A Sylvan IDYL.
In the morning the Viscount Massetti’s
arm was found to be so much swollen and his wound
so painful that it was deemed advisable to send for
a physician, who resided in a neighboring hamlet not
more than a mile distant from the cabin of the Solaras.
The man of medicine was soon at Giovanni’s bedside.
After examining and dressing his hurt, he declared
that the patient ought not to be moved for at least
a week, a piece of intelligence at which the young
man inwardly rejoiced, notwithstanding all the torture
he suffered, for his sojourn involved nursing at the
hands of the beautiful Annunziata, who had already
shown him that she possessed tenderness and a kind
heart, as well as good looks.
Esperance held a conference with his
friend after the physician’s departure to decide
upon what should be done. He proposed to go at
once to Rome and acquaint the Viscount’s family
with what had happened and Giovanni’s condition,
but the young man firmly opposed this plan, declaring
that he would be well in a few days at most and protesting
that informing his relatives of his situation would
involve explanations he had no desire to give.
Giovanni also begged Esperance to remain with him
and give no sign as to their place of retreat; so earnestly
did he solicit these favors that the son of Monte-Cristo,
much against his will and with many forebodings, finally
consented to grant them.
Pasquale Solara returned home late
on the day following the arrival of the strangers
at his hut. He was an old, but sturdy shepherd,
whose rough, sunburned visage spoke of exposure to
the weather and hard toil. He frequently was
absent for days and nights in succession, absences
that he never explained and about which his son and
daughter did not dare to question him, for Pasquale
was a harsh man, who grew angry at the slightest pretext
and was inclined to be severe with all who sought
to pry into his affairs. He expressed great fear
of the bandits who infested the vicinity of Rome and
especially of Luigi Vampa’s band, but those
who knew him best shook their heads doubtingly, and,
though they did not say so, it was plainly to be seen
that they deemed this fear merely assumed for purposes
of his own. At any rate, it was a significant
fact that Pasquale was never disturbed in his wanderings,
while the brigands always left his dwelling and its
inmates unmolested.
The old shepherd frowned darkly when
informed by his children that they had given shelter
to a couple of travelers, one of whom had been wounded
in a fight with a brigand, but he said nothing and
appeared disposed to accept the situation without
even a grumble. He did not, however, enter the
chamber in which Giovanni lay and avoided coming in
contact with Esperance, who caught but a passing glimpse
of him ere he departed again on another expedition,
which he did after a stay of only half an hour at
his cabin.
The young peasant and Esperance soon
became quite friendly, indulging in many a ramble
in the forest and beside the gurgling brook. The
peasant’s name was Lorenzo, and he appeared
to lead a free life, totally unencumbered with avocation
of any kind, save occasionally looking after a few
sheep that never strayed far from the banks of the
little stream.
Annunziata for the time abandoned
her visits to Rome, installing herself as Giovanni’s
nurse. She was almost constantly beside him, and
her presence and care were more potent medicines than
any the physician administered. Her smile seemed
to exercise a bewitching effect upon the young Viscount,
while her voice sounded in his ravished ear like the
sweetest music. The handsome girl was the very
picture of perfect health, and her well-developed
form had all the charm of early maturity, added to
youthful freshness and grace. She wore short skirts,
and her shapely limbs were never encumbered with stockings,
while her feet were invariably bare. A low, loose
body with short sleeves displayed her robust neck
and shoulders, and plump, dimpled arms that would have
been the envy of a duchess. Her hands as well
as her feet were not small and the sun had given them
a liberal coat of brown, but they were neatly turned
and attractive, while her short, taper fingers were
tipped with pink, carefully trimmed nails. Altogether
she looked like the spirit of the place, a delicious
wood nymph as enchanting as any a poet’s fancy
ever created and yet a substantial, mortal reality
well calculated to fire a man’s blood and set
his brain in a whirl. If she had appeared beautiful
in Rome, amid the aristocratic fashion queens of the
Piazza del Popolo, she seemed a thousand-fold
more delightful and fascinating in her humble forest
home, where she shook off all restraint and showed
herself as she really was, a bright, innocent child
of nature, as pure as the breath of heaven and as
free from guile as the honey-fed butterfly of the
summer sunshine.
The more Giovanni saw of her the more
he came under the dominion of her irresistible charms,
the empire of her physical attractiveness. Gradually
he mended, and as his wound healed his strength returned.
At length, towards the close of the week, he was able
to quit his bed and sit in a large chair by the window
of his room. It had been agreed upon between
him and Esperance that, during their sojourn at the
Solara cabin, they should be known respectively as
Antonio Valpi and Guiseppe Sagasta, and already Annunziata
had bestowed upon her patient the friendly and familiar
diminutive of Tonio, a name to which he answered with
wildly beating heart and eyes that spoke volumes.
By means of shrewdly managed questions
the young Viscount had ascertained that the flower-girl
had no lover, that her breast had never owned the
tender passion, and this intelligence added fuel to
the flame that was consuming him. It is not to
be supposed that Annunziata was ignorant of the strong
impression she had made upon her youthful and handsome
patient. She was perfectly aware of it and secretly
rejoiced at the manifest exhibition of the power of
her charms. Perhaps she did not as yet love Giovanni,
perhaps it was merely the general physical attraction
of a woman towards a man, or it might have been that
innate spice of coquetry common to every female, but
the fact remained that she tacitly encouraged the
young Viscount in his ardent attentions to her.
She, moreover, lured and inflamed him in such a careless,
innocent way that she acquired additional piquancy
thereby. Had Annunziata been a designing woman
of the world intent upon trapping a wealthy lover,
instead of a pure and artless country maid totally
unconscious of the harm she was working, she could
not have played her game with more effect. Giovanni
had become altogether her slave. He hung upon
her smiles, drank her words and could hardly restrain
himself in her presence. No shipwrecked mariner
ever more greedily devoured with his dazzled eyes
the fateful loreley of a rocky, deserted coast than
he did her. Had she been his social equal, had
her intelligence and education matched her personal
beauty, he would have forgotten Zuleika, thrown himself
impetuously at her feet and solicited her hand.
As it was, while Monte-Cristo’s daughter possessed
his entire heart, Annunziata Solara enslaved his senses.
She received his approaches as a matter-of-course,
without diffidence, without a blush. His gallant
speeches pleased her, she did not know why. So
thoroughly unsuspicious was she, that she failed to
notice his language was not that of the untutored
peasant he claimed to be, that his bearing as well
as his words indicated a degree of culture and refinement
far above his assumed station. She was dazzled,
charmed by him as the bird is by the glittering serpent
with its wicked, fascinating eyes. She thought
of nothing but the present and its novel joys.
She had never heeded the future she did
not heed it now.
One morning as she sat at his side
by the open window, through which stole the balmy
air of the forest laden with the intoxicating perfume
of a thousand wild, intensely sweet flowers, Giovanni
suddenly took her brown hand, covering it with passionate
kisses. The girl did not resist, did not withdraw
her hand from his; she did not even tremble, though
a slight glow came into her cheeks, making her look
like a very Circe.
“Annunziata,” said Giovanni,
in a low voice scarcely above a whisper, “do
you care for me?”
“Care for you, Tonio?”
replied the girl, gazing sweetly into his glowing
and agitated countenance. “Oh! yes!
I care a great deal for you!”
He threw his arm about her neck, and,
as his hand lay upon her shapely shoulder, a magnetic
thrill shot through him like a sudden shock from a
powerful electric battery. Annunziata did not
seek to withdraw herself from his warm embrace, and
he drew her to him with tightening clasp until her
full, palpitating bosom rested against his breast.
Her tempting red lips, slightly parted, were upturned;
he placed his upon them in a long, lingering, delirious
kiss. Then the color deepened in her cheeks,
and she gently disengaged herself. She did not,
however, avert her eyes, but gazed into his with a
look of mute inquiry. All this was new to her,
and the more delicious because of its entire novelty.
“Neither my father, nor my brother,
nor my dead mother ever kissed me like that!”
she said, artlessly.
Giovanni was enraptured; the girl’s
innocence was absolutely marvelous; he had never dreamed
that such innocence existed upon earth. Was she
really what she appeared?
“Annunziata,” he said,
abruptly, his heart beating furiously and his breath
coming thick and fast, “you have never experienced
love, or you would know the meaning of that kiss!”
“Love?” answered the girl,
opening her large, lustrous eyes widely. “Oh!
yes, I have felt love. I love my father and Lorenzo,
I love everybody!”
“But not as you would love a
young man, who would throw himself at your pretty
feet and pour out the treasures of his heart to you!”
“No young man has ever done
that,” said Annunziata, smiling and nestling
closer to him.
“But some one will before long,
perhaps before many minutes! How would you like
me to be that one!” cried the Viscount, in his
headlong fashion.
“I cannot tell,” answered the girl, “I
do not know!”
“Then let me try the experiment!”
said Giovanni, rising from his chair and sinking on
his knees in front of her. “Annunziata,
I love you!”
The girl stroked his hair and then
passed her taper fingers through his flowing locks.
She was silent and seemed to be thinking. Her
bosom heaved just a little more than usual, and the
glow on her cheeks became a trifle more intense.
Giovanni, yet kneeling, seized her hand, holding it
in a crushing clasp.
“Do you hear me?” he cried,
impatiently. “Do you understand me?
I love you!”
“You love me, Tonio?”
replied the girl, slowly. “Well, it is only
natural! Every young man must love some young
girl some time or other, and I think I
think I love you a little!”
“Think!” said Giovanni, amazed. “Do
you not know it?”
“Perhaps!” answered Annunziata, still
fondling his hair.
Giovanni threw his arms about her
waist, an ample, healthful waist, free from the restraints
of corsets and the cramping devices of fashion.
As he did so the sound of footsteps was heard without,
and he had scarcely time to leap to his feet when
Esperance entered the room.
Massetti was confused and his friend
noticed the fact. He also remarked that Annunziata
was slightly flushed and seemed to have experienced
some agreeable agitation. Esperance instantly
leaped to a conclusion. Giovanni’s flirtation
with the fair flower-girl had gone a trifle too far,
had assumed a serious aspect. He would interfere,
he would remonstrate with him. It might not yet
be too late after all. Annunziata was a pure
and innocent creature, unused to the ways of the world
and incapable of suspecting the wickedness of men.
She was on the point of falling into a deadly snare,
on the point of being wrecked upon the most dangerous
shoal life presented. Her very purity and innocence
would make her an easy victim. Giovanni was not
wicked; he was merely young, the prey of the irresistible
passion of youth. Annunziata’s surpassing
loveliness had fired his blood, had driven him to the
verge of a reckless action, a crime against this beautiful
girl that money could not repair. This crime
should not be committed, if he could help it, and
he would risk the Viscount’s friendship to save
him from himself. Giovanni could not marry the
humble peasant girl; he should not mar her future.
When Esperance came into the chamber,
his presence recalled Annunziata to herself and also
dampened Massetti’s ardor. The girl arose
and, smiling at Esperance, tripped blushingly away.
Giovanni was flushed and somewhat angry at the intrusion
at the critical moment of his love making. Espérance’s
face was grave; he felt all the weight of the
responsibility he was about to assume.
“Giovanni,” said he, in
a measured tone, “I do not blame you for being
fascinated by a pretty, amiable girl like Annunziata
Solara, far from it. She is certainly a paragon
of beauty, a model of rustic grace, a very tempting
morsel of rural virtue and innocence. She is well
fitted to turn the head of almost any young man I
freely acknowledge that. It is pardonable to
wish to enjoy her society nay, a harmless
flirtation with her is, perhaps, not censurable; but
that is the utmost length to which a man of honor
can go! Remember she has a reputation to lose,
a heart to break!”
“What do you mean by that long
sermon?” demanded the Viscount, setting his
teeth and frowning savagely.
“I mean that you have been making
love to this poor girl, that you have been seeking
to requite her care of you in a manner but little to
your credit!”
“I owe you my life, Esperance,”
replied Massetti, “but even my gratitude will
not shield you from my fury, if you step between me
and Annunziata Solara!”
“You mean to pursue her then,
to soil her name, to blast her future, for surely
you are not courting her with marriage as your object?”
Giovanni flushed scarlet at this open accusation.
“I mean to pursue her yes!
What my object in the matter is concerns only myself;
you have nothing whatever to do with it!” he
exclaimed, hotly.
“But I have a great deal to
do with it!” replied Esperance, firmly.
“You shall not pursue Annunziata Solara to her
destruction! Between her good name and your reckless
intentions I will oppose a barrier you cannot surmount myself!”
“Do you mean to champion her
to the extent of challenging me?” demanded Massetti,
fairly foaming with ire.
“If you persist in your nefarious
designs, yes!” answered the son of Monte-Cristo,
with equal warmth. “You are my friend, my
friend of friends, Giovanni Massetti, but the instant
you menace that innocent girl’s honor my friendship
for you crumbles to dust and you become my deadly
foe! Take your choice. Either leave this
hospitable cabin with me as soon as the state of your
wound will permit you to do so, meanwhile respecting
Annunziata Solara as you would your own sister, or
meet me pistol in hand on the field of honor!
Take your choice, I say! What is your decision?”
“I will not give up Annunziata!”
“Then you must fight!”
“I shall not hesitate!”
“So be it! My life against
yours! I will defend this poor girl’s honor
to the last drop of my blood!”
“When shall we fight?”
“To-morrow at dawn.”
“Where?”
“In the clearing beyond the
chestnut copse on the further side of the brook.
There is no need of witnesses; this matter is between
us and us alone!”
“So much the better, for it
will be a duel to the death! I cannot as yet
hold my right arm aloft long enough to fight with it,
but I will make my left hand serve!” Then, as
a sudden thought struck him, Massetti added:
“Do you propose to betray me, to carry your story
to Annunziata and her brother?”
Esperance surveyed his companion with
intense scorn flashing from his eyes.
“I am no traitor!” he
said, coldly, and, turning, quitted the apartment.