A number of visitors were sprinkled about Olaf van Noord's large
and dirty studio, these being made up for the most part of those
weird and nondescript enthusiasts who seek to erect an apocryphal
Montmartre in the plains of Soho. One or two ordinary mortals,
representing the Press, leavened the throng, but the entire
gathering--"advanced" and unenlightened alike--seemed to be drawn
to a common focus: a large canvas placed advantageously in the
southeast corner of the studio, where it enjoyed all the benefit of
a pure and equably suffused light.
Seated apart from his worshipers upon a little sketching stool, and
handling a remarkably long, amber cigarette-holder with much grace,
was Olaf van Noord. He had hair of so light a yellow as sometimes
to appear white, worn very long, brushed back from his brow and cut
squarely all around behind, lending him a medieval appearance. He
wore a slight mustache carefully pointed; and his scanty vandyke
beard could not entirely conceal the weakness of his chin. His
complexion had the color and general appearance of drawing-paper,
and in his large blue eyes was an eerie hint of sightlessness. He
was attired in a light tweed suit cut in an American pattern, and
out from his low collar flowed a black French knot.
Olaf van Noord rose to meet Helen Cumberly and Denise Ryland,
advancing across the floor with the measured gait of a tragic
actor. He greeted them aloofly, and a little negro boy proffered
tiny cups of China tea. Denise Ryland distended her nostrils as
her gaze swept the picture-covered walls; but she seemed to approve
of the tea.
The artist next extended to them an ivory box containing little
yellow-wrapped cigarettes. Helen Cumberly smilingly refused, but
Denise Ryland took one of the cigarettes, sniffed at it
superciliously--and then replaced it in the box.
"It has a most . . . egregiously horrible . . . odor," she
commented.
"They are a special brand," explained Olaf van Noord, distractedly,
"which I have imported for me from Smyrna. They contain a small
percentage of opium."
"Opium!" exclaimed Denise Ryland, glaring at the speaker and then
at Helen Cumberly, as though the latter were responsible in some
way for the vices of the painter.
"Yes," he said, reclosing the box, and pacing somberly to the door
to greet a new arrival.
"Did you ever in all your life," said Denise Ryland, glancing about
her, "see such an exhibition . . . of nightmares?"
Certainly, the criticism was not without justification; the dauby-
looking oil-paintings, incomprehensible water-colors, and riotous
charcoal sketches which formed the mural decoration of the studio
were distinctly "advanced." But, since the center of interest
seemed to be the large canvas on the easel, the two moved to the
edges of the group of spectators and began to examine this
masterpiece. A very puzzled newspaperman joined them, bending and
whispering to Helen Cumberly:
"Are you going to notice the thing seriously? Personally, I am
writing it up as a practical joke! We are giving him half a
column--Lord knows what for!--but I can't see how to handle it
except as funny stuff."
"But, for heaven's sake . . . what does he . . . call it?" muttered
Denise Ryland, holding a pair of gold rimmed pince-nez before her
eyes, and shifting them to and fro in an endeavor to focus the
canvas.
"'Our Lady of the Poppies,'" replied the journalist. "Do you think
it's intended to mean anything in particular?"
The question was no light one; it embodied a problem not readily
solved. The scene depicted, and depicted with a skill, with a
technical mastery of the bizarre that had in it something horrible--
was a long narrow room--or, properly, cavern. The walls
apparently were hewn from black rock, and at regular intervals,
placed some three feet from these gleaming walls, uprose slender
golden pillars supporting a kind of fretwork arch which entirely
masked the ceiling. The point of sight adopted by the painter was
peculiar. One apparently looked down into this apartment from some
spot elevated fourteen feet or more above the floor level. The
floor, which was black and polished, was strewn with tiger skins;
and little, inlaid tables and garishly colored cushions were spread
about in confusion, whilst cushioned divans occupied the visible
corners of the place. The lighting was very "advanced": a lamp,
having a kaleidoscopic shade, swung from the center of the roof low
into the room and furnished all the illumination.
Three doors were visible; one, directly in line at the further end
of the place, apparently of carved ebony inlaid with ivory;
another, on the right, of lemon wood or something allied to it, and
inlaid with a design in some emerald hued material; with a third,
corresponding door, on the left, just barely visible to the
spectator.
Two figures appeared. One was that of a Chinaman in a green robe
scarcely distinguishable from the cushions surrounding him, who
crouched upon the divan to the left of the central door, smoking a
long bamboo pipe. His face was the leering face of a yellow satyr.
But, dominating the composition, and so conceived in form, in
color, and in lighting, as to claim the attention centrally, so
that the other extravagant details became but a setting for it, was
another figure.
Upon a slender ivory pedestal crouched a golden dragon, and before
the pedestal was placed a huge Chinese vase of the indeterminate
pink seen in the heart of a rose, and so skilfully colored as to
suggest an internal luminousness. The vase was loaded with a mass
of exotic poppies, a riotous splash of color; whilst beside this
vase, and slightly in front of the pedestal, stood the figure
presumably intended to represent the Lady of the Poppies who gave
title to the picture.
The figure was that of an Eastern girl, slight and supple, and
possessing a devilish and forbidding grace. Her short hair formed
a black smudge upon the canvas, and cast a dense shadow upon her
face. The composition was infinitely daring; for out of this
shadow shone the great black eyes, their diablerie most cunningly
insinuated; whilst with a brilliant exclusion of detail--by means
of two strokes of the brush steeped in brightest vermilion, and one
seemingly haphazard splash of dead white--an evil and abandoned
smile was made to greet the spectator.
To the waist, the figure was a study in satin nudity, whence, from
a jeweled girdle, light draperies swept downward, covering the feet
and swinging, a shimmering curve out into the foreground of the
canvas, the curve being cut off in its apogee by the gold frame.
Above her head, this girl of demoniacal beauty held a bunch of
poppies seemingly torn from the vase: this, with her left hand;
with her right she pointed, tauntingly, at her beholder.
In comparison with the effected futurism of the other pictures in
the studio, "Our Lady of the Poppies," beyond question was a great
painting. From a point where the entire composition might be taken
in by the eye, the uncanny scene glowed with highly colored detail;
but, exclude the scheme of the composition, and focus the eye upon
any one item--the golden dragon--the seated Chinaman--the ebony
door--the silk-shaded lamp; it had no detail whatever: one beheld a
meaningless mass of colors. Individually, no one section of the
canvas had life, had meaning; but, as a whole, it glowed, it lived--
it was genius. Above all, it was uncanny.
This, Denise Ryland fully realized, but critics had grown so used
to treating the work of Olaf van Noord as a joke, that "Our Lady of
the Poppies" in all probability would never be judged seriously.
"What does it mean, Mr. van Noord?" asked Helen Cumberly, leaving
the group of worshipers standing hushed in rapture before the
canvas and approaching the painter. "Is there some occult
significance in the title?"
"It is a priestess," replied the artist, in his dreamy fashion. . . .
Helen Cumberly glanced again at the astonishing picture.
"Do you mean," she began, "that there is a living original?"
Olaf van Noord bowed absently, and left her side to greet one who
at that moment entered the studio. Something magnetic in the
personality of the newcomer drew all eyes from the canvas to the
figure on the threshold. The artist was removing garish tiger skin
furs from the shoulders of the girl--for the new arrival was a
girl, a Eurasian girl.
She wore a tiger skin motor-coat, and a little, close-fitting,
turban-like cap of the same. The coat removed, she stood revealed
in a clinging gown of silk; and her feet were shod in little amber
colored slippers with green buckles. The bodice of her dress
opened in a surprising V, displaying the satin texture of her neck
and shoulders, and enhancing the barbaric character of her
appearance. Her jet black hair was confined by no band or comb,
but protruded Bishareen-like around the shapely head. Without
doubt, this was the Lady of the Poppies--the original of the
picture.
"Dear friends," said Olaf van Noord, taking the girl's hand, and
walking into the studio, "permit me to present my model!"
Following, came a slightly built man who carried himself with a
stoop; an olive faced man, who squinted frightfully, and who
dressed immaculately.
"What a most . . . extraordinary-looking creature!" whispered
Denise Ryland to Helen. "She has undoubted attractions of . . . a
hellish sort . . . if I may use . . . the term."
"She is the strangest looking girl I have ever seen in my life,"
replied Helen, who found herself unable to turn her eyes away from
Olaf van Noord's model. "Surely she is not a professional model!"
The chatty reporter (his name was Crockett) confided to Helen
Cumberly:
"She is not exactly a professional model, I think, Miss Cumberly,
but she is one of the van Noord set, and is often to be seen in the
more exclusive restaurants, and sometimes in the Cafe Royal."
"She is possibly a member of the theatrical profession?"
"I think not. She is the only really strange figure (if we exclude
Olaf) in this group of poseurs. She is half Burmese, I believe,
and a native of Moulmein."
"Mostextraordinary creature!" muttered Denise Ryland, focussing
upon the Eurasian her gold rimmed glasses--"Most extraordinary."
She glanced around at the company in general. "I really begin to
feel . . . more and more as though I were . . . in a private
lunatic . . . asylum. That picture . . . beyond doubt is the work
. . . of a madman . . . a perfect . . . madman!"
"I, also, begin to be conscious of an uncomfortable sensation,"
said Helen, glancing about her almost apprehensively. "Am I
dreaming, or did some one else enter the studio, immediately behind
that girl?"
"No, my dear . . . look for yourself. As you say . . . you are
. . . dreaming. It's not to be wondered . . . at!"
Helen laughed, but very uneasily. Evidently it had been an
illusion, but an unpleasant illusion; for she should have been
prepared to swear that not two, but three people had entered!
Moreover, although she was unable to detect the presence of any
third stranger in the studio, the persuasion that this third person
actually was present remained with her, unaccountably, and
uncannily.
The lady of the tiger skins was surrounded by an admiring group of
unusuals, and Helen, who had turned again to the big canvas,
suddenly became aware that the little cross-eyed man was bowing and
beaming radiantly before her.
"May I be allowed," said Olaf van Noord who stood beside him, "to
present my friend Mr. Gianapolis, my dear Miss Cumberly?" . . .
Helen Cumberly found herself compelled to acknowledge the
introduction, although she formed an immediate, instinctive
distaste for Mr. Gianapolis. But he made such obvious attempts to
please, and was so really entertaining a talker, that she unbent
towards him a little. His admiration, too, was unconcealed; and no
pretty woman, however great her common sense, is entirely
admiration-proof.
"Do you not think 'Our Lady of the Poppies' remarkable?" said
Gianapolis, pleasantly.
"I think," replied Denise Ryland,--to whom, also, the Greek had
been presented by Olaf van Noord, "that it indicates . . . a
disordered . . . imagination on the part of . . . its creator."
"It is a technical masterpiece," replied the Greek, smiling, "but
hardly a work of imagination; for you have seen the original of the
principal figure, and"--he turned to Helen Cumberly--"one need not
go very far East for such an interior as that depicted."
"What!" Helen knitted her brows, prettily--"you do not suggest that
such an apartment actually exists either East or West?"
"Never, unfortunately. I have desired to go for years, and hope to
go some day."
"In Smyrna you may see such rooms; possibly in Port Said--certainly
in Cairo. In Constantinople--yes! But perhaps in Paris; and--who
knows?--Sir Richard Burton explored Mecca, but who has explored
London?"
"He is telling . . . fairy tales," she declared. "He thinks . . .
we are . . . silly!"
"On the contrary," declared Gianapolis; "I flatter myself that I am
too good a judge of character to make that mistake."
Helen Cumberly absorbed his entire attention; in everything he
sought to claim her interest; and when, ere taking their departure,
the girl and her friend walked around the studio to view the other
pictures, Gianapolis was the attendant cavalier, and so well as one
might judge, in his case, his glance rarely strayed from the
piquant beauty of Helen.
When they departed, it was Gianapolis, and not Olaf van Noord, who
escorted them to the door and downstairs to the street. The red
lips of the Eurasian smiled upon her circle of adulators, but her
eyes--her unfathomable eyes--followed every movement of the Greek.