Halo, The
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Halo, by Bettina von Hutten This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: The Halo
Author: Bettina von Hutten
Illustrator: B. Martin Justice
Release Date: October 20, 2005 [EBook #16909]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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THE HALO
[Illustration: BRIGIT]
The
HALO
BY
BETTINA von HUTTEN
_Author of "PAM," "PAM DECIDES," ETC._
WITH FRONTISPIECE By B. MARTIN JUSTICE
NEW YORK, DODD, MEAD
AND COMPANY, MCMVII
Copyright, 1907 By Bettina von Hutten
Published October, 1907
TO THE MEMORY OF
A DEAR LOST FRIEND
I DEDICATE THIS BOOK
Bettina von Hutten
Thun, Switzerland, _September 5, 1907_
PROLOGUE
A straight stretch of dusty Norman road dappled with grotesque shadows of the ancient apple-trees that, bent as if in patient endurance of the weight of their thick-set scarlet fruit, edged it on both sides.
Under one of the trees, his back against its gnarled trunk, sat an old man playing a cracked fiddle.
He played horribly, wrenching discords from the poor instrument, grinning with a kind of vacant malice as it shrieked aloud in agony, and rolling in their scarred sockets his long-blind eyes.
Beside him, his tongue hanging out, his head bent, sat a yellow dog with a lead to his collar. Far and wide there was to be seen no other living thing, and in the apple-scented heat the screeching of the violin was like the resentful cries of some invisible creature being tortured.
"Papillon, mon ami," said the old man, ceasing playing for a moment, "we are wasting time; the shadows are coming. See the baby shadow apple-trees creeping across the road."
The yellow dog cocked an ear and said nothing.
"Time should never be lost, _petit chien jaune_--never be lost."
Then with a shrill laugh he ground his bow deep into the roughened strings, and the painful music began again.
The yellow dog closed his eyes....
Suddenly far down the road appeared a low cloud of white dust, advancing rapidly, and until it was nearly abreast of the fiddler, noiselessly, and then, with the cessation of a quick padding sound of bare feet, appeared a small, black-smocked boy, his sabots under his arm, his face white with anger.
"Stop it!" he cried, "stop it!"
The old man turned. "Stop what, little seigneur," he asked with surly amusement. "Does the high road belong to you?"
"You must stop it, I say, I cannot bear it."
The fiddler rose and danced about scraping more hideously than before. "Ho, ho," he laughed, "ho, ho, ho, ho!"
The child threw his arms over his head in a gesture of unconscious melodrama. "I cannot bear it--you are hurting it--I--I will kill you if you do not stop." And he flew at his enemy, using his close-cropped bullet-head as a battering ram.
For some seconds the absurd battle continued, and then, as unexpectedly as he had begun it, the boy gave it up, and as the fiddler laughed harshly, and the fiddle screeched, threw himself on the warm, dusty grass and cried aloud.
There was a pause, after which, in silence, the old man groped his way to the boy and knelt by him. "Hush, mon petit," he beseeched, "old Luc-Ange is a monster to tease you. Do not cry, do not cry."
A curious apple, leaning over to listen, fell from its bough and dropped with a thud into the grass.
The little Norman sat up. "I am not crying," he declared, turning a brown, pugnacious face towards his late foe, "see, there are no tears."
The man touched his cheeks and eyelids delicately with his dirty fingers. "True--no tears. But--why, why did you----"
"I was screaming because that noise was so horrible."
"And--that noise gave you pain?"
Bullet-Head frowned. Like all Normans, he resented his mental privacy being intruded on by questions.
"Not pain; it gives me a horrible, hollow feeling in my inside," he admitted grudgingly, "just under the belt."
After a moment he added, his dark eyes fixed angrily on the violin, "I hate violins; they are dreadful things. M. Chalumeau had one. I broke it."
The blind man laughed gratingly. "Because it made such a horrible noise?"
"Yes."
Another pause, and then the man's expression of vacant malice turned to one pitiful to see, one of indistinct yearning. "Give it to me," he muttered, "they say I am half mad, and perhaps I am, but--I think I could play once----" The yellow dog snapped at a fly, and his master turned towards him, adding, "Before your time, Papillon, long before."
The bow touched the strings once or twice gently and ineffectively, and then, his lips twitching, his eyelids as much closed as the scars on their lids allowed them to be, he began to play.
It was the playing
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