South Wind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about South Wind.

South Wind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about South Wind.
every mitigation of savagery, every incitement to worthy or heroic actions, was due to her gentle words, her encouraging example.  From the very dawn of history woman had opposed herself to deeds of violence.  What was it Count Caloveglia had said?  “Temperance.  All the rest is embroidery.”  How well the old man could put things!  Temperance. . . .  His cousin, from what he could guess of her character, agreed with that description.  Mr. Heard would have maintained against the whole world that a woman, a true woman like this, could do no wrong.

And now he gathered that she was in trouble of some kind.  Then why not allow him to help?  He had asked for an early reply to his note.  Well, perhaps it would arrive by the evening post.

Slightly vexed none the less, he laid down the stump of his cigarette, preparatory to retiring for the hot hours of the day.  One owes something to oneself, N’EST-CE Pas?  At that moment there was a knock at his door.

Denis entered.  His face, shaded under a broad-brimmed hat, was ruddy with the heat.  He wore light flannels, and was carrying his jacket on his arm.  There was a large parcel in his hand.  He looked the picture of health.

Mr. Heard, on rising, gave him a critical glance.  He remembered his trip in the boat, and the suicide’s rock—­that black, ominous cliff; he remembered the thoughts which had passed through his mind at the time.  Was this the kind of boy to kill himself?  Surely not.  Keith must have been mistaken.  And Count Caloveglia—­was he mistaken too?  Evidently.  There was nothing tragic about Denis.  He was brimming over with life.  His troubles, whatever they were, must have been forgotten.

“I’ve been lunching with Keith,” he began.  “He made me tell him a fairy-tale.”

“Sit down and have some coffee!  You came away very early.”

“He told me he wanted to go to sleep after luncheon.  And one or two other nice things.”

Ah, thought Mr. Heard, Keith was acting up to what he had said in the boat; he was being good to the boy; that was right of him.

“I’m sure,” he said, “that Keith has been speaking kindly to you.”

“Kindly?  It’s like talking to an earthquake.  He told me to dominate my reflexes.  He called me a perambulating echo.  He said I was a human amoeba—­”

“Amoeba.  What’s that?”

“A sort of animal that floats about trying to attach itself to something which it can’t find.”

“I think I see what he means.  Anything else?”

“He said I was a chameleon.”

“A chameleon!”

“A chameleon that needed the influence of a good woman.  Then he gave me this box of Cuban chocolates, to keep me from crying, I suppose.  Have one!  They’re not nearly as nasty as they look.”

“Thanks.  A chameleon.  That is really interesting, as Keith would say.  I have seen thousands of them.  Outlandish beasts, that anchor themselves by their tails and squint horribly.  Let’s have a look at you, Denis.  No, I fail to detect any striking resemblance.”

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South Wind from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.