<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<br/>
<div class="first">TO the zest of the amateur, Blake added
knowledge of a practical kind in the arrangement of household gods,
and long ere the February dusk had fallen, the fifth-floor
<i>appartement</i> had assumed a certain homeliness. True, much of
the 'old iron,' as he termed the coppers and brasses for which Max
had bartered in the rue André de Sarte, still encumbered the
floor, and most of the windows cried aloud for covering; but the
little <i>salon</i> was habitable, and in the bedroom once occupied
by Madame Salas a bed and a dressing-table stood forth, fresh and
enticing enough to suggest a lady's chamber, while over the high
window white serge curtains shut out the cold.</div>
<p>At seven o'clock, having torn the canvas wrappings from the last
chair, the two workers paused in their labors by common consent and
looked at each other by the uncertain light of half a dozen candles
stuck into bowls and vases in various corners of the
<i>salon</i>.</p>
<p>"Boy," said Blake, breaking what had been a long silence, "I
tell you what it is, you're done! Take a warm by the fire for a
minute, while I tub under the kitchen tap, then we'll fare forth
for a meal and a breath of air!"</p>
<p>Max, who had worked with fierce zeal if little knowledge, made
no protest. His face was pale, and he moved with a certain slow
weariness.</p>
<p>"Here! Let's test the big chair!" Blake pulled forward the deep
leathern arm-chair, that had been purchased second-hand in the rue
de la Nature, and set it in front of the blazing logs. Without a
word, Max sank into it.</p>
<p>"Comfortable?"</p>
<p>"Very comfortable." The voice was a little thin.</p>
<p>The other looked down upon him. "You're done, you know!
Literally done! Why didn't you give in sooner?"</p>
<p>"Because I was not tired—and I am not tired."</p>
<p>"Not tired! And your face is as white as a sheet! I don't
believe you're fit to go out for food."</p>
<p>"How absurd! You talk as though I were a child!" Max lifted
himself petulantly on one elbow, but his head drooped and the
remonstrance died away before it was finished.</p>
<p>"I talk as if you were a child, do I? Then I talk uncommon good
sense! Well, I'm off to wash."</p>
<p>"There is some soap in my bedroom." The voice seemed to come
from a great distance, the elbow slipped from the arm of the chair,
the dark head drooped still more, and as the door shut upon Blake,
the eyelids closed mechanically.</p>
<p>Blake's washing was a protracted affair, for the day had been
long and the toil strenuous; but at last he returned, face and
hands clean, hair smooth, and clothes reduced to order.</p>
<p>"Sorry for being so long," he began, as he walked into the room;
but there he stopped, his eyebrows went up, and his face assumed a
curious look, half amused, half tender.</p>
<p>"Poor child!" he said below his breath, and tiptoeing across the
room, he paused by the arm-chair, in the depths of which Max's
slight figure was curled up in the pleasant embrace of sleep.</p>
<p>The fire had died down, the pool of candle-light was not
brilliant, and in the soft, shadowed glow the boy made an
attractive picture.</p>
<SPAN name="mystery"></SPAN>
<center><ANTIMG src="images/ill126.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="614" alt="THE IMPRESSION OF A MYSTERY FLOWED BACK UPON HIM"></center>
<h5>THE IMPRESSION OF A MYSTERY FLOWED BACK UPON HIM</h5>
<p>One hand lay carelessly on either arm of the chair; the head was
thrown back, the black lashes of the closed eyes cast shadows on
the smooth cheeks.</p>
<p>Blake looked long and interestedly, and his earliest
impression—the impression of a mystery—flowed back upon
him strong as on the night of the long journey.</p>
<p>The beauty and strength of the face called forth thought; and
Max's own declaration, so often repeated, came back upon him with
new meaning, 'I am older than you think!'</p>
<p>For almost the first time the words carried weight. It was not
that the features looked older; if anything they appeared younger
in their deep repose. But the expression—the slight knitting
of the dark brows, the set of the chin, the modelling of the full
lips, usually so mobile and prone to laughter—suggested a
hidden force, gave warranty of a depth, a strength irreconcilable
with a boy's capacities.</p>
<p>He looked—puzzled, attracted; then his glance dropped from
the face to the pathetically tired limbs, and the sense of pity
stirred anew, banishing question, causing the light of a pleasant
inspiration to awaken in his eyes.</p>
<p>Smiling to himself, he replenished the fire with exaggerated
stealth; and, creeping out of the room, closed the door behind
him.</p>
<p>He was gone for over half an hour, and when he again entered,
the fire had sprung into new life, and fresh flames—blue and
sulphur and copper-colored—were dancing up the chimney, while
the candles in their strange abiding-places had burned an inch or
two lower. But his eyes were for Max, and for Max alone, and with
the same intense stealth he crept across the room to the bare table
and solemnly unburdened himself of a variety of parcels and a
cheery-looking bottle done up in red tissue-paper.</p>
<p>Max still slept, and, drawing a sigh of satisfaction, he
proceeded with the task he had set himself—the task of
providing supper after the manner of the genius in the
fairy-tale.</p>
<p>First plates were brought from the new-filled kitchen shelves;
then knives were found, and forks; then the mysterious-looking
parcels delivered up their contents—a cold roast chicken, all
brown and golden as it had left the oven, cheese, butter, crisp
rolls, and crisp red radishes, finally a little basket piled with
fruit.</p>
<p>It was a very simple meal, but Blake smiled to himself as he set
out the dishes to the best advantage, placed the wine reverentially
in the centre to crown the feast, and at last, still tiptoeing,
came round to the back of Max's chair and laid his hands over the
closed eyes.</p>
<p>"Guess!" he said, as if to a child.</p>
<p>Max gave a little cry, in which surprise and fear struggled for
supremacy; then he sprang to his feet, shaking off the imprisoning
hands.</p>
<p>"What is it? Who is it?" Then he laughed shamefacedly, and,
turning, saw the spread table.</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>mon ami</i>!" His eyes opened wide, and he gazed from
the food to Blake. "<i>Mon ami!</i> You have done this for me while
I was sleeping!"</p>
<p>His gaze was eloquent even beyond his words, and Blake, finding
no fit answer, began to move about the room, collecting the vases
that held the candles and carrying them to the table.</p>
<p>"<i>Mon ami!</i>"</p>
<p>"Nonsense, boy! It's little enough I do, goodness knows!"</p>
<p>"This is a great deal."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! What is it? You were fagged and I was fresh! And now
I suppose I must knock the head off this bottle, for we haven't a
corkscrew. The Lord lend me a steady hand, for 'twould be a pity if
I shook the wine!"</p>
<p>He carried the bottle to the fireplace, and with considerable
dexterity cracked the head and wiped the raw glass edges. "Now,
boy, the glasses! Oh, but have we glasses, though?" His face fell
in a manner that set Max laughing.</p>
<p>"We have one glass—in my room."</p>
<p>"Bravo! Fly for it!"</p>
<p>Max laughed again—his sleep, his surprise, his gratitude
equally routed; he flew, in literal obedience to the command,
across the little hall and, groping his way to the dressing-table,
searched about in the darkness for the tumbler.</p>
<p>"Ned! A candle!"</p>
<p>Blake brought the desired light, and together they discovered
the coveted glass. Max seized upon it eagerly, but as he delivered
it up a swift exclamation escaped him:</p>
<p>"My God! How dirty I am! Regard my hands!"</p>
<p>"What does it matter! You can wash after you've eaten."</p>
<p>"Oh, but no! I pay more compliment to your feast."</p>
<p>"Very well, then! We may hope to sup in an hour or so. I know
you and the making of your toilet!"</p>
<p>"Impertinent!" Max caught him by the arm and pushed him,
laughing, toward the door. "Go back and complete the table. I will
delay but four—three—two minutes in the making of
myself clean."</p>
<p>"But the table is complete—"</p>
<p>"It is incomplete, <i>mon ami</i>; it is without flowers."</p>
<p>Before Blake's objections could form into new words, he found
himself in the little hallway with the bedroom door closed upon
him, and, being a philosopher, he shook his head contentedly and
walked back into the <i>salon</i>, where he obediently brought to
light the bowl of jonquils that was still perfuming the air from
its dark corner, and set it carefully between the wine and the
fruit.</p>
<p>Ten minutes and more slipped by, during which, still
philosophical, he walked slowly round and round the table,
straightening a candle here, altering a dish there, humming all the
while in a not unmusical voice the song from <i>Louise</i>.</p>
<p>He was dwelling fondly upon the line</p>
<div class='blkquot'>
<p>"Depuis le jour où je me suis donnée"—</p>
</div>
<p>when the door of the bedroom was flung open as by a gale, and at
the door of the <i>salon</i> appeared Max—his dark hair
falling over his forehead, a comb in one hand, a brush in the
other.</p>
<p>"<i>Mon cher!</i> a hundred—a thousand apologies for being
so long! It is all the fault of my hair!"</p>
<p>Blake looked at him across the candles. "Indeed I wouldn't
bother about my hair, if I were you! A century of brushing wouldn't
make it respectable."</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>"Look at the length of it!"</p>
<p>"Ah, but that pleases me!"</p>
<p>Blake shook his head in mock seriousness. "These artists! These
artists!" he murmured to himself.</p>
<p>Max laughed, threw the comb and brush from him into some unseen
corner of the hall, and ran across the <i>salon</i>.</p>
<p>"You are very ill-mannered! I shall box your ears!"</p>
<p>Blake threw himself into an attitude of defence. "I'd ask
nothing better!" he cried. "Come on! Just come on!"</p>
<p>Max, laughing and excited, took a step forward, then paused as
at some arresting thought.</p>
<p>"Afraid? Oh, <i>la, la</i>! Afraid?"</p>
<p>"Afraid!" The boy tossed the word back scornfully, but his face
flushed and he made no advance.</p>
<p>"You'll have to, now, you know!"</p>
<p>Max retreated.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, you don't!" With a quick, gay laugh, touched with the
fire of battle, Blake followed; but ere he could come to close
quarters, the boy had dodged and, lithe and swift as a cat, was
round the table.</p>
<p>"No! No!" he cried, with a little gasp, a little sob of
excitement that caught the breath. "No! No! I demand grace. A
starving man, <i>mon ami</i>! A starving man! It is not fair."</p>
<p>He knew his adversary. Blake's hands dropped to his sides, he
yielded with a laugh.</p>
<p>"Very well! Very well! Another time I'll see what you're made
of. And now 'we'll exterminate the bread-stuffs,' as McCutcheon
would say!"</p>
<p>And laughing, jesting—content in the moment for the
moment's sake—they sat down to their first serious meal in
the little <i>salon</i>.</p>
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