Complete Works of F Marion Crawford

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by F. Marion Crawford


  “Mademoiselle is too kind. She exaggerates. And yet, since she has put the question, I will say that I should forget my broken bones very soon if I might be permitted to paint Mademoiselle’s portrait. I am a painter,” he added, in modest explanation.

  “Yes,” said the princess, “I know. But, really — this is a matter which would require great consideration — and my husband’s consent — and, for the present—”

  She paused significantly, intending to convey a polite refusal, but

  Gouache completed the sentence.

  “For the present, until my bones are mended, we will not speak of it. When I am well again I will do myself the honour of asking the prince’s consent myself.”

  Flavia leaned towards her mother and whispered into her ear. The words were quite audible, and the girl’s dark eyes turned to Gouache with a wicked laugh in them while she was speaking.

  “Oh, mamma, if you tell papa it is for nothing he will be quite delighted!”

  Gouache’s lip trembled as he suppressed a smile, and the elderly princess’s florid cheeks flushed with annoyance.

  “For the present,” she said, holding out her hand rather coldly, “we will not speak of it. Pray let us know of your speedy recovery, Monsieur Gouache.”

  As the artist took his leave he glanced once more at Donna Faustina. Her face was pale and her eyes flashed angrily. She, too, had heard Flavia’s stage whisper and was even more annoyed than her mother. Gouache went his way toward his lodging in the company of the surgeon, pondering on the inscrutable mysteries of the Roman household of which he had been vouchsafed a glimpse. He was in pain from his head and shoulder, but insisted that the walk would do him good and refused the cab which his companion had brought. A broken collar-bone is not a dangerous matter, but it can be very troublesome for a while, and the artist was glad to get back to his lodgings and to find himself comfortably installed in an easy chair with something to eat before him, of a more substantial nature than the Principessa Montevarchi’s infusions of camomile and mallows.

  CHAPTER III.

  WHILE GIOVANNI WAS at the Palazzo Montevarchi, and while Corona was busy with her dressmakers, Prince Saracinesca was dozing over the Osservatore Romano in his study. To tell the truth the paper was less dull than usual, for there was war and rumour of war in its columns. Garibaldi had raised a force of volunteers and was in the neighbourhood of Arezzo, beginning to skirmish with the outlying posts of the pontifical army along the frontier. The old gentleman did not know, of course, that on that very day the Italian Government was issuing its proclamation against the great agitator, and possibly if he had been aware of the incident it would not have produced any very strong impression upon his convictions. Garibaldi was a fact, and Saracinesca did not believe that any proclamations would interfere with his march unless backed by some more tangible force. Even had he known that the guerilla general had been arrested at Sinalunga and put in confinement as soon as the proclamation had appeared, the prince would have foreseen clearly enough that the prisoner’s escape would be only a question of a few days, since there were manifold evidences that an understanding existed between Ratazzi and Garibaldi of much the same nature as that which in 1860 had been maintained between Garibaldi and Cavour during the advance upon Naples. The Italian Government kept men under arms to be ready to take advantage of any successes obtained by the Garibaldian volunteers, and at the same time to suppress the republican tendencies of the latter, which broke out afresh with every new advance, and disappeared, as by magic, under the depressing influence of a forced retreat.

  The prince knew all these things, and had reflected upon them so often that they no longer afforded enough interest to keep him awake. The warm September sun streamed into the study and fell upon the paper as it slowly slipped over the old gentleman’s knees, while his head sank lower and lower on his breast. The old enamelled clock upon the chimney-piece ticked more loudly, as clocks seem to do when people are asleep and they are left to their own devices, and a few belated flies chased each other in the sunbeams.

  The silence was broken by the entrance of a servant, who would have withdrawn again when he saw that his master was napping, had not the latter stirred and raised his head before the man had time to get away. Then the fellow came forward with an apology and presented a visiting-card. The prince stared at the bit of pasteboard, rubbed his eyes, stared again, and then laid it upon the table beside him, his eyes still resting on the name, which seemed so much to surprise him. Then he told the footman to introduce the visitor, and a few moments later a very tall man entered the room, hat in hand, and advanced slowly towards him with the air of a person who has a perfect right to present himself but wishes to give his host time to recognise him.

  The prince remembered the newcomer very well. The closely-buttoned frock-coat showed the man’s imposing figure to greater advantage than the dress in which Saracinesca had last seen him, but there was no mistaking the personality. There was the same lean but massive face, broadened by the high cheekbones and the prominent square jaw; there were the same piercing black eyes, set near together under eyebrows that met in the midst of the forehead, the same thin and cruel lips, and the same strongly-marked nose, set broadly on at the nostrils, though pointed and keen. Had the prince had any doubts as to his visitor’s identity they would have been dispelled by the man’s great height and immense breadth of shoulder, which would have made it hard indeed for him to disguise himself had he wished to do so. But though very much surprised, Saracinesca had no doubts whatever. The only points that were new to him in the figure before him were the outward manner and appearance, and the dress of a gentleman.

  “I trust I am not disturbing you, prince?” The words were spoken in a deep, clear voice, and with a notable southern accent.

  “Not at all. I confess I am astonished at seeing you in Rome. Is there anything I can do for you? I shall always be grateful to you for having been alive to testify to the falsehood of that accusation made against my son. Pray sit down. How is your Signora? And the children? All well, I hope?”

  “My wife is dead,” returned the other, and the grave tones of his bass voice lent solemnity to the simple statement.

  “I am sincerely sorry—” began the prince, but his visitor interrupted him.

  “The children are well. They are in Aquila for the present. I have come to establish myself in Rome, and my first visit is naturally to yourself, since I have the advantage of being your cousin.”

  “Naturally,” ejaculated Saracinesca, though his face expressed considerable surprise.

  “Do not imagine that I am going to impose myself upon you as a poor relation,” continued the other with a faint smile. “Fortune has been kind to me since we met, perhaps as a compensation for the loss I suffered in the death of my poor wife. I have a sufficient independence and can hold my own.”

  “I never supposed—”

  “You might naturally have supposed that I had come to solicit your favour, though it is not the case. When we parted I was an innkeeper in Aquila. I have no cause to be ashamed of my past profession. I only wish to let you know that it is altogether past, and that I intend to resume the position which my great-grandfather foolishly forfeited. As you are the present head of the family I judged that it was my duty to inform you of the fact immediately.”

  “By all means. I imagined this must be the case from your card. You are entirely in your rights, and I shall take great pleasure in informing every one of the fact. You are the Marchese di San Giacinto, and the inn at Aquila no longer exists.”

  “As these things must be done, once and for always, I have brought my papers to Rome,” answered the Marchese. “They are at your disposal, for you certainly have a right to see them, if you like. I will recall to your memory the facts of our history, in case you have forgotten them.”

  “I know the story well enough,” said Saracinesca. “Our great-grandfathers were brothers. Yours went to live in Naples. His son grew up and joined
the French against the King. His lands were forfeited, he married and died in obscurity, leaving your father, his only son. Your father died young and you again are his only son. You married the Signora Felice—”

  “Baldi,” said the Marchese, nodding in confirmation of the various statements.

  “The Signora Felice Baldi, by whom you have two children—”

  “Boys.”

  “Two boys. And the Signora Marchesa, I grieve to hear, is dead. Is that accurate?”

  “Perfectly. There is one circumstance, connected with our great-grandfathers, which you have not mentioned, but which I am sure you remember.”

  “What is that?” asked the prince, fixing his keen eyes on his companion’s face.

  “It is only this,” replied San Giacinto, calmly. “My great-grandfather was two years older than yours. You know he never meant to marry, and resigned the title to his younger brother, who had children already. He took a wife in his old age, and my grandfather was the son born to him. That is why you are so much older than I, though we are of the same generation in the order of descent.”

  “Yes,” assented the prince. “That accounts for it. Will you smoke?”

  Giovanni Saracinesca, Marchese di San Giacinto, looked curiously at his cousin as he took the proffered cigar. There was something abrupt in the answer which attracted his attention and roused his quick suspicions. He wondered whether that former exchange of titles, and consequent exchange of positions were an unpleasant subject of conversation to the prince. But the latter, as though anticipating such a doubt in his companion’s mind, at once returned to the question with the boldness which was natural to him.

  “There was a friendly agreement,” he said, striking a match and offering it to the Marchese. “I have all the documents, and have studied them with interest. It might amuse you to see them, some day.”

  “I should like to see them, indeed,” answered San Giacinto. “They must be very curious. As I was saying, I am going to establish myself in Rome. It seems strange to me to be playing the gentleman — it must seem even more odd to you.”

  “It would be truer to say that you have been playing the innkeeper,” observed the prince, courteously. “No one would suspect it,” he added, glancing at his companion’s correct attire.

  “I have an adaptable nature,” said the Marchese, calmly. “Besides, I have always looked forward to again taking my place in the world. I have acquired a little instruction — not much, you will say, but it is sufficient as the times go; and as for education, it is the same for every one, innkeeper or prince. One takes off one’s hat, one speaks quietly, one says what is agreeable to hear — is it not enough?”

  “Quite enough,” replied the prince. He was tempted to smile at his cousin’s definition of manners, though he could see that the man was quite able to maintain his position. “Quite enough, indeed, and as for instruction, I am afraid most of us have forgotten our Latin. You need have no anxiety on that score. But, tell me, how comes it that, having been bred in the south, you prefer to establish yourself in Rome rather than in Naples? They say that you Neapolitans do not like us.”

  “I am a Roman by descent, and I wish to become one in fact,” returned the Marchese. “Besides,” he added, in a peculiarly grave tone of voice, “I do not like the new order of things. Indeed, I have but one favour to ask of you, and that is a great one.”

  “Anything in my power—”

  “To present me to the Holy Father as one who desires to become his faithful subject. Could you do so, do you think, without any great inconvenience?”

  “Eh! I shall be delighted! Magari!” answered the prince, heartily. “To tell the truth, I was afraid you meant to keep your Italian convictions, and that, in Rome, would be against you, especially in these stormy days. But if you will join us heart and soul you will be received with open arms. I shall take great pleasure in seeing you make the acquaintance of my son and his wife. Come and dine this evening.”

  “Thank you,” said the Marchese. “I will not fail.”

  After a few more words San Giacinto took his leave, and the prince could not but admire the way in which this man, who had been brought up among peasants, or at best among the small farmers of an outlying district, assumed at once an air of perfect equality while allowing just so much of respect to appear in his manner as might properly be shown by a younger member to the head of a great house. When he was gone Saracinesca rang the bell.

  “Pasquale,” he said, addressing the old butler who answered the summons, “that gentleman who is just gone is my cousin, Don Giovanni Saracinesca, who is called Marchese di San Giacinto. He will dine here this evening. You will call him Eccellenza, and treat him as a member of the family. Go and ask the princess if she will receive me.”

  Pasquale opened his mental eyes very wide as he bowed and left the room. He had never heard of this other Saracinesca, and the appearance of a new member of the family upon the scene, who must, from his appearance, have been in existence between thirty and forty years, struck him as astonishing in the extreme; for the old servant had been bred up in the house from a boy and imagined himself master of all the secrets connected with the Saracinesca household.

  He was, indeed, scarcely less surprised than his master who, although he had been aware for some time past that Giovanni Saracinesca existed and was his cousin, had never anticipated the event of his coming to Rome, and had expected still less that the innkeeper would ever assume the title to which he had a right and play the part of a gentleman, as he himself had expressed it. There was a strange mixture of boldness and foresight in the way the old prince had received his new relation. He knew the strength of his own position in society, and that the introduction of a humble cousin could not possibly do him harm. At the worst, people might laugh a little among themselves and remark that the Marchese must be a nuisance to the Saracinesca. On the other hand, the prince was struck from the first with the air of self-possession which he discerned in San Giacinto, and foresaw that the man would very probably play a part in Roman life. He was a man who might be disliked, but who could not be despised; and since his claims to consideration were undeniably genuine, it seemed wiser to accept him from the first as a member of the family and unhesitatingly to treat him as such. After all, he demanded nothing to which he had not a clear right from the moment he announced his intention of taking his place in the world, and it was certainly far wiser to receive him cordially at once, than to draw back from acknowledging the relationship because he had been brought up in another sphere.

  This was the substance of what Prince Saracinesca communicated to his daughter-in-law a few minutes later. She listened patiently to all he had to say, only asking a question now and then in order to understand more clearly what had happened. She was curious to see the man whose name had once been so strangely confounded with her husband’s by the machinations of the Conte Del Ferice and Donna Tullia Mayer, and she frankly confessed her curiosity and her satisfaction at the prospect of meeting San Giacinto that evening. While she was talking with the prince, Giovanni unexpectedly returned from his walk. He had turned homewards as soon as he had sent the military surgeon to Gouache. “Well, Giovannino,” cried the old gentleman, “the prodigal innkeeper has returned to the bosom of the family.”

  “What innkeeper?”

  “Your worthy namesake, and cousin, Giovanni Saracinesca, formerly of

  Aquila.”

  “Does Madame Mayer want to prove that it is he who has married Corona?” inquired Sant ‘Ilario with a laugh.

  “No, though I suppose he is a candidate for marriage. I never was more surprised in my life. His wife is dead. He is rich, or says he is. He has his card printed in full, ‘Giovanni Saracinesca, Marchese di San Giacinto,’ in the most correct manner. He wears an excellent coat, and announces his intention of being presented to the Pope and introduced to Roman society.”

  Sant’ Ilario stared incredulously at his father, and then looked inquiringly at his wife as th
ough to ask if it were not all a jest. When he was assured that the facts were true he looked grave and slowly stroked his pointed black beard, a gesture which was very unusual with him, and always accompanied the deepest meditation.

  “There is nothing to be done but to receive him into the family,” he said at last. “But I do not wholly believe in his good intentions. We shall see. I shall be glad to make his acquaintance.”

  “He is coming to dinner.”

  The conversation continued for some time and the arrival of San Giacinto was discussed in all its bearings. Corona took a very practical view of the question, and said that it was certainly best to treat him well, thereby relieving her father-in-law of a considerable anxiety. He had indeed feared lest she should resent the introduction of a man who might reasonably be supposed to have retained a certain coarseness of manner from his early surroundings, and he knew that her consent was all-important in such a case, since she was virtually the mistress of the house. But Corona regarded the matter in much the same light as the old gentleman himself, feeling that nothing of such a nature could possibly injure the imposing position of her husband’s family, and taking it for granted that no one who had good blood in his veins could ever behave outrageously. Of all the three, Sant’ Ilario was the most silent and thoughtful, for he feared certain consequences from the arrival of this new relation which did not present themselves to the minds of the others, and was resolved to be cautious accordingly, even while appearing to receive San Giacinto with all due cordiality. Later in the day he was alone with his father for a few minutes.

 

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