Dubrov sighed into his glass of tea. “Diaghilev has all the best dancers. The rest are with Pavlova.” He glanced at her sideways from beneath his Santa Claus eyebrows. “And of course there are a few who don’t like the idea of the insects and the diseases and so on,” he admitted. He threw out a dismissive hand and returned to his present preoccupation. “I could take the blonde with the curls, I suppose, but I can get girls like that from an agency. It’s the little brown one I want. Let me talk to her myself; perhaps I can persuade her.”
“How obstinate you are, my poor Sasha! Still, it will be interesting for all the girls to hear of your plans. I shall stop the class early and Harriet can listen with the others. It is always instructive to watch Harriet listen.”
So the advanced class was stopped early and the girls came down. Phyllis had removed her bandeau to let her curls tumble round her face, but Harriet came as she was and as she sank onto a footstool, Dubrov nodded, for she had that unteachable thing that nevertheless comes only after years of teaching: that harmonious placing of the limbs and head that they call
Like all men of his class, Dubrov had had an English governess and spoke the language fluently. Yet beneath his words, as he began to describe the journey he would make, there beat the grave exotic rhythm that enables the Slavs to make poetry even of a laundry list.
“We shall embark at Liverpool,” he said, addressing all the girls yet speaking only to one, “on a white ship of great comfort and luxury; a ship with salons and recreation rooms and even a library… a veritable hotel on which we shall steam westwards across the Atlantic with its white birds and great green waves.”
Here he paused for a moment, recalling that Maximov, his
He spoke on, untroubled by considerations of accuracy, for the flora and fauna of Brazil were quite unknown to him, and as he spoke Harriet closed her eyes—and saw…
She saw a white ship steaming in silence along the mazed waterways of the River Sea… She saw a shimmering world in which trees grew from the dusky water only to find themselves embraced by ferns and fronds and brilliantly colored orchids. She saw an alligator slide from a gleaming sand-bar into the leaf-stained shallows… and the gray skeleton of a deodar, its roots asphyxiated by the water, aflame with scarlet ibis…
Standing in the bows of the ship as it steamed through this enchanted world, Harriet saw a raven-haired woman, pensive and beautiful: La Simonova, the Maryinsky’s brightest jewel and beside her, manly and protective, the leonine
Dubrov had reached the “wedding of the waters,” the place where the leaf-brown waters of the Amazon flowed distinct and separate beside the black waters of the Negro. It was up this Stygian river that he now took them and there—shining, dazzling, its wonder reflected in Harriet’s suddenly opened eyes—was the green and gold dome of the Opera House soaring over the roofs of the city.
“We shall be giving