The Street of Seven Stars
ouse was war
er the beards of middle life the fine horizontal scars of student days; elderly doctors from the general hospital across the street; even a Hofrath or two, drinking beer and reading the "Fliegende Blaetter" and "Simplicissimus"; and in an alcove round a billiard table a group of noisy Korps students. Over all a permea
spite of the salon of Maria Theresa and three expensive lessons a week in German. Harmony knew the art galleries and the churches, which w
andsome, hardly good-looking. His mouth was wide, his nose irregular, his hair a nondescript brown,-but the mouth had humor, the nose character, and, thank Heaven, there was plenty of hair. Not that Harmony saw all this at once.
the contrast. Possibly the revelation was an easement to the girl's nervousness. This smiling and unpressed individual, blithely waving aloft the Paris edition of the "Heral
sat down at her side, not to interf
r?" he
y mu
I live. They save the sugariest cakes for me. Don't let me bother you; go on and read. See which o
round. It's cur
e coffee-house, one dozen military men for local color, one dozen students ditto, and one
out the medi
dark-gray eyes fulfilled the
public will eat cinnamon cakes and drink coffee until the feeble American
conversation until she had had her coffee. She ate the ca
prescribing, and there's to be no conversation until the
loud, as she ate, bits of news from the paper, pausing to sip his own coffee and to cast an eye over the crowded room. Here and there an officer, gazing with too open a
l began to gather up her wra
ed gravely, "is twofold. Coffee is only the
rse very
t ourselves. We are sure to do
at her back; better than the little room with the sagging bed and the doors covered with wall paper. Her feet had stopped aching, too, She could have sat there
," she
hat over early, because it isn't much, as n
I'm not s
her's. Augustus! It's rather a mess. What shall I put on my professional brassplate? I
Patr
ss as Patrick! Patrick has possibilities. The d
confessed half shyly, "
e West and escaped unmarried; did two years in a drygoods store until, by saving and working in my vacations, I got through medical college and tried general practice. Didn't like it-always wanted to do surgery. A little legacy from the German uncle, trying to atone for the 'Augustus,' gave
esponse in her-loneliness and struggle, and the ever-present anxiety about money, grim determination, hope and fear, and even occasional despair. He was still young, bu
d out h
I understand very well because-it's music with me: v
table and looked out over
never pan out! Why aren't you at home to-night, eating a civilized beefsteak and running upstairs to get ready for a nice young man to bring you a box of chocolates? Wh
o expect none. She was drawing on her gloves
. Then, seeing Byrne, he waved a greeting to him. Byr
eyes. Unlike Byrne, he was foppishly neat. He was not alone. A slim little Austr
e demanded fretfully in Ge
y had, and eminently satisfactory, each underst
smoking a great many poisonous and highly expen
his eyes and sti
that wit
d out, little one. Old Pe
icer as she passed him, and paused to apologize, to the officer's delight and her escort's irritation. And Pete
he table while he was still greeting her. He held her in conversation in his absurd German until they had reached the swinging doors, while her companion followed helplessly. And he bo
e pavement when Byrne turned,
w, Stewart," he said, g
wouldn't
t argue a
s awkward pause
"That is up to you, of course. I didn't
gement rose in Byrne, but the situation f
"I have a lecture and I ma
e moved off into the night,
r and slipped a hand through her arm. "He protects h
e," he said cheerfully, "you w
the curb and r
d what
he stars, only-
oom for subtlety. The "beautiful" calmed her, but t
? What
nking of W
l for war. Stewart r
nnese idioms and German epithets. He drew his chin into the up-turned collar of his overcoat and waited, an absurdly patient figure, until the hail of consonants had subsid
ituation. He had suspected it that morning, listening to the delicatessen-seller's narrative of Rosa's account of the disrupted colony across in the old lodge; he had been certain of it that evening, finding Harmony in the dark entrance to his own rather sordid pension.
of native wine. And he knew the musical temperament; the all or nothing of its insistent demands; its heights that are higher than others, its wretchednesses that are hell. Once in the Hofstadt Theater, where he had bought stand
liards and Munchener beer, than Peter's new resolution that night: this poverty adopting
knew her name, Rosa having called her "The Beautiful One" in her nar
guardian, squared his shoulders and tried to look much older than he really was, and resp
nce at his determinedly altruistic profile. "I must
aven't even tol
resent you to-night,
yrne ro
u should not go through that
w do you
, and which proved to be in an alarming state of dissolution. It took a momen
the girl's eyes seemed somehow to compel: "That's true, but it's not all the truth. I was on the bus last night, and when you g
his suggestion that he see her safely to the old lodge and help her carry her hand-luggage and her violin to the pe
She was cleaning down the stairs by the light of a candle, and the steam of the hot water on the cold marble invested her like an aura. She stood aside to l
demanded from the doorwa
S
money you refuse, because she reminds you of you
eautiful-there is always a man,"
ng hands on her apron and
e threw back over her shoulder. "I knew it from the first;
a stiff chair under the great chandelier Peter Byrne sat and waited and blew on his