3.7.
Odo heard a slight movement behind
him. He turned and saw that Fulvia had vanished.
He understood her wish for concealment, but its futility
was written in the glance with which de Crucis followed
her flight.
The abate continued to speak in urgent
tones. “I implore you,” he said,
“to lose no time in accompanying me to Pianura.
The situation there is critical and before now his
Highness’s death may have placed the reins in
your hands.” He glanced at his watch.
“If your excellency is not too tired to set
out at once, my horses can be harnessed within the
half hour.”
Odo’s heart sank. To have
let his thoughts dwell on such a possibility seemed
to have done little to prepare him for its realisation.
He hardly understood what de Crucis was saying:
he knew only that an hour before he had fancied himself
master of his fate and that now he was again in bonds.
His first clear thought was that nothing should part
him from Fulvia.
De Crucis seemed to read the thought.
“Cavaliere,” he said,
“at a moment when time is so valuable you will
pardon my directness. You are accompanying to
Switzerland a lady who has placed herself in your
charge—”
Odo made no reply, and the other went
on in the same firm but courteous tone: “Foreseeing
that it would be difficult for you to leave her so
abruptly I provided myself, in Venice, with a passport
which will take her safely across the border.”
He drew a paper from his coat. “This,”
said he, handing it to Odo, “is the Papal Nuncio’s
authorisation to the Signorina Fulvia Vivaldi, known
in religion as Sister Veronica, to absent herself
from Italy for an indefinite period. With this
passport and a good escort your companion will have
no difficulty in joining her friends.”
Excess of astonishment kept Odo silent
for a moment; and in that moment he had as it were
a fugitive glimpse into the workings of the great
power which still strove for predominance in Italy.
A safe-conduct from the Papal Nuncio to Fulvia Vivaldi
was equivalent to her release from her vows; and this
in turn implied that, for the moment, religious discipline
had been frankly sacrificed to the pressure of political
necessities. How the invisible hands made and
unmade the destinies of those who came in their way!
How boldly the Church swept aside her own defences
when they obstructed her course! He was conscious,
even at the moment, of all that men like de Crucis
had to say in defence of this higher expediency, this
avowed discrimination between the factors in each
fresh combination of circumstances. He had himself
felt the complex wonder of thoughtful minds before
the Church’s perpetual miracle of change disguised
in immutability; but now he saw only the meaner side
of the game, its elements of cruelty and falseness;
and he felt himself no more than a frail bark on the
dark and tossing seas of ecclesiastical intrigue.
For a moment his heart shuddered back from its fate.
“No passport, no safe-conduct,”
he said at length, “can release me from my duty
to the lady who has placed herself in my care.
I shall not leave her till she has joined her friends.”
De Crucis bowed. “This
is the answer I expected,” he said, not without
sadness.
Odo glanced at him in surprise.
The two men, hitherto, had addressed each other as
strangers; but now something in the abate’s tone
recalled to Odo the familiarity of their former intercourse,
their deep community of thought, the significance
of the days they had spent together in the monastery
of Monte Cassino. The association of ideas brought
before him the profound sense of responsibility with
which, at that time, he had looked forward to such
an hour as this.
The abate was watching him gravely.
“Cavaliere,” he said,
“every instant counts, all you had once hoped
to do for Pianura is now yours to accomplish.
But in your absence your enemies are not idle.
His Highness may revoke your appointment at any hour.
Of late I have had his ear, but I have now been near
a week absent, and you know the Duke is not long constant
to one purpose.—Cavaliere,” he exclaimed,
“I appeal to you not in the name of the God
whom you have come to doubt, but in that of your fellow-men,
whom you have wished to serve.”
Odo looked at him, not without a confused
sense of the irony of such an appeal on such lips,
yet with the distinct consciousness that it was uttered
in all sincerity, and that, whatever their superficial
diversity of view, he and de Crucis were at one on
those deeper questions that gave the moment its real
significance.
“It is impossible,” he
repeated, “that I should go with you.”
De Crucis was again silent, and Odo
was aware of the renewed intentness of his scrutiny.
“If the lady—” broke from him
once; but he checked himself and took a turn in the
room.
Meanwhile a resolve was slowly forming
itself in Odo. He would not be false to the call
which, since his boyhood, had so often made itself
heard before the voice of pleasure and self-interest;
but he would at least reserve the right to obey it
in his own fashion and under conditions which left
his private inclination free.
“There may be more than one
way of serving one’s fellows,” he said
quietly. “Go back without me, abate.
Tell my cousin that I resign my rights to the succession.
I shall live my own life elsewhere, not unworthily,
I hope, but as a private person.”
De Crucis had turned pale. For
a moment his habitual self-command seemed about to
fail him; and Odo could not but see that a sincere
personal regret was mingled with the political agent’s
consciousness of failure.
He himself was chiefly aware of a
sense of relief, of self-recovery, as though he had
at last solved a baffling enigma and found himself
once more at one with his fate.
Suddenly he heard a step behind him.
Fulvia had re-entered the room. She had put off
her drenched cloak, but the hair lay in damp strands
on her forehead, deepening her pallor and the lines
of weariness under her eyes. She moved across
the room, carrying her head high and advancing tranquilly
to Odo’s side. Even in that moment of confused
emotions he was struck by the nobility of her gait
and gesture.
She turned to de Crucis, and Odo had
the immediate intuition that she had recognised him.
“Will you let me speak a word
privately to the cavaliere Valsecca?” she said.
The other bowed silently and turned
away. The door closed on him, and Odo and Fulvia
remained alone. For a moment neither spoke; then
she said: “That was the abate de Crucis?”
He assented.
She looked at him sadly. “You still believe
him to be your friend?”
“Yes,” he answered frankly,
“I still believe him to be my friend, and, spite
of his cloth, the friend of justice and humanity.
But he is here simply as the Duke’s agent.
He has been for some time the governor of Prince Ferrante.”
“I knew,” she murmured, “I knew—”
He went up to her and caught her hands.
“Why do we waste our time upon him?” he
exclaimed impatiently. “Nothing matters
but that I am free at last.”
She drew back, gently releasing herself. “Free—?”
“My choice is made. I have
resigned my right to the succession. I shall
not return to Pianura.”
She continued to stare at him, leaning
against the chair from which de Crucis had risen.
“Your choice is made! Your
choice is made!” she repeated. “And
you have chosen—”
“You,” he said simply.
“Will you go to France with me, Fulvia?
Will you be my wife and work with me at a distance
for the cause that, in Italy, we may not serve together?
I have never abandoned the aims your father taught
me to strive for; they are dearer, more sacred to me
than ever; but I cannot strive for them alone.
I must feel your hand in mine, I must know that your
heart beats with mine, I must hear the voice of liberty
speak to me in your voice—” He broke
off suddenly and went up to her. “All this
is nothing,” he said. “I love you.
I cannot give you up. That is all.”
For a moment, as he spoke, her face
shone with an extraordinary light. She looked
at him intently, as one who seemed to gaze beyond and
through him, at some mystic vision that his words
evoked. Then the brightness faded.
“The picture you draw is a beautiful
one,” she said, speaking slowly, in sweet deliberate
tones, “but it is not for me to look on.
What you said last is not true. If you love me
it is because we have thought the same thoughts, dreamed
the same dream, heard the same voice—in
each other’s voices, perhaps, as you say, but
none the less a real voice, apart from us and above
us, and one which would speak to us as loudly if we
were apart—one which both of us must follow
to the end.”
He gazed at her eagerly as she spoke;
and while he gazed there came to him, perversely enough,
a vision of the life he was renouncing, not as it
concerned the public welfare but in its merely personal
aspect: a vision of the power, the luxury, the
sumptuous background of traditional state and prerogative
in which his artistic and intellectual tastes, as
well as his easy impulses of benevolence, would find
unchecked and immediate gratification. It was
the first time that he had been aware of such lurking
influences under his most generous aspirations; but
even as Fulvia ceased to speak the vision faded, leaving
only an intenser longing to bend her will to his.
“You are right,” he rejoined;
“we must follow that voice to the end; but why
not together? Your father himself often questioned
whether the patriot could not serve his people better
at a distance than in their midst. In France,
where the new ideas are not only tolerated but put
in practice, we shall be able to study their effects
and to learn how they may best be applied to the relief
of our own unhappy people; and as a private person,
independent of party and patronage, could I not do
more than as the nominal head of a narrow priest-ridden
government, where every act and word would be used
by my enemies to injure me and the cause I represent?”
The vigour and rapidity of the attack,
and the promptness with which he converted her argument
to his own use, were not without visible effect.
Odo saw his words reflected in the wavering glow of
Fulvia’s cheek; but almost at once she regained
control of her pulses and faced him with that serenity
which seemed to come to her at such moments.
“What you say might be true,”
she answered, “were your opportunities indeed
restricted to the regency. But the little prince’s
life is known to hang on a thread: at any moment
you may be Duke. And you will not deny that as
Duke of Pianura you can serve your people better than
as an obscure pamphleteer in Paris.”
Odo made an impatient gesture.
“Are you so sure?” he said. “Even
as Duke I must be the puppet of powers greater than
myself—of Austria, of Rome, nay, of the
wealthy nobles who will always league themselves with
their sovereign’s enemies rather than suffer
a hand upon their privileges. And even if I were
fortunate enough to outwit my masters and rule indeed,
over what a toy kingdom should I reign! How small
a number would be benefited! How little the cause
would be helped by my example! As an obscure
pamphleteer I might reach the hearts of thousands and
speak to great kings on their thrones; as Duke of
Pianura, fighting single-handed to reform the laws
of my little state, I should rank at best with the
other petty sovereigns who are amusing themselves all
over Italy with agricultural experiments and improved
methods of cheese-making.”
Again the brightness shone in Fulvia’s
face. “How you love me!” she said
as he paused; and went on, restraining him with a gesture
of the gentlest dignity: “For it is love
that speaks thus in you and not reason; and you know
as I do that the duty to which a man is born comes
before any of his own choosing. You are called
to serve liberty on a throne, I in some obscure corner
of the private life. We can no more exchange
our duties than our stations; but if our lives divide,
our purpose remains one, and as pious persons recall
each other in the mystery of the Sacrament, so we
shall meet in spirit in the new religion we profess.”
Her voice gained strength and measure
as she spoke, and Odo felt that all that passion could
urge must spend itself in vain against such high security
of spirit.
“Go, cavaliere,” she continued,
“I implore you to lose no time in reaching Pianura.
Occasion is short-lived, and an hour’s lingering
may cost you the regency, and with it the chance of
gaining a hold on your people. I will not expatiate,
as some might, on the power and dignities that await
you. You are no adventurer plotting to steal a
throne, but a soldier pledged to his post.”
She moved close to him and suddenly caught his hand
and raised it to her lips. “Your excellency,”
said she, “has deigned to look for a moment
on a poor girl that crossed your path. Now your
eyes must be on your people, who will yet have cause
to love and bless you as she does.”
She shone on him with a weeping brightness
that dissolved his very soul.
“Ah,” he cried, “you
have indeed learned your lesson well! I admire
with what stoic calmness you pronounce my doom, with
what readiness you dispose of my future!”
“It is not mine to dispose of,”
she caught him up, “nor yours; but belongs,
as much as any slave’s to his master, to the
people you are called to rule. Think for how
many generations their unheeded sufferings, their
unrewarded toil, have paid for the pomp and pleasure
of your house! That is the debt you are called
on to acquit, the wrong you are pledged to set right.”
Odo was silent. She had found
the unanswerable word. Yes, he was called on
to acquit the accumulated debt of that long unrighteous
rule: it was he who must pay, if need be with
the last drop of his blood, for the savage victories
of Bracciaforte, the rapacity of Guidobaldo, the magnificence
of Ascanio, the religious terrors and secret vices
of the poor Duke now nearing his end. All these
passions had preyed on the people, on the tillers
and weavers and vine-dressers, obscure servants of
a wasteful greatness: theirs had been the blood
that renewed the exhausted veins of their rulers,
through generation after generation of dumb labour
and privation. And the noblest passions, as well
as the basest, had been nourished at the same cost.
Every flower in the ducal gardens, every picture on
the palace walls, every honour in the ancient annals
of the house, had been planted, paid for, fought for
by the people. With mute inconscient irony the
two powers had faced each other for generations:
the subjects never guessing that their sovereigns were
puppets of their own making, the Dukes that all their
pomp and circumstance were but a borrowed motley.
Now the evil wrought in ignorance remained to be undone
in the light of the world’s new knowledge:
the discovery of that universal brotherhood which Christ
had long ago proclaimed, and which, after so many
centuries, those who denied Christ were the first
to put in practice. Hour by hour, day by day,
at the cost of every personal inclination, of all that
endears life and ennobles failure, Odo must set himself
to redeem the credit of his house. He saw his
way straight before him; but in that hour of insight
his heart’s instinct of self-preservation made
one last effort against fate.
He turned to Fulvia.
“You are right,” he said;
“I have no choice. You have shown me the
way; but must I travel it alone? You ask me to
give up at a stroke all that makes life desirable:
to set forth, without a backward glance, on the very
road that leads me farthest from you! Yesterday
I might have obeyed; but how can I turn today from
this near view of my happiness?”
He paused a moment and she seemed
about to answer; but he hurried on without giving
her time. “Fulvia, if you ask this sacrifice
of me, is there none you will make in return?
If you bid me go forth and work for my people, will
you not come with me and work for them too?”
He stretched out his hands, in a gesture that seemed
to sum up his infinite need of her, and for a moment
they faced each other, silenced by the nearness of
great issues.
She knew well enough what he offered.
According to the code of the day there was no dishonour
in the offer and it did not occur to her to resent
it. But she looked at him sadly and he read her
refusal in the look.
“The Regent’s mistress?”
she said slowly. “The key to the treasury,
the back-door to preferment, the secret trafficker
in titles and appointments? That is what I should
stand for—and it is not to such services
that you must even appear to owe your power. I
will not say that I have my own work to do; for the
dearest service I could perform would be to help you
in yours. But to do this I must stand aside.
To be near you I must go from you. To love you
I must give you up.”
She looked him full in the eyes as
she spoke; then she went up to him and kissed him.
It was the first kiss she had given him since she had
thrown herself in his arms in her father’s garden;
but now he felt her whole being on her lips.
He would have held her fast, forgetting
everything in the sweetness of her surrender; but
she drew back quickly and, before he could guess her
intention, throw open the door of the room to which
de Crucis had withdrawn.
“Signor abate!” she said.
The Jesuit came forward. Odo
was dimly aware that, for an instant, the two measured
each other; then Fulvia said quietly:
“His excellency goes with you to Pianura.”
What more she said, or what de Crucis
answered, he could never afterward recall. He
had a confused sense of having cried out a last unavailing
protest, faintly, inarticulately, like a man struggling
to make himself heard in a dream; then the room grew
dark about him, and in its stead he saw the old chapel
at Donnaz, with its dimly-gleaming shrine, and heard
the voice of the chaplain, harsh and yet strangely
shaken:—“My chief prayer for you
is that, should you be raised to this eminence, it
may be at a moment when such advancement seems to
thrust you in the dust.”
Odo lifted his head and saw de Crucis
standing alone before him.
“I am ready,” he said.