It was Cloudy in Italy, which surprised
them. They had expected brilliant sunshine.
But never mind: it was Italy, and the very clouds
looked fat. Neither of them had ever been there
before. Both gazed out of the windows with rapt
faces. The hours flew as long as it was daylight,
and after that there was the excitement of getting
nearer, getting quite near, getting there. At
Genoa it had begun to rain— Genoa!
Imagine actually being at Genoa, seeing its name written
up in the station just like any other name—at
Nervi it was pouring, and when at last towards midnight,
for again the train was late, they got to Mezzago,
the rain was coming down in what seemed solid sheets.
But it was Italy. Nothing it did could be bad.
The very rain was different— straight
rain, falling properly on to one’s umbrella;
not that violently blowing English stuff that got
in everywhere. And it did leave off; and when
it did, behold the earth would be strewn with roses.
Mr. Briggs, San Salvatore’s
owner, had said, “You get out at Mezzago, and
then you drive.” But he had forgotten what
he amply knew, that trains in Italy are sometimes
late, and he had imagined his tenants arriving at
Mezzago at eight o’clock and finding a string
of flys to choose from.
The train was four hours late, and
when Mrs. Arbuthnot and Mrs. Wilkins scrambled down
the ladder-like high steps of their carriage into
the black downpour, their skirts sweeping off great
pools of sooty wet because their hands were full of
suit-cases, if it had not been for the vigilance of
Domenico, the gardener at San Salvatore, they would
have found nothing for them to drive in. All
ordinary flys had long since gone home. Domenico,
foreseeing this, had sent his aunt’s fly, driven
by her son his cousin; and his aunt and her fly lived
in Castagneto, the village crouching at the feet of
San Salvatore, and therefore, however late the train
was, the fly would not dare come home without containing
that which it had been sent to fetch.
Domenico’s cousin’s name
was Beppo, and he presently emerged out of the dark
where Mrs. Arbuthnot and Mrs. Wilkins stood, uncertain
what to do next after the train had gone on, for they
could see no porter and they thought from the feel
of it that they were standing not so much on a platform
as in the middle of the permanent way.
Beppo, who had been searching for
them, emerged from the dark with a kind of pounce
and talked Italian to them vociferously. Beppo
was a most respectable young man, but he did not look
as if her were, especially not in the dark, and he
had a dripping hat slouched over one ye. They
did not like the way he seized their suit-cases.
He could not be, they thought, a porter. However,
they presently from out of his streaming talk discerned
the words San Salvatore, and after that they kept
on saying them to him, for it was the only Italian
they knew, as they hurried after him, unwilling to
lose sight of their suit-cases, stumbling across rails
and through puddles out to where in the road a small,
high fly stood.
Its hood was up, and its horse was
in an attitude of thought. They climbed in, and
the minute they were in—Mrs. Wilkins, indeed,
could hardly be called in—the horse awoke
with a start from its reverie and immediately began
going home rapidly; without Beppo; without the suit-cases.
Beppo darted after him, making the
night ring with his shouts, and caught the hanging
reins just in time. He explained proudly, and
as it seemed to him with perfect clearness, that the
horse always did that, being a fine animal full of
corn and blood, and cared for by him, Beppo, as if
he were his own son, and the ladies must be alarmed—he
had noticed they were clutching each other; but clear,
and loud, and profuse of words though he was, they
only looked at him blankly.
He went on talking, however, while
he piled the suit-cases up round them, sure that sooner
or later they must understand him, especially as he
was careful to talk very loud and illustrate everything
he said with the simplest elucidatory gestures, but
they both continued only to look at him. They
both, he noticed sympathetically, had white faces,
fatigued faces, and they both had big eyes, fatigued
eyes. They were beautiful ladies, he though,
and their eyes, looking at him over the tops of the
suit-cases watching his every movement—there
were no trunks, only numbers of suit-cases—were
like the eyes of the Mother of God. The only
thing the ladies said, and they repeated it at regular
intervals, even after they had started, gently prodding
him as he sat on his box to call his attention to it,
was, “San Salvatore?”
And each time he answered vociferously,
encouragingly, “Si, si— San Salvatore.”
“We don’t know of course
if he’s taking us there,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot
at last in a low voice, after they had been driving
as it seemed to them a long while, and had got off
the paving-stones of the sleep-shrouded town and were
out on a winding road with what they could just see
was a low wall on their left beyond which was a great
black emptiness and the sound of the sea. On
their right was something close and steep and high
and black—rocks, they whispered to each
other; huge rocks.
They felt very uncomfortable.
It was so late. It was so dark. The road
was so lonely. Suppose a wheel came off.
Suppose they met Fascisti, or the opposite of Fascisti.
How sorry they were now that they had not slept at
Genoa and come on the next morning in daylight.
“But that would have been the
first of April,” said Mrs. Wilkins, in a low
voice.
“It is that now,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot
beneath her breath.
“So it is,” murmured Mrs. Wilkins.
They were silent.
Beppo turned round on his box—a
disquieting habit already noticed, for surely his
horse ought to be carefully watched—and
again addressed them with what he was convinced was
lucidity—no patois, and the clearest explanatory
movements.
How much they wished their mothers
had made them learn Italian when they were little.
If only now they could have said, “Please sit
round the right way and look after the horse.”
They did not even know what horse was in Italian.
It was contemptible to be so ignorant.
In their anxiety, for the road twisted
round great jutting rocks, and on their left was only
the low wall to keep them out of the sea should anything
happen, they too began to gesticulate, waving their
hands at Beppo point ahead. They wanted him to
turn round again and face his horse, that was all.
He thought they wanted him to drive faster; and there
followed a terrifying ten minutes during which, as
he supposed, he was gratifying them. He was
proud of his horse, and it could go very fast.
He rose in his seat, the whip cracked, the horse
rushed forward, the rocks leaped towards them, the
little fly swayed, the suit-cases heaved, Mrs. Arbuthnot
and Mrs. Wilkins clung. In this way they continued,
swaying, heaving, clattering, clinging, till at a
point near Castagneto there was a rise in the road,
and on reaching the foot of the rise the horse, who
knew every inch of the way, stopped suddenly, throwing
everything in the fly into a heap, and then proceeded
up at the slowest of walks.
Beppo twisted himself round to receive
their admiration, laughing with pride in his horse.
There was no answering laugh from
the beautiful ladies. Their eyes, fixed on him,
seemed bigger than ever, and their faces against the
black of the night showed milky.
But here at least, once they were
up the slope, were houses. The rocks left off,
and there were houses; the low wall left off, and there
were houses; the sea shrunk away, and the sound of
it ceased, and the loneliness of the road was finished.
No lights anywhere, of course, nobody to see them
pass; and yet Beppo, when the houses began, after
looking over his shoulder and shouting “Castagneto”
at the ladies, once more stood up and cracked his
whip and once more made his horse dash forward.
“We shall be there in a minute,”
Mrs. Arbuthnot said to herself, holding on.
“We shall soon stop now,”
Mrs. Wilkins said to herself, holding on. They
said nothing aloud, because nothing would have been
heard above the whip-cracking and the wheel-clattering
and the boisterous inciting noises Beppo was making
at his horse.
Anxiously they strained their eyes
for any sight of the beginning of San Salvatore.
They had supposed and hoped that after
a reasonable amount of village a mediaeval archway
would loom upon them, and through it they would drive
into a garden and draw up at an open, welcoming door,
with light streaming from it and those servants standing
in it who, according to the advertisement, remained.
Instead the fly suddenly stopped.
Peering out they could see they were
still in the village street, with small dark houses
each side; and Beppo, throwing the reins over the
horse’s back as if completely confident this
time that he would not go any farther, got down off
his box. At the same moment, springing as it
seemed out of nothing, a man and several half-grown
boys appeared on each side of the fly and began dragging
out the suit-cases.
“No, no—San Salvatore,
San Salvatore”—exclaimed Mrs. Wilkins,
trying to hold on to what suit-cases she could.
“Si, si—San Salvatore,” they
all shouted, pulling.
“This can’t be San Salvatore,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, turning to Mrs. Arbuthnot, who
sat quite still watching her suit-cases being taken
from her with the same patience she applied to lesser
evils. She knew she could do nothing if these
men were wicked men determined to have her suit-cases.
“I don’t think it can
be,” she admitted, and could not refrain from
a moment’s wonder at the ways of God. Had
she really been brought here, she and poor Mrs. Wilkins,
after so much trouble in arranging it, so much difficulty
and worry, along such devious paths of prevarication
and deceit, only to be—
She checked her thoughts, and gently
said to Mrs. Wilkins, while the ragged youths disappeared
with the suit-cases into the night and the man with
the lantern helped Beppo pull the rug off her, that
they were both in God’s hands; and for the first
time on hearing this, Mrs. Wilkins was afraid.
There was nothing for it but to get
out. Useless to try to go on sitting in the
fly repeating San Salvatore. Every time they
said it, and their voices each time were fainter,
Beppo and the other man merely echoed it in a series
of loud shouts. If only they had learned Italian
when they were little. If only they could have
said, “We wish to be driven to the door.”
But they did not even know what door was in Italian.
Such ignorance was not only contemptible, it was,
they now saw, definitely dangerous. Useless,
however, to lament it now. Useless to put off
whatever it was that was going to happen to them by
trying to go on sitting in the fly. They therefore
got out.
The two men opened their umbrellas
for them and handed them to them. From this
they received a faint encouragement, because they
could not believe that if these men were wicked they
would pause to open umbrellas. The man with
the lantern then made signs to them to follow him,
talking loud and quickly, and Beppo, they noticed,
remained behind. Ought they to pay him?
Not, they thought, if they were going to be robbed
and perhaps murdered. Surely on such an occasion
one did not pay. Besides, he had not after all
brought them to San Salvatore. Where they had
got to was evidently somewhere else. Also, he
did not show the least wish to be paid; he let them
go away into the night with no clamour at all.
This, they could not help thinking, was a bad sign.
He asked for nothing because presently he was to get
so much.
They came to some steps. The
road ended abruptly in a church and some descending
steps. The man held the lantern low for them
to see the steps.
“San Salvatore?” said
Mrs. Wilkins once again, very faintly, before committing
herself to the steps. It was useless to mention
it now, of course, but she could not go down steps
in complete silence. No mediaeval castle, she
was sure, was ever built at the bottom of steps.
Again, however, came the echoing shout—“Si,
si—San Salvatore.”
They descended gingerly, holding up
their skirts just as if they would be wanting them
another time and had not in all probability finished
with skirts for ever.
The steps ended in a steeply sloping
path with flat stone slabs down the middle.
They slipped a good deal on these wet slabs, and the
man with the lantern, talking loud and quickly, held
them up. His way of holding them up was polite.
“Perhaps,” said Mrs. Wilkins
in a low voice to Mrs. Arbuthnot, “It is all
right after all.”
“We’re in God’s
hands,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot again; and again
Mrs. Wilkins was afraid.
They reached the bottom of the sloping
path, and the light of the lantern flickered over
an open space with houses round three sides.
The sea was the fourth side, lazily washing backwards
and forwards on pebbles.
“San Salvatore,” said
the man pointing with his lantern to a black mass
curved round the water like an arm flung about it.
They strained their eyes. They
saw the black mass, and on the top of it a light.
“San Salvatore?” they
both repeated incredulously, for where were the suit-cases,
and why had they been forced to get out of the fly?
“Si, si—San Salvatore.”
They went along what seemed to be
a quay, right on the edge of the water. There
was not even a low wall here—nothing to
prevent the man with the lantern tipping them in if
he wanted to. He did not, however, tip them
in. Perhaps it was all right after all, Mrs.
Wilkins again suggested to Mrs. Arbuthnot on noticing
this, who this time was herself beginning to think
that it might be, and said no more about God’s
hands.
The flicker of the lantern danced
along, reflected in the wet pavement of the quay.
Out to the left, in the darkness and evidently at
the end of a jetty, was a red light. They came
to an archway with a heavy iron gate. The man
with the lantern pushed the gate open. This
time they went up steps instead of down, and at the
top of them was a little path that wound upwards among
flowers. They could not see the flowers, but
the whole place was evidently full of them.
It here dawned on Mrs. Wilkins that
perhaps the reason why the fly had not driven them
up to the door was that there was no road, only a
footpath. That also would explain the disappearance
of the suit-cases. She began to feel confident
that they would find their suit-cases waiting for
them when they got up to the top. San Salvatore
was, it seemed, on the top of a hill, as a mediaeval
castle should be. At a turn of the path they
saw above them, much nearer now and shining more brightly,
the light they had seen from the quay. She told
Mrs. Arbuthnot of her dawning belief, and Mrs. Arbuthnot
agreed that it was very likely a true one.
Once more, but this time in a tone
of real hopefulness, Mrs. Wilkins said, pointing upwards
at the black outline against the only slightly less
black sky, “San Salvatore?” And once more,
but this time comfortingly, encouragingly, came back
the assurance, “Si, si—San Salvatore.”
They crossed a little bridge, over
what was apparently a ravine, and then came a flat
bit with long grass at the sides and more flowers.
They felt the grass flicking wet against their stockings,
and the invisible flowers were everywhere. Then
up again through trees, along a zigzag path with the
smell all the way of the flowers they could not see.
The warm rain was bringing out all the sweetness.
Higher and higher they went in this sweet darkness,
and the red light on the jetty dropped farther and
farther below them.
The path wound round to the other
side of what appeared to be a little peninsula; the
jetty and the red light disappeared; across the emptiness
on their left were distant lights.
“Mezzago,” said the man,
waving his lantern at the lights.
“Si, si,” they answered,
for they had by now learned si, si. Upon which
the man congratulated them in a great flow of polite
words, not one of which they understood, on their
magnificent Italian; for this was Domenico, the vigilant
and accomplished gardener of San Salvatore, the prop
and stay of the establishment, the resourceful, the
gifted, the eloquent, the courteous, the intelligent
Domenico. Only they did not know that yet; and
he did in the dark, and even sometimes in the light,
look, with his knife-sharp swarthy features and swift,
panther movements, very like somebody wicked.
They passed along another flat bit
of path, with a black shape like a high wall towering
above them on their right, and then the path went
up again under trellises, and trailing sprays of scented
things caught at them and shook raindrops on them,
and the light of the lantern flickered over lilies,
and then came a flight of ancient steps worn with
centuries, and then another iron gate, and then they
were inside, though still climbing a twisting flight
of stone steps with old walls on either side like
the walls of dungeons, and with a vaulted roof.
At the top was a wrought-iron door,
and through it shone a flood of electric light.
“Ecco,” said Domenico,
lithely running up the last few steps ahead and pushing
the door open.
And there they were, arrived; and
it was San Salvatore; and their suit-cases were waiting
for them; and they had not been murdered.
They looked at each other’s
white faces and blinking eyes very solemnly.
It was a great, a wonderful moment.
Here they were, in their mediaeval castle at last.
Their feet touched its stones.
Mrs. Wilkins put her arm round Mrs.
Arbuthnot’s neck and kissed her.
“The first thing to happen in
this house,” she said softly, solemnly, “shall
be a kiss.”
“Dear Lotty,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Dear Rose,” said Mrs. Wilkins, her eyes
brimming with gladness.
Domenico was delighted. He liked
to see beautiful ladies kiss. He made them a
most appreciative speech of welcome, and they stood
arm in arm, holding each other up, for they were very
tired, blinking smilingly at him, and not understanding
a word.