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"About anything you like."
"Do you recollect meeting a young Frenchman at Herr Fellner's, an artist, a painter?"
"Monsieur Benedict Turpin? I should think so! A charming man who makes the most rapid sketches, and though they are flattering, they are still likenesses."
"Oh! come, come! You are quite enthusiastic."
"I can show you one he did of me. He has given me a pair of wings, and I really look like an angel!"
"Then he is clever?"
"Enormously clever."
"And witty."
"He can certainly give you as good as you gave. You should have seen how he routed some of our bankers when they tried to chaff him. He spoke better German than they did."
"Is he rich as well?"
"So they say."
"It also seems as if there were remarkable affinities between his character and that of a little girl I know."
"But who? I don't understand."
"Nevertheless, it is some one you know. He appears to be capricious, imaginative, vivacious; he adores travelling, is an excellent rider, and a good sportsman, either on foot or horseback, all which coincides admirably with the tastes of a certain 'Diana Vernon.'"
"I thought that was what you always called me."
"So it is. Do you recognize my portrait?"
"Not at all, not in the least. I am gentle, calm, collected. I like travelling, yes. But where have I been? To Paris, Berlin, Vienna, London, and that is all, I love horses, but what do I ever ride except my poor little Gretchen?"
"She has nearly killed you twice over!"
"Poor thing! it was my own fault. As for shooting, I have never held a gun, and as for coursing, I have never started a hare."
"True, but why not? Only because the grandmother objected. If you could have had your own way--"
"Oh, yes! It would be glorious to rush against the wind, to feel it blowing through one's hair. There is great pleasure in rapid motion, a feeling of life which one finds in nothing else."
"So you would like to be able to do these things which you don't do."
"Yes, indeed."
"With Monsieur Benedict?"
"Why Monsieur Benedict more than any one else?"
"Because he is more charming than most."
"I do not think so."
"Really?"
"No."
"Then; supposing you were allowed to choose a husband out of all my friends, you would not choose M. Benedict?"
"I should never dream of doing so."
"Now, little sister, you know I am an obstinate man, who likes to understand, things. How is it that a man, young, handsome, rich, talented, courageous, and imaginative, fails to interest you, particularly when he has both the good qualities and the defects of your own character?"
"What am I to say? I do not know, I cannot a.n.a.lyse my feelings. Some people are sympathetic to me, some indifferent, some downright disagreeable!"
"Well, you don't cla.s.s Monsieur Benedict among the disagreeable, I hope."
"No, but among the indifferents."
"And why among the indifferents?"
"Monsieur Benedict is of medium height, I like tall men: he is fair, I like dark men. He is volatile, I like serious people. He is bold, always rus.h.i.+ng off to the ends of the world; he would be the husband of other men's wives, and not even the lover of his own."
"Let us resume. What sort of man, then, must he be that would please you?"
"Somebody just the opposite of M. Benedict."
"He must be tall."
"Yes."
"Dark?"
"Either dark or dark chestnut."
"Grave."
"Grave, or at least, serious. Also brave, steady, loyal, and--"
"Just so. Do you know that you have described, word for word, my friend, Karl von Freyberg?"
Helen blushed crimson, and moved quickly, as if to leave the room, but Frederic, disregarding his wound, caught her hand and made her sit down again. The light from between the curtains irradiated her face like the sunlight falling on a flower. He looked at her intently.
"Well, yes," she said, "but no one knows but you."
"Not Karl himself?"
"He may have some idea."