CHAPTER XXVIII
SPERO
The Vicomte of Monte-Cristo was a wonderfully handsome man. The grace ofhis mother and the stalwart build of his father were united in him. Hisdark hair fell in wavy locks over his high white forehead, and the longeyelashes lay like veils upon his cheeks.
The young man's surroundings were in every particular arranged withconsummate taste. The vicomte had inherited from his parents a taste forOriental things, and his study looked like a costly tent, while hisbedroom was furnished with the simplicity of a convent cell. The Countof Monte-Cristo had taught his son to be strict to himself and notbecome effeminate in any way. Nice pictures and statues were in theparlors, the bookcase was filled with selected volumes and he spent manyhours each day in serious studies. Spero was a master in all physicalaccomplishments. His father's iron muscles were his legacy, and thecount often proudly thought that his son, in case of need, would alsohave found the means and the way to escape from the Chateau d'If.
The vicomte sat at his writing-desk and was reading his father's letterwhen Coucou entered. The Zouave had changed somewhat. He no longer worea uniform or the little cap of a Jackal, but had changed them for a darkbrown overcoat. His eyes, however, still sparkled as merrily as ever,and Coucou could laugh as heartily as ever.
"When did the count leave the house?" asked Spero, whose voice remindedone of his father's.
"This evening, vicomte," replied Coucou, with military briefness.
"Why was I not called?"
"The count forbade it. He ordered me to place the letter which you foundon the writing-table and--"
"Did the count go alone?"
"No, Ali accompanied him."
"In what direction did he go?"
"I do not know. I was called to the count at two o'clock this morning,and after I had received the letter, I went away."
"Without asking any questions?"
"Oh, vicomte, no one asks the Count of Monte-Cristo for a reason," criedCoucou, vivaciously. "I am not a coward, but--"
"I know you possess courage," replied the young man.
"_Sapristi_--there, now, I have allowed myself to go again. I know thatmy way of speaking displeases you, vicomte, and I will try next time todo better."
"What makes you think that your language displeases me?" asked Spero,laughing.
"Because--excuse me, vicomte, but sometimes you look so stern--"
"Nonsense," interrupted Spero; "I may sometimes look troubled, butcertainly not stern, and I beg you not to speak differently from whatyou were taught--speak to me as you do to my father."
"Ah, it is easy to speak to the count," said Coucou, unthinkingly; "hehas such a cheering smile--"
A frown passed over Spero's face, and he gently said:
"My father is good--he is much better than I am--I knew it long ago."
"Vicomte, I did not say that," cried the Zouave, embarrassed.
"No, but you thought so, and were perfectly right, my dear Auguste; ifyou wish to have me for a friend, always tell the truth."
"Yes, sir," replied Coucou, "and now I have a special favor to ask you,vicomte."
"Speak, it is already granted."
"Vicomte, the count never calls me Auguste, which is my baptismal name,but Coucou. If you would call me Coucou, I--"
"With pleasure. Well, then, Coucou, you know nothing further?"
"Nothing."
"It is good. You can go."
The Zouave turned toward the door. When he had nearly reached it, Sperocried:
"Coucou, stay a moment."
"Just as you say, vicomte."
"I only wished to beg you again," said Spero, in a low, trembling voice,"not to think me stern or ungrateful. I shall never forget that it wasyou who accompanied my father and me to Africa, and that you placedyour own life in danger to rescue mine."
"Ah, vicomte," stammered the Zouave, deeply moved, "that was only myduty."
"That a good many would have shirked this duty, and that you did not, iswhy I thank you still to-day. Give me your hand in token of ourfriendship. Now we are good friends again, are we not?"
With tears in his laughing eyes, Coucou laid his big brown hand in thedelicate hand of the vicomte. The latter cordially shook it, and wasalmost frightened, when the Zouave uttered a faint cry and hastilywithdrew his fingers.
"What is the matter with you?" asked Spero, in amazement.
"Oh, nothing, but--"
"Well, but--"
"You see, vicomte, my hand is almost crushed, and because I was notprepared for it, I gave a slight cry. Who would have thought that such afine, white, delicate hand could give you a squeeze like a piston-rod?"
Spero looked wonderingly at his hands, and then dreamily said:
"I am stronger than I thought."
"I think so, too," said Coucou. "Only the count understands how tosqueeze one's hand in that way. I almost forgot to ask you, vicomte,where you intend to take breakfast?"
"Downstairs in the dining-room."
"Are you going to breakfast alone?"
"That depends. Perhaps one of my friends may drop in, though I haven'tinvited any one."
"Please ring the bell in case you want to be served," said Coucou, ashe left the room.
Spero stood at the writing-desk for a time, and his dark eyes werehumid. He shoved a brown velvet curtain aside and entered a small, darkroom which opened from his study. A pressure of the finger upon theblinds caused them to spring open, and the broad daylight streamedthrough the high windows. The walls, which were hung with brown velvet,formed an octagon, and opposite the broad windows were two pictures ingold frames. The vicomte's look rested on these pictures. They were thefeatures of his parents which had been placed upon the canvas by thehand of an artist. In all her goodness, Haydee, Ali Tebelen's daughter,looked down upon her son, and the bold, proud face of Edmond Dantesgreeted his heir with a speaking look.
"Ah, my mother," whispered Spero, softly, "if you were only with me nowthat father has left me. How shall I get along in life without him? Thefuture looks blank and dark to me, the present sad, and only the past isworth having lived for! What a present the proud name is that was laidin my cradle. Others see bright light where the shadow threatens tosuffocate me, and my heart trembles when I think that I am standing inthe labyrinth of life without a guide!"
From this it can be seen that the count had not exaggerated in hisletter to his son. He domineered, consciously or unconsciously, over hissurroundings, and so it happened that Spero hardly dared to express athought of his own.
Spero was never heard to praise or admire this or that, before he hadfirst inquired whether such an opinion would be proper to express. Thefather recognized too late that his son lacked independence of thought.He had, as he thought, schooled his son for the battle of life. He hadtaught him how to carry the weapons, but in his anxiety about exteriorand trivial things he had forgotten to make allowance for the inwardyearning. The form was more to him than the contents, and this wasrevenging itself now in a telling way. The demands of ordinary life wereunknown to Spero. He had put his arm in the burning flame with thecourage of a Mucius Scaevola, and quailed before the prick of a needle.
Suddenly the door-bell rang, and breathing more freely the vicomte leftthe little room. When he returned to his study he found Coucou awaitinghim. The Zouave presented a visiting card to the vicomte on a silversalver, and hardly had Spero thrown a look at it, when he joyfullycried:
"Bring the gentleman to the dining-room, Coucou, and put two covers on;we shall dine together."
The Son of Monte-Cristo, Volume II Page 29