She looked at him sidelong, but the honesty of his regard was convincing. “But how do they expect to live themselves, when their sleds are empty, if they do not feed the unfortunate now?”
“They rely on providence and their own management to prevent that from ever happening,” he replied, and Gaspare chimed in with, “They are hard, the people of France. Very hard!”
Saara sought advice from the black, disinterested eyes of the horse, and failing there, from her naked toes. She nibbled delicately at the end of one braid. Finally she raised her chin and nodded.
Her face was stern. “I believe what you tell me, Damiano, though I cannot see how a land can work so. Things are more just in the land of the Lapps….” Her words fell away, as though her memories had changed in midsentence. “Well, no mind. If they will not feed you, you must take what you need. It is only fair.”
Gaspare jumped up and down in place. “Hah. That’s what I’ve been telling him since November last!”
Damiano did not respond to the boy. “Saara,” he said instead, “if we are caught stealing we could be hanged, or could have our hands chopped off. Without a hand I will not be able to play the lute.”
Saara sputtered, and her pink feet danced over the road. “Is that all it would matter to you? That you would not be able to play the lute? Well, Damiano, I will try to see you do not get caught. What more can I say?”
Pain added an extra glitter to Damiano’s eyes, for he had donned his woolen shirt. The three thieves strolled casually along the dry and empty road, with Saara’s witchsense keeping watch. Damiano walked stiffly, and the Fenwoman kept to his side, so that left Gaspare to lead the foraging party.
As was only appropriate.
Stepping her sun-browned feet in the dust next to Damiano, Saara was touched with meaning, with an importance of line, of color, of gesture that was almost deadly to him. It was nothing she did, for she did nothing but patter along childlike on his right side. It was not the beauty of her face or form, for though her skin was infant-fine, her green eyes were tilted like those of a fox, and were foxlike sly, and of her figure, though Damiano felt that he knew quite a lot about it, still all he had ever seen was the shapeless, felt dress.
But the sun became glory, when it burnished her hair. And the road of dirt became adventure, because reaching out Damiano could touch her. And this hot March afternoon marked the clear end of something, and the beginning of something else.
Yet under the heat of his face and behind the smiling mouth Damiano was not happy, for his feelings knew too much of yearning and not enough of rest. If this was love, it was not the same passion he would have said he felt for Carla Denezzi, now behind convent walls at Bard.
This was no blessed or consoling feeling. He thought perhaps he wanted to strike Saara, to hit her across her petal-pink lips and knock her down. But of course he would not be able to strike her; if he lifted his fist she would turn and look at him and he would be the one to fall.
Or perhaps he wanted only to shout at her, to tear her heavy dress off, to shock her in any way possible.
Why? Was it because he wanted her, and desire made him feel like a fool?
Then Saara turned her glance from the gray ducks of the pond to Damiano. In an instant he felt his mind had been read, and flinched with guilt, but what Saara said was, “Why ‘sheep-face,’ Dami? Why did he call you sheep-face?”
Relief was exquisite, and the silly question settled his mind as little else could have done. “Because he thinks I look like a sheep,” he answered her, and then he yielded to the temptation of adding, “Can you see a resemblance?”
Saara’s eye went dry and analytical. Damiano swallowed.
“I see what he means. It is the nose, mostly. It is broad down the middle and almost turns under. And the eyes, also.”
“I see,” said Damiano, as stoutly as he could.
“I myself have been told I look like a fox about the face,” she added, but Damiano interrupted with an angry hiss.
“Not at all!” he cried, with all the more heat because he had been thinking exactly that—that Saara looked like a fox. “There is no resemblance! Your face is as fine as ivory and roses, and you move like a bird in the air. Fox indeed!”
She skittered two feet away, amusement written all over her fox-face. “So. Is that the way I was supposed to answer you? ‘There is no resemblance!’ Well, I can look like roses and a fox, too, I imagine, and you, Damiano Delstrego, are a vain young man, just like…”
“Don’t say ‘like Ruggerio,’ “ he pleaded. “I am not a duelist like him, and he was a Roman besides.”
“I was not going to say that,” she replied, subdued suddenly. “But never mind. I think you are a handsome boy, Damiano. Handsome and more besides. And you can be all that and still look a little like a sheep.” The part in her hair (straight, but slightly off-center) came just under Damiano’s eye level. As he looked down upon it suddenly his roiled emotions clarified and he did what he wanted to do, which was to kiss that warm, bronze-brown head.
“I love you, Saara,” he whispered, regardless of Gaspare, trotting on ahead. “I know all men have to love you, so that is nothing special to you, and I know further that I am last of all who should speak to you of love, but I do love you.
“I hear you in my mind a thousand miles away, and your image floats to me through pain and darkness, like a golden lamp. I have nothing to give—not even time—but still I love you.”
Saara stepped back and her gaze was not soft but shrewd. “You don’t love me, Damiano, though I might wish you did. You hear your other part; your broken self is calling to be whole.”
Damiano heard her. He answered nothing, though his mouth formed words. He shivered. By the pure Mother of God, he whispered to himself alone, she’s right, or at least partly right.
Of course Saara was important, her every gesture imbued with meaning. Her every gesture was flavored by his every gesture, and her eyes gave back his own familiar fire. How could he not have seen? He had become simple indeed to stand next to his own spirit and not feel it.
He was ashamed.
He was ashamed, but he raised his head. “You know what I do not, Saara. Probably you know me better than I know myself, anymore. But still I love you.”
They had stopped together, just beyond the duckpond. Together they stood under the sun, amid the buzzing of the season’s first dragonflies. And Saara’s smile was most maliciously sly. “All right, my pretty, sheep-face Damiano. So if you do love me what do we do about it?”
But if they had forgotten the purpose and urgency of their mission, Gaspare had not. He danced back, his feet impatient and demanding. “First you dawdle,” he hissed. “And then you stop entirely. I’d like to know how you expect to win your bread that way. Are you still bothered that our purpose is not holy enough, Damiano?”
The older fellow glared, but he was really glad of the interruption. A greater interruption followed, as the sound of unhurried footsteps scuffed up the road toward them, their maker hidden by the last hillock between the pond and the house.
With instinctive smoothness Gaspare’s face became casual and innocent—far more respectable than its usual habit. He bent down and snatched up one of his cloth-booted feet, and examined the many rents in the material with proprietary interest. He also pointed to his foot, looking up at Damiano so that the approaching householder would see a tableau that raised no suspicious questions.
But to the ruin of his plans, Damiano’s barefoot lady began to sing. Perfectly loudly she caroled, and tunefully, too. But her eyes were closed, and the words were quite mad.
“Damiano, Gaspare, me.
There is nothing here to see. Damiano, Gaspare, me.
There is nothing here to see.”
The fine hairs on Gaspare’s arms prickled. He stared wildly at Damiano, but his friend’s dark face wore a peculiar expression of listening, colored by satisfaction. His face shifted from Saara to the person approaching as that one
rounded the hillock.
It was a girl of perhaps sixteen years, her smooth hair hanging loosely over her shoulders. Her dress was pale homespun. She swung a flat basket, looking as bored as a sixteen-year-old girl may look, when out to gather eggs.
“Nothing but sky above your head,
Nothing but dirt on which you tread, Damiano, Gaspare, me.
There is nothing here to see.”
The girl passed them by and she did not look toward them at all.
Damiano was grinning broadly. “It has been a long time,” he whispered in his throat, and then to Gaspare, “I don’t know how she finds the rhyme so quick.”
But Saara paid him no mind. Still singing, she jerked on Gaspare’s sleeve and signaled them both to follow. Feet of pinkish-brown leaped from the dust of the road to the grass bank, and hopped tussock to tussock into the wet. Gaspare and Damiano imitated her steps, Damiano with less agility, for despite adventure and an epiphany of the heart, his back still hurt.
“Damiano, Gaspare, me
There is nothing here to see. Hear no sound of splashing legs,
Nor ducks’ squeal as we steal their eggs. Nothing but sky above your head
And slimy ooze through which you tread Damiano, Gaspare, me…”
“It is getting longer,” said Damiano for Gaspare’s ear only. “And she changes it a little as she goes. It’s a wonder she can remember!”
Gaspare leaped over a freshet and helped his friend after. His spare face was transfigured, and his prominent eyes stood out. “Is this magic?” he hissed back. “Real magic? The goosegirl cannot see us?”
Damiano nodded. “But that is not to say she cannot hear us talk.” But even he could not resist adding, “Well, what do you think of magic—real magic?”
The boy made an owl face. “It is silly! And in terrible taste. But if it works, it’s wonderful, of course.”
“Of course. All wonderful things are silly, and most are in abysmal taste.”
Saara, with unerring instinct, took four eggs from three squalling, sitting ducks, and then would search no more. Instead she slipped the eggs down the neckline of her embroidered dress, causing Damiano and Gaspare to wonder what held them there. Saara left the goosegirl rummaging through the nests, cursing the nips on her ankles, and she led her small parade over the grass and to the house.
“There is nothing here to see,
Nothing moves but wind in tree.”
They entered the farmyard, which was marked out by being slightly boggier and more laden with manure than the surrounding grass. A shortish, stocky horse of the Comtois breed stood grazing not fifty feet from the white house wall. The calloused scars of the ox-yoke covered his shoulders.
Damiano spared a moment’s disapproval. “A horse shouldn’t plow in a yoke. There are perfectly decent horse harnesses. Or better yet, they should get an ox for plowing.”
Both Gaspare and Saara shot him glances of irritation. She took him by the wrist and put a finger to her mouth, all the while singing her simple, repetitive song.
“Damiano, Gaspare, me,
There is no one here to see. Nothing stirs upon the planking,
Form is missing, voice is lacking.”
“Ouch!” whispered Damiano, and Gaspare (who in all matters of art was sensitive) cringed his shoulders. Saara spared one offended sniff and then pulled them in behind her. Into the house.
It was dim within, and the stones were damp. Yet in this, the largest room of the house, two cook-fires gave their smoky warmth, and the odor of lamb and pastry was overpowering.
In the middle of the room, where the black rafters rose highest, a long table had been set, with benches at either side. On one side sat a man: burly, bearded, short, liberally daubed with mud. He reclined on one elbow, while he played with the last corner of the hard piece of flatbread that had been his dinner trencher. On the far side of the table sat a mug, surrounded by crumbs: remnants of the goosegirl’s meal. A tall woman, thinner than either husband or daughter, was tending the fire beneath the iron oven-pot, which was raised on fieldstone to the height of her waist.
“It don’ draw none,” she declared in a patois of langue d’oc and langue d’oil even Damiano could scarcely follow. “It needs you to build it again.”
The man turned to his wife with the slowness of seasons revolving. “You want I should build something, the time to say that is winter, not when the ground is open.”
“In winter you say you can’t work stone because the ground is froze,” she replied, but without rancor. Indeed, this entire interchange had been conducted with a boredom on both sides equal to that shown by the girl at the duckpond.
Saara took Gaspare by the shoulders and set him down on the far end of the bench from the householder. Damiano she motioned to the bench on the far side of the table. Both young men sat in a paralysis of fear, to find themselves in such close and protracted contact with the people they were robbing. Gaspare’s pale green eyes glowed almost white.
Now Saara’s song changed, fading into the back of her throat, and the odd words Damiano could pick up were not Italian. She moved with practiced efficiency through the smoky kitchen, carving a quarter of lamb and cutting black bread with a knife as long as a boar spear and thin from much sharpening. Both the meat and the bread she wrapped in a scrap of dirty linen which lay by the potstove. This bag she dropped on the table in front of Gaspare, but as the boy goggled at it between terror and fascination, his mouth wet and working, she shoved it across the boards to Damiano, thinking perhaps that he would be the more trustworthy keeper. Then she went from the kitchen into a darker room behind it. Damiano heard her digging in sand.
The goosegirl returned, her wood-shod feet making a great racket on the floor. Gaspare started in panic, but Damiano leaned painfully across the table and put his restraining hand upon the boy’s bony shoulder.
“I can’t believe,” the girl announced, setting her basket between the intruders. “Only two eggs.”
Her father grunted heavily. “Not right, this season. There should be a half-dozen, at least, with all the ducks we kept over winter. It must be the foxes again. I’lll set the dog on them.”
This last suggestion infused Damiano with a warm glow—a ridiculous warm glow, as though he had been personally praised. A fox it had been in truth: a lovely, sly, green-eyed fox, and he heard her now in the pantry, stuffing things into a sack.
Magic or simple, whole or sundered, let no man say he did not love Saara the witch. And for a moment, in the middle of peril, with one hand on the racing pulse of Gaspare and his nose full of the smell of food, Damiano convinced himself that this was his own house he sat in, at his own kitchen table, with his own Saara singing from happiness in the next room.
Of course if it were his, the house would be light and dry, the walls fresh-limed, and the floor painted tile. If it were his, there would be rows of books, and one would be able to look out the window and see the clean mountains. And the beasts in the stable would be full-fed and glossy, with never a scar.
And this vision of bucolic contentment raised in him such a dizzying desire that he choked on it, and Gaspare looked up, his own fear turned to concern. Damiano frowned hugely, to show he was all right.
The peasant rose then, moving ponderously for his moderate size, and the goosegirl took his place by the table, staring. No word passed between her and her mother.
One year ago, or fifteen months, perhaps, Damiano reflected, he had lusted after immortal greatness. He had wanted the name of Delstrego to be linked with that of Hermes, the alchemist, and with Dante, the patriot. His only quandary had been whether to achieve his greatness through literature, music or natural philosophy.
And he had accomplished something.
For one night he had led an army (much against its will). On one winter’s day he had bested the greatest witch in the Italies in single combat (and there she was in the pantry, singing). He had won a peace for the city to which he had bargained away his righ
ts, forever.
And now, in the spring of his twenty-fourth year, Damiano could imagine no greater happiness than to live an unexceptional life within four rooms by a duckpond, in the company of a woman—a rose-faced, fox-faced woman—who went barefoot through the cold.
Viciously he informed himself that he could not have that form of happiness, nor any other that came upon the earth, for along with his rights to Partestrada, he had bargained away all rights to the future.
Damiano was standing by the table when Saara came singing from the pantry.
Sunlight hit them like a blow; even Saara blinked against it. Damiano gave Gaspare the bag and took from Saara the rough sack she had slung over one shoulder. The witch trotted them up the road the goosegirl had taken.
Without warning, a dog—the forgotten sheepdog, the dog that was to be set on foxes—exploded from a ditch at their feet. It was a heavy creature, almost the size of one of its own wooly charges, headed like a mastiff and bobtailed. Gaspare shrieked but clutched his parcel to him.
Damiano leaped forth. He stood between the animal and Gaspare, raised one arm and shouted, “Go! Go home!” in his most commanding bass.
The beast slavered, crouched down and sprang for Damiano’s throat.
It was a sharp stone the size of a man’s fist, and it caught the dog exactly over its left eye. Its charge went crooked and it landed on its outsized jaw. It peered at Saara—author of the stone—with a single working eye which was the size of that of a pig. With its little tail tucked down against its rump, the sheepdog backed sullenly away.
Damiano was full of admiration. “Not a beat!” he exclaimed, hefting his sack once more. “You missed not a beat while you jumped sideways, bent down, found the stone and tossed it!”
Saara returned his glance without enthusiasm. Her face was slick with sweat. Yet still the sure line of melody passed her lips, endless as a Breton ballad. She led them back to the wagon.
Out of green brush and long grasses Damiano hacked a nest for Saara. He bathed her face with water from Gaspare’s leather drinking bottle, and dried it on his single change of shirt.
Damiano's Lute Page 9