Montevarchi made his daughter sit beside him and took her hand
affectionately in his, assuming at the same time the expression of
sanctimonious superiority he always wore when he mentioned the
cares of his household or was engaged in regulating any matter of
importance in his family. Flavia used to imitate the look
admirably, to the delight of her brothers and sisters. He smiled
meaningly, pressed the girl's fingers, and smiled again,
attempting in vain to elicit some response. But Faustina remained
cold and indifferent, for she was used to her father's ways and
did not like them.
"You know what I am going to say, I am sure," he began. "It
concerns what must be very near your heart, my dear child."
"I do not know what it can be," answered Faustina, gravely. She
was too well brought up to show any of the dislike she felt for
her father's way of doing things, but she was willing to make it
as hard as possible for him to express himself.
"Cannot you guess what it is?" asked the old man, with a ludicrous
attempt at banter. "What is it that is nearest to every girl's
heart? Is not that little heart of yours already a resort of the
juvenile deity?"
"Well, well, my dear--I see that your education has not included a
course of mythology. It is quite as well, perhaps, as those
heathens are poor company for the young. I refer to marriage,
Faustina, to that all-important step which you are soon to take."
"Have you quite decided to marry me to Frangipani?" asked the
young girl with a calmness that somewhat disconcerted her father.
"How boldly you speak of it!" he exclaimed with a sigh of
disapproval. "I will not, however, conceal from you that I hope--"
"Pray talk plainly with me, papa!" cried Faustina suddenly looking
up. "I cannot bear this suspense."
"Ah! Is it so, little one?" Montevarchi shook his finger playfully
at her. "I thought I should find you ready! So you are anxious to
become a princess at once? Well, well, all women are alike!"
Faustina drew herself up a little and fixed her deep brown eyes
upon her father's face, very quietly and solemnly.
"You misunderstand me," she said. "I only wish to know your
decision in order that I may give you my answer."
"And what can that answer be? Have I not chosen, wisely, a husband
fit for you in every way?"
"I trust you are not about to commit the unpardonable folly of
differing from me, my daughter," answered Montevarchi, with a
sudden change of tone indicative of rising displeasure. "It is for
me to decide, for you to accept my decision."
"Upon other points, yes. In the question of marriage I think I
have something to say."
"Is it possible that you can have any objections to the match I
have found for you? Is it possible that you are so foolish as to
fancy that at your age you can understand these things better than
I? Faustina, I would not have believed it!"
"It is not a question of feeling, it is a question of wisdom, of
foresight, of prudence, of twenty qualities which you are far too
young to possess. If marriage were a matter of feeling, of vulgar
sentiment, I ask you, what would become of the world? Of what use
is it to have all the sentiment in life, if you have not that
which makes life itself possible? Can you eat sentiment? Can you
harness sentiment in a carriage and make it execute a trottata in
the Villa Borghese? Can you change an ounce of sentiment into good
silver scudi and make it pay for a journey in the hot weather? No,
no, my child. Heaven knows that I am not avaricious. Few men, I
think, know better than I that wealth is perishable stuff--but so
is this mortal body, and the perishable must be nourished with the
perishable, lest dust return to dust sooner than it would in the
ordinary course of nature. Money alone will not give happiness,
but it is, nevertheless, most important to possess a certain
amount of it."
"I would rather do without it than be miserable all my life for
having got it."
"Miserable all your life? Why should you be miserable? No woman
should be unhappy who is married to a good man. My dear, this
matter admits of no discussion. Frangipani is young, handsome, of
irreproachable moral character, heir to a great fortune and to a
great name. You desire to be in love. Good. Love will come, the
reward of having chosen wisely. It will be time enough then to
think of your sentiments. Dear me! if we all began life by
thinking of sentiment, where would our existence end?"
"Will you please tell me whether you have quite decided that I am
to marry Frangipani?" Faustina found her father's discourses
intolerable, and, moreover, she had something to say which would
be hard to express and still harder to sustain by her actions.
"If you insist upon my giving you an answer, which you must have
already foreseen, I am willing to tell you that I have quite
decided upon the match."
"I cannot marry him!" exclaimed Faustina, clasping her hands
together and looking into her father's face.
"My dear," answered Montevarchi with a smile, "it is absolutely
decided. We cannot draw back. You must marry him."
"Must, papa? Oh, think what you are saying! I am not disobedient,
indeed I am not. I have always submitted to you in everything. But
this--no, not this. Bid me do anything else--anything--"
"But, my child, nothing else would produce the same result. Be
reasonable. You tell me to impose some other duty upon you. That
is not what I want. I must see you married before I die, and I am
an old man. Each year, each day, may be my last. Of what use would
it be that you should make another sacrifice to please me, when
the one thing I desire is to see you well settled with a good
husband? I have done what I could. I have procured you the best
match in all Rome, and now you implore me to spare you, to reverse
my decision, to tell my old friend Frangipani that you will not
have his son, and to go out into the market to find you another
help-meet. It is not reasonable. I had expected more dutiful
conduct from you."
"Is it undutiful not to be able to love a man one hardly knows,
when one is ordered to do so?"
"You will make me lose my patience, Faustina!" exclaimed
Montevarchi, in angry tones. "Have I not explained to you the
nature of love? Have I not told you that you can love your husband
as much as you please? Is it not a father's duty to direct the
affections of his child as I wish to do, and is it not the child's
first obligation to submit to its father's will and guidance? What
more would you have? In truth, you are very exacting!"
"I am very unhappy!" The young girl turned away and rested her
elbow on the table, supporting her chin in her hand. She stared
absently at the old bookcases as though she were trying to read
the titles upon the dingy bindings. Montevarchi understood her
words to convey a submission and changed his tone once more.
"Well, well, my dear, you will never regret your obedience," he
said. "Of course, my beloved child, it is never easy to see things
as it is best that we should see them. I see that you have yielded
at last--"
"I have not yielded in the least!" cried Faustina, suddenly facing
him, with an expression he had never seen before.
"What do you mean?" asked Montevarchi in considerable
astonishment.
"What I say. I will not marry Frangipani--I will not! Do you
understand?"
"No. I do not understand such language from my daughter; and as
for your determination, I tell you that you will most certainly
end by acting as I wish you to act."
"You cannot force me to marry. What can you do? You can put me
into a convent. Do you think that would make me change my mind? I
would thank God for any asylum in which I might find refuge from
such tyranny."
"My daughter," replied the prince in bland tones, "I am fully
resolved not to be angry with you. Your undutiful conduct proceeds
from ignorance, which is never an offence, though it is always a
misfortune. If you will have a little patience--"
"I have none!" exclaimed Faustina, exasperated by her father's
manner. "My undutiful conduct does not proceed from ignorance--it
proceeds from love, from love for another man, whom I will marry
if I marry any one."
"Faustina!" cried Montevarchi, holding up his hands in horror and
amazement. "Do you dare to use such language to your father!"
"I dare do anything, everything--I dare even tell you the name of
the man I love--Anastase Gouache!"
"My child! My child! This is too horrible! I must really send for
your mother."
Faustina had risen to her feet and was standing before one of the
old bookcases, her hands folded before her, her eyes on fire, her
delicate mouth scornfully bent. Montevarchi, who was really
startled almost out of his senses, moved cautiously towards the
bell, looking steadily at his daughter all the while as though he
dreaded some fresh outbreak. There was something ludicrous in his
behaviour which, at another time, would not have escaped the young
girl. Now, however, she was too much in earnest to perceive
anything except the danger of her position and the necessity for
remaining firm at any cost. She did not understand why her mother
was to be called, but she felt that she could face all her family
if necessary. She kept her eyes upon her father and was hardly
conscious that a servant entered the room. Montevarchi sent a
message requesting the princess to come at once. Then he turned
again towards Faustina.
"You can hardly suppose," he observed, "that I take seriously what
you have just said; but you are evidently very much excited, and
your mother's presence will, I trust, have a soothing effect. You
must be aware that it is very wrong to utter such monstrous
untruths--even in jest--"
"I am in earnest. I will marry Monsieur Gouache or I will marry no
one."
Montevarchi really believed that his daughter's mind was deranged.
His interview with Gouache had convinced him that Faustina meant
what she said, though he affected to laugh at it, but he was
wholly unable to account for her conduct on any theory but that of
insanity. Being at his wits' end he had sent for his wife, and
while waiting for her he did not quite know what'to do.
"My dear child, what is Monsieur Gouache? A very estimable young
man, without doubt, but not such a one as we could choose for your
husband."
"I have chosen him," answered Faustina. "That is enough."
"How you talk, my dear! How rashly you talk! As though choosing a
husband were like buying a new hat! And you, too, whom I always
believed to be the most dutiful, the most obedient of my children!
But your mother and I will reason with you, we will endeavour to
put better thoughts into your heart."
Faustina glanced scornfully at her father and turned away, walking
slowly in the direction of the window.
"It is of no use to waste your breath on me," she said presently.
"I will marry Gouache or nobody."
"You--marry Gouache?" cried the princess, who entered at that
moment, and heard the last words. Her voice expressed an amazement
and horror fully equal to her husband's.
"Have you come to join the fray, mamma?" inquired Faustina, in
English.
"Pray speak in a language I can understand," said Montevarchi who,
in a whole lifetime, had never mastered a word of his wife's
native tongue.
"Oh, Lotario!" exclaimed the princess. "What has the child been
telling you?"
"Things that would make you tremble, my dear! She refuses to marry
Frangipani--"
"Refuses! But, Faustina, you do not know what you are doing! You
are out of your mind!"
"And she talks wildly of marrying a certain Frenchman, a Monsieur
Gouache, I believe--is there such a man, my dear?"
"Of course, Lotario! The little man you ran over. How forgetful
you are!"
"Yes, yes, of course. I know. But you must reason with her,
Guendalina--"
"It seems to me. Lotario, that you should do that--"
"My dear, I think the child is insane upon the subject. Where
could she have picked up such an idea? Is it a mere caprice, a
mere piece of impertinence, invented to disconcert the sober
senses of a careful father?"
"Nonsense, Lotario! She is not capable of that. After all, she is
not Flavia, who always had something dreadful quite ready, just
when you least expected it."
"I almost wish she were Flavia!" exclaimed Montevarchi, ruefully.
"Flavia has done very well." During all this time Faustina was
standing with her back towards the window and her hands folded
before her, looking from the one to the other of the speakers with
an air of bitter contempt which was fast changing to
uncontrollable anger. Some last remaining instinct of prudence
kept her from interrupting the conversation by a fresh assertion
of her will, and she waited until one of them chose to speak to
her. She had lost her head, for she would otherwise never have
gone so far as to mention Gouache's name, but, as with all very
spontaneous natures, with her to break the first barrier was to go
to the extreme, whatever it might be. Her clear brown eyes were
very bright, and there was something luminous about her angelic
face which showed that her whole being was under the influence of
an extraordinary emotion, almost amounting to exaltation. It was
impossible to foresee what she would say or do.
"Your father almost wishes you were Flavia!" groaned the princess,
shaking her head and looking very grave. Then Faustina laughed
scornfully and her wrath bubbled over.
"I am not Flavia!" she cried, coming forward and facing her father
and mother. "I daresay you do wish I were. Flavia has done so very
well. Yes, she is Princess Saracinesca this evening, I suppose.
Indeed she has done well, for she has married the man she loves,
as much as she is capable of loving anything. And that is all the
more reason why I should do the same. Besides, am I as old as
Flavia that you should be in such a hurry to marry me? Do you
think I will yield? Do you think that while I love one man, I will
be so base as to marry another?"
"Your explanations will drive me mad! You may explain anything in
that way--and prove that Love itself does not exist. Do you think
your saying so makes it true? There is more truth in a little of
my love than in all your whole life!"
"What? May I not answer you? Must I believe you infallible when
you use arguments that would not satisfy a child? Is my whole
nature a shadow because yours cannot understand my reality?"
"If you are going to make this a question of metaphysics--"
"I am not, I do not know what metaphysic means. But I will repeat
before my mother what I said to you alone. I will not marry
Frangipani, and you cannot force me to marry him. If I marry any
one I will have the man I love."
"But, my dearest Faustina," cried the princess in genuine
distress, "this is a mere idea--a sort of madness that has seized
upon you. Consider your position, consider what you owe to us,
consider--"
"Consider, consider, consider! Do you suppose that any amount of
consideration would change me?"
"Do you think your childish anger will change us?" inquired
Montevarchi, blandly. He did not care to lose his temper, for he
was quite indifferent to Faustina's real inclinations, if she
would only consent to marry Frangipani.
"Childish!" cried Faustina, her eyes blazing with anger. "Was I
childish when I followed him out into the midst of the revolution
last October, when I was nearly killed at the Serristori, when I
thought he was dead and knelt there among the ruins until he found
me and brought me home? Was that a child's love?"
The princess turned pale and grasped her husband's arm, staring at
Faustina in horror. The old man trembled and for a few moments
could not find strength to speak. Nothing that Faustina could have
invented could have produced such a sudden and tremendous effect
as this revelation of what had happened on the night of the
insurrection, coming from the girl's own lips with the
unmistakable accent of truth. The mother's instinct was the first
to assert itself. With a quick movement she threw her arms round
the young girl, as though to protect her from harm.
"It is not true, it is not true," she cried in an agonised tone.
"Faustina, my child--it is not true!"
"It is quite true, mamma," answered Faustina, who enjoyed an odd
satisfaction in seeing the effect of her words, which can only be
explained by her perfect innocence. "Why are you so much
astonished? I loved him--I thought he was going out to be killed--
I would not let him go alone--"
"Oh, Faustina! How could you do it!" moaned the princess. "It is
too horrible--it is not to be believed--"
Princess Montevarchi fell into a chair and burst into tears,
burying her face in her hands and sobbing aloud.
"If you are going to cry, Guendalina, you had better go away,"
said her husband, who was now as angry as his mean nature would
permit him to be. She was so much accustomed to obey that she left
the room, crying as she went, and casting back a most sorrowful
look at Faustina.
Montevarchi shut the door and, coming back, seized his daughter's
arm and shook it violently.
"Fool!" he cried angrily, unable to find any other word to express
his rage.
Faustina said nothing but tried to push him away, her bright eyes
gleaming with contempt. Her silence exasperated the old man still
further. Like most very cowardly men he could be brutal to women
when he was angry. It seemed to him that the girl, by her folly,
had dashed from him the last great satisfaction of his life at the
very moment when it was within reach. He could have forgiven her
for ruining herself, had she done so; he could not forgive her for
disappointing his ambition; he knew that one word of the story she
had told would make the great marriage impossible, and he knew
that she had the power to speak that word when she pleased as well
as the courage to do so.
"Fool!" he repeated, and before she could draw back, he struck her
across the mouth with the back of his hand.
A few drops of bright red blood trickled from her delicate lips.
With an instinctive movement she pressed her handkerchief to the
wound. Montevarchi snatched it roughly from her hand and threw it
across the room. From his eyes she guessed that he would strike
her again if she remained. With a look of intense hatred she made
a supreme effort, and concentrating the whole strength of her
slender frame wrenched herself free.
"Coward!" she cried, as he reeled backwards; then, before he could
recover himself, she was gone and he was left alone.
He was terribly angry, and at the same time his ideas were
confused, so that he hardly understood anything but the main point
of her story, that she had been with Gouache on that night when
Corona had brought her home. He began to reason again. Corona knew
the truth, of course, and her husband knew it too. Montevarchi
realised that he had already taken his revenge for their
complicity, before knowing that they had injured him. His
overwrought brain was scarcely capable of receiving another
impression. He laughed aloud in a way that was almost hysterical.
"All!" he cried in sudden exultation. "All--even to their name--
but the other--" His face changed quickly and he sank into his
chair and buried his face in his hands, as he thought of all he
had lost through Faustina's folly. And yet, the harm might be
repaired--no one knew except--
He looked up and saw that Meschini had returned and was standing
before him, as though waiting to be addressed. The suddenness of
the librarian's appearance made the prince utter an exclamation of
surprise.
"Yes, I have come back," said Meschini. "The matter we were
discussing cannot be put off, and I have come back to ask you to
be good enough to pay the money."
Montevarchi was nervous and had lost the calm tone of superiority
he had maintained before his interview with Faustina. The idea of
losing Frangipani, too, made his avarice assert itself very
strongly.
"I told you," he replied, "that I refused altogether to talk with
you, so long as you addressed me in that tone. I repeat it. Leave
me, and when you have recovered your manners I will give you
something for yourself. You will get nothing so long as you demand
it as though it were a right."
"I will not leave this room without the money," answered Meschini,
resolutely. The bell was close to the door. The librarian placed
himself between the prince and both.
"Leave the room!" cried Montevarchi, trembling with anger. He had
so long despised Meschini, that the exhibition of obstinacy on the
part of the latter did not frighten him.
The librarian stood before the bell and the latch of the door, his
long arms hanging down by his sides, his face yellow, his eyes
red. Any one might have seen that he was growing dangerous.
Instead of repeating his refusal to go, he looked steadily at his
employer and a disagreeable smile played upon his ugly features.
Monterarchi saw it and his fury boiled over. He laid his hands on
the arms of his chair as though he would rise, and in that moment
he would have been capable of striking Meschini as he had struck
Faustina. Meschini shuffled forwards and held up his hand.
"Do not be violent," he said, in a low voice. "I am not your
daughter, you know."
Montevarchi's jaw dropped, and he fell back into his chair again.
"Yes, of course. Will you pay me? I am desperate, and I will have
it. You and your miserable secrets are mine, and I will have my
price. I only want the sum you promised. I shall be rich in a few
days, for I have entered into an affair in which I shall get
millions, as many as you have perhaps. But the money must be paid
to-morrow morning or I am ruined, and you must give it to me. Do
you hear? Do you understand that I will have what is mine?"
At this incoherent speech, Montevarchi recovered something of his
former nerve. There was something in Meschini's language that
sounded like argument, and to argue was to temporise. The prince
changed his tone.
"But, my dear Meschini, how could you be so rash as to go into a
speculation when you knew that the case might not be decided for
another week? You are really the most rash man I ever knew. I
cannot undertake to guarantee your speculations. I will be just. I
have told you that I would give you two thousand--"
"Twenty thousand hard, good scudi in cash, I tell you. No more,
but no less either." The librarian's hands were clenched, and he
breathed hard, while his red eyes stared in a way that began to
frighten Montevarchi.
"No, no, be reasonable! My dear Meschini, pray do not behave in
this manner. You almost make me believe that you are threatening
me. I assure you that I desire to do what is just--"
Arnodo Meschini's long arms had shot out and his hands had seized
the prince's throat in a grip from which there was no escape.
There lurked a surprising strength in the librarian's round
shoulders, and his energy was doubled by a fit of anger that
amounted to insanity. The old man rocked and swayed in his chair,
and grasped at the green table-cover, but Meschini had got behind
him and pressed his fingers tighter and tighter. His eye rested
upon Faustina's handkerchief that lay on the floor at his feet.
His victim was almost at the last gasp, but the handkerchief would
do the job better. Meschini kept his grip with one hand and with
the other snatched up the bit of linen. He drew it tight round the
neck and wrenched at the knot with his yellow teeth. There was a
convulsive struggle, followed by a long interval of quiet. Then
another movement, less violent this time, another and another, and
then Meschini felt the body collapse in his grasp. It was over.
Montevarchi was dead. Meschini drew back against the bookcases,
trembling in every joint. He scarcely saw the objects in the room,
for his head swam and his senses failed him, from horror and from
the tremendous physical effort he had made. Then in an instant he
realised what he had done, and the consequences of the deed
suggested themselves.
He had not meant to kill the prince. So long as he had kept some
control of his actions he had not even meant to lay violent hands
upon him. But he had the nature of a criminal, by turns profoundly
cunning and foolishly rash. A fatal influence had pushed him
onward so soon as he had raised his arm, and before he was
thoroughly conscious of his actions the deed was done. Then came
the fear of consequences, then again the diabolical reasoning
which intuitively foresees the immediate results of murder, and
provides against them at once.
"Nobody knows that I have been here. Nothing is missing. No one
knows about the forgery. No one will suspect me. There is no one
in the library nor in the corridor. The handkerchief is not mine.
If it was not his own it was Donna Faustina's. No one will suspect
her. It will remain a mystery."
Meschini went towards the door through which he had entered and
opened it. He looked back and held his breath. The prince's head
had fallen forward upon his hands as they lay on the table, and
the attitude was that of a man overcome by despair, but not that
of a dead body. The librarian glanced round the room. There was no
trace of a struggle. The position of the furniture had not been
changed, nor had anything fallen on the floor. Meschini went out
and softly closed the door behind him, leaving the dead man alone.
The quiet afternoon sun fell upon the houses on the opposite side
of the street, and cast a melancholy reflection into the dismal
chamber where Prince Montevarchi had passed so many hours of his
life, and in which that life had been cut short so suddenly. On
the table before his dead hands lay the copy of the verdict, the
testimony of his last misdeed, of the crime for which he had paid
the forfeit upon the very day it was due. It lay there like the
superscription upon a malefactor's gallows in ancient times, the
advertisement of the reason of his death to all who chose to
inquire. Not a sound was heard save the noise that rose faintly
and at intervals from the narrow street below, the cry of a
hawker, the song of a street-boy, the bark of a dog. To-morrow the
poor body would be mounted upon a magnificent catafalque,
surrounded by the pomp of a princely mourning, illuminated by
hundreds of funeral torches, an object of aversion, of curiosity,
even of jest, perhaps, among those who bore the prince a grudge.
Many of those who had known him would come and look on his dead
face, and some would say that he was changed and others that he
was not. His wife and his children would, in a few hours, be all
dressed in black, moving silently and mournfully and occasionally
showing a little feeling, though not more than would be decent.
There would be masses sung, and prayers said, and his native city
would hear the tolling of the heavy bells for one of her greatest
personages. All this would be done, and more also, until the dead
prince should be laid to rest beneath the marble floor of the
chapel where his ancestors lay side by side.
But to-day he sat in state in his shabby chair, his head lying
upon that table over which he had plotted and schemed for so many
years, his white fingers almost touching the bit of paper whereon
was written the ruin of the Saracinesca.
And upstairs the man who had killed him shuffled about the
library, an anxious expression on his yellow face, glancing from
time to time at his hands as he took down one heavy volume after
another, practising in solitude the habit of seeming occupied, in
order that he might not be taken unawares when an under-servant
should be sent to tell the insignificant librarian of what had
happened that day in Casa Montevarchi.