A visit to the refuge
Among the details of the Count of
Monte-Cristo’s plan for the rehabilitation of
Giovanni Massetti was a visit to Annunziata Solara
at the Refuge in Civita Vecchia. This visit
he made one morning in company with Zuleika and M.
and Mme. Morrel. Madame de Rancogne was delighted
to see the Count and cordially welcomed him and his
party.
“So this handsome young lady
is your daughter, Edmond,” she said, seating
herself beside Zuleika and taking her hand. “How
rapidly time flies. To-day we are in the midst
of the enjoyment of youth and to-morrow we are the
middle-aged people of our locality. Then in another
brief space we are the aged, after which comes death!”
Zuleika blushed at Helena’s
compliment to herself and looked at her curiously
while she delivered the closing part of her speech.
But the Countess of Monte-Cristo of the past was not
of a sombre nature, and, smiling, she added:
“The most dazzling and enchanting
side to the picture of youth is love! Has Zuleika,
Count, ever experienced the tender passion? It
will be exceedingly strange if she has not.”
Monte-Cristo’s daughter blushed again.
The Count smiled as he replied:
“Yes, Helena, Zuleika has experienced
the crowning passion of life. She is betrothed
to the Viscount Giovanni Massetti of Rome.”
“What!” exclaimed Mme.
de Rancogne, stricken with amazement and horror.
“That Giovanni Massetti who has been disowned
and disinherited by his father for the commission
of one of the vilest and most dishonorable crimes
known to the world?”
“The same!” answered Monte-Cristo, calmly.
Mme. de Rancogne was now more astounded than
ever.
“You know this man’s record
and yet you allow him to win your daughter! Count,
this is not like you! I cannot understand it!”
“Helena,” returned Monte-Cristo,
“this poor young man has been maligned, falsely
accused by persons inimical to him.”
The Superior of the Order of Sisters
of Refuge slowly but firmly shook her head, looking
the while at the Count and his daughter with an expression
of deep sympathy and compassion upon her noble countenance.
“You have been deceived, imposed
upon, Edmond,” she rejoined. “There
can be no doubt whatever as to the young man’s
terrible and damning guilt. Besides, my assertion
admits of immediate verification and proof. Massetti’s
unfortunate victim, the beautiful peasant girl Annunziata
Solara, is now an inmate of this institution whither
she dragged herself when overcome by shame and suffering
of the keenest description, seeking to find here an
asylum and a cloister where prying eyes could not
find her out and where the venomous tongue of scandal
could not tear open her wounds and set them to bleeding
afresh. She is a member of our Order, has devoted
the rest of her days to the achievement of good actions
and the raising up of the fallen and betrayed of her
sex. Annunziata Solara is here, almost within
sound of my voice, and will, though with reluctance
I am convinced, confirm every word I have uttered
relative to her cowardly and villainous abductor!”
“To hold an interview with this
unfortunate creature is what has brought me here with
Zuleika and my friends the Morrels,” said the
Count. “Of course, I wished to see you,
Helena, and enjoy once again the pleasure of your
society,” he added, his agreeable smile accompanying
his words.
The Superior bowed gracefully and arose.
“I can understand then your
anxiety to see and speak with Annunziata at the earliest
possible moment. Therefore, I will immediately
summon her to this apartment where the desired interview
can take place without delay.”
As she uttered these words Mme.
de Rancogne hastened from the salon, shortly afterwards
returning with the former flower-girl of the Piazza
del Popolo in Rome.
Annunziata stood for an instant in
the centre of the apartment, gazing inquiringly at
the visitors, for Mme. de Rancogne had not informed
her of their business, preferring that Monte-Cristo
in his wisdom and experience should conduct the interview
and develop his wishes in his own peculiar fashion.
The Count and Maximilian gazed at
old Pasquale Solara’s daughter with considerable
interest, but it was an interest altogether masculine.
Valentine also looked at her attentively, with that
searching, penetrating look one woman invariably casts
upon another. As for Zuleika, her eyes literally
devoured the peasant girl, flashing with what was
not exactly hatred for a rival but rather an instinctive
fear and distrust. She was well aware that Giovanni
had flirted with this girl, had been enthralled by
her physical charms, had almost yielded to her sway,
and she felt a peculiar interest in the creature who
had temporarily at least stolen the heart of her lover
from her.
Annunziata had been greatly benefited
by her sojourn in the calm and quiet Refuge.
She had by a great and heroic exercise of her strength
of mind put aside from her all thoughts of her lamentable
history, of her suddenly clouded and terrible past.
She had thoroughly abandoned herself to the discipline
and duties of the Sisters of the Order of Refuge, and
had sought with more or less success even to forget
herself. Her unruffled life, passed in the continual
doing of good, filled her with peacefulness and satisfaction,
and for the first time in a long while she fully realized
what it was to be perfectly contented and happy.
In consequence her physical condition had improved,
promptly responding to her mental ease. She had
recovered the beauty she had lost during her confinement
in the bandits’ hut and her subsequent wanderings
as a homeless, starving outcast. Her plumpness
had also returned, and her glance had all the brightness
and gayety that had formerly distinguished it.
Still a general refinement had taken possession of
her, and Annunziata was no longer the child of nature
she had been when she lived in the romantic cabin
in the forest.
Madame de Rancogne was the first to speak.
“Sister Annunziata,” she
said, “here are his Excellency the Count of
Monte-Cristo, Zuleika his daughter, and M. and Mme.
Morrel. Allow me to make you acquainted with
them and to assure you that they are true friends
of mine, firmly to be relied on. They wish to
interrogate you in regard to a certain matter.
You can answer their questions without fear and without
the slightest hesitation. The Count of Monte-Cristo
is the very soul of chivalry and honor!”
The Count bowed in acknowledgment
of this well-turned speech and, addressing Annunziata,
who, notwithstanding Mme. de Rancogne’s
assurances, began to tremble and feel distressed, said:
“Sister Annunziata, I wish to
ask you certain important questions as your Superior
has told you. I am pursuing an investigation that
promises to be fruitful in the very best results of
the highest possible good. Sister Annunziata,
I wish your aid in clearing the record of an innocent
man, one who has suffered as greatly as you have and
for whom you can, therefore, feel pity and sympathy.
I allude to the Viscount Giovanni Massetti.”
The girl gave a sudden start and turned ghastly pale.
“The Viscount Giovanni Massetti?”
repeated she, interrogatively, half doubting whether
she could have heard the name aright.
“Yes,” said Monte-Cristo,
“the Viscount Giovanni Massetti, who has been
falsely accused of having abducted you!”
“Falsely accused!” cried
Annunziata. “Why, Signor Count of Monte-Cristo,
the wretched young man is guilty of everything with
which he has been charged, whether the charges were
made by persons inimical to him or not!”
The visitors were still closely watching
the peasant girl. They had expected she would
say exactly what she had said and, therefore, were
not in the slightest degree astonished or disconcerted.
Her earnestness and the circumstance that she certainly
ought to know the identity of her abductor were well-calculated
to inspire confidence in her statements and to induce
a belief in the guilt of the young Viscount Massetti.
Monte-Cristo answered Annunziata firmly
but considerately.
“Sister,” he said, “notwithstanding
your belief that Massetti was your abductor, I know
the contrary to be true and have in my possession
indubitable proof of what I assert!”
Annunziata shook her head.
“The proof must, indeed, be
conclusive that would shake my belief!” she
said, with a slight trace of bitterness in her tone.
“It is conclusive!”
“But if young Massetti is innocent
of my abduction and of my poor brother’s murder,
who then, in Heaven’s name, is the guilty party?”
“Luigi Vampa!”
“Luigi Vampa?”
“Yes. He forced his way
into your cabin on that eventful night, abducted you
and afterwards shot your brother Lorenzo in the forest.”
“You say you have indubitable proof of this.
How was it obtained?”
“From a man named Peppino, who
overheard all the details of the nefarious bargain
and conspiracy entered into by the brigand chief and
old Pasquale Solara.”
“Pasquale Solara? My father! Oh!
Signor Count, what do you mean?”
“Be calm, my child, and listen
to me. Your father despicably sold you to Luigi
Vampa for a large sum of money and they together so
arranged the abduction that all suspicion would fall
with crushing force upon the shoulders of the young
Italian!”
Annunziata put her hand to her forehead
and stood still, rooted to the spot by horror and
amazement. She had no great love for her moody
and morose father, who never had done anything calculated
to inspire affection for him in the bosom of his daughter,
but, at the same time, it seemed incredible and horrible
to her that her parent should have been guilty of
this unnatural behavior towards her, of this unmanly
conduct with regard to an innocent guest who in all
confidence was partaking of the hospitality his roof
afforded. She looked at Monte-Cristo doubtingly
and then at Mme. de Rancogne, who was smiling
upon her encouragingly.
“As God is my judge,”
said she, solemnly, “I believe Giovanni Massetti
to have been my abductor!”
“Of course,” returned
Monte-Cristo, “but you are in error!”
“I saw his face! Surely
I ought to have been able to recognize that!”
“Certainly; but, I tell you,
everything was so arranged as to deceive you into
believing the young Italian the criminal, the despicable
wretch who had failed to respect a woman’s honor!”
“It may be as you assert, but
I cannot rid myself of my firm and deep-rooted belief
in the matter. I have forgiven the Viscount Massetti
for the foul wrong he did me, but to the latest day
of my earthly existence I shall believe him guilty!”
Suddenly fixing her eyes upon Zuleika
with a gaze of bewildering intensity, Annunziata stood
as if anxious to speak to her of some very important
topic.
Monte-Cristo’s daughter divined
this, and, going to the former flower-girl, said to
her:
“Is there anything I can do
for you, Sister Annunziata? If so you have only
to ask it!”
Annunziata laid her hand upon Zuleika’s
shoulder, asking, in a tone that notwithstanding all
her efforts to control it was not a little unsteady
and tremulous:
“Do you love him? do you love the
Viscount Massetti?”
“Yes,” answered Zuleika,
lowering her eyes beneath the intensity of the other’s
look.
“So I thought, but oh! daughter
of a noble family, beware of the perfidious young
man! He will not hesitate to deceive you as he
deceived me! Then he will leave you to your fate
as he left me to mine, and life-long sorrow and misery
will be your portion!”
Zuleika gazed pityingly at the peasant girl.
“You loved him once, did you not?” she
asked.
“Perhaps I did, perhaps I did
not!” replied Annunziata. “I do not
know! Certainly my heart spoke for him, but that
may have been only friendly esteem! However,
after the abduction and the horrible and disgraceful
events that followed it, I grew to hate him with the
bitterest description of hate! I have told you
that I have forgiven him and it was the truth.
I have forgiven and am endeavoring to forget him!”
There was a suspicious glitter in
the girl’s eyes as she spoke, something that
hinted of the presence of tears, but the glitter passed
away and, turning to Mme. de Rancogne, she said:
“Are your guests through with
questioning me, Madame the Superior?”
Mme. de Rancogne glanced inquiringly
at Monte-Cristo, who nodded his head affirmatively.
“The interview is concluded,”
replied Helena, “and now, if you so desire,
you can return to your apartment.”
Annunziata, more affected and agitated
by what she had just passed through than she cared
to admit, bowed to the visitors and the Superior and
hastily quitted the salon.
“Poor girl! she remains perfectly
unconvinced!” said Monte-Cristo, after her departure.
“And she is right!” rejoined
Mme. de Rancogne, warmly. “I have heard
all the details of her story and the chain of evidence
against the Viscount Giovanni Massetti is altogether
complete. To doubt his guilt would be sheer idiocy!”
After a sojourn of a few hours longer
at the Refuge, Monte-Cristo and his party returned
to Rome to go actively to work in Massetti’s
cause.