thoroughly /au fait/ on the character and position of Mlle. Moriaz. He
knew that she had a heart of gold, a mind free from all narrow
prejudices, a generous soul, and a love for all that was chivalrous
and heroic; he knew that two days of every week were devoted by her to
visiting the poor, and that she looked upon these as natural creditors
to whom it was her duty to make restitution. He knew also that Mlle.
Moriaz could all the better satisfy her charitable inclinations, as
her mother had left her an income of one hundred thousand livres. He
learned that she danced to perfection, that she drew like an angel,
and that she read Italian and spoke English. This last seemed of
mediocre importance to Count Abel. St. Paul said: "Though I speak with
the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as
sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal." The count was of St. Paul's
opinion, and had Mlle. Moriaz known neither how to speak English, nor
to draw, nor yet to dance, it would not in the least have diminished
the esteem with which he honoured her. The main essential in his eyes
was that she was benevolent to the poor, and that she cherished a
little tenderness for heroes.
When he had learned, with an air of indifference, all that he cared to
learn, he respectfully bowed himself away from Mlle. Moiseney, to whom
he had not mentioned his name, and, buckling his haversack, he put it
on his back, paid his bill, and set out on foot to make a hasty ascent
of the culminating point of the Albula Pass, which leads into the
Engadine Valley. One would have difficulty in finding throughout the
Alps a more completely barren, rugged, desolate spot, than this
portion of the Albula Pass. The highway lies among masses of rocks,
heaped up in terrible disorder. Arrived at the culminating point,
Count Abel felt the necessity of taking breath. He clambered up a
little hillock, where he seated himself. At his feet were wide open
the yawning jaws of a cavern, obstructed by great tufts of aconite
(wolf's-bane), with sombre foliage; one would have said that they kept
guard over some crime in which they had been accomplices. Count Abel
contemplated the awful silence that surrounded him; everywhere
enormous boulders, heaped together, or scattered about in isolated
grandeur; some pitched on their sides, others standing erect, still
others suspended, as it were, in mid-air. It seemed to him that these
boulders had formerly served for the games of bacchanalian Titans,
who, after having used them as skittles or jack-stones, had ended by
hurling them at one another's heads. It is most probable that He who
constructed the Albula Pass, alarmed and confused by the hideous
aspect of his work, did justice to it by breaking it into fragments
with his gigantic hammer.
Count Abel heard a tinkling of bells, and, looking up, he saw
approaching a post-chaise, making its way from Engadine to Bergun. It
was a large, uncovered berlin, and in it sat a woman of about sixty
years of age, accompanied by her attendants and her pug-dog. This
woman had rather a bulky head, a long face, a snub-nose, high cheek-
bones, a keen, bright eye, a large mouth, about which played a smile,
at the same time /spirituel/, imperious, and contemptuous. Abel grew
pale, and became at once convulsed with terror; he could not withdraw
his eyes from this markedly Mongolian physiognomy, which from afar he
had recognised. "Ah, yes," he said, "it is she!" He drew over his face
the cape of his mantle, and disappeared as completely as it is
possible to disappear when one is perched upon a hillock. It was six
years since he had seen this woman, and he had promised himself never
to see her again; but man is the plaything of circumstances, and his
happiness as well as his pride is at the mercy of a chance encounter.