“Will you go at once?” stamping her foot angrily.
“Most certainly, signorina.”
“Then lose no time. I will go with you and see you start.”
She followed the man out, and kept at his side until he had secured several servants with lanterns for the search. The promise of high caparra or earnest money made all eager to join the band, but the padrone could only allow a half dozen to leave their stations at the hotel. In the town, however, whither Beth accompanied them, a score of sleepy looking fellows were speedily secured, and under the command of Frascatti, who had resolved to earn his money by energy and good will because there was no chance of success, they marched out of the Catania Gate and scattered along the mountain paths.
“If you find Uncle John before morning I will give you a thousand lira additional,” promised Beth.
“We will search faithfully,” replied her captain, “but the signorina must not be disappointed if the lawless ones evade us. They have a way of hiding close in the caves, where none may find them. It is regrettable, very; but it is so.”
Then he followed his men to the mountains, and as the last glimmer from his lantern died away the girl sighed heavily and returned alone through the deserted streets to the hotel.
Clouds hid the moon and the night was black and forbidding; but it did not occur to her to be afraid.
CHAPTER XV
DAYS OF ANXIETY
Uncle John’s nieces passed a miserable night. Patsy stole into his room and prayed fervently beside his bed that her dear uncle might be preserved and restored to them in health and safety. Beth, meantime, paced the room she shared with Patsy with knitted brows and flashing eyes, the flush in her cheeks growing deeper as her anger increased. An ungovernable temper was the girl’s worst failing; the abductors of her uncle were arousing in her the most violent passions of which she was capable, and might lead her to adopt desperate measures. She was only a country girl, and little experienced in life, yet Beth might be expected to undertake extraordinary things if, as she expressed it, if she “got good and mad!”
No sound was heard during the night from the room occupied by Louise, but the morning disclosed a white, drawn face and reddened eyelids as proof that she had rested as little as her cousins.
Yet, singularly enough, Louise was the most composed of the three when they gathered in the little sitting room at daybreak, and tried earnestly to cheer the spirits of her cousins. Louise never conveyed the impression of being especially sincere, but the pleasant words and manners she habitually assumed rendered her an agreeable companion, and this faculty of masking her real feelings now stood her in good stead and served to relieve the weight of anxiety that oppressed them all.
Frascatti came limping back with his tired followers in the early dawn, and reported that no trace of the missing man had been observed. There were no brigands and no Mafia; on that point all his fellow townsmen agreed with him fully. But it was barely possible some lawless ones who were all unknown to the honest Taorminians had made the rich American a prisoner.
Il Duca? Oh, no, signorini! A thousand times, no. Il Duca was queer and unsociable, but not lawless. He was of noble family and a native of the district. It would be very wrong and foolish to question Il Duca’s integrity.
With this assertion Frascatti went to bed. He had not shirked the search, because he was paid for it, and he and his men had tramped the mountains faithfully all night, well knowing it would result in nothing but earning their money.
On the morning train from Catania arrived Silas Watson and his young ward Kenneth Forbes, the boy who had so unexpectedly inherited Aunt Jane’s fine estate of Elmhurst on her death. The discovery of a will which gave to Kenneth all the property their aunt had intended for her nieces had not caused the slightest estrangement between the young folks, then or afterward. On the contrary, the girls were all glad that the gloomy, neglected boy, with his artistic, high-strung temperament, would be so well provided for. Without the inheritance he would have been an outcast; now he was able to travel with his guardian, the kindly old Elmhurst lawyer, and fit himself for his future important position in the world. More than all this, however, Kenneth had resolved to be a great landscape painter, and Italy and Sicily had done much, in the past year, to prepare him for this career.
The boy greeted his old friends with eager delight, not noticing for the moment their anxious faces and perturbed demeanor. But the lawyer’s sharp eyes saw at once that something was wrong.
“Where is John Merrick?” he asked.
“Oh, I’m so glad you’ve come!” cried Patsy, clinging to his hand.
“We are in sore straits, indeed, Mr. Watson,” said Louise.
“Uncle John is lost,” explained Beth, “and we’re afraid he is in the hands of brigands.”
Then she related as calmly as she could all that had happened. The relation was clear and concise. She told of their meeting with Valdi on the ship, of Count Ferralti’s persistence in attaching himself to their party, and of Uncle John’s discovery that the young man was posing under an assumed name. She did not fail to mention Ferralti’s timely assistance on the Amalfi drive, or his subsequent devoted attentions to Louise; but the latter Beth considered merely as an excuse for following them around.
“In my opinion,” said she, “we have been watched ever since we left America, by these two spies, who had resolved to get Uncle John into some unfrequented place and then rob him. If they succeed in their vile plot, Mr. Watson, we shall be humiliated and disgraced forever.”
“Tut-tut,” said he; “don’t think of that. Let us consider John Merrick, and nothing else.”
Louise protested that Beth had not been fair in her conclusions. The Count was an honorable man; she would vouch for his character herself.
But Mr. Watson did not heed this defense. The matter was very serious — how serious he alone realized — and his face was grave indeed as he listened to the descriptions of that terrible Il Duca whom the natives all shrank from and refused to discuss.
When he had learned all the nieces had to tell he hastened into the town and telegraphed the American consul at Messina. Then he found the questura, or police office, and was assured by the officer in attendance that the disappearance of Mr. Merrick was already known to the authorities and every effort was being made to find him.
“Do you think he has been abducted by brigands?” asked the lawyer.
“Brigands, signore?” was the astonished reply. “There are no brigands in this district at all. We drove them out many years ago.”
“How about Il Duca?”
“And who is that, signore?”
“Don’t you know?”
“I assure you we have no official knowledge of such a person. There are dukes in Sicily, to be sure; but ‘Il Duca’ means nothing. Perhaps you can tell me to whom you refer?”
“See here,” said the lawyer, brusquely; “I know your methods, questore mia, but they won’t prove effective in this case. If you think an American is helpless in this country you are very much mistaken. But, to save time, I am willing to submit to your official requirements. I will pay you well for the rescue of my friend.”
“All shall be done that is possible.”
“But if you do not find him at once, and return him to us unharmed, I will have a regiment of soldiers in Taormina to search your mountains and break up the bands of brigands that infest them. When I prove that brigands are here and that you were not aware of them, you will be disgraced and deposed from your office.”
The official shrugged his shoulders, a gesture in which the Sicilian is as expert as the Frenchman.
“I will welcome the soldiery,” said he; “but you will be able to prove nothing. The offer of a reward may accomplish more — if it is great enough to be interesting.”
“How great is that?”
“Can I value your friend? You must name the reward yourself. But even then I can promise nothing. In the course of our duty every effort i
s now being made to find the missing American. But we work in the dark, as you know. Your friend may be a suicide; he may have lost his mind and wandered into the wilderness; he may have committed some crime and absconded. How do I know? You say he is missing, but that is no reason the brigands have him, even did brigands exist, which I doubt. Rest assured, signore, that rigid search will be made. It is my boast that I leave no duty unfulfilled.”
Mr. Watson walked back to the telegraph office and found an answer to his message. The American consul was ill and had gone to Naples for treatment. When he returned, his clerk stated, the matter of the disappearance of John Merrick would immediately be investigated.
Feeling extremely helpless and more fearful for his friend than before, the lawyer returned to the hotel for a conference with the nieces.
“How much of a reward shall I offer?” he asked. “That seems to be the only thing that can be depended upon to secure results.”
“Give them a million — Uncle John won’t mind,” cried Patsy, earnestly.
“Don’t give them a penny, sir,” said Beth. “If they are holding him for a ransom Uncle is in no personal danger, and we have no right to assist in robbing him.”
“But you don’t understand, my dear,” asserted the lawyer. “These brigands never let a victim go free unless they are well paid. That is why they are so often successful. If John Merrick is not ransomed he will never again be heard of.”
“But this is not a ransom, sir. You propose to offer a reward to the police.”
“Let me explain. The ways of the Italian police are very intricate. They know of no brigandage here, and cannot find a brigand. But if the reward is great enough to divide, they know where to offer a share of it, in lieu of a ransom, and will force the brigands to accept it. In that way the police gets the glory of a rescue and a share of the spoils. If we offer no reward, or an insignificant one, the brigands will be allowed to act as they please.”
“That is outrageous!” exclaimed Beth.
“Yes. The Italian government deplores it. It is trying hard to break up a system that has existed for centuries, but has not yet succeeded.”
“Then I’d prefer to deal directly with the brigands.”
“So would I, if — ”
“If what, sir?”
“If we were sure your uncle is in their hands. Do you think the party you sent out last night searched thoroughly?”
“I hope so.”
“I will send out more men at once. They shall search the hills in every direction. Should they find nothing our worst fears will be confirmed, and then — ”
“Well, Mr. Watson?”
“Then we must wait for the brigands to dictate the terms of a ransom, and make the best bargain we can.”
“That seems sensible,” said Kenneth, and both Patsy and Louise agreed with him, although it would be tedious waiting.
But Beth only bit her lip and frowned.
Mr. Watson’s searching party was maintained all day — for two days, and three; but without result. Then they waited for the brigands to act. But a week dragged painfully by and no word of John Merrick’s whereabouts reached the ears of the weary watchers.
CHAPTER XVI
TATO
When Uncle John passed through the west gate for a tramp along the mountain paths he was feeling in an especially happy and contented mood. The day was bright and balmy, the air bracing, the scenery unfolded step by step magnificent and appealing. To be in this little corner of the old world, amid ruins antedating the Christian era, and able to wholly forget those awful stock and market reports of Wall street, was a privilege the old gentleman greatly appreciated.
So away he trudged, exploring this path or that leading amongst the rugged cliffs, until finally he began to take note of his erratic wanderings and wonder where he was. Climbing an elevated rock near the path he poised himself upon its peak and studied the landscape spread out beneath him.
There was a patch of sea, with the dim Calabrian coast standing sentry behind it. The nearer coast was hidden from view, but away at the left was a dull white streak marking the old wall of Taormina, and above this the ruined citadel and the ancient castle of Mola — each on its separate peak.
“I must be getting back,” he thought, and sliding down the surface of the rock he presently returned to the path from whence he had climbed.
To his surprise he found a boy standing there and looking at him with soft brown eyes that were both beautiful and intelligent. Uncle John was as short as he was stout, but the boy scarcely reached to his shoulder. He was slender and agile, and clothed in a grey corduroy suit that was better in texture than the American had seen other Sicilian youths wear. As a rule the apparel of the children in this country seemed sadly neglected.
Yet the most attractive thing about this child was his face, which was delicate of contour, richly tinted to harmonize with his magnificent brown eyes, and so sensitive and expressive that it seemed able to convey the most subtle shades of emotion. He seemed ten or twelve years of age, but might have been much older.
As soon as the American had returned to the path the boy came toward him in an eager, excited way, and exclaimed:
“Is it not Signor Merrick?”
The English was fluent, and only rendered softer by the foreign intonation.
“It is,” said Uncle John, cheerfully. “Where did you drop from, my lad? I thought these hills were deserted, until now.”
“I am sent by a friend,” answered the boy, speaking rapidly and regarding the man with appealing glances. “He is in much trouble, signore, and asks your aid.”
“A friend? Who is it?”
“The name he gave me is Ferralti, signore. He is near to this place, in the hills yonder, and unable to return to the town without assistance.”
“Ferralti. H-m-m. Is he hurt?”
“Badly, signore; from a fall on the rocks.”
“And he sent for me?”
“Yes, signore. I know you by sight — who does not? — and as I hurried along I saw you standing on the rock. It is most fortunate. Will you hasten to your friend, then? I will lead you to him.”
Uncle John hesitated. He ought to be getting home, instead of penetrating still farther into these rocky fastnesses. And Ferralti was no especial friend, to claim his assistance. But then the thought occurred that this young Italian had befriended both him and his nieces in an extremity, and was therefore entitled to consideration when trouble in turn overtook himself. The natural impulse of this thought was to go to his assistance.
“All right, my lad,” said he. “Lead on, and I’ll see what can be done for Ferralti. Is it far?”
“Not far, signore.”
With nervous, impatient steps the child started up the narrow path and Uncle John followed — not slowly, but scarcely fast enough to satisfy his zealous guide.
“What is your name, little one?”
“Tato, signore.”
“Where do you live?”
“Near by, signore.”
“And how did you happen to find Ferralti?”
“By chance, signore.”
Uncle John saved his remaining breath for the climb. He could ask questions afterward.
The path was in a crevasse where the rocks seemed once to have split. It was narrow and steep, and before long ended in a cul de sac. The little man thought they had reached their destination, then; but without hesitation the boy climbed over a boulder and dropped into another path on the opposite side, holding out a hand to assist the American.
Uncle John laughed at the necessity, but promptly slid his stout body over the boulder and then paused to mop his brow.
“Much farther, Tato?”
“Just a step, signore.”
“It is lucky you found Ferralti, or he might have died in these wilds without a soul knowing he was here.”
“That is true, signore.”
“Well, is this the path?”
“Yes, signore. Follow me, please.
”
The cliffs were precipitous on both sides of them. It was another crevasse, but not a long one. Presently the child came to a halt because the way ended and they could proceed no farther. He leaned against the rock and in a high-pitched, sweet voice sang part of a Sicilian ditty, neither starting the verse nor ending it, but merely trilling out a fragment.
Uncle John regarded him wonderingly; and then, with a sudden suspicion, he demanded:
“You are not playing me false, Tato?”
“I, signore?” smiling frankly into the man’s eyes; “you need never fear Tato, signore. To be your friend, and Signor Ferralti’s friend, makes me very proud.”
The rock he leaned against fell inward, noiselessly, and disclosed a passage. It was short, for there was light at the other end.
The strange child darted in at once.
“This way, signore. He is here!”
Uncle John drew back. He had forgotten until now that these mountains are dangerous. And something strange in the present proceedings, the loneliness of the place and the elfish character of his guide, suddenly warned him to be cautious.
“See here, my lad,” he called: “I’ll go no farther.”
Instantly Tato was at his side again, grasping the man’s hand in his tiny brown one and searching his face with pleading eyes.
“Ah, signore, you will not fail your friend, when he is so near you and in such great trouble? See! I who am a stranger and not even his countryman, even I weep for the poor young man, and long to comfort him. Do you, his friend, refuse him aid because you have fear of the wild mountains and a poor peasant boy?”
Tears really stood in the beautiful brown eyes. They rolled down his cheeks, as with both hands he pressed that of Uncle John and urged him gently forward.
“Oh, well; lead on, Tato. I’ll see the other side of your tunnel, anyhow. But if you play me tricks, my lad — ”
He paused, for a wonderful vision had opened before him. Coming through the short passage hewn in the rocks the American stood upon a ledge facing a most beautiful valley, that was hemmed in by precipitous cliffs on every side. From these stern barriers of the outside world the ground sloped gradually toward the center, where a pretty brook flowed, its waters sparkling like diamonds in the sunlight as it tumbled over its rocky bed. Groves of oranges and of olive, lemon and almond trees occupied much of the vale, and on a higher point at the right, its back to the wall of rock that towered behind it, stood a substantial yet picturesque mansion of stone, with several outbuildings scattered on either side.
Complete Works of L. Frank Baum Page 408