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"The dark backward and abysm of s.p.a.ce?" she repeated. "And you do not wear black spectacles? Then it must be that your eyes themselves are just a pair of black-seeing pessimists."
"On the contrary," triumphed Peter, "it is because they are optimists, that they suspect there must be forwarder and more luminous regions than the Solar System."
The d.u.c.h.essa laughed.
"I think you have the prettiest mouth, and the most exquisite little teeth, and the eyes richest in promise, and the sweetest laughter, of any woman out of Paradise," said Peter, in the silence of his soul.
"It is clear I shall never be your match in debate," said she.
Peter made a gesture of deprecating modesty.
"But I wonder," she went on, "whether you would put me down as 'another species of s.n.a.t.c.her,' if I should ask you to spare me just the merest end of a crust of bread?" And she lifted those eyes rich in promise appealingly to his.
"Oh, I beg of you--take all I have," he responded, with effusion.
"But--but how--?"
"Toss," she commanded tersely.
So he tossed what was left of his bread into the air, above the river; and the d.u.c.h.essa, easily, deftly, threw up a hand, and caught it on the wing.
"Thank you very much," she laughed, with a little bow.
Then she crumbled the bread, and began to sprinkle the ground with it; and in an instant she was the centre of a cloud of birds. Peter was at liberty to watch her, to admire the swift grace of her motions, their suggestion of delicate strength, of joy in things physical, and the lithe elasticity of her figure, against the background of satiny lawn, and the further vistas of lofty sunlit trees. She was dressed in white, as always--a frock of I know not what supple fabric, that looked as if you might have pa.s.sed it through your ring, and fell in mult.i.tudes of small soft creases. Two big red roses drooped from her bodice. She wore a garden-hat, of white straw, with a big daring rose-red bow, under which the dense meshes of her hair, warmly dark, dimly bright, s.h.i.+mmered in a blur of brownish gold.
"What vigour, what verve, what health," thought Peter, watching her, "what--lean, fresh, fragrant health!" And he had, no doubt, his emotions.
She bestowed her bread crumbs on the birds; but she was able, somehow, to discriminate mightily in favour of the goldfinches. She would make a diversion, the semblance of a fling, with her empty right hand; and the too-greedy sparrows would dart off, avid, on that false lead. Whereupon, quickly, stealthily, she would rain a little shower of crumbs, from her left hand, on the gra.s.s beside her, to a confiding group of finches a.s.sembled there. And if ever a sparrow ventured to intrude his ruffianly black beak into this sacred quarter, she would manage, with a kind of restrained ferocity, to "shoo" him away, without thereby frightening the finches.
And all the while her eyes laughed; and there was colour in her cheeks; and there was the forceful, graceful action of her body.
When the bread was finished, she clapped her hands together gently, to dust the last mites from them, and looked over at Peter, and smiled significantly.
"Yes," he acknowledged, "you outwitted them very skilfully. You, at any rate, have no need of a dragon."
"Oh, in default of a dragon, one can do dragon's work oneself," she answered lightly. "Or, rather, one can make oneself an instrument of justice."
"All the same, I should call it uncommonly hard luck to be born a sparrow--within your jurisdiction," he said.
"It is not an affair of luck," said she. "One is born a sparrow--within my jurisdiction--for one's sins in a former state.--No, you little dovelings"--she turned to a pair of finches on the greensward near her, who were lingering, and gazing up into her face with hungry, expectant eyes--"I have no more. I have given you my all." And she stretched out her open hands, palms downwards, to convince them.
"The sparrows got nothing; and the goldfinches, who got 'your all,'
grumble because you gave so little," said Peter, sadly. "That is what comes of interfering with the laws of Nature." And then, as the two birds flew away, "See the dark, doubtful, reproachful glances with which they cover you."
"You think they are ungrateful?" she said. "No--listen."
She held up a finger.
For, at that moment, on the branch of an acacia, just over her head, a goldfinch began to sing--his thin, sweet, crystalline trill of song.
"Do you call that grumbling?" she asked.
"It implies a grumble," said Peter, "like the 'thank you' of a servant dissatisfied with his tip. It's the very least he can do. It's perfunctory--I 'm not sure it is n't even ironical."
"Perfunctory! Ironical!" cried the d.u.c.h.essa. "Look at him! He's warbling his delicious little soul out."
They both paused to look and listen.
The bird's gold-red bosom palpitated. He marked his modulations by sudden emphatic movements of the head. His eyes were fixed intently before him, as if he could actually see and follow the s.h.i.+ning thread of his song, as it wound away through the air. His performance had all the effect of a spontaneous rhapsody. When it was terminated, he looked down at his auditors, eager, inquisitive, as who should say, "I hope you liked it?"--and then, with a nod clearly meant as a farewell, flew out of sight.
The d.u.c.h.essa smiled again at Peter, with intention.
"You must really try to take a cheerier view of things," she said.
And next instant she too was off, walking slowly, lightly, up the green lawns, between the trees, towards the castle, her gown fluttering in the breeze, now dazzling white as she came into the sun, now pearly grey as she pa.s.sed into the shade.
"What a woman it is," said Peter to himself, looking after her. "What vigour, what verve, what s.e.x! What a woman!"
And, indeed, there was nothing of the too-prevalent epicene in the d.u.c.h.essa's aspect; she was very certainly a woman. "Heavens, how she walks!" he cried in a deep whisper.
But then a sudden wave of dejection swept over him. At first he could not account for it. By and by, however, a malicious little voice began to repeat and repeat within him, "Oh, the futile impression you must have made upon her! Oh, the inept.i.tudes you uttered! Oh, the precious opportunity you have misemployed!"
"You are a witch," he said to Marietta. "You've proved it to the hilt. I 've seen the person, and the object is more desperately lost than ever."
X
That evening, among the letters Peter received from England, there was one from his friend Mrs. Winchfield, which contained certain statistics.
"Your d.u.c.h.essa di Santangiolo 'was' indeed, as your funny old servant told you, English: the only child and heiress of the last Lord Belfont.
The Belfonts of Lancas.h.i.+re (now, save for your d.u.c.h.essa, extinct) were the most bigoted sort of Roman Catholics, and always educated their daughters in foreign convents, and as often as not married them to foreigners. The Belfont men, besides, were ever and anon marrying foreign wives; so there will be a goodish deal of un-English blood in your d.u.c.h.essa's own ci-devant English veins.
"She was born, as I learn from an indiscretion of my Peerage, in 1870, and is, therefore, as near to thirty (the dangerous age!) as to the six-and-twenty your droll old Marietta gives her. Her Christian names are Beatrice Antonia Teresa Mary--faites en votre choix. She was married at nineteen to Balda.s.sarre Agosto, Principe Udeschini, Duca di Santangiolo, Marchese di Castellofranco, Count of the Holy Roman Empire, Knight of the Holy Ghost and of St. Gregory, (does it take your breath away?), who, according to Frontin, died in '93; and as there were no children, his brother Felipe Lorenzo succeeded to the t.i.tles. A younger brother still is Bishop of Sardagna. Cardinal Udeschini is the uncle.
"That, dear child, empties my sack of information. But perhaps I have a bigger sack, full of good advice, which I have not yet opened. And perhaps, on the whole, I will not open it at all. Only, remember that in yonder sentimental Italian lake country, in this summer weather, a solitary young man's fancy might be much inclined to turn to thoughts of--folly; and keep an eye on my friend Peter Marchdale."
Our solitary young man brooded over Mrs. Winchfield's letter for a long while.
"The daughter of a lord, and the widow of a duke, and the niece-in-law of a cardinal," he said. "And, as if that were not enough, a bigoted Roman Catholic into the bargain.... And yet--and yet," he went on, taking heart a little, "as for her bigotry, to judge by her a.s.siduity in attending the village church, that factor, at least, thank goodness, would appear to be static, rather than dynamic."
After another longish interval of brooding, he sauntered down to the riverside, through his fragrant garden, fragrant and fresh with the cool odours of the night, and peered into the darkness, towards Castel Ventirose. Here and there he could discern a gleam of yellow, where some lighted window was not entirely hidden by the trees. Thousands and thousands of insects were threading the silence with their shrill insistent voices. The repeated wail, harsh, prolonged, eerie, of some strange wild creature, bird or beast, came down from the forest of the Gnisi. At his feet, on the troubled surface of the Aco, the stars, reflected and distorted, shone like broken spearheads.
He lighted a cigarette, and stood there till he had consumed it.
"Heigh-ho!" he sighed at last, and turned back towards the villa. And "Yes," he concluded, "I must certainly keep an eye on our friend Peter Marchdale."