“Pomegranates—Yes—you like some? I give you.”
He disappeared into the shop and Betty followed him, looking about with clear, interested eyes. It was like no place she had ever seen—this cool, dark room, with its tiers on tiers of fruit, and the fragrant, spicy smell, and the man with the sad, kind face. Her quick eye paused—arrested by the word printed on a box on the shelf to the right.... Ah, that was it! She knew now quite well. He was a Greek man. She knew the letters; She had studied Greek for six months; but she did not know this word. She was still spelling it out when Achilles returned with the small box of pomegranates in his hand.
She looked up slowly. “I can’t quite make it out,” she said.
“That?” Achilles’s face was alight. “That is Greek.”
She nodded. “I know. I study it; but what is it—the word?”
“The word!—Ah, yes, it is—How you say? You shall see.”
He reached out a hand to the box. But the child stopped him. A quick thought had come to her. “You have been in Athens, haven’t you? I want to ask you something, please.”
The hand dropped from the box. The man turned about, waiting. If heaven were to open to him now—!
“I’ve always wanted to see a Greek man,” said the child, slowly, “a real Greek man. I’ve wanted to ask him something he would know about. Have you ever seen the Parthenon?” She put the question with quaint seriousness.
A light came into the eyes of Achilles Alexandrakis. It flooded the room.
“You ask me—the Parthenon?” he said, solemnly. “You wish me—tell that?” It was wistful—almost a cry of longing.
Betty Harris nodded practically. “I’ve always wanted to know about it—the Parthenon. They tell you how long it is, and how wide, and what it is made of, and who began it, and who finished it, and who destroyed it, but they never, never”—she raised her small hand impressively—“they never tell you how it looks!”
Achilles brought a chair and placed it near the open door. “Will it—kindly—you sit?” he said, gravely.
She seated herself, folding her hands above the music-roll, and lifting her eyes to the dark face looking down at her. “Thank you.”
Achilles leaned back against the counter, thinking a little. He sighed gently. “I tell you many things,” he said at last.
“About the Parthenon, please,” said Betty Harris.
“You like Athens?” He said it like a child.
“I should like it—if they would tell me real things. I don’t seem to make them understand. But when they say how beautiful it is—I feel it here.” She laid her small hand to her side.
The smile of Achilles held the glory in its depths. “I tell you,” he said.
The clear face reflected the smile. A breath of waiting held the lips. “Yes.”
Achilles leaned again upon his counter. His face was rapt, and he spread his finger-tips a little, as if something within them stirred to be free.