CHAPTER 6
Italy, Philip had always maintained, is only her true self in the height of
the summer, when the tourists have left her, and her soul awakes under the beams
of a vertical sun. He now had every opportunity of seeing her at her best,
for it was nearly the middle of August before he went out to meet Harriet in the
Tirol.
He found his sister in a dense cloud five
thousand feet above the sea, chilled to the bone, overfed, bored, and not at all
unwilling to be fetched away.
"It upsets one's plans
terribly," she remarked, as she squeezed out her sponges, "but obviously it is
my duty."
"Did mother explain it all to you?" asked
Philip.
"Yes, indeed! Mother has written me a
really beautiful letter. She describes how it was that she gradually got
to feel that we must rescue the poor baby from its terrible surroundings, how
she has tried by letter, and it is no good--nothing but insincere compliments
and hypocrisy came back. Then she says, 'There is nothing like personal
influence; you and Philip will succeed where I have failed.' She says, too, that
Caroline Abbott has been wonderful."
Philip
assented.
"Caroline feels it as keenly almost as
us. That is because she knows the man. Oh, he must be
loathsome! Goodness me! I've forgotten to pack the ammonia! .
. . It has been a terrible lesson for Caroline, but I fancy it is her
turning-point. I can't help liking to think that out of all this evil good
will come."
Philip saw no prospect of good, nor of
beauty either. But the expedition promised to be highly comic. He
was not averse to it any longer; he was simply indifferent to all in it except
the humours. These would be wonderful. Harriet, worked by her
mother; Mrs. Herriton, worked by Miss Abbott; Gino, worked by a cheque--what
better entertainment could he desire? There was nothing to distract him
this time; his sentimentality had died, so had his anxiety for the family
honour. He might be a puppet's puppet, but he knew exactly the disposition
of the strings.
They travelled for thirteen hours
down-hill, whilst the streams broadened and the mountains shrank, and the
vegetation changed, and the people ceased being ugly and drinking beer, and
began instead to drink wine and to be beautiful. And the train which had
picked them at sunrise out of a waste of glaciers and hotels was waltzing at
sunset round the walls of Verona.
"Absurd nonsense
they talk about the heat," said Philip, as they drove from the station.
"Supposing we were here for pleasure, what could be more pleasurable than
this?"
"Did you hear, though, they are remarking on
the cold?" said Harriet nervously. "I should never have thought it
cold."
And on the second day the heat struck them,
like a hand laid over the mouth, just as they were walking to see the tomb of
Juliet. From that moment everything went wrong. They fled from
Verona. Harriet's sketch-book was stolen, and the bottle of ammonia in her
trunk burst over her prayer-book, so that purple patches appeared on all her
clothes. Then, as she was going through Mantua at four in the morning,
Philip made her look out of the window because it was Virgil's birthplace, and a
smut flew in her eye, and Harriet with a smut in her eye was notorious. At
Bologna they stopped twenty-four hours to rest. It was a festa,
and children blew bladder whistles night and day. "What a religion!" said
Harriet. The hotel smelt, two puppies were asleep on her bed, and her
bedroom window looked into a belfry, which saluted her slumbering form every
quarter of an hour. Philip left his walking-stick, his socks, and the
Baedeker at Bologna; she only left her sponge-bag. Next day they crossed
the Apennines with a train-sick child and a hot lady, who told them that never,
never before had she sweated so profusely. "Foreigners are a filthy
nation," said Harriet. "I don't care if there are tunnels; open the
windows." He obeyed, and she got another smut in her eye. Nor did Florence
improve matters. Eating, walking, even a cross word would bathe them both
in boiling water. Philip, who was slighter of build, and less
conscientious, suffered less. But Harriet had never been to Florence, and
between the hours of eight and eleven she crawled like a wounded creature
through the streets, and swooned before various masterpieces of art. It
was an irritable couple who took tickets to
Monteriano.
"Singles or returns?" said
he.
"A single for me," said Harriet peevishly; "I
shall never get back alive."
"Sweet creature!" said
her brother, suddenly breaking down. "How helpful you will be when we come
to Signor Carella!"
"Do you suppose," said Harriet,
standing still among a whirl of porters--"do you suppose I am going to enter
that man's house?"
"Then what have you come for,
pray? For ornament?"
"To see that you do your
duty."
"Oh, thanks!"
"So
mother told me. For goodness sake get the tickets; here comes that hot
woman again! She has the impudence to
bow."
"Mother told you, did she?" said Philip
wrathfully, as he went to struggle for tickets at a slit so narrow that they
were handed to him edgeways. Italy was beastly, and Florence station is
the centre of beastly Italy. But he had a strange feeling that he was to
blame for it all; that a little influx into him of virtue would make the whole
land not beastly but amusing. For there was enchantment, he was sure of
that; solid enchantment, which lay behind the porters and the screaming and the
dust. He could see it in the terrific blue sky beneath which they
travelled, in the whitened plain which gripped life tighter than a frost, in the
exhausted reaches of the Arno, in the ruins of brown castles which stood
quivering upon the hills. He could see it, though his head ached and his
skin was twitching, though he was here as a puppet, and though his sister knew
how he was here. There was nothing pleasant in that journey to Monteriano
station. But nothing--not even the discomfort--was
commonplace.
"But do people live inside?" asked
Harriet. They had exchanged railway-carriage for the legno, and the legno
had emerged from the withered trees, and had revealed to them their
destination. Philip, to be annoying, answered
"No."
"What do they do there?" continued Harriet,
with a frown.
"There is a caffè. A
prison. A theatre. A church. Walls. A
view."
"Not for me, thank you," said Harriet, after a
weighty pause.
"Nobody asked you, Miss, you
see. Now Lilia was asked by such a nice young gentleman, with curls all
over his forehead, and teeth just as white as father makes them." Then his
manner changed. "But, Harriet, do you see nothing wonderful or attractive
in that place--nothing at all?"
"Nothing at
all. It's frightful."
"I know it is. But
it's old--awfully old."
"Beauty is the only test,"
said Harriet. "At least so you told me when I sketched old buildings--for
the sake, I suppose, of making yourself
unpleasant."
"Oh, I'm perfectly right. But at
the same time--I don't know--so many things have happened here--people have
lived so hard and so splendidly--I can't explain."
"I
shouldn't think you could. It doesn't seem the best moment to begin your
Italy mania. I thought you were cured of it by now. Instead, will
you kindly tell me what you are going to do when you arrive. I do beg you
will not be taken unawares this time."
"First,
Harriet, I shall settle you at the Stella d'Italia, in the comfort that befits
your sex and disposition. Then I shall make myself some tea. After
tea I shall take a book into Santa Deodata's, and read there. It is always
fresh and cool."
The martyred Harriet exclaimed, "I'm
not clever, Philip. I don't go in for it, as you know. But I know
what's rude. And I know what's
wrong."
"Meaning--?"
"You!"
she shouted, bouncing on the cushions of the legno and startling all the
fleas. "What's the good of cleverness if a man's murdered a
woman?"
"Harriet, I am hot. To whom do you
refer?"
"He. Her. If you don't look out
he'll murder you. I wish he would."
"Tut tut,
tutlet! You'd find a corpse extraordinarily inconvenient." Then he
tried to be less aggravating. "I heartily dislike the fellow, but we know
he didn't murder her. In that letter, though she said a lot, she never
said he was physically cruel."
"He has murdered
her. The things he did--things one can't even
mention--"
"Things which one must mention if one's to
talk at all. And things which one must keep in their proper place.
Because he was unfaithful to his wife, it doesn't follow that in every way he's
absolutely vile." He looked at the city. It seemed to approve his
remark.
"It's the supreme test. The man who is
unchivalrous to a woman--"
"Oh, stow it! Take
it to the Back Kitchen. It's no more a supreme test than anything
else. The Italians never were chivalrous from the first. If you
condemn him for that, you'll condemn the whole
lot."
"I condemn the whole
lot."
"And the French as
well?"
"And the French as
well."
"Things aren't so jolly easy," said Philip,
more to himself than to her.
But for Harriet things
were easy, though not jolly, and she turned upon her brother yet again.
"What about the baby, pray? You've said a lot of smart things and whittled
away morality and religion and I don't know what; but what about the baby?
You think me a fool, but I've been noticing you all today, and you haven't
mentioned the baby once. You haven't thought about it, even. You
don't care. Philip! I shall not speak to you. You are
intolerable."
She kept her promise, and never opened
her lips all the rest of the way. But her eyes glowed with anger and
resolution. For she was a straight, brave woman, as well as a peevish
one.
Philip acknowledged her reproof to be
true. He did not care about the baby one straw. Nevertheless, he
meant to do his duty, and he was fairly confident of success. If Gino
would have sold his wife for a thousand lire, for how much less would he not
sell his child? It was just a commercial transaction. Why should it
interfere with other things? His eyes were fixed on the towers again, just
as they had been fixed when he drove with Miss Abbott. But this time his
thoughts were pleasanter, for he had no such grave business on his mind.
It was in the spirit of the cultivated tourist that he approached his
destination.
One of the towers, rough as any other,
was topped by a cross--the tower of the Collegiate Church of Santa
Deodata. She was a holy maiden of the Dark Ages, the city's patron saint,
and sweetness and barbarity mingle strangely in her story. So holy was she
that all her life she lay upon her back in the house of her mother, refusing to
eat, refusing to play, refusing to work. The devil, envious of such
sanctity, tempted her in various ways. He dangled grapes above her, he
showed her fascinating toys, he pushed soft pillows beneath her aching
head. When all proved vain he tripped up the mother and flung her
downstairs before her very eyes. But so holy was the saint that she never
picked her mother up, but lay upon her back through all, and thus assured her
throne in Paradise. She was only fifteen when she died, which shows how
much is within the reach of any school-girl. Those who think her life was
unpractical need only think of the victories upon Poggibonsi, San Gemignano,
Volterra, Siena itself--all gained through the invocation of her name; they need
only look at the church which rose over her grave. The grand schemes for a
marble façade were never carried out, and it is brown unfinished stone until
this day. But for the inside Giotto was summoned to decorate the walls of
the nave. Giotto came--that is to say, he did not come, German research
having decisively proved--but at all events the nave is covered with frescoes,
and so are two chapels in the left transept, and the arch into the choir, and
there are scraps in the choir itself. There the decoration stopped, till
in the full spring of the Renaissance a great painter came to pay a few weeks'
visit to his friend the Lord of Monteriano. In the intervals between the
banquets and the discussions on Latin etymology and the dancing, he would stroll
over to the church, and there in the fifth chapel to the right he has painted
two frescoes of the death and burial of Santa Deodata. That is why
Baedeker gives the place a star.
Santa Deodata was
better company than Harriet, and she kept Philip in a pleasant dream until the
legno drew up at the hotel. Every one there was asleep, for it was still
the hour when only idiots were moving. There were not even any beggars
about. The cabman put their bags down in the passage--they had left heavy
luggage at the station--and strolled about till he came on the landlady's room
and woke her, and sent her to them.
Then Harriet
pronounced the monosyllable "Go!"
"Go where?" asked
Philip, bowing to the landlady, who was swimming down the
stairs.
"To the Italian.
Go."
"Buona sera, signora padrona. Si ritorna
volontieri a Monteriano!" (Don't be a goose. I'm not going
now. You're in the way, too.) "Vorrei due
camere--"
"Go. This instant. Now.
I'll stand it no longer. Go!"
"I'm damned if
I'll go. I want my tea."
"Swear if you like!"
she cried. "Blaspheme! Abuse me! But understand, I'm in
earnest."
"Harriet, don't act. Or act
better."
"We've come here to get the baby back, and
for nothing else. I'll not have this levity and slackness, and talk about
pictures and churches. Think of mother; did she send you out for
them?"
"Think of mother and don't straddle
across the stairs. Let the cabman and the landlady come down, and let me
go up and choose rooms."
"I
shan't."
"Harriet, are you
mad?"
"If you like. But you will not come up
till you have seen the Italian."
"La signorina si
sente male," said Philip, "C' è il
sole."
"Poveretta!" cried the landlady and the
cabman.
"Leave me alone!" said Harriet, snarling
round at them. "I don't care for the lot of you. I'm English, and
neither you'll come down nor he up till he goes for the
baby."
"La prego-piano-piano-c è un' altra signorina
che dorme--"
"We shall probably be arrested for
brawling, Harriet. Have you the very slightest sense of the
ludicrous?"
Harriet had not; that was why she could
be so powerful. She had concocted this scene in the carriage, and nothing
should baulk her of it. To the abuse in front and the coaxing behind she was
equally indifferent. How long she would have stood like a glorified
Horatius, keeping the staircase at both ends, was never to be known. For
the young lady, whose sleep they were disturbing, awoke and opened her bedroom
door, and came out on to the landing. She was Miss
Abbott.
Philip's first coherent feeling was one of
indignation. To be run by his mother and hectored by his sister was as
much as he could stand. The intervention of a third female drove him
suddenly beyond politeness. He was about to say exactly what he thought
about the thing from beginning to end. But before he could do so Harriet
also had seen Miss Abbott. She uttered a shrill cry of
joy.
"You, Caroline, here of all people!" And
in spite of the heat she darted up the stairs and imprinted an affectionate kiss
upon her friend.
Philip had an inspiration.
"You will have a lot to tell Miss Abbott, Harriet, and she may have as much to
tell you. So I'll pay my call on Signor Carella, as you suggested, and see
how things stand."
Miss Abbott uttered some noise of
greeting or alarm. He did not reply to it or approach nearer to her.
Without even paying the cabman, he escaped into the
street.
"Tear each other's eyes out!" he cried,
gesticulating at the façade of the hotel. "Give it to her, Harriet!
Teach her to leave us alone. Give it to her, Caroline! Teach her to
be grateful to you. Go it, ladies; go it!"
Such
people as observed him were interested, but did not conclude that he was
mad. This aftermath of conversation is not unknown in
Italy.
He tried to think how amusing it was; but it
would not do--Miss Abbott's presence affected him too personally. Either
she suspected him of dishonesty, or else she was being dishonest herself.
He preferred to suppose the latter. Perhaps she had seen Gino, and they
had prepared some elaborate mortification for the Herritons. Perhaps Gino
had sold the baby cheap to her for a joke: it was just the kind of joke that
would appeal to him. Philip still remembered the laughter that had greeted
his fruitless journey, and the uncouth push that had toppled him on to the
bed. And whatever it might mean, Miss Abbott's presence spoilt the comedy:
she would do nothing funny.
During this short
meditation he had walked through the city, and was out on the other side.
"Where does Signor Carella live?" he asked the men at the
Dogana.
"I'll show you," said a little girl,
springing out of the ground as Italian children
will.
"She will show you," said the Dogana men,
nodding reassuringly. "Follow her always, always, and you will come to no
harm. She is a trustworthy guide. She is my
daughter."
cousin."
sister."
Philip knew these relatives well: they ramify, if
need be, all over the peninsula.
"Do you chance to
know whether Signor Carella is in?" he asked her.
She
had just seen him go in. Philip nodded. He was looking forward to
the interview this time: it would be an intellectual duet with a man of no great
intellect. What was Miss Abbott up to? That was one of the things he
was going to discover. While she had it out with Harriet, he would have it
out with Gino. He followed the Dogana's relative softly, like a
diplomatist.
He did not follow her long, for this was
the Volterra gate, and the house was exactly opposite to it. In half a
minute they had scrambled down the mule-track and reached the only practicable
entrance. Philip laughed, partly at the thought of Lilia in such a
building, partly in the confidence of victory. Meanwhile the Dogana's
relative lifted up her voice and gave a shout.
For an
impressive interval there was no reply. Then the figure of a woman
appeared high up on the loggia.
"That is Perfetta,"
said the girl.
"I want to see Signor Carella," cried
Philip.
"Out!"
"Out,"
echoed the girl complacently.
"Why on earth did you
say he was in?" He could have strangled her for temper. He had been
just ripe for an interview--just the right combination of indignation and
acuteness: blood hot, brain cool. But nothing ever did go right in
Monteriano. "When will he be back?" he called to Perfetta. It really
was too bad.
She did not know. He was away on
business. He might be back this evening, he might not. He had gone
to Poggibonsi.
At the sound of this word the little
girl put her fingers to her nose and swept them at the plain. She sang as
she did so, even as her foremothers had sung seven hundred years back--
Poggibonizzi, fatti in là,
Che Monteriano si fa
città!
Then she asked Philip for a halfpenny. A German
lady, friendly to the Past, had given her one that very
spring.
"I shall have to leave a message," he
called.
"Now Perfetta has gone for her basket," said
the little girl. "When she returns she will lower it--so. Then you
will put your card into it. Then she will raise it--thus. By this
means--"
When Perfetta returned, Philip remembered to
ask after the baby. It took longer to find than the basket, and he stood
perspiring in the evening sun, trying to avoid the smell of the drains and to
prevent the little girl from singing against Poggibonsi. The olive-trees
beside him were draped with the weekly--or more probably the
monthly--wash. What a frightful spotty blouse! He could not think
where he had seen it. Then he remembered that it was Lilia's. She had
brought it "to hack about in" at Sawston, and had taken it to Italy because "in
Italy anything does." He had rebuked her for the
sentiment.
"Beautiful as an angel!" bellowed
Perfetta, holding out something which must be Lilia's baby. "But who am I
addressing?"
"Thank you--here is my card." He
had written on it a civil request to Gino for an interview next morning.
But before he placed it in the basket and revealed his identity, he wished to
find something out. "Has a young lady happened to call here lately--a
young English lady?"
Perfetta begged his pardon: she
was a little deaf.
"A young lady--pale, large,
tall."
She did not quite
catch.
"A YOUNG
LADY!"
"Perfetta is deaf when she chooses," said the
Dogana's relative. At last Philip admitted the peculiarity and strode
away. He paid off the detestable child at the Volterra gate. She got
two nickel pieces and was not pleased, partly because it was too much, partly
because he did not look pleased when he gave it to her. He caught her
fathers and cousins winking at each other as he walked past them.
Monteriano seemed in one conspiracy to make him look a fool. He felt tired
and anxious and muddled, and not sure of anything except that his temper was
lost. In this mood he returned to the Stella d'Italia, and there, as he
was ascending the stairs, Miss Abbott popped out of the dining-room on the first
floor and beckoned to him mysteriously.
"I was going
to make myself some tea," he said, with his hand still on the
banisters.
"I should be
grateful--"
So he followed her into the dining-room
and shut the door.
"You see," she began, "Harriet
knows nothing."
"No more do I. He was
out."
"But what's that to do with
it?"
He presented her with an unpleasant smile.
She fenced well, as he had noticed before. "He was out. You find me
as ignorant as you have left Harriet."
"What do you
mean? Please, please Mr. Herriton, don't be mysterious: there isn't the
time. Any moment Harriet may be down, and we shan't have decided how to
behave to her. Sawston was different: we had to keep up appearances.
But here we must speak out, and I think I can trust you to do it.
Otherwise we'll never start clear."
"Pray let us
start clear," said Philip, pacing up and down the room. "Permit me to
begin by asking you a question. In which capacity have you come to
Monteriano--spy or traitor?"
"Spy!" she answered,
without a moment's hesitation. She was standing by the little Gothic
window as she spoke--the hotel had been a palace once--and with her finger she
was following the curves of the moulding as if they might feel beautiful and
strange. "Spy," she repeated, for Philip was bewildered at learning her
guilt so easily, and could not answer a word. "Your mother has behaved
dishonourably all through. She never wanted the child; no harm in that;
but she is too proud to let it come to me. She has done all she could to
wreck things; she did not tell you everything; she has told Harriet nothing at
all; she has lied or acted lies everywhere. I cannot trust your
mother. So I have come here alone--all across Europe; no one knows it; my
father thinks I am in Normandy--to spy on Mrs. Herriton. Don't let's
argue!" for he had begun, almost mechanically, to rebuke her for
impertinence. "If you are here to get the child, I will help you; if you
are here to fail, I shall get it instead of you."
"It
is hopeless to expect you to believe me," he stammered. "But I can assert
that we are here to get the child, even if it costs us all we've got. My
mother has fixed no money limit whatever. I am here to carry out her
instructions. I think that you will approve of them, as you have
practically dictated them. I do not approve of them. They are
absurd."
She nodded carelessly. She did not
mind what he said. All she wanted was to get the baby out of
Monteriano.
"Harriet also carries out your
instructions," he continued. "She, however, approves of them, and does not
know that they proceed from you. I think, Miss Abbott, you had better take
entire charge of the rescue party. I have asked for an interview with
Signor Carella tomorrow morning. Do you
acquiesce?"
She nodded
again.
"Might I ask for details of your interview
with him? They might be helpful to me."
He had
spoken at random. To his delight she suddenly collapsed. Her hand
fell from the window. Her face was red with more than the reflection of
evening.
"My interview--how do you know of
it?"
"From Perfetta, if it interests
you."
"Who ever is
Perfetta?"
"The woman who must have let you
in."
"In where?"
"Into
Signor Carella's house."
"Mr. Herriton!" she
exclaimed. "How could you believe her? Do you suppose that I would
have entered that man's house, knowing about him all that I do? I think
you have very odd ideas of what is possible for a lady. I hear you wanted
Harriet to go. Very properly she refused. Eighteen months ago I
might have done such a thing. But I trust I have learnt how to behave by
now."
Philip began to see that there were two Miss
Abbotts--the Miss Abbott who could travel alone to Monteriano, and the Miss
Abbott who could not enter Gino's house when she got there. It was an
amusing discovery. Which of them would respond to his next
move?
"I suppose I misunderstood Perfetta.
Where did you have your interview, then?"
"Not an
interview--an accident--I am very sorry--I meant you to have the chance of
seeing him first. Though it is your fault. You are a day late.
You were due here yesterday. So I came yesterday, and, not finding you,
went up to the Rocca--you know that kitchen-garden where they let you in, and
there is a ladder up to a broken tower, where you can stand and see all the
other towers below you and the plain and all the other
hills?"
"Yes, yes. I know the Rocca; I told you
of it."
"So I went up in the evening for the sunset:
I had nothing to do. He was in the garden: it belongs to a friend of
his."
"And you
talked."
"It was very awkward for me. But I had
to talk: he seemed to make me. You see he thought I was here as a tourist; he
thinks so still. He intended to be civil, and I judged it better to be
civil also."
"And of what did you
talk?"
"The weather--there will be rain, he says, by
tomorrow evening--the other towns, England, myself, about you a little, and he
actually mentioned Lilia. He was perfectly disgusting; he pretended he
loved her; he offered to show me her grave--the grave of the woman he has
murdered!"
"My dear Miss Abbott, he is not a
murderer. I have just been driving that into Harriet. And when you
know the Italians as well as I do, you will realize that in all that he said to
you he was perfectly sincere. The Italians are essentially dramatic; they
look on death and love as spectacles. I don't doubt that he persuaded
himself, for the moment, that he had behaved admirably, both as husband and
widower."
"You may be right," said Miss Abbott,
impressed for the first time. "When I tried to pave the way, so to
speak--to hint that he had not behaved as he ought--well, it was no good at
all. He couldn't or wouldn't understand."
There
was something very humorous in the idea of Miss Abbott approaching Gino, on the
Rocca, in the spirit of a district visitor. Philip, whose temper was
returning, laughed.
"Harriet would say he has no
sense of sin."
"Harriet may be right, I am
afraid."
"If so, perhaps he isn't
sinful!"
Miss Abbott was not one to encourage
levity. "I know what he has done," she said. "What he says and what
he thinks is of very little importance."
Philip
smiled at her crudity. "I should like to hear, though, what he said about
me. Is he preparing a warm reception?"
"Oh, no,
not that. I never told him that you and Harriet were coming. You
could have taken him by surprise if you liked. He only asked for you, and
wished he hadn't been so rude to you eighteen months
ago."
"What a memory the fellow has for little
things!" He turned away as he spoke, for he did not want her to see his
face. It was suffused with pleasure. For an apology, which would
have been intolerable eighteen months ago, was gracious and agreeable
now.
She would not let this pass. "You did not
think it a little thing at the time. You told me he had assaulted
you."
"I lost my temper," said Philip lightly.
His vanity had been appeased, and he knew it. This tiny piece of civility
had changed his mood. "Did he really--what exactly did he
say?"
"He said he was sorry--pleasantly, as Italians
do say such things. But he never mentioned the baby
once."
What did the baby matter when the world was
suddenly right way up? Philip smiled, and was shocked at himself for
smiling, and smiled again. For romance had come back to Italy; there were
no cads in her; she was beautiful, courteous, lovable, as of old. And Miss
Abbott--she, too, was beautiful in her way, for all her gaucheness and
conventionality. She really cared about life, and tried to live it
properly. And Harriet--even Harriet tried.
This
admirable change in Philip proceeds from nothing admirable, and may therefore
provoke the gibes of the cynical. But angels and other practical people
will accept it reverently, and write it down as
good.
"The view from the Rocca (small gratuity) is
finest at sunset," he murmured, more to himself than to
her.
"And he never mentioned the baby once," Miss
Abbott repeated. But she had returned to the window, and again her finger
pursued the delicate curves. He watched her in silence, and was more
attracted to her than he had ever been before. She really was the
strangest mixture.
"The view from the Rocca--wasn't
it fine?"
"What isn't fine here?" she answered
gently, and then added, "I wish I was Harriet," throwing an extraordinary
meaning into the words.
"Because
Harriet--?"
She would not go further, but he believed
that she had paid homage to the complexity of life. For her, at all
events, the expedition was neither easy nor jolly. Beauty, evil, charm,
vulgarity, mystery--she also acknowledged this tangle, in spite of
herself. And her voice thrilled him when she broke silence with "Mr.
Herriton--come here--look at this!"
She removed a
pile of plates from the Gothic window, and they leant out of it. Close
opposite, wedged between mean houses, there rose up one of the great
towers. It is your tower: you stretch a barricade between it and the
hotel, and the traffic is blocked in a moment. Farther up, where the
street empties out by the church, your connections, the Merli and the Capocchi,
do likewise. They command the Piazza, you the Siena gate. No one can
move in either but he shall be instantly slain, either by bows or by crossbows,
or by Greek fire. Beware, however, of the back bedroom windows. For
they are menaced by the tower of the Aldobrandeschi, and before now arrows have
stuck quivering over the washstand. Guard these windows well, lest there
be a repetition of the events of February 1338, when the hotel was surprised
from the rear, and your dearest friend--you could just make out that it was
he--was thrown at you over the stairs.
"It reaches up
to heaven," said Philip, "and down to the other place." The summit of the tower
was radiant in the sun, while its base was in shadow and pasted over with
advertisements. "Is it to be a symbol of the
town?"
She gave no hint that she understood
him. But they remained together at the window because it was a little
cooler and so pleasant. Philip found a certain grace and lightness in his
companion which he had never noticed in England. She was appallingly
narrow, but her consciousness of wider things gave to her narrowness a pathetic
charm. He did not suspect that he was more graceful too. For our
vanity is such that we hold our own characters immutable, and we are slow to
acknowledge that they have changed, even for the
better.
Citizens came out for a little stroll before
dinner. Some of them stood and gazed at the advertisements on the
tower.
"Surely that isn't an opera-bill?" said Miss
Abbott.
Philip put on his pince-nez. " 'Lucia
di Lammermoor. By the Master Donizetti. Unique representation.
This evening.'
"But is there an opera? Right up
here?"
"Why, yes. These people know how to
live. They would sooner have a thing bad than not have it at all.
That is why they have got to have so much that is good. However bad the
performance is tonight, it will be alive. Italians don't love music
silently, like the beastly Germans. The audience takes its
share--sometimes more."
"Can't we
go?"
He turned on her, but not unkindly. "But
we're here to rescue a child!"
He cursed himself for
the remark. All the pleasure and the light went out of her face, and she
became again Miss Abbott of Sawston--good, oh, most undoubtedly good, but most
appallingly dull. Dull and remorseful: it is a deadly combination, and he
strove against it in vain till he was interrupted by the opening of the
dining-room door.
They started as guiltily as if they
had been flirting. Their interview had taken such an unexpected
course. Anger, cynicism, stubborn morality--all had ended in a feeling of
good-will towards each other and towards the city which had received them.
And now Harriet was here--acrid, indissoluble, large; the same in Italy as in
England--changing her disposition never, and her atmosphere under
protest.
Yet even Harriet was human, and the better
for a little tea. She did not scold Philip for finding Gino out, as she
might reasonably have done. She showered civilities on Miss Abbott,
exclaiming again and again that Caroline's visit was one of the most fortunate
coincidences in the world. Caroline did not contradict
her.
"You see him tomorrow at ten, Philip.
Well, don't forget the blank cheque. Say an hour for the business.
No, Italians are so slow; say two. Twelve o'clock. Lunch.
Well--then it's no good going till the evening train. I can manage the
baby as far as Florence--"
"My dear sister, you can't
run on like that. You don't buy a pair of gloves in two hours, much less a
baby."
"Three hours, then, or four; or make him learn
English ways. At Florence we get a
nurse--"
"But, Harriet," said Miss Abbott, "what if
at first he was to refuse?"
"I don't know the meaning
of the word," said Harriet impressively. "I've told the landlady that
Philip and I only want our rooms one night, and we shall keep to
it."
"I dare say it will be all right. But, as
I told you, I thought the man I met on the Rocca a strange, difficult
man."
"He's insolent to ladies, we know. But my
brother can be trusted to bring him to his senses. That woman, Philip,
whom you saw will carry the baby to the hotel. Of course you must tip her
for it. And try, if you can, to get poor Lilia's silver bangles.
They were nice quiet things, and will do for Irma. And there is an inlaid
box I lent her--lent, not gave--to keep her handkerchiefs in. It's of no
real value; but this is our only chance. Don't ask for it; but if you see
it lying about, just say--"
"No, Harriet; I'll try
for the baby, but for nothing else. I promise to do that tomorrow, and to
do it in the way you wish. But tonight, as we're all tired, we want a
change of topic. We want relaxation. We want to go to the
theatre."
"Theatres here? And at such a
moment?"
"We should hardly enjoy it, with the great
interview impending," said Miss Abbott, with an anxious glance at
Philip.
He did not betray her, but said, "Don't you
think it's better than sitting in all the evening and getting
nervous?"
His sister shook her head. "Mother
wouldn't like it. It would be most unsuitable--almost irreverent.
Besides all that, foreign theatres are notorious. Don't you remember those
letters in the 'Church Family Newspaper'?"
"But this
is an opera--'Lucia di Lammermoor'--Sir Walter Scott--classical, you
know."
Harriet's face grew resigned. "Certainly
one has so few opportunities of hearing music. It is sure to be very
bad. But it might be better than sitting idle all the evening. We
have no book, and I lost my crochet at
Florence."
"Good. Miss Abbott, you are coming
too?"
"It is very kind of you, Mr. Herriton. In
some ways I should enjoy it; but--excuse the suggestion--I don't think we ought
to go to cheap seats."
"Good gracious me!" cried
Harriet, "I should never have thought of that. As likely as not, we should
have tried to save money and sat among the most awful people. One keeps on
forgetting this is Italy."
"Unfortunately I have no
evening dress; and if the seats--"
"Oh, that'll be
all right," said Philip, smiling at his timorous, scrupulous women-kind.
"We'll go as we are, and buy the best we can get. Monteriano is not
formal."
So this strenuous day of resolutions, plans,
alarms, battles, victories, defeats, truces, ended at the opera. Miss
Abbott and Harriet were both a little shame-faced. They thought of their
friends at Sawston, who were supposing them to be now tilting against the powers
of evil. What would Mrs. Herriton, or Irma, or the curates at the Back
Kitchen say if they could see the rescue party at a place of amusement on the
very first day of its mission? Philip, too, marvelled at his wish to
go. He began to see that he was enjoying his time in Monteriano, in spite
of the tiresomeness of his companions and the occasional contrariness of
himself.
He had been to this theatre many years
before, on the occasion of a performance of "La Zia di Carlo." Since then
it had been thoroughly done up, in the tints of the beet-root and the tomato,
and was in many other ways a credit to the little town. The orchestra had
been enlarged, some of the boxes had terra-cotta draperies, and over each box
was now suspended an enormous tablet, neatly framed, bearing upon it the number
of that box. There was also a drop-scene, representing a pink and purple
landscape, wherein sported many a lady lightly clad, and two more ladies lay
along the top of the proscenium to steady a large and pallid clock. So
rich and so appalling was the effect, that Philip could scarcely suppress a
cry. There is something majestic in the bad taste of Italy; it is not the
bad taste of a country which knows no better; it has not the nervous vulgarity
of England, or the blinded vulgarity of Germany. It observes beauty, and
chooses to pass it by. But it attains to beauty's confidence. This
tiny theatre of Monteriano spraddled and swaggered with the best of them, and
these ladies with their clock would have nodded to the young men on the ceiling
of the Sistine.
Philip had tried for a box, but all
the best were taken: it was rather a grand performance, and he had to be content
with stalls. Harriet was fretful and insular. Miss Abbott was
pleasant, and insisted on praising everything: her only regret was that she had
no pretty clothes with her.
"We do all right," said
Philip, amused at her unwonted vanity.
"Yes, I know;
but pretty things pack as easily as ugly ones. We had no need to come to
Italy like guys."
This time he did not reply, "But
we're here to rescue a baby." For he saw a charming picture, as charming a
picture as he had seen for years--the hot red theatre; outside the theatre,
towers and dark gates and mediaeval walls; beyond the walls olive-trees in the
starlight and white winding roads and fireflies and untroubled dust; and here in
the middle of it all, Miss Abbott, wishing she had not come looking like a
guy. She had made the right remark. Most undoubtedly she had made
the right remark. This stiff suburban woman was unbending before the
shrine.
"Don't you like it at all?" he asked
her.
"Most awfully." And by this bald
interchange they convinced each other that Romance was
here.
Harriet, meanwhile, had been coughing ominously
at the drop-scene, which presently rose on the grounds of Ravenswood, and the
chorus of Scotch retainers burst into cry. The audience accompanied with
tappings and drummings, swaying in the melody like corn in the wind.
Harriet, though she did not care for music, knew how to listen to it. She
uttered an acid "Shish!"
"Shut it," whispered her
brother.
"We must make a stand from the
beginning. They're talking."
"It is tiresome,"
murmured Miss Abbott; "but perhaps it isn't for us to
interfere."
Harriet shook her head and shished
again. The people were quiet, not because it is wrong to talk during a
chorus, but because it is natural to be civil to a visitor. For a little
time she kept the whole house in order, and could smile at her brother
complacently.
Her success annoyed him. He had
grasped the principle of opera in Italy--it aims not at illusion but at
entertainment--and he did not want this great evening-party to turn into a
prayer-meeting. But soon the boxes began to fill, and Harriet's power was
over. Families greeted each other across the auditorium. People in
the pit hailed their brothers and sons in the chorus, and told them how well
they were singing. When Lucia appeared by the fountain there was loud
applause, and cries of "Welcome to
Monteriano!"
"Ridiculous babies!" said Harriet,
settling down in her stall.
"Why, it is the famous
hot lady of the Apennines," cried Philip; "the one who had never, never
before--"
"Ugh! Don't. She will be very
vulgar. And I'm sure it's even worse here than in the tunnel. I wish
we'd never--"
Lucia began to sing, and there was a
moment's silence. She was stout and ugly; but her voice was still
beautiful, and as she sang the theatre murmured like a hive of happy bees.
All through the coloratura she was accompanied by sighs, and its top note was
drowned in a shout of universal joy.
So the opera
proceeded. The singers drew inspiration from the audience, and the two
great sextettes were rendered not unworthily. Miss Abbott fell into the
spirit of the thing. She, too, chatted and laughed and applauded and
encored, and rejoiced in the existence of beauty. As for Philip, he forgot
himself as well as his mission. He was not even an enthusiastic
visitor. For he had been in this place always. It was his
home.
Harriet, like M. Bovary on a more famous
occasion, was trying to follow the plot. Occasionally she nudged her
companions, and asked them what had become of Walter Scott. She looked
round grimly. The audience sounded drunk, and even Caroline, who never
took a drop, was swaying oddly. Violent waves of excitement, all arising
from very little, went sweeping round the theatre. The climax was reached
in the mad scene. Lucia, clad in white, as befitted her malady, suddenly
gathered up her streaming hair and bowed her acknowledgment to the
audience. Then from the back of the stage--she feigned not to see
it--there advanced a kind of bamboo clothes-horse, stuck all over with
bouquets. It was very ugly, and most of the flowers in it were false.
Lucia knew this, and so did the audience; and they all knew that the
clothes-horse was a piece of stage property, brought in to make the performance
go year after year. None the less did it unloose the great deeps.
With a scream of amazement and joy she embraced the animal, pulled out one or
two practicable blossoms, pressed them to her lips, and flung them into her
admirers. They flung them back, with loud melodious cries, and a little
boy in one of the stageboxes snatched up his sister's carnations and offered
them. "Che carino!" exclaimed the singer. She darted at the little
boy and kissed him. Now the noise became tremendous. "Silence!
silence!" shouted many old gentlemen behind. "Let the divine creature
continue!" But the young men in the adjacent box were imploring Lucia to
extend her civility to them. She refused, with a humorous, expressive
gesture. One of them hurled a bouquet at her. She spurned it with
her foot. Then, encouraged by the roars of the audience, she picked it up
and tossed it to them. Harriet was always unfortunate. The bouquet
struck her full in the chest, and a little billet-doux fell out of it into her
lap.
"Call this classical!" she cried, rising from
her seat. "It's not even respectable! Philip! take me out at
once."
"Whose is it?" shouted her brother, holding up
the bouquet in one hand and the billet-doux in the other. "Whose is
it?"
The house exploded, and one of the boxes was
violently agitated, as if some one was being hauled to the front. Harriet
moved down the gangway, and compelled Miss Abbott to follow her. Philip,
still laughing and calling "Whose is it?" brought up the rear. He was
drunk with excitement. The heat, the fatigue, and the enjoyment had
mounted into his head.
"To the left!" the people
cried. "The innamorato is to the left."
He
deserted his ladies and plunged towards the box. A young man was flung
stomach downwards across the balustrade. Philip handed him up the bouquet
and the note. Then his own hands were seized affectionately. It all
seemed quite natural.
"Why have you not written?"
cried the young man. "Why do you take me by
surprise?"
"Oh, I've written," said Philip
hilariously. "I left a note this
afternoon."
"Silence! silence!" cried the
audience, who were beginning to have enough. "Let the divine creature
continue." Miss Abbott and Harriet had
disappeared.
"No! no!" cried the young
man. "You don't escape me now." For Philip was trying feebly to
disengage his hands. Amiable youths bent out of the box and invited him to
enter it.
"Gino's friends are
ours--"
"Friends?" cried Gino. "A
relative! A brother! Fra Filippo, who has come all the way from
England and never written."
"I left a
message."
The audience began to
hiss.
"Come in to
us."
"Thank you--ladies--there is not
time--"
The next moment he was swinging by his
arms. The moment after he shot over the balustrade into the box.
Then the conductor, seeing that the incident was over, raised his baton.
The house was hushed, and Lucia di Lammermoor resumed her song of madness and
death.
Philip had whispered introductions to the
pleasant people who had pulled him in--tradesmen's sons perhaps they were, or
medical students, or solicitors' clerks, or sons of other dentists. There
is no knowing who is who in Italy. The guest of the evening was a private
soldier. He shared the honour now with Philip. The two had to stand
side by side in the front, and exchange compliments, whilst Gino presided,
courteous, but delightfully familiar. Philip would have a spasm of horror
at the muddle he had made. But the spasm would pass, and again he would be
enchanted by the kind, cheerful voices, the laughter that was never vapid, and
the light caress of the arm across his back.
He could
not get away till the play was nearly finished, and Edgardo was singing amongst
the tombs of ancestors. His new friends hoped to see him at the Garibaldi
tomorrow evening. He promised; then he remembered that if they kept to
Harriet's plan he would have left Monteriano. "At ten o'clock, then," he
said to Gino. "I want to speak to you alone. At
ten."
"Certainly!" laughed the
other.
Miss Abbott was sitting up for him when he got
back. Harriet, it seemed, had gone straight to
bed.
"That was he, wasn't it?" she
asked.
"Yes, rather."
"I
suppose you didn't settle anything?"
"Why, no; how
could I? The fact is--well, I got taken by surprise, but after all, what
does it matter? There's no earthly reason why we shouldn't do the business
pleasantly. He's a perfectly charming person, and so are his
friends. I'm his friend now--his long-lost brother. What's the
harm? I tell you, Miss Abbott, it's one thing for England and another for
Italy. There we plan and get on high moral horses. Here we find what
asses we are, for things go off quite easily, all by themselves. My hat,
what a night! Did you ever see a really purple sky and really silver stars
before? Well, as I was saying, it's absurd to worry; he's not a porky
father. He wants that baby as little as I do. He's been ragging my
dear mother--just as he ragged me eighteen months ago, and I've forgiven
him. Oh, but he has a sense of humour!"
Miss
Abbott, too, had a wonderful evening, nor did she ever remember such stars or
such a sky. Her head, too, was full of music, and that night when she
opened the window her room was filled with warm, sweet air. She was bathed
in beauty within and without; she could not go to bed for happiness. Had
she ever been so happy before? Yes, once before, and here, a night in
March, the night Gino and Lilia had told her of their love--the night whose evil
she had come now to undo.
She gave a sudden cry of
shame. "This time--the same place--the same thing"--and she began to beat
down her happiness, knowing it to be sinful. She was here to fight against
this place, to rescue a little soul--who was innocent as yet. She was here
to champion morality and purity, and the holy life of an English home. In
the spring she had sinned through ignorance; she was not ignorant now.
"Help me!" she cried, and shut the window as if there was magic in the
encircling air. But the tunes would not go out of her head, and all night
long she was troubled by torrents of music, and by applause and laughter, and
angry young men who shouted the distich out of Baedeker:--
Poggibonizzi fatti in là,
Che Monteriano si fa
città!
Poggibonsi was revealed to her as they sang--a
joyless, straggling place, full of people who pretended. When she woke up
she knew that it had been Sawston.