2.5.
When the Professor’s gate closed
on Odo night was already falling and the oil-lamp
at the end of the arched passage-way shed its weak
circle of light on the pavement. This light,
as Odo emerged, fell on a retreating figure which
resembled that of the blind beggar he had seen crouching
on the steps of the Corpus Domini. He ran forward,
but the man hurried across the little square and disappeared
in the darkness. Odo had not seen his face; but
though his dress was tattered, and he leaned on a
beggar’s staff, something about his broad rolling
back recalled the well-filled outline of Cantapresto’s
cassock.
Sick at heart, Odo rambled on from
one street to another, avoiding the more crowded quarters,
and losing himself more than once in the districts
near the river, where young gentlemen of his figure
seldom showed themselves unattended. The populace,
however, was all abroad, and he passed as unregarded
as though his sombre thoughts had enveloped him in
actual darkness.
It was late when at length he turned
again into the Piazza Castello, which was brightly
lit and still thronged with pleasure-seekers.
As he approached, the crowd divided to make way for
three or four handsome travelling-carriages, preceded
by linkmen and liveried out-riders and followed by
a dozen mounted equerries. The people, evidently
in the humour to greet every incident of the streets
as part of a show prepared for their diversion, cheered
lustily as the carriages dashed across the square;
and Odo, turning to a man at his elbow, asked who the
distinguished visitors might be.
“Why, sir,” said the other
laughing, “I understand it is only an Embassage
from some neighbouring state; but when our good people
are in their Easter mood they are ready to take a
mail-coach for Elijah’s chariot and their wives’
scolding for the Gift of Tongues.”
Odo spent a restless night face to
face with his first humiliation. Though the girl’s
rebuff had cut him to the quick, it was the vision
of the havoc his folly had wrought that stood between
him and sleep. To have endangered the liberty,
the very life, perhaps, of a man he loved and venerated,
and who had welcomed him without heed of personal risk,
this indeed was bitter to his youthful self-sufficiency.
The thought of Giannone’s fate was like a cold
clutch at his heart; nor was there any balm in knowing
that it was at Fulvia’s request he had been so
freely welcomed; for he was persuaded that, whatever
her previous feeling might have been, the scene just
enacted must render him forever odious to her.
Turn whither it would, his tossing vanity found no
repose; and dawn rose for him on a thorny waste of
disillusionment.
Cantapresto broke in early on this
vigil, flushed with the importance of a letter from
the Countess Valdu. The lady summoned her son
to dinner, “to meet an old friend and distinguished
visitor”; and a verbal message bade Odo come
early and wear his new uniform. He was too well
acquainted with his mother’s exaggerations to
attach much importance to the summons; but being glad
of an excuse to escape his daily visit at the Palazzo
Tournanches, he sent Donna Laura word that he would
wait on her at two.
On the very threshold of Casa Valdu,
Odo perceived that unwonted preparations were afoot.
The shabby liveries of the servants had been refurbished
and the marble floor newly scoured; and he found his
mother seated in the drawing-room, an apartment never
unshrouded save on the most ceremonious occasions.
As to Donna Laura, she had undergone the same process
of renovation, and with more striking results.
It seemed to Odo, when she met him sparkling under
her rouge and powder, as though some withered flower
had been dipped in water, regaining for the moment
a languid semblance of its freshness. Her eyes
shone, her hand trembled under his lips, and the diamonds
rose and fell on her eager bosom.
“You are late!” she tenderly
reproached him; and before he had time to reply, the
double doors were thrown open, and the major-domo announced
in an awed voice: “His excellency Count
Lelio Trescorre.”
Odo turned with a start. To his
mind, already crowded with a confusion of thoughts,
the name summoned a throng of memories. He saw
again his mother’s apartments at Pianura, and
the handsome youth with lace ruffles and a clouded
amber cane, who came and went among her other visitors
with an air of such superiority, and who rode beside
the travelling-carriage on the first stage of their
journey to Donnaz. To that handsome youth the
gentleman just announced bore the likeness of the
finished portrait to the sketch. He was a man
of about two-and-thirty, of the middle height, with
a delicate dark face and an air of arrogance not unbecomingly
allied to an insinuating courtesy of address.
His dress of sombre velvet, with a star on the breast,
and a profusion of the finest lace, suggested the
desire to add dignity and weight to his appearance
without renouncing the softer ambitions of his age.
He received with a smile Donna Laura’s
agitated phrases of welcome. “I come,”
said he kissing her hand, “in my private character,
not as the Envoy of Pianura, but as the friend and
servant of the Countess Valdu; and I trust,”
he added turning to Odo, “of the Cavaliere Valsecca
also.”
Odo bowed in silence.
“You may have heard,”
Trescorre continued, addressing him in the same engaging
tone, “that I am come to Turin on a mission from
his Highness to the court of Savoy: a trifling
matter of boundary-lines and customs, which I undertook
at the Duke’s desire, the more readily, it must
be owned, since it gave me the opportunity to renew
my acquaintance with friends whom absence has not
taught me to forget.” He smiled again at
Donna Laura, who blushed like a girl.
The curiosity which Trescorre’s
words excited was lost to Odo in the painful impression
produced by his mother’s agitation. To see
her, a woman already past her youth, and aged by her
very efforts to preserve it, trembling and bridling
under the cool eye of masculine indifference, was
a spectacle the more humiliating that he was too young
to be moved by its human and pathetic side. He
recalled once seeing a memento mori of delicately-tinted
ivory, which represented a girl’s head, one side
all dewy freshness, the other touched with death; and
it seemed to him that his mother’s face resembled
this tragic toy, the side her mirror reflected being
still rosy with youth, while that which others saw
was already a ruin. His heart burned with disgust
as he followed Donna Laura and Trescorre into the
dining-room, which had been set out with all the family
plate, and decked with rare fruits and flowers.
The Countess had excused her husband on the plea of
his official duties, and the three sat down alone
to a meal composed of the costliest delicacies.
Their guest, who ate little and drank
less, entertained them with the latest news of Pianura,
touching discreetly on the growing estrangement between
the Duke and Duchess, and speaking with becoming gravity
of the heir’s weak health. It was clear
that the speaker, without filling an official position
at the court, was already deep in the Duke’s
counsels, and perhaps also in the Duchess’s;
and Odo guessed under his smiling indiscretions the
cool aim of the man who never wastes a shot.
Toward the close of the meal, when
the servants had withdrawn, he turned to Odo with
a graver manner. “You have perhaps guessed,
cavaliere,” he said, “that in venturing
to claim the Countess’s hospitality in so private
a manner, I had in mind the wish to open myself to
you more freely than would be possible at court.”
He paused a moment, as though to emphasise his words;
and Odo fancied he cultivated the trick of deliberate
speaking to counteract his natural arrogance of manner.
“The time has come,” he went on, “when
it seems desirable that you should be more familiar
with the state of affairs at Pianura. For some
years it seemed likely that the Duchess would give
his Highness another son; but circumstances now appear
to preclude that hope; and it is the general opinion
of the court physicians that the young prince has not
many years to live.” He paused again, fixing
his eyes on Odo’s flushed face. “The
Duke,” he continued, “has shown a natural
reluctance to face a situation so painful both to
his heart and his ambitions; but his feelings as a
parent have yielded to his duty as a sovereign, and
he recognises the fact that you should have an early
opportunity of acquainting yourself more nearly with
the affairs of the duchy, and also of seeing something
of the other courts of Italy. I am persuaded,”
he added, “that, young as you are, I need not
point out to you on what slight contingencies all
human fortunes hang, and how completely the heir’s
recovery or the birth of another prince must change
the aspect of your future. You have, I am sure,
the heart to face such chances with becoming equanimity,
and to carry the weight of conditional honours without
any undue faith in their permanence.”
The admonition was so lightly uttered
that it seemed rather a tribute to Odo’s good
sense than a warning to his inexperience; and indeed
it was difficult for him, in spite of an instinctive
aversion to the man, to quarrel with anything in his
address or language. Trescorre in fact possessed
the art of putting younger men at their ease, while
appearing as an equal among his elders: a gift
doubtless developed by the circumstances of court
life, and the need of at once commanding respect and
disarming diffidence.
He took leave upon his last words,
declaring, in reply to the Countess’s protests,
that he had promised to accompany the court that afternoon
to Stupinigi. “But I hope,” he added,
turning to Odo, “to continue our talk at greater
length, if you will favour me with a visit tomorrow
at my lodgings.”
No sooner was the door closed on her
illustrious visitor than Donna Laura flung herself
on Odo’s bosom.
“I always knew it,” she
cried, “my dearest; but, oh, that I should live
to see the day!” and she wept and clung to him
with a thousand endearments, from the nature of which
he gathered that she already beheld him on the throne
of Pianura. To his laughing reminder of the distance
that still separated him from that dizzy eminence,
she made answer that there was far more than he knew,
that the Duke had fallen into all manner of excesses
which had already gravely impaired his health, and
that for her part she only hoped her son, when raised
to a station so far above her own, would not forget
the tenderness with which she had ever cherished him,
or the fact that Count Valdu’s financial situation
was one quite unworthy the stepfather of a reigning
prince.
Escaping at length from this parody
of his own sensations, Odo found himself in a tumult
of mind that solitude served only to increase.
Events had so pressed upon him within the last few
days that at times he was reduced to a passive sense
of spectatorship, an inability to regard himself as
the centre of so many converging purposes. It
was clear that Trescorre’s mission was mainly
a pretext for seeing the Duke’s young kinsman;
and that some special motive must have impelled the
Duke to show such sudden concern for his cousin’s
welfare. Trescorre need hardly have cautioned
Odo against fixing his hopes on the succession.
The Duke himself was a man not above five-and-thirty,
and more than one chance stood between Odo and the
duchy; nor was it this contingency that set his pulses
beating, but rather the promise of an immediate change
in his condition. The Duke wished him to travel,
to visit the different courts of Italy: what
was the prospect of ruling over a stagnant principality
to this near vision of the world and the glories thereof,
suddenly discovered from the golden height of opportunity?
Save for a few weeks of autumn villeggiatura at some
neighbouring chase or vineyard, Odo had not left Turin
for nine years. He had come there a child and
had grown to manhood among the same narrow influences
and surroundings. To be turned loose on the world
at two-and-twenty, with such an arrears of experience
to his credit, was to enter on a richer inheritance
than any duchy; and in Odo’s case the joy of
the adventure was doubled by its timeliness.
That fate should thus break at a stroke the meshes
of habit, should stoop to play the advocate of his
secret inclinations, seemed to promise him the complicity
of the gods. Once in a lifetime, chance will
thus snap the toils of a man’s making; and it
is instructive to see the poor puppet adore the power
that connives at his evasion…
Trescorre remained a week in Turin;
and Odo saw him daily at court, at his lodgings, or
in company. The little sovereignty of Pianura
being an important factor in the game of political
equilibrium, her envoy was sure of a flattering reception
from the neighbouring powers; and Trescorre’s
person and address must have commended him to the most
fastidious company. He continued to pay particular
attention to Odo, and the rumour was soon abroad that
the Cavaliere Valsecca had been sent for to visit
his cousin, the reigning Duke; a rumour which, combined
with Donna Laura’s confidential hints, made
Odo the centre of much feminine solicitude, and roused
the Countess Clarice to a vivid sense of her rights.
These circumstances, and his own tendency to drift
on the current of sensation, had carried Odo more
easily than he could have hoped past the painful episode
of the Professor’s garden. He was still
tormented by the sense of his inability to right so
grave a wrong; but he found solace in the thought
that his absence was after all the best reparation
he could make.
Trescorre, though distinguishing Odo
by his favours, had not again referred to the subject
of their former conversation; but on the last day
of his visit he sent for Odo to his lodgings and at
once entered upon the subject.
“His Highness,” said he,
“does not for the present recommend your resigning
your commission in the Sardinian army; but as he desires
you to visit him at Pianura, and to see something
of the neighbouring courts, he has charged me to obtain
for you a two years’ leave of absence from his
Majesty’s service: a favour the King has
already been pleased to accord. The Duke has
moreover resolved to double your present allowance
and has entrusted me with the sum of two hundred ducats,
which he desires you to spend in the purchase of a
travelling-carriage, and such other appointments as
are suitable to a gentleman of your rank and expectations.”
As he spoke, he unlocked his despatch-box and handed
a purse to Odo. “His Highness,” he
continued, “is impatient to see you; and once
your preparations are completed, I should advise you
to set out without delay; that is,” he added,
after one of his characteristic pauses, “if
I am right in supposing that there is no obstacle to
your departure.”
Odo, inferring an allusion to the
Countess Clarice, smiled and coloured slightly.
“I know of none,” he said.
Trescorre bowed. “I am
glad to hear it,” he said, “for I know
that a man of your age and appearance may have other
inclinations than his own to consider. Indeed,
I have had reports of a connection that I should not
take the liberty of mentioning, were it not that your
interest demands it.” He waited a moment,
but Odo remained silent. “I am sure,”
he went on, “you will do me the justice of believing
that I mean no reflection on the lady, when I warn
you against being seen too often in the quarter behind
the Corpus Domini. Such attachments, though engaging
at the outset to a fastidious taste, are often more
troublesome than a young man of your age can foresee;
and in this case the situation is complicated by the
fact that the girl’s father is in ill odour with
the authorities, so that, should the motive of your
visits be mistaken, you might find yourself inconveniently
involved in the proceedings of the Holy Office.”
Odo, who had turned pale, controlled
himself sufficiently to listen in silence, and with
as much pretence of indifference as he could assume.
It was the peculiar misery of his situation that he
could not defend Fulvia without betraying her father,
and that of the two alternatives prudence bade him
reject the one that chivalry would have chosen.
It flashed across him, however, that he might in some
degree repair the harm he had done by finding out
what measures were to be taken against Vivaldi; and
to this end he carelessly asked:—“Is
it possible that the Professor has done anything to
give offence in such quarters?”
His assumption of carelessness was
perhaps overdone; for Trescorre’s face grew
as blank as a shuttered house-front.
“I have heard rumours of the
kind,” he rejoined; “but they would scarcely
have attracted my notice had I not learned of your
honouring the young lady with your favours.”
He glanced at Odo with a smile. “Were I
a father,” he added, “with a son of your
age, my first advice to him would be to form no sentimental
ties but in his own society or in the world of pleasure—the
only two classes where the rules of the game are understood.”