The Duchessa kept her eyes down. She did not speak.
Peter waited as long as flesh-and-blood could wait, looking at her.
“Well?” he pleaded, at last. “That is all. Have you nothing to say to me?”
She raised her eyes, and for the tiniest fraction of a second they gave themselves to his. Then she dropped them again.
“You are sure,” she asked, “you are perfectly sure that when, afterwards, you met her, and came to know her as she really is—you are perfectly sure there was no disappointment?”
“Disappointment!” cried Peter. “She is in every way immeasurably beyond anything that I was capable of dreaming. Oh, if you could see her, if you could hear her speak, if you could look into her eyes—if you could see her as others see her—you would not ask whether there was a disappointment. She is... No; the language is not yet invented, in which I could describe her.”
The Duchessa smiled, softly, to herself.
“And you are in love with her—more or less?” she asked.
“I love her so that the bare imagination of being allowed to tell her of my love almost makes me faint with joy. But it is like the story of the poor squire who loved his queen. She is the greatest of great ladies. I am nobody. She is so beautiful, so splendid, and so high above me, it would be the maddest presumption for me to ask her for her love. To ask for the love of my Queen! And yet—Oh, I can say no more. God sees my heart. God knows how I love her.”
“And it is on her account—because you think your love is hopeless—that you are going away, that you are going back to England?”