The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

Finally she folded her meager wardrobe and placed it in the Herr Doktor’s American trunk:  a marvel, that trunk, so firm, so heavy, bound with iron.  And with her own clothing she packed Stewart’s, the dress-suit he had worn once to the Embassy, a hat that folded, strange American shoes, and books—­always books.  The Herr Doktor would study at Semmering.  When all was in readiness and Stewart was taking a final survey, Marie ran downstairs and summoned a cab.  It did not occur to her to ask him to do it.  Marie’s small life was one of service, and besides there was an element in their relationship that no one but Marie suspected, and that she hid even from herself.  She was very much in love with this indifferent American, this captious temporary god of her domestic altar.  Such a contingency had never occurred to Stewart; but Peter, smoking gravely in the little apartment, had more than once caught a look in Marie’s eyes as she turned them on the other man, and had surmised it.  It made him uncomfortable.

When the train was well under way, however, and he found no disturbing element among the three others in the compartment, Stewart relaxed.  Semmering was a favorite resort with the American colony, but not until later in the winter.  In December there were rains in the mountains, and low-lying clouds that invested some of the chalets in constant fog.  It was not until the middle of January that the little mountain train became crowded with tourists, knickerbockered men with knapsacks, and jaunty feathers in their soft hats, boys carrying ski, women with Alpine cloaks and iron-pointed sticks.

Marie was childishly happy.  It was the first real vacation of her life, and more than that she was going to Semmering, in the very shadow of the Raxalpe, the beloved mountain of the Viennese.

Marie had seen the Rax all her life, as it towered thirty miles or so away above the plain.  On peaceful Sundays, having climbed the cog railroad, she had seen its white head turn rosy in the setting sun, and once when a German tourist from Munich had handed her his fieldglass she had even made out some of the crosses that showed where travelers had met their deaths.  Now she would be very close.  If the weather were good, she might even say a prayer in the chapel on its crest for the souls of those who had died.  It was of a marvel, truly; so far may one go when one has money and leisure.

The small single-trucked railway carriages bumped and rattled up the mountain sides, always rising, always winding.  There were moments when the track held to the cliffs only by gigantic fingers of steel, while far below were peaceful valleys and pink-and-blue houses and churches with gilded spires.  There were vistas of snow-peak and avalanche shed, and always there were tunnels.  Marie, so wise in some things, was a child in others; she slid close to Stewart in the darkness and touched him for comfort.

“It is so dark,” she apologized, “and it frightens me, the mountain heart.  In your America, have you so great mountains?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Street of Seven Stars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.