached the gallery he turned instinctively and looked back at
the royal box. Her eyes had followed him, and as he remained a
moment motionless in the doorway her lips parted in a grateful
smile, and she waved her fan with a faint but unmistakable gesture
of farewell.
The next morning he left Alstadt. There was some little delay at
the Zoll on the frontier, and when Hoffman received back his trunk
it was accompanied by a little sealed packet which was handed to
him by the Customhouse Inspector. Hoffman did not open it until he
was alone.
There hangs upon the wall of his modest apartment in New York a
narrow, irregular photograph ingeniously framed, of himself
standing side by side with a young German girl, who, in the
estimation of his compatriots, is by no means stylish and only
passably good-looking. When he is joked by his friends about the
post of honor given to this production, and questioned as to the
lady, he remains silent. The Princess Alexandrine Elsbeth Marie
Stephanie von Westphalen-Alstadt, among her other royal qualities,
knew whom to trust.