Page:The Writings of Prosper Merimee-Volume 5.djvu/112

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
90
THE "VICCOLO" OF

susceptibility of all German, Spanish, and Italian ladies at the mere look of a Frenchman. In short, at that period I was still very much of a Frenchman, and, besides, did not the rose tell its own tale plainly enough?

"Madam," I said in a low voice, as I picked up the rose, " you have dropped your nose-gay. ..."

But the lady had already vanished, and the window had been closed noiselessly. I did what every other man would have done in my position:

I looked for the nearest door, which was two steps from the window; I found it, and I waited to have it opened for me. Five minutes passed in a profound silence; then I coughed, then I scratched softly, but the door did not open. I examined it more carefully, hoping to find a lock or latch; to my great surprise I found it padlocked.

"The jealous lover has not gone in yet, then," I said to myself.

I picked up a small stone and threw it against the window; it hit a wooden outside shutter and fell at my feet.

"The devil!" I thought; "Roman ladies must be accustomed to lovers who carry ladders in their pockets; no one told me of the custom." I waited a few more moments, but fruitlessly.