Theodora, a Fragment
By Victoria Cross
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. . . . . . . . . . .
I DID not turn out of bed till ten o’clock the next morning, and
I was
still in dressing-gown and slippers, sitting by the fire,
looking over
a map, when Digby came in upon me.
” Hullo, Ray, only just up, eh ? as usual ? ” was his first
exclamation
as he entered, his ulster buttoned to his chin, and
the snow thick
upon his boots. ” What a fellow you are ! I
can’t understand anybody
lying in bed till ten o’clock in the
morning.”
” And I can’t understand anybody driving up at seven,” I
said, smiling,
and stirring my coffee idly. I had laid down the
map with resignation.
I knew Digby had come round to jaw
for the next hour at least. ” Can I
offer you some breakfast ? ”
” Breakfast ! ” returned Digby contemptuously. ” No, thanks.
I had mine
hours ago. Well, what do you think of her ? ”
” Of whom ?—this Theodora ? “
” Oh, it’s Theodora already, is it ? ” said Digby, looking at me.
”
Well, never mind : go on. Yes, what do you think of her ? ”
“She seems rather clever, I think.”
“Do
” Do you ? ” returned Digby, with a distinct accent of regret,
as if I
had told him I thought she squinted. ” I never noticed it.
But her
looks, I mean ? ”
” She is very peculiar,” I said, merely.
” But you like everything extraordinary. I should have thought
her very
peculiarity was just what would have attracted you.”
” So it does,” I admitted ; ” so much so, that I am going to
take the
trouble of calling this afternoon expressly to see her
again.”
Digby stared hard at me for a minute, and then burst out
laughing. ” By
Jove ! You’ve made good use of your time.
Did she ask you ? ”
” She did,” I said.
” This looks as if it would be a case,” remarked Digby lightly,
and then
added, ” I’d have given anything to have had her myself.
But if it’s
not to be for me, I’d rather you should be the lucky
man than any one
else.”
” Don’t you think all that is a little ‘ previous ‘ ? ” I asked
satirically, looking at him over the coffee, which stood on the map
of
Mesopotamia.
” Well, I don’t know. You must marry some time, Cecil.”
” Really ! ” I said, raising my eyebrows and regarding him with
increased amusement. ” I think I have heard of men remaining
celibates
before now, especially men with my tastes.”
” Yes,” said Digby, becoming suddenly as serious and thoughtful
as if he
were being called upon to consider some weighty problem,
and of which
the solution must be found in the next ten minutes.
” I don’t know how
you would agree. She is an awfully religious
girl.”
” Indeed ? ” I said with a laugh. ” How do you know ? “
Digby thought hard.
” She
“She is,” he said with conviction, at last. ” I see her at church
every
Sunday.”
” Oh then, of course she must be—proof conclusive,” I
answered.
Digby looked at me and then grumbled, ” Confounded sneering
fellow you
are. Has she been telling you she is not ? ”
I remembered suddenly that I had promised Theodora not to
repeat her
opinions, so I only said, ” I really don’t know what she
is ; she may
be most devout for all I know—or care.”
“Of course you can profess to be quite indifferent,” said Digby
ungraciously. “But all I can say is, it doesn’t look like
it—your
going there this afternoon ; and anyway, she is not
indifferent to
you. She said all sorts of flattering things about
you.”
” Very kind, I am sure,” I murmured derisively.
” And she sent round to my rooms this morning a thundering
box of
Havannahs in recognition of my having won the bet about
your
looks.”
I laughed outright. ” That’s rather good biz for you ! The
least you can
do is to let me help in the smoking of them, I
think.”
” Of course I will. But it shows what she thinks of you,
doesn’t it ?
”
” Oh, most convincingly,” I said with mock earnestness.
” Havannahs are
expensive things.”
” But you know how awfully rich she is, don’t you ? ” asked
Digby,
looking at me as if he wanted to find out whether I were
really
ignorant or affecting to be so.
” My dear Charlie, you know I know nothing whatever about
her except
what you tell me—or do you suppose she showed me
her banking
account between the dances ? ”
” Don’t know, I am sure,” Digby grumbled back. ” You sat
in
in that passage long enough to be going through a banking
account, and
balancing it too, for that matter ! However, the
point is, she is
rich—tons of money, over six thousand a year.”
” Really ? ” I said, to say something.
” Yes, but she loses every penny on her marriage. Seems such
a funny way
to leave money to a girl, doesn’t it ? Some old pig of
a maiden aunt
tied it up in that way . Nasty thing to do, I think ;
don’t you ?
”
” Very immoral of the old lady, it seems. A girl like that, if
she can’t
marry, will probably forego nothing but the cere-
mony.”
” She runs the risk of losing her money, though, if anything
were known.
She only has it dum casta manet, just like a
separa-
tion allowance.”
” Hard lines,” I murmured sympathetically.
” And so of course her people are anxious she should make a
good
match—take some man, I mean, with an income equal to
what she
has now of her own, so that she would not feel any loss.
Otherwise,
you see, if she married a poor man, it would be rather
a severe drop
for her.”
” Conditions calculated to prevent any fellow but a millionaire
proposing to her, I should think,” I said.
” Yes, except that she is a girl who does not care about money.
She has
been out now three seasons, and had one or two good
chances and not
taken them. Now myself, for instance, if she
wanted money and position
and so on, she could hardly do better,
could she ? And my family and
the rest of it are all right ; but
she couldn’t get over my red
hair—I know it was that. She’s
mad upon looks—I know she
is ; she let it out to me once, and
I bet you anything, she’d take you
and chuck over her money and
everything else, if you gave her the
chance.”
” I am
” I am certainly not likely to,” I answered. ” All this you’ve
just told
me alone would be enough to choke me off. I have always
thought I
could never love a decent woman unselfishly enough,
even if she gave
up nothing for me ; and, great heavens ! I should
be sorry to value
myself, at—what do you say she has ?—six
thousand a year
? ”
” Leave the woman who falls in love with the cut of your nose
to do the
valuation. You’ll be surprised at the figure ! ” said
Digby with a
touch of resentful bitterness, and getting up
abruptly. ” I’ll look
round in the evening,” he added, buttoning
up his overcoat. ” Going to
be in ? ”
” As far as I know,” I answered, and he left.
I got up and dressed leisurely, thinking over what he had said,
and
those words ” six thousand ” repeating themselves unpleasantly
in my
brain.
The time was in accordance with strict formality when I found
myself on
her steps. The room I was shown into was large,
much too large to be
comfortable on such a day ; and I had to
thread my way through a
perfect maze of gilt-legged tables and
statuette-bearing tripods
before I reached the hearth. Here burnt
a small, quiet, chaste-looking
fire, a sort of Vestal flame, whose heat
was lost upon the tesselated
tiles, white marble, and polished brass
about it. I stood looking down
at it absently for a few minutes,
and then Theodora came in.
She was very simply dressed in some dark stuff that fitted
closely to
her, and let me see the harmonious lines of her figure as
she came up
to me. The plain, small collar of the dress opened
at the neck, and a
delicious, solid, white throat rose from the dull
stuff like an almond
bursting from its husk. On the pale, well-
cut face and small head
great care had evidently been bestowed.
The eyes were darkened, as
last night, and the hair arranged with
infinite
infinite pains on the forehead and rolled into one massive coil at
the
back of her neck.
She shook hands with a smile—a smile that failed to dispel the
air of fatigue and fashionable dissipation that seemed to cling to
her
; and then wheeled a chair as near to the fender as she
could get
it.
As she sat down, I thought I had never seen such splendid
shoulders
combined with so slight a hip before.
” Now I hope no one else will come to interrupt us,” she said
simply. ”
And don’t let’s bother to exchange comments on the
weather nor last
night’s dance. I have done that six times over
this morning with other
callers. Don’t let’s talk for the sake of
getting through a certain
number of words. Let us talk because
we are interested in what we are
saying.”
” I should be interested in anything if you said it,” I
answered.
Theodora laughed. ” Tell me something about the East, will
you ? That is
a nice warm subject, and I feel so cold.”
And she shot out towards the blaze two well-made feet and
ankles.
” Yes, in three weeks’ time I shall be in a considerably warmer
climate
than this,” I answered, drawing my chair as close to hers
as fashion
permits.
Theodora looked at me with a perceptibly startled expression
as I
spoke.
” Are you really going out so soon ? ” she said.
” I am, really,” I said with a smile.
” Oh, I am so sorry ! “
” Why ? ” I asked merely.
” Because I was thinking I should have the pleasure of meeting
you lots
more times at different functions.”
” And
The Yellow Book— Vol. IV. K
” And would that be a pleasure ? “
” Yes, very great,” said Theodora, with a smile lighting her
eyes and
parting faintly the soft scarlet lips.
She looked at me, a seducing softness melting all her face and
swimming
in the liquid darkness of the eyes she raised to mine.
A delicious
intimacy seemed established between us by that smile.
We seemed nearer
to each other after it than before, by many
degrees. A month or two of
time and ordinary intercourse may
be balanced against the seconds of
such a smile as this.
A faint feeling of surprise mingled with my thoughts, that she
should
show her own attitude of mind so clearly, but I believe
she felt
instinctively my attraction towards her, and also undoubt-
edly she
belonged, and had always been accustomed, to a fast set.
I was not the
sort of man to find fault with her for that, and
probably she had
already been conscious of this, and felt all the
more at ease with me.
The opening-primrose type of woman,
the girl who does or wishes to
suggest the modest violet unfolding
beneath the rural hedge, had never
had a charm for me. I do not
profess to admire the simple violet ; I
infinitely prefer a well-
trained hothouse gardenia. And this girl,
about whom there was
nothing of the humble, crooked-neck
violet—in whom there was
a dash of virility, a hint at
dissipation, a suggestion of a certain
decorous looseness of morals
and fastness of manners—could
stimulate me with a keen sense of
pleasure, as our eyes or hands
met.
” Why would it be a pleasure to meet me ? ” I asked, holding
her eyes
with mine, and wondering whether things would so turn
out that I
should ever kiss those parting lips before me.
Theodora laughed gently.
” For a good many reasons that it would make you too con-
ceited to
hear,” she answered. ” But one is because you are more
interesting
interesting to talk to than the majority of people I meet every
day. The
castor of your chair has come upon my dress. Will
you move it back a
little, please ? ”
I pushed my chair back immediately and apologised.
” Are you going alone ? ” resumed Theodora.
” Quite alone.”
” Is that nice ? “
” No. I should have been very glad to find some fellow to go
with me,
but it’s rather difficult. It is not everybody that one
meets whom one
would care to make such an exclusive com-
panion of, as a life like
that out there necessitates. Still, there’s
no doubt I shall be dull
unless I can find some chum there.”
” Some Englishman, I suppose ? “
” Possibly ; but they are mostly snobs who are out there.”
Theodora made a faint sign of assent, and we both sat silent,
staring
into the fire.
” Does the heat suit you ? ” Theodora asked, after a pause.
” Yes, I like it.”
” So do I.”
” I don’t think any woman would like the climate I am going
to now, or
could stand it,” I said.
Theodora said nothing, but I had my eyes on her face, which
was turned
towards the light of the fire, and I saw a tinge of
mockery come over
it.
We had neither said anything farther, when the sound of a
knock reached
us, muffled, owing to the distance the sound had to
travel to reach us
by the drawing-room fire at all, but distinct in
the silence between
us.
Theodora looked at me sharply.
” There is somebody else. Do you want to leave yet ? ” she
asked, and
then added in a persuasive tone, ” Come into my own
study,
study, where we shan’t be disturbed, and stay and have tea with
me, will
you ? ”
She got up as she spoke.
The room had darkened considerably while we had been sitting
there, and
only a dull light came from the leaden, snow-laden sky
beyond the
panes, but the firelight fell strongly across her figure
as she stood,
glancing and playing up it towards the slight waist,
and throwing
scarlet upon the white throat and under-part of the
full chin. In the
strong shadow on her face I could see
merely the two seducing eyes.
Easily excitable where once a
usually hypercritical or rather
hyperfanciful eye has been attracted,
I felt a keen sense of pleasure
stir me as I watched her rise and
stand, that sense of pleasure which
is nothing more than an
assurance to the roused and unquiet instincts
within one, of
future satisfaction or gratification, with, from, or at
the expense of
the object creating the sensation. Unconsciously a
certainty of
possession of Theodora to-day, to-morrow, or next year,
filled me
for the moment as completely as if I had just made her my
wife.
The instinct that demanded her was immediately answered by
a
mechanical process of the brain, not with doubt or fear, but
simple confidence. ” This is a pleasant and delightful object to
you—as others have been. Later it will be a source of enjoy-
ment to you—as others have been.” And the lulling of this
painful instinct is what we know as pleasure. And this instinct
and
its answer are exactly that which we should not feel within us
for any
beloved object. It is this that tends inevitably to degrade
the loved
one, and to debase our own passion. If the object is
worthy and lovely
in any sense, we should be ready to love it as
being such, for itself,
as moralists preach to us of Virtue, as
theologians preach to us of
the Deity. To love or at least to
strive to love an object for the
object’s sake, and not our own
sake,
sake, to love it in its relation to its pleasure
and not in its relation
to our own pleasure, is to feel the only love
which is worthy of
offering to a fellow human being, the one which
elevates—and
the only one—both giver and receiver. If we
ever learn this
lesson, we learn it late. I had not learnt it yet.
I murmured a prescribed ” I shall be delighted,” and followed
Theodora
behind a huge red tapestry screen that reached half-way
up to the
ceiling.
We were then face to face with a door which she opened, and
we both
passed over the threshold together.
She had called the room her own, so I glanced round it with a
certain
curiosity. A room is always some faint index to the
character of its
occupier, and as I looked a smile came to my face.
This room suggested
everywhere, as I should have expected, an
intellectual but careless
and independent spirit. There were two
or three tables, in the window,
heaped up with books and strewn
over with papers. The centre-table had
been pushed away, to
leave a clearer space by the grate, and an
armchair, seemingly of
unfathomable depths, and a sofa, dragged
forward in its place.
Within the grate roared a tremendous fire,
banked up half-way
to the chimney, and a short poker was thrust into
it between the
bars. The red light leapt over the whole room and made
it
brilliant, and glanced over a rug, and some tumbled cushions
on
the floor in front of the fender, evidently where she had been
lying. Now, however, she picked up the cushions, and tossed
them into
the corner of the couch, and sat down herself in the
other corner.
” Do you prefer the floor generally ? ” I asked, taking the
armchair as
she indicated it to me.
” Yes, one feels quite free and at ease lying on the floor,
whereas on a
couch its limits are narrow, and one has the con-
straint
straint and bother of taking care one does not go to sleep and
roll
off.”
” But suppose you did, you would then but be upon the
floor.”
” Quite so ; but I should have the pain of falling.”
Our eyes met across the red flare of the firelight.
Theodora went on jestingly : ” Now, these are the ethics of
the couch
and the floor. I lay myself voluntarily on the floor,
knowing it
thoroughly as a trifle low, but undeceptive and favourable
to the
condition of sleep which will probably arise, and suitable to
my
requirements of ease and space. I avoid the restricted and
uncertain
couch, recognising that if I fall to sleep on that raised
level, and
the desire to stretch myself should come, I shall awake
with pain and
shock to feel the ground, and see above me the
couch from which I
fell—do you see ? ”
She spoke lightly, and with a smile, and I listened with one.
But her
eyes told me that these ethics of the couch and floor
covered the
ethics of life.
” No, you must accept the necessity of the floor, I think, unless
you
like to forego your sleep and have the trouble of taking care to
stick
upon your couch ; and for me the difference of level between
the two
is not worth the additional bother.”
She laughed, and I joined her.
” What do you think ? ” she asked.
I looked at her as she sat opposite me, the firelight playing all
over
her, from the turn of her knee just marked beneath her skirt
to her
splendid shoulders, and the smooth soft hand and wrist
supporting the
distinguished little head. I did not tell her what
I was thinking ;
what I said was : ” You are very logical. I am
quite convinced there’s
no place like the ground for a siesta.”
Theodora laughed, and laid her hand on the bell.
A second
A second or two after, a door, other than the one we had entered
by,
opened, and a maid appeared.
” Bring tea and pegs,” said Theodora, and the door shut again.
” I ordered pegs for you because I know men hate tea,” she
said. ”
That’s my own maid. I never let any of the servants
answer this bell
except her ; she has my confidence, as far as one
ever gives
confidence to a servant. I think she likes me. I like
making myself
loved,” she added impulsively.
” You’ve never found the least difficulty in it, I should think,”
I
answered, perhaps a shade more warmly than I ought, for the
colour
came into her cheek and a slight confusion into her eyes.
The servant’s re-entry saved her from replying.
” Now tell me how you like your peg made, and I’ll make it,”
said
Theodora, getting up and crossing to the table when the
servant had
gone.
I got up, too, and protested against this arrangement.
Theodora turned round and looked up at me, leaning one hand
on the
table.
” Now, how ridiculous and conventional you are ! ” she said.
” You would
think nothing of letting me make you a cup of tea,
and yet I must by
no means mix you a peg ! ”
She looked so like a young fellow of nineteen as she spoke
that half the
sense of informality between us was lost, and there
was a keen, subtle
pleasure in this superficial familiarity with her
that I had never
felt with far prettier women. The half of nearly
every desire is
curiosity, a vague, undefined curiosity, of which we
are hardly
conscious ; and it was this that Theodora so violently
stimulated,
while her beauty was sufficient to nurse the other half.
This feeling
of curiosity arises, of course, for any woman who
may be new to us,
and who has the power to move us at all. But
generally, if it cannot
be gratified for the particular one, it is more
or
or less satisfied by the general knowledge applying to them all ;
but
here, as Theodora differed so much from the ordinary feminine
type,
even this instinctive sort of consolation was denied me. I
looked down
at her with a smile.
” We shan’t be able to reconcile Fashion and Logic, so it’s no
use,” I
said. ” Make the peg, then, and I’ll try and remain in the
fashion by
assuming it’s tea.”
” Great Scott ! I hope you won’t fancy it’s tea while you are
drinking
it ! ” returned Theodora laughing.
She handed me the glass, and I declared nectar wasn’t in it with
that
peg, and then she made her own tea and came and sat
down to drink it,
in not at all an indecorous, but still informal
proximity.
” Did you collect anything in the East ? ” she asked me, after a
minute
or two.
” Yes ; a good many idols and relics and curiosities of sorts,” I
answered. ” Would you like to see them ? ”
” Very much,” Theodora answered. ” Where are they ? “
” Well, not in my pocket,” I said smiling. ” At my chambers.
Could you
and Mrs. Long spare an afternoon and honour me with
a visit there ?
”
” I should like it immensely. I know Helen will come if I
ask her.”
” When you have seen them I must pack them up, and send
them to my
agents. One can’t travel about with those things.”
A sort of tremor passed over Theodora’s face as I spoke, and
her glance
met mine, full of demands and questionings, and a very
distinct
assertion of distress. It said distinctly, ” I am so sorry
you are
going.” The sorrow in her eyes touched my vanity
deeply, which is the
most responsive quality we have. It is
difficult to reach our hearts
or our sympathies, but our vanity is
always
always available. I felt inclined to throw my arm round that
supple-looking waist—and it was close to me—and say, ”
Don’t
be sorry ; come too.” I don’t know whether my looks were as
plain as hers, but Theodora rose carelessly, apparently to set her
teacup down, and then did not resume her seat by me, but went
back to
the sofa on the other side of the rug. This, in the state
of feeling
into which I had drifted, produced an irritated sensation,
and I was
rather pleased than not when a gong sounded some-
where in the house
and gave me a graceful opening to rise.
” May I hope to hear from you, then, which day you will like
to come ? ”
I asked, as I held out my hand.
Now this was the moment I had been expecting, practically,
ever since
her hand had left mine last night, the moment when it
should touch it
again. I do not mean consciously, but there are
a million slight,
vague physical experiences and sensations within
us of which the mind
remains unconscious. Theodora’s white
right hand rested on her hip,
the light from above struck upon it,
and I noted that all the rings
had been stripped from it ; her left
was crowded with them, so that
the hand sparkled at each
movement, but not one remained on her right.
I coloured violently
for the minute as I recollected my last night’s
pressure, and the
idea flashed upon me at once that she had removed
them expressly
to avoid the pain of having them ground into her
flesh.
The next second Theodora had laid her hand confidently in
mine. My mind,
annoyed at the thought that had just shot
through it, bade me take her
hand loosely and let it go, but
Theodora raised her eyes to me, full
of a soft disappointment
which seemed to say, ” Are you not going to
press it, then, after
all, when I have taken off all the rings
entirely that you may ? “
That look seemed to push away, walk over,
ignore my reason, and
appeal directly to the eager physical nerves and
muscles.
Spontaneously,
Spontaneously, whether I would or not, they responded to it, and
my
fingers laced themselves tightly round this morsel of velvet-
covered
fire.
We forgot in those few seconds to say the orthodox good-byes ;
she
forgot to answer my question. That which we were both
saying to each
other, though our lips did not open, was, ” So I
should like to hold
and embrace you ; ” and she, ” So I should like
to be held and
embraced.”
Then she withdrew her hand, and I went out by way of the
drawing-room
where we had entered.
In the hall her footman showed me out with extra obsequiousness.
My
three-hours’ stay raised me, I suppose, to the rank of more
than an
ordinary caller.
It was dark now in the streets, and the temperature must have
been
somewhere about zero. I turned my collar up and started
to walk
sharply in the direction of my chambers. Walking always
induces in me
a tendency to reflection and retrospection, and now,
removed from the
excitement of Theodora’s actual presence, my
thoughts lapped quietly
over the whole interview, going through it
backwards, like the calming
waves of a receding tide, leaving
lingeringly the sand. There was no
doubt that this girl attracted
me very strongly, that the passion born
yesterday was nearing
adolescence ; and there was no doubt, either,
that I ought to strangle
it now before it reached maturity. My
thoughts, however, turned
impatiently from this question, and kept
closing and centring round
the object itself, with maddening
persistency. I laughed to myself
as Schopenhauer’s theory shot across
me that all impulse to love is
merely the impulse of the genius of the
genus to select a fitting
object which will help in producing a Third
Life. Certainly the
genius of the genus in me was weaker than the
genius of my own
individuality, in this instance, for Theodora was as
unfitted,
according
according to the philosopher’s views, to become a co-worker with
me in
carrying out Nature’s aim, as she was fitted to give me as
an
individual the strongest personal pleasure.
I remember Schopenhauer does admit that this instinct in man
to choose
some object which will best fulfil the duty of the race,
is apt to be
led astray, and it is fortunate he did not forget to make
this
admission, if his theory is to be generally applied, considering
how
very particularly often we are led astray, and that our strongest,
fiercest passions and keenest pleasures are constantly not those
suitable to, nor in accordance with, the ends of Nature. The
sharpest,
most violent stimulus, we may say, the true essence of
pleasure, lies
in some gratification which has no claim whatever, in
any sense, to be
beneficial or useful, or to have any ulterior motive,
conscious or
instinctive, or any lasting result, or any fulfilment of
any object,
but which is simple gratification and dies naturally in
its own
excess.
As we admit of works of pure genius that they cannot claim
utility, or
motive, or purpose, but simply that they exist as joy-
giving and
beautiful objects of delight, so must we have done with
utility,
motive, purpose, and the aims of Nature, before we can
reach the most
absolute degree of positive pleasure. To choose an
admissible
instance, a naturally hungry man, given a slice of bread,
will he or
will he not devour it with as great a pleasure as the
craving drunkard
feels in swallowing a draught of raw brandy ?
In the first case a simple natural desire is gratified, and the aim
of
Nature satisfied ; but the individual’s longing and subsequent
pleasure cannot be said to equal the furious craving of the
drunkard,
and his delirious sense of gratification as the brandy
burns his
throat.
My inclination towards Theodora could hardly be the simple,
natural
instinct, guided by natural selection, for then surely I
should
should have been swayed towards some more womanly individual,
some more
vigorous and at the same time more feminine physique.
In me, it was
the mind that had first suggested to the senses, and
the senses that
had answered in a dizzy pleasure, that this passionate,
sensitive
frame, with its tensely-strung nerves and excitable pulses,
promised
the height of satisfaction to a lover. Surely to Nature it
promised a
poor if possible mother, and a still poorer nurse. And
these desires
and passions that spring from that border-land between
mind and sense,
and are nourished by the suggestions of the one
and the stimulus of
the other, have a stronger grip upon our
organisation, because they
offer an acuter pleasure, than those
simple and purely physical ones
in which Nature is striving after
her own ends and using us simply as
her instruments.
I thought on in a desultory sort of way, more or less about
Theodora,
and mostly about the state of my own feelings, until I
reached my
chambers. There I found Digby, and in his society,
with his chaff and
gabble in my ears, all reflection and philosophy
fled, without leaving
me any definite decision made.
The next afternoon but one found myself and Digby standing
at the
windows of my chambers awaiting Theodora’s arrival. I
had invited him
to help me entertain the two women, and also to
help me unearth and
dust my store of idols and curiosities, and
range them on the tables
for inspection. There were crowds of
knick-knacks picked up in the
crooked streets and odd corners of
Benares, presents made to me,
trifles bought in the Cairo bazaars,
and vases and coins discovered
below the soil in the regions of the
Tigris. Concerning several of the
most typical objects Digby
and I had had considerable difference of
opinion. One highly
interesting bronze model of the monkey-god at
Benares he had
declared I could not exhibit on account of its too
pronounced
realism and insufficient attention to the sartorial art. I
had
insisted
insisted that the god’s deficiencies in this respect were not more
striking than the objects in flesh-tints, hung at the Academy, that
Theodora viewed every season.
” Perhaps not,” he answered. ” But this is not in
pink and
white, and hung on the Academy walls for the public to stare
at,
and therefore you can’t let her see it.”
This was unanswerable. I yielded, and the monkey-god was
wheeled under a
side-table out of view.
Every shelf and stand and table had been pressed into the
service, and
my rooms had the appearance of a corner in an
Egyptian bazaar, now
when we had finished our preparations.
” There they are,” said Digby, as Mrs. Long’s victoria came
in
sight.
Theodora was leaning back beside her sister, and it struck me
then how
representative she looked, as it were, of herself and her
position.
From where we stood we could see down into the
victoria, as it drew up
at our door. Her knees were crossed
under the blue carriage-rug, on
the edge of which rested her two
small pale-gloved hands. A velvet
jacket, that fitted her as its
skin fits the grape, showed us her
magnificent shoulders, and the
long easy slope of her figure to the
small waist. On her head, in
the least turn of which lay the acme of
distinction, amongst the
black glossy masses of her hair, sat a small
hat in vermilion velvet,
made to resemble the Turkish fez. As the
carriage stopped, she
glanced up ; and a brilliant smile swept over
her face, as she
bowed slightly to us at the window. The handsome
painted
eyes, the naturally scarlet lips, the pallor of the oval face,
and each
well-trained movement of the distinguished figure, as she
rose
and stepped from the carriage, were noted and watched by our
four critical eyes.
” A typical product of our nineteenth-century civilisation,” I
said,
said, with a faint smile, as Theodora let her fur-edged skirt draw
over
the snowy pavement, and we heard her clear cultivated tones,
with the
fashionable drag in them, ordering the coachman not to
let the horses
get cold.
” But she’s a splendid sort of creature, don’t you think ? ” asked
Digby. ” Happy the man who——eh ? ”
I nodded. ” Yes,” I assented. ” But how much that man
should have to
offer, old chap, that’s the point ; that six thousand
of hers seems an
invulnerable protection.”
” I suppose so,” said Digby with a nervous yawn. ” And to
think I have
more than double that and yet— It’s a pity. Funny
it will be if
my looks and your poverty prevent either of us having
her.”
” My own case is settled,” I said decisively. ” My position
and hers
decide it for me.”
” I’d change places with you this minute if I could,” muttered
Digby
moodily, as steps came down to our door, and we went
forward to meet
the women as they entered.
It seemed to arrange itself naturally that Digby should be
occupied in
the first few seconds with Mrs. Long, and that I
should be free to
receive Theodora.
Of all the lesser emotions, there is hardly any one greater than
that
subtle sense of pleasure felt when a woman we love crosses
for the
first time our own threshold. We may have met her a
hundred times in
her house, or on public ground, but the sensa-
tion her presence then
creates is altogether different from that
instinctive, involuntary,
momentary and delightful sense of
ownership that rises when she enters
any room essentially our
own.
It is the very illusion of possession.
With this hatefully egoistic satisfaction infused through me, I
drew
drew forward for her my own favourite chair, and Theodora
sank into it,
and her tiny, exquisitely-formed feet sought my
fender-rail. At a
murmured invitation from me, she unfastened
and laid aside her jacket.
Beneath, she revealed some purplish,
silk-like material, that seemed
shot with different colours as
the firelight fell upon it. It was
strained tight and smooth
upon her, and the swell of a low bosom was
distinctly defined
below it. There was no excessive development, quite
the con-
trary, but in the very slightness there was an
indescribably
sensuous curve, and a depression, rising and falling,
that seemed
as if it might be the very home itself of passion. It was
a
breast with little suggestion of the duties or powers of
Nature,
but with infinite seduction for a lover.
” What a marvellous collection you have here,” she said throw-
ing her
glance round the room. ” What made you bring home
all these things ?
”
” The majority were gifts to me—presents made by the different
natives whom I visited or came into connection with in various
ways. A
native is never happy, if he likes you at all, until he has
made you
some valuable present.”
” You must be very popular with them indeed,” returned
Theodora,
glancing from a brilliant Persian carpet, suspended on
the wall, to a
gold and ivory model of a temple, on the console by
her side.
” Well, when one stays with a fellow as his guest, as I have
done with
some of these small rajahs and people, of course one tries
to make
oneself amiable.”
” The fact is, Miss Dudley,” interrupted Digby, ” Ray
admires these
fellows, and that is why they like him. Just look
at this sketch-book
of his—what trouble he has taken to make
portraits of
them.”
And
And he stretched out a limp-covered pocket-album of mine.
I reddened slightly and tried to intercept his hand.
” Nonsense, Digby. Give the book to me,” I said ; but
Theodora had
already taken it, and she looked at me as I spoke
with one of those
delicious looks of hers that could speak so clearly.
Now it seemed to
say, ” If you are going to love me, you must
have no secrets from me.”
She opened the book and I was
subdued and let her. I did not much
care, except that it was
some time now since I had looked at it, and I
did not know what
she might find in it. However, Theodora was so
different from
girls generally, that it did not greatly matter.
” Perhaps these are portraits of your different conquests amongst
the
Ranees, are they ? ” she said. ” I don’t see ‘ my victims,’
though,
written across the outside as the Frenchmen write on
their
albums.”
” No,” I said, with a smile, ” I think these are only portraits of
men
whose appearance struck me. The great difficulty is to
persuade any
Mohammedan to let you draw him.”
The very first leaf she turned seemed to give the lie to my
words.
Against a background of yellow sand and blue sky, stood
out a slight
figure in white, bending a little backward, and holding
in its hands,
extended on either side, the masses of its black hair
that fell
through them, till they touched the sand by its feet.
Theodora threw a
side-glance full of derision on me, as she raised
her eyes from the
page.
” I swear it isn’t,” I said hastily, colouring, for I saw she
thought it
was a woman. ” It’s a young Sikh I bribed to let
me paint him.”
” Oh, a young Sikh, is it ? ” said Theodora, bending over the
book
again. ” Well it’s a lovely face ; and what beautiful hair ! ”
” Yes, almost as beautiful as yours,” I murmured, in safety, for
the
the others were wholly occupied in testing the limits of the
flexibility
of the soapstone.
Not for any consideration in this world could I have restrained
the
irresistible desire to say the words, looking at her sitting
sideways
to me, noting that shining weight of hair lying on the
white neck, and
that curious masculine shade upon the upper lip.
A faint liquid smile
came to her face.
” Mine is not so long as that when you see it undone,” she said,
looking
at me.
” How long is it? ” I asked mechanically, turning over the
leaves of the
sketch-book, and thinking in a crazy sort of way
what I would not give
to see her with that hair unloosed, and have
the right to lift a
single strand of it.
” It would not touch the ground,” she answered, ” it must be
about eight
inches off it, I think.”
” A marvellous length for a European,” I answered in a con-
ventional
tone, though it was a difficulty to summon it.
Within my brain all the dizzy thoughts seemed reeling together
till they
left me hardly conscious of anything but an acute painful
sense of her
proximity.
” Find me the head of a Persian, will you ? ” came her voice next.
” A Persian ? ” I repeated mechanically.
Theodora looked at me wonderingly and I recalled myself.
” Oh, yes,” I answered, ” I’ll find you one. Give me the
book.”
I took the book and turned over the leaves towards the end.
As I did so,
some of the intermediate pages caught her eye, and
she tried to arrest
the turning leaves.
” What is that ? Let me see.”
” It is nothing,” I said, passing them over. ” Allow me to find
you the
one you want.”
Theodora
The Yellow Book—Vol. IV. L
Theodora did not insist, but her glance said : ” I will be re-
venged
for this resistance to my wishes ! ”
When I had found her the portrait, I laid the open book back
upon her
knees. Theodora bent over it with an unaffected ex-
clamation of
delight. ” How exquisite ! and how well you have
done it ! What a
talent you must have ! ”
” Oh no, no talent,” I said hastily. ” It’s easy to do a thing
like that
when your heart is in it.”
Theodora looked up at me and said simply, ” This is a
woman.”
And I looked back in her eyes and said as simply, ” Yes, it is a
woman.”
Theodora was silent, gazing at the open leaf, absorbed. And
half-unconsciously my eyes followed hers and rested with hers on
the
page.
Many months had gone by since I had opened the book ; and
many, many
cigars, that according to Tolstoi deaden every mental
feeling, and
many, many pints of brandy that do the same thing,
only more so, had
been consumed, since I had last looked upon
that face. And now I saw
it over the shoulder of this woman.
And the old pain revived and
surged through me, but it was dull—
dull as every emotion must
be in the near neighbourhood of a
new object of desire—every
emotion except one.
” Really it is a very beautiful face, isn’t it ? ” she said at last,
with a tender and sympathetic accent, and as she raised her head
our
eyes met.
I looked at her and answered, ” I should say yes, if we were not
looking
at it together, but you know beauty is entirely a question
of
comparison.”
Her face was really not one-tenth so handsome as the mere
shadowed,
inanimate representation of the Persian girl, beneath
our
our hands. I knew it and so did she. Theodora herself would
have been
the first to admit it. But nevertheless the words were
ethically true.
True in the sense that underlay the society com-
pliment, for no
beauty of the dead can compare with that of the
living. Such are we,
that as we love all objects in their relation
to our own pleasure from
them, so even in our admiration, the
greatest beauty, when absolutely
useless to us, cannot move us as
a far lesser degree has power to do,
from which it is possible to
hope, however vaguely, for some personal
gratification. And to
this my words would come if translated. And I
think Theodora
understood the translation rather than the conventional
form of
them, for she did not take the trouble to deprecate the
flattery.
I got up, and, to change the subject, said, ” Let me wheel up
that
little table of idols. Some of them are rather curious.”
I moved the tripod up to the arm of her chair.
Theodora closed the sketch-book and put it beside her, and
looked over
the miniature bronze gods with interest. Then she
stretched out her
arm to lift and move several of them, and her
soft fingers seemed to
lie caressingly—as they did on everything
they
touched—on the heads and shoulders of the images. I
watched
her, envying those senseless little blocks of brass.
” This is the Hindu equivalent of the Greek Aphrodite,” I said,
lifting
forward a small, unutterably hideous, squat female figure,
with the
face of a monkey, and two closed wings of a dragon on
its
shoulders.
” Oh, Venus,” said Theodora. ” We must certainly crown
her amongst them,
though hardly, I think, in this particular case,
for her beauty !
”
And she laughingly slipped off a diamond half-hoop from her
middle
finger, and slipped the ring on to the model’s head. It
fitted exactly
round the repulsive brows of the deformed and
stunted
stunted image, and the goddess stood crowned in the centre of the
table,
amongst the other figures, with the circlet of brilliants,
flashing
brightly in the firelight, on her head. As Theodora
passed the ring
from her own warm white finger on to the forehead
of the misshapen
idol, she looked at me. The look, coupled with
the action, in my
state, went home to those very inner cells of the
brain where are the
springs themselves of passion. At the same
instant the laughter and
irresponsible gaiety and light pleasure on
the face before me, the
contrast between the delicate hand and the
repellent monstrosity it
had crowned—the sinister, allegorical
significance—struck me like a blow. An unexplained feeling of
rage filled me. Was it against her, myself, her action, or my own
desires ? It seemed for the moment to burn against them all.
On the
spur of it, I dragged forward to myself another of the
images from
behind the Astarte, slipped oft” my own signet-ring,
and put it on the
head of the idol.
” This is the only one for me to crown,” I said bitterly, with a
laugh,
feeling myself whiten with the stress and strain of a host
of
inexplicable sensations that crowded in upon me, as I met
Theodora’s
lovely inquiring glance.
There was a shade of apprehensiveness in her voice as she said,
” What
is that one ? ”
” Shiva,” I said curtly, looking her straight in the eyes. ” The
god of
self-denial.”
I saw the colour die suddenly out of her face, and I knew I had
hurt
her. But I could not help it. With her glance she had
summoned me to
approve or second her jesting act. It was a
challenge I could not pass
over. I must in some correspondingly
joking way either accept or
reject her coronation. And to reject
it was all I could do, since this
woman must be nothing to me.
There was a second’s blank pause of
strained silence. But, super-
ficially
ficially, we had not strayed off the legitimate ground of mere
society
nothings, whatever we might feel lay beneath them.
And Theodora was
trained thoroughly in the ways of fashion.
The next second she leant back in her chair, saying lightly,
” A false,
absurd, and unnatural god ; it is the greatest error to
strive after
the impossible ; it merely prevents you accomplishing
the possible.
Gods like these,” and she indicated the abominable
squint-eyed Venus,
“are merely natural instincts personified, and
one may well call them
gods since they are invincible. Don’t
you remember the fearful
punishments that the Greeks represented
as overtaking mortals who
dared to resist nature’s laws, that they
chose to individualise as
their gods ? You remember the fate of
Hippolytus who tried to disdain
Venus, of Pentheus who tried to
subdue Bacchus ? These two plays teach
the immortal lesson
that if you have the presumption to try to be
greater than nature
she will in the end take a terrible revenge. The
most we can do
is to guide her. You can never be her conqueror.
Consider
yourself fortunate if she allows you to be her
charioteer.”
It was all said very lightly and jestingly, but at the last phrase
there
was a flash in her eye, directed upon me—yes, me—as if
she read down into my inner soul, and it sent the blood to my
face.
As the last word left her lips, she stretched out her hand and
deliberately took my ring from the head of Shiva, put it above her
own
diamonds on the other idol, and laid the god I had chosen,
the god of
austerity and mortification, prostrate on its face, at the
feet of the
leering Venus.
Then, without troubling to find a transition phrase, she got up
and
said, ” I am going to look at that Persian carpet.”
It had all taken but a few seconds ; the next minute we were
over by the
carpet, standing in front of it and admiring its hues in
the
the most orthodox terms. The images were left as she had
placed them. I
could do nothing less, of course, than yield to a
woman and my guest.
The jest had not gone towards calming
my feelings, nor had those two
glances of hers—the first so tender
and appealing as she had
crowned the Venus, the second so virile
and mocking as she had
discrowned the Shiva. There was a
strange mingling of extremes in her.
At one moment she seemed
will-less, deliciously weak, a thing only
made to be taken in one’s
arms and kissed. The next, she was full of
independent uncon-
trollable determination and opinion. Most men would
have found
it hard to be indifferent to her. When beside her you must
either
have been attracted or repelled. For me, she was the very
worst
woman that could have crossed my path.
As I stood beside her now, her shoulder only a little below my
own, her
neck and the line of her breast just visible to the side
vision of my
eye, and heard her talking of the carpet, I felt there
was no price I
would not have paid to have stood for one half-hour
in intimate
confidence with her, and been able to tear the veils
from this
irritating character.
From the carpet we passed on to a table of Cashmere work and
next to a
pile of Mohammedan garments. These had been packed
with my own
personal luggage, and I should not have thought of
bringing them forth
for inspection. It was Digby who, having
seen them by chance in my
portmanteau, had insisted that they
would add interest to the general
collection of Eastern trifles.
” Clothes, my dear fellow, clothes ;
why, they will probably please
her more than anything else.”
Theodora advanced to the heap of stuffs and lifted them.
” What is the history of these ? ” she said laughing. ” These
were not
presents to you ! ”
” No,” I murmured. ” Bought in the native bazaars.”
” Some
” Some perhaps,” returned Theodora, throwing her glance over
them. ” But
a great many are not new.”
It struck me that she would not be a woman very easy to
deceive. Some
men value a woman in proportion to the ease with
which they can impose
upon her, but to me it is too much trouble
to deceive at all, so that
the absence of that amiable quality did
not disquiet me. On the
contrary, the comprehensive, cynical,
and at the same time indulgent
smile that came so readily to
Theodora’s lips charmed me more, because
it was the promise of
even less trouble than a real or professed
obtuseness.
” No,” I assented merely.
” Well, then ? ” asked Theodora, but without troubling to seek
a reply.
” How pretty they are and how curious ! this one, for
instance.” And
she took up a blue silk zouave, covered with gold
embroidery, and
worth perhaps about thirty pounds. ” This has
been a good deal worn.
It is a souvenir, I suppose ? ”
I nodded. With any other woman I was similarly anxious to
please I
should have denied it, but with her I felt it did not
matter.
” Too sacred perhaps, then, for me to put on ? ” she asked with
her hand
in the collar, and smiling derisively.
” Oh dear no ! ” I said, ” not at all. Put it on by all means.”
” Nothing is sacred to you, eh ? I see. Hold it then.”
She gave me the zouave and turned for me to put it on her.
A glimpse of
the back of her white neck, as she bent her head
forward, a convulsion
of her adorable shoulders as she drew on the
jacket, and the zouave
was fitted on. Two seconds perhaps,
but my self-control wrapped round
me had lost one of its skins.
” Now I must find a turban or fez,” she said, turning over
gently, but
without any ceremony, the pile. ” Oh, here’s one ! “
She drew out a
white fez, also embroidered in gold, and, removing
her
her hat, put it on very much to one side, amongst her black hair,
with
evident care lest one of those silken inflected waves should be
disturbed ; and then affecting an undulating gait, she walked over
to
the fire.
” How do you like me in Eastern dress, Helen ? ” she said,
addressing
her sister, for whom Digby was deciphering some old
coins. Digby and I
confessed afterwards to each other the
impulse that moved us both to
suggest it was not at all complete
without the trousers. I did offer
her a cigarette, to enhance
the effect.
” Quite passable, really,” said Mrs. Long, leaning back and
surveying
her languidly.
Theodora took the cigarette with a laugh, lighted and smoked
it, and it
was then, as she leant against the mantel-piece with her
eyes full of
laughter, a glow on her pale skin, and an indolent
relaxation in the
long, supple figure, that I first said, or rather an
involuntary,
unrecognised voice within me said, ” It is no good ;
whatever happens
I must have you.”
” Do you know that it is past six, Theo ? ” said Mrs. Long.
” You will let me give you a cup of tea before you go ? ” I said.
” Tea ! ” repeated Theodora. ” I thought you were going to
say haschisch
or opium, at the least, after such an Indian
afternoon.”
” I have both,” I answered, “would you like some ? ” thinking,
” By
Jove, I should like to see you after the haschisch.”
” No,” replied Theodora, ” I make it a rule not to get
intoxicated in
public.”
When the women rose to go, Theodora, to my regret, divested
herself of
the zouave without my aid, and declined it also for
putting on her own
cloak. As they stood drawing on their gloves
I asked if they thought
there was anything worthy of their
acceptance
acceptance amongst these curiosities. Mrs. Long chose from the
table
near her an ivory model of the Taj, and Digby took it up
to carry for
her to the door. As he did so his eye caught the table
of images.
” This is your ring, Miss Dudley, I believe,” he said.
I saw him grin horridly as he noted the arrangement of the
figures.
Doubtless he thought it was mine.
I took up my signet-ring again, and Theodora said carelessly,
without
the faintest tinge of colour rising in her cheek, ” Oh, yes,
I had
forgotten it. Thanks.”
She took it from him and replaced it.
I asked her if she would honour me as her sister had done.
” There is one thing in this room that I covet immensely,” she
said,
meeting my gaze.
” It is yours, of course, then,” I answered. ” What is it ? “
Theodora stretched out her open hand. ” Your sketch-book.”
For a second I felt the blood dye suddenly all my face. The
request took
me by surprise, for one thing ; and immediately after
the surprise
followed the vexatious and embarrassing thought that
she had asked for
the one thing in the room that I certainly did
not wish her to have.
The book contained a hundred thousand
memories, embodied in writing,
sketching, and painting, of those
years in the East. There was not a
page in it that did not reflect
the emotions of the time when it had
been filled in, and give a
chronicle of the life lived at the date
inscribed on it. It was a
sort of diary in cipher, and to turn over
its leaves was to re-live
the hours they represented. For my own
personal pleasure I liked
the book and wanted to keep it, but there
were other reasons too why
I disliked the idea of surrendering it. It
flashed through me, the
question as to what her object was in
possessing herself of it.
Was it jealousy of the faces or any face
within it that prompted her,
and
and would she amuse herself, when she had it, by tearing out the
leaves
or burning it ? To give over these portraits merely to be
sacrificed
to a petty feminine spite and malice, jarred upon me.
Involuntarily I
looked hard into her eyes to try and read her
intentions, and I felt I
had wronged her. The eyes were full of
the softest, tenderest light.
It was impossible to imagine them
vindictive. She had seen my
hesitation and she smiled faintly.
” Poor Herod with your daughter of Herodias,” she said, softly.
” Never
mind, I will not take it.”
The others who had been standing with her saw there was some
embarrassment that they did not understand, and Mrs. Long
turned to go
slowly down the corridor. Digby had to follow.
Theodora was left
standing alone before me, her seductive figure
framed in the open
doorway. Of course she was irresistible. Was
she not the new object of
my desires ?
I seized the sketch-book from the chair. What did anything
matter ?
” Yes,” I said hastily, putting it into that soft, small hand
before it
could draw back. ” Forgive me the hesitation. You
know I would give
you anything.”
If she answered or thanked me, I forget it. 1 was sensible of
nothing at
the moment but that the blood seemed flowing to my
brain, and
thundering through it, in ponderous waves. Then I
knew we were walking
down the passage, and in a few minutes
more we should have said
good-bye, and she would be gone.
An acute and yet vague realisation came upon me that the
corridor was
dark, and that the others had gone on in front, a
confused
recollection of the way she had lauded Nature and its
domination a
short time back, and then all these were lost again
in the eddying
torrent of an overwhelming desire to take her in
my arms and hold her,
control her, assert my will over hers, this
exasperating
exasperating object who had been pleasing and seducing every
sense for
the last three hours, and now was leaving them all
unsatisfied. That
impulse towards some physical demonstration,
that craving for physical
contact, which attacks us suddenly with
its terrific impetus, and
chokes and stifles us, ourselves, beneath it,
blinding us to all
except itself, rushed upon me then, walking
beside her in the dark
passage ; and at that instant Theodora
sighed.
” I am tired,” she said languidly. ” May I take your arm ? “
and her
hand touched me.
I did not offer her my arm, I flung it round her neck, bending
back her
head upon it, so that her lips were just beneath my own
as I leant
over her, and I pressed mine on them in a delirium of
passion.
Everything that should have been remembered I forgot.
Knowledge was lost of all, except those passive, burning lips
under my
own. As I touched them, a current of madness
seemed to mingle with my
blood, and pass flaming through all my
veins.
I heard her moan, but for that instant I was beyond the reach
of pity or
reason, I only leant harder on her lips in a wild,
unheeding,
unsparing frenzy. It was a moment of ecstasy that I
would have bought
with years of my life. One moment, the
next I released her, and so
suddenly, that she reeled against the
wall of the passage. I caught
her wrist to steady her. We
dared neither of us speak, for the others
were but little ahead of
us ; but I sought her eyes in the dusk.
They met mine, and rested on them, gleaming through the
darkness. There
was no confusion nor embarrassment in them,
they were full of the hot,
clear, blinding light of passion ; and I
knew there would be no need
to crave forgiveness.
The
The next moment had brought us up to the others, and to the
end of the
passage.
Mrs. Long turned round, and held out her hand to me.
” Good-bye,” she said. ” We have had a most interesting
afternoon.”
It was with an effort that I made some conventional remark.
Theodora, with perfect outward calm, shook hands with myself
and Digby,
with her sweetest smile, and passed out.
I lingered some few minutes with Digby, talking ; and then he
went off
to his own diggings, and I returned slowly down the
passage to my
rooms.
My blood and pulses seemed beating as they do in fever, my
ears seemed
full of sounds, and that kiss burnt like the brand of
hot iron on my
lips. When I reached my rooms, I locked the
door and flung both the
windows open to the snowy night. The
white powder on the ledge
crumbled and drifted in.
. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
MLA citation:
Cross, Victoria [Annie Sophie Cory]. “Theodora, a Fragment.” The Yellow Book, vol. 4, January 1895, pp. 156-188. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/YBV4_cross_theodora/