Marietta - LightNovelsOnl.com
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The boatman had already understood that his pa.s.senger knew Venice almost as well as he. The boat shot forward at a good rate under the bending oar, and in twenty minutes Aristarchi was at the entrance to the ca.n.a.l of San Piero and within sight of Beroviero's house.
"Easy there," said the Greek, holding up his hand. "Do you know Murano well, my man?"
"As well as Venice, sir."
"Whose house is that, which has the upper story built on columns over the footway?"
"It belongs to Messer Angelo Beroviero. His gla.s.s-house takes up all the left aide of the ca.n.a.l as far as the bridge."
"And beyond the bridge I can see two new houses, on the same side. Whose are they?"
"They belong to the two sons of Messer Angelo Beroviero, who have furnaces of their own, all the way to the corner of the Grand Ca.n.a.l."
"Is there a Grand Ca.n.a.l in Murano?" asked Aristarchi.
"They call it so," answered the boatman with some contempt. "The Beroviero have several houses on it, too."
"It seems to me that Beroviero owns most of Murano," observed the Greek. "He must be very rich."
"He is by far the richest. But there is Alvise Trevisan, a rich man, too, and there are two or three others. The island and all the gla.s.s-works are theirs, amongst them."
"I have business with Messer Angelo," said Aristarchi. "But if he is such a great man he will hardly be in the gla.s.s-house."
"I will ask," answered the boatman.
In a few minutes he made his boat fast to the steps before the gla.s.s-house, went ash.o.r.e and knocked at the door. Aristarchi leaned back in his seat, chewing pistachio nuts, which he carried in an embroidered leathern bag at his belt. His right hand played mechanically with the short string of thick amber beads which he used for counting. The June sun blazed down upon his swarthy face.
At the grating beside the door the porter's head appeared, partially visible behind the bars.
"Is Messer Angelo Beroviero within?" inquired the boatman civilly.
"What is your business?" asked the porter in a tone of surly contempt, instead of answering the question.
"There is a rich foreign gentleman here, who desires to speak with him," answered the boatman.
"Is he the Pope?" asked the porter, with fine irony.
"No, sir," said the other, intimidated by the fellow's manner. "He is a rich-"
"Tell him to wait, then." And the surly head disappeared.
The boatman supposed that the man was gone to speak with his master, and waited patiently by the door. Aristarchi chewed his pistachio nut till there was nothing left, at which time he reached the end of his patience. He argued that it was a good sign if Angelo Beroviero kept rich strangers waiting at his gate, for it showed that he had no need of their custom. On the other hand the Greek's dignity was offended now that he had been made to wait too long, for he was hasty by nature. Once, in a fit of irritation with a Candiot who stammered out of sheer fright, the captain had ordered him to be hanged. Having finished his nut, he stood up in the boat and stepped ash.o.r.e.
"Knock again," he said to the boatman, who obeyed.
There was no answer this time.
"I can hear the fellow inside," said the boatman.
The grating was too high for a man to look through it from outside. Aristarchi laid his knotty hands on the stone sill and pulled himself up till his face was against the grating. He now looked in and saw the porter sitting in his chair.
"Have you taken my message to your master?" inquired the Greek.
The porter looked up in surprise, which increased when he caught sight of the ferocious face of the speaker. But he was not to be intimidated so easily.
"Messer Angelo is not to be disturbed at his studies," he said. "If you wait till noon, perhaps he will come out to go to dinner."
"Perhaps!" repeated Aristarchi, still hanging by his hands. "Do you think I shall wait all day?"
"I do not know. That is your affair."
"Precisely. And I do not mean to wait."
"Then go away."
But the Greek had come on an exploring expedition in which he had nothing to lose. Hauling himself up a little higher, till his mouth was close to the grating, he hailed the house as he would have hailed a s.h.i.+p at sea, in a voice of thunder.
"Ahoy there! Is any one within? Ahoy! Ahoy!"
This was more than the porter's equanimity could bear. He looked about for a weapon with which to attack the Greek's face through the bars, heaping, upon him a torrent of abuse in the meantime.
"Son of dogs and mules!" he cried in a rising growl. "Ill befall the foul souls of thy dead and of their dead before them."
"Ahoy-oh! Ahoy!" bellowed the Greek, who now thoroughly enjoyed the situation.
The boatman, anxious for drink money, and convinced that his huge employer would get the better of the porter, had obligingly gone down upon his hands and knees, thrusting his broad back under the captain's feet, so that Aristarchi stood upon him and was now prepared to prolong the interview without any further effort. His terrific shouts rang through the corridor to the garden.
The first person to enter the little lodge was Marietta herself, and the Greek broke off short in the middle of another tremendous yell as soon as he saw her. She turned her face up to him, quite fearlessly, and was very much inclined to laugh as she saw the sudden change in his expression.
"Madam," he said with great politeness, "I beg you to forgive my manner of announcing myself. If your porter were more obliging, I should have been admitted in the ordinary way."
"What is this atrocious disturbance?" asked Zorzi, entering before Marietta could answer. "Pray leave the fellow to me," he added, speaking to Marietta, who cast one more glance at Aristarchi and went out.
"Sir," said the captain blandly, "I admit that my behaviour may give you some right to call me 'fellow,' but I trust that my apology will make you consider me a gentleman like yourself. Your porter altogether refused to take a message to Messer Angelo Beroviero. May I ask whether you are his son, sir?"
"No, sir. You say that you wish to speak with the master. I can take a message to him, but I am not sure that he will see any one to-day."
Aristarchi imagined that Beroviero made himself inaccessible, in order to increase the general idea of his wealth and importance. He resolved to convey a strong impression of his own standing.
"I am the chief partner in a great house of Greek merchants settled in Palermo," he said. "My name is Charalambos Aristarchi, and I desire the honour of speaking with Messer Angelo about the purchase of several cargoes of gla.s.s for the King of Sicily."
"I will deliver your message, sir," said Zorzi. "Pray wait a minute, I will open the door."
Aristarchi's big head disappeared at last.
"Yes!" growled the porter to Zorzi. "Open the door yourself, and take the blame. The man has the face of a Turkish pirate, and his voice is like the bellowing of several bulls."
Zorzi unbarred the door, which opened inward, and Aristarchi turned a little sideways in order to enter, for his shoulders would have touched the two door-posts. The slight and gracefully built Dalmatian looked at him with some curiosity, standing aside to let him pa.s.s, before barring the door again. Aristarchi, though not much taller than himself, was the biggest man he had ever seen. He thanked Zorzi, who pushed forward the porter's only chair for him to sit on while he waited.