Veronica was awake early in the May
morning, and looked out again upon the great valley
she had seen at sunset. It was all mist and light,
without distinct outline. A fresh breeze blew
into her face as she stood at the open window, and
the sun was yet on the southeast wall, so that she
stood in the clear, bluish shadow which high buildings
cast only in the morning.
She had slept soundly without dreams,
and she wondered how she could have ever glanced last
night towards the place in the corner where the trap-door
was hidden under her toilet table, or how she could
have felt herself lonely and not quite safe, in her
own castle, with a dozen of her own people, when she
had never been afraid in the Palazzo Macomer.
She pushed back her brown hair, a little impatiently,
and laughed as she turned to Elettra.
“We are well here, Excellency,”
said the maid, with a smile of satisfaction.
She rarely spoke unless Veronica addressed
her, and was never a woman of many words.
“And you saw no ghosts?” Veronica laughed.
“I am afraid of ghosts that wear felt slippers,”
answered Elettra.
An hour later Veronica sent for Don
Teodoro, and they went over the castle together.
He led her first to the high dungeon on the north side.
The natural rock sprang up at that end, and some of
the steps were cut in it. At the top, the tower
was round, with a high parapet, and an extension on
one side, all filled with earth and planted with cabbages
and other green things.
“The under-steward had a little
vegetable garden here,” said Don Teodoro.
“I suppose that you will plant flowers.
Will you look over the parapet on that side?”
Veronica trod the soft earth daintily
and reached the wall. She glanced over it, and
then drew a deep breath of surprise. Below her
was a sheer fall of a thousand feet, to the bottom
of a desolate ravine that ran up to northward in an
incredibly steep ascent.
Then they went into the ancient prison,
which was a round, vaulted chamber, shaped like the
inside of the sharp end of an eggshell, with one small
grated window, three times a man’s height from
the stone floor. The little iron door had huge
bolts and locks, and might have been four or five
hundred years old. On the stone walls, men who
had been imprisoned there had chipped out little crosses,
and made initials, and rough dates in the fruitless
attempts to commemorate their obscure suffering.
Veronica and Don Teodoro descended
again, and he led her through many strange places,
dimly lighted by small windows piercing ten feet of
masonry, and through the enormous hall which had been
the guard-room or barrack in old days, and had served
as a granary since then, and up and down dark stairs,
through narrow ways, out upon jutting bastions, down
and up, backwards and forwards, as it seemed to her,
till she could only guess at the direction in which
she was going, by the glimpses of distant mountain
and valley as she passed the irregularly placed windows.
Several of her people followed her, and one went before
with a huge bunch of ancient keys, opening and shutting
all manner of big and little doors before her and
after her. Now and then one of the men in green
coats lighted a lantern and showed her where steep
black steps led down into dark cellars, and vaults,
and underground places.
She saw it all, but she was glad to
get back to the room she already loved best, from
which the balcony outside the windows looked down upon
the valley.
And there she began at once to install
herself, causing her books to be unpacked and arranged,
as well as the few objects familiar to her eyes, which
she had brought with her. Among these was the
photograph of Bosio Macomer. Those of Gregorio
and Matilde had disappeared. She hesitated, as
she held the picture in her hand, as to whether she
should keep it in her bedroom, or in the sitting-room,
in which she meant chiefly to live, and she looked
at it with sad eyes. She decided that it should
be in the sitting-room. Where everything was
hers, she had a right to show what had been all but
quite hers at the last. The six brass candlesticks
were taken away, and Bosio’s photograph was
set upon the long, low mantelpiece. His death
had after all been more a surprise, a horror, a disappointment,
than the wound it might have been if she had really
loved him, and it is only the wound that leaves a scar.
The momentary shock is presently forgotten when the
young nerves are rested and the vision of a great
moment fades to the half-tone of the general past.
Between her present, too, and the night of Bosio’s
death, had come the attempt upon her own life, and
all the sudden change that had followed the catastrophe.
She was too brave to realize, even now, that she might
have died at Matilde’s hands. She had to
go over the facts to make herself believe that she
had been almost killed. But the whole affair
had brought a revolution into her life, since Bosio
had been gone.
Another companionship had taken the
place of his, so that she hardly missed him now.
She would miss Gianluca’s letters far more than
Bosio, if they should suddenly stop, and the mere
thought that the correspondence might be broken off
gave her a sharp little pain. The idea crossed
her mind while she was arranging her writing-table
near her favourite window, for all writing seemed
to be connected with Gianluca, so that she could not
imagine passing more than a day or two without setting
down something on paper which he was to read, and to
answer. To lose that close intimacy of thought
would be to lose much.
But Gianluca had written on the morning
of her departure, and before Veronica had half finished
what she was doing, one of her women brought her his
letter, for the post came in at about midday.
It came alone, for Bianca had not written yet, and
Veronica’s correspondence was not large.
She had not even thought of ordering a newspaper to
be sent to her. Her work and occupation were
to be in Muro, and she cared very little about what
might happen anywhere else. She broke the seal
and read the letter eagerly.
It was like most of his letters at
first, being full of matters about which he had talked
with her, and written in the graceful way which was
especially his and which had so much charm for her.
But towards the end his courage must have failed him
a little, for there were sad words and one or two
phrases that had in them something touching and tender
to which she was not accustomed. He did not tell
her that he was ill and that he feared lest he might
never see her again, for he was far too careful as
yet of hinting at the truth she would not understand.
They were very little things that told her of his
sadness an unfinished sentence ending in
a dash, the fall of half a dozen harmonious words
that were like a beautiful verse and vaguely reminded
her of Leopardi’s poetry small touches
here and there which had either never slipped from
his pen before, or which she had never noticed.
They pleased her. She would not
have been a human woman if she had not been a little
glad to be missed for herself, even though the writing
was to continue. She read the last part of the
letter over three times, the rest only twice, and
then she laid it in an empty drawer of her table,
rather tenderly, to be the first of many. That
should be Gianluca’s especial place.
Amidst her first arrangements for
her own comfort, she did not forget what she looked
upon as her chief work, and before that day was over
she had begun what was to be a systematic improvement
of Muro. Direct and practical, with a sense beyond
her years, she did not hesitate. The first step
was to clean the little town and pave the streets.
The next to visit and examine the dwellings.
“The place shall be clean,”
said Veronica to the steward, who stood before her
table, receiving her orders.
“But, Excellency, how can it
be clean when there are pigs everywhere?” inquired
the man, astonished at her audacity.
“There shall be no more pigs
in Muro,” answered the young princess. “The
people shall choose as many trustworthy old men and
boys as are necessary to look after the creatures.
They shall be kept at night in some barn or old building
a mile or two from here, and they shall be fed there,
or pastured there. I will pay what it costs.”
“Excellency, it is impossible!
There will be a revolution!” The steward held
up his hands in amazement.
“Very well, then. Let us
have a revolution. But do not tell me that what
I order is impossible. I will have no impossibilities.
The town belongs to me, and it shall be inhabited
by human beings, and not by pigs. If you make
difficulties, you may go. I can find people to
carry out my orders. Begin and clean the streets
to-day. Take as many hands as you need and pay
them full labourer’s wages, but see that they
work. Make a list of the pigs and their owners.
Decide where you will keep them. Hire the swineherds.
If I find one pig in Muro a week from to-day, and if,
in fine weather, I cannot walk dry shod where I please,
I will take another steward. I intend to remit
a quarter of all the rents this year. You may
tell the people so. You may go and see about these
things at once, but let me hear no more of impossibilities.
Only children say that things are impossible.”
The man understood that the old order
had departed and that Veronica Serra meant to be obeyed
without question, and he never again raised his voice
to suggest that there might be what he called a revolution
if her orders were carried out.
As for the people of Muro, they were
dumb with astonishment. They had a municipality,
of course, a syndic, and a secretary, and certain head
men, to whose authority they were accustomed to appeal
in everything generally against the extortion
of the stewards who had obeyed Gregorio Macomer.
But before Veronica had been in Muro ten days, the
municipality was nothing more than the shadow of a
name. The syndic was her tenant, and bowed down
to her, and the rest of the illiterate officials followed
his lead. It was natural enough; for they all
benefited by the lowering of the rents, and they were
quick to see that she meant to spend money in the
place, which would be to the advantage of every one
before long.
It was she who made the revolution,
and not they. Before the first week was out the
pigs were gone, and she walked dry shod over the stones
from the castle to the entrance of the village.
In less than a month the principal way was levelled
and half paved, and masons were everywhere at work
repairing those of the houses which were in most immediate
need of improvement.
“You are Christians,”
she said to a little crowd that gathered round her
one day, while she was watching the setting-up of a
new door. “You shall live like Christians.
When you have been clean for a month, you will never
wish to be dirty again.”
“That is true,” answered
an old man, shaking his head thoughtfully. “But,
in the name of God, who has ever thought of these things?
It needed this angel from Paradise.”
Veronica laughed. They were docile
people, and they soon found out that the young princess
was as absolute a despot in character as ever terrorized
Rome or ruled the Russias. At the merest suggestion
of opposition, the small aquiline nose seemed to quiver,
the little head was thrown back, the brown eyes gleamed,
the delicate gloved hand either closed upon itself
quickly or went out in a gesture of command.
But then, they sometimes saw another
look in her face, though not often, and perhaps it
was less natural to her though not less true to her
nature. They had seen the brown eyes soften wonderfully
and the small hands do very tender things, now and
then, for poor children and suffering women when,
no one else was at hand to give aid. Yet, at most
times, she was quiet, cheerful, natural, for it happened
more and more rarely that any one opposed her will.
She became to them the very incarnation
of power on earth. She would have been thought
rich in any country; to their utter wretchedness her
wealth was fabulous beyond bounds of fairy tale.
Most persons would have admitted that she was wonderfully
practical and showed a great deal of common sense
in what she did; to her own people she seemed preternaturally
wise, only to be compared with Providence for her
foresight, and much more occupied with their especial
welfare than Providence could be expected to be, considering
the extent of the world. She was endlessly charitable
to women and children and old men, but to those who
could work she was inexorable. She paid well,
but she insisted that the work should be done honestly.
Some of the younger ones murmured at her hardness
when they had tried to deceive her.
“Would you take false money
from me?” she asked. “Why should I
take false work from you? You have good work
to sell, and I have good money to give you for it.
I do not cheat you. Do not try to cheat me.”
They laughed shamefacedly and worked
better the next time, for they were not without common
sense, either. Doubtless, she attempted and expected
more than was possible at first, but she had Don Teodoro
at her elbow, and he was able to direct her energy,
though he could not have moderated it. He found
it hard, indeed, to keep pace with her swift advances
towards the civilization of Muro, and he was quite
incapable of entering into the boldness of some of
her generalizations, which, to tell the truth, were
youthful enough when she first expressed her ideas
to him. But while one of his two great passions
was learning, the other was charity, in that simple
form which gives all it has to any one who seems to
be in trouble the charity that is universal,
and easily imposed upon, and that exists spontaneously
and, as it were, for its own sake, in certain warm-hearted
people an indiscriminate love of giving
to the poor, the overflow of a heart so full of kindness
that it would be kind to a withering flower or a half-dead
tree, rather than not expend itself at all. And
so, seeing the great things that were done by Veronica
in Muro, and secretly giving of his very little where
she gave very much, Don Teodoro grew daily to be more
and more happy in the satisfaction of his strongest
instinct; and little by little he, also, came to look
upon his princess as the incarnation of a good power
come to illuminate his darkness and to lift his people
out of degradation to human estate.
Veronica was happy too. There
is a sort of exhilaration and daily surprise in the
first use of real power in any degree, and she enjoyed
her own sensations to the fullest extent. When
she was alone, she wrote about them to Gianluca, giving
him what was almost a daily chronicle of her new life,
and waiting anxiously for the answers to her letters
which came with almost perfect regularity for some
time after her own arrival at Muro.
They pleased her, too, though the
note of sadness was more accentuated in them, as time
went on and spring ran into summer. He had hoped,
perhaps, that she might tire of her solitude and come
down to Naples, if only for a few days; or at least,
that something might happen to break what promised
to be a long separation. He longed for a sight
of her, and said so now and then, for letter-writing
could not fill up the aching emptiness she had left
in his already empty life. He had not her occupations
and interests to absorb his days and make each hour
seem too short, and, moreover, he loved her, whereas
she was not at all in love with him.
Then, a little later, there was a
tone of complaint in what he wrote, which suddenly
irritated her. He told her that his life was dreary
and tiresome, and that the people about him did not
understand him. She answered that he should occupy
himself, that he should find something to do and do
it, and that she herself never had time enough in the
day for all she undertook. It was the sort of
letter which a very young woman will sometimes write
to a man whose existence she does not understand,
a little patronizing in tone and superior with the
self-assurance of successful and unfeeling youth.
She even pointed out to him that there were several
things which he did not know, but which he might learn
if he chose, all of which was undoubtedly true, though
it was not at all what he wanted. For him, however,
the whole letter was redeemed by a chance phrase at
the end of it. She carelessly wrote that she wished
he were at Muro to see what she had done in a short
time. He knew that the words meant nothing, but
he lived on them for a time, because she had written
them to him. His next letter was more cheerful.
He repeated her own words, as though wishing her to
see how much he valued them, saying that he wished
indeed that he were at Muro, to see what she had accomplished.
To some extent, he added, the fulfilment of the wish
only depended on herself, for in the following week
he was going with his father and mother and all the
family to spend a month in a place they had not far
from Avellino, and that, as she knew, was not at an
impossible distance from Muro. But of course he
could not intrude alone upon her solitude.
When she next wrote, Veronica made
no reference to this hint of his. The man was
not the same person to her as the correspondent, and
she very much preferred exchanging letters with him
to any conversation. She did not forget what
he had said, however, and when she supposed that the
Della Spina family had gone to the country she addressed
her letters to him near Avellino. He had not
yet gone, however, and he soon wrote from Naples complaining
that he had no news from her.
On the following day Veronica was
surprised to receive a letter addressed in a hand
she did not know. It was from Taquisara, and she
frowned a little angrily as she glanced at the signature
before reading the contents. It began in the
formal Italian manner, “Most gentle
Princess,” and it ended with an equally
formal assurance of respectful devotion. But
the matter of the letter showed little formality.
“I have hesitated long before
writing to you” it said “both
because I offended you at our last meeting and because
I have not been sure, until to-day, about the principal
matter of which I have to speak. In the first
place, I beg you to forgive me for having spoken to
you as I did at the Princess Corleone’s house.
I am not skilful at saying disagreeable things gracefully.
I was in earnest, and I meant what I said, but I am
sincerely sorry that I should have said it rudely.
I earnestly beg you to pardon the form which my intention
took.
“Secondly, I wish very much
that I might see you. I fear that you would not
receive me, and from the ordinary point of view of
society you would be acting quite rightly, since you
are really living alone. The world, however,
is quite sure that you have a companion, an elderly
gentlewoman who is a distant relation of yours.
It will never be persuaded that this good lady does
not exist, because it cannot possibly believe that
you would have the audacity to live alone in your
own house.
“I wish to see you, because
my friend Gianluca cannot live much longer. You
may remember that he walked with difficulty, and even
used a stick, before you left Naples. He can
now hardly walk at all. According to the doctors,
he has a mortal disease of the spine and cannot live
more than two or three months. Perhaps I am telling
you this very roughly, but it cannot pain you as much
as it does me, and you ought to know it. He is
not the man to let any one tell you of his state, and
I have taken it upon myself to write to you without
asking his opinion. I told you once what you
were to him. All that I told you is ten times
more true, now. Between you and life, he would
not choose, if he could; but he is losing both.
As a Christian woman, in commonest kindness, if you
can see him before he dies, do so. And you can,
if you will. He was to have been moved to the
place near Avellino a few days ago, but he was too
ill. They all leave next week, unless he should
be worse. You are strong and well, and it would
not be much for you to make that short journey, considering
Gianluca’s condition.
“I shall not tell him that I
have written to you, and I leave to you to let him
know of my writing, or not, as you think fit.”
Here followed the little final phrase
and the signature. Veronica let the sheet fall
upon her table, and gazed long and steadily at the
tapestry on the wall opposite her. Her hands clasped
each other suddenly and then fell apart loosely and
lay idle before her. Her head sank forward a
little, but her eyes still held the point on which
they were looking.
In the first shock of knowing that
Gianluca was to die, she felt as though she had lost
a part of him already, and something she dearly valued
seemed to go out of her life. Her instinct was
not to go to him and see him while she could, but
to look forward to the blankness that would be before
her when he should be gone. Something of him was
an integral part of her life. But there was something
of him for which she felt that she hardly cared at
all.
She was probably selfish in the common
sense of that ill-used word. It is generally
applied to persons who do not love those that love
them, but are glad of their existence, as it were,
for the sake of something they receive and perhaps
return as Veronica did. But she did
not ask herself questions, for she had never had the
smallest inclination to analysis or introspection.
It was as clear to her as ever that she did not love
Gianluca in the least, but that she should find it
hard to be happy without him. She had been nearer
to loving poor Bosio than Gianluca, though the truth
was that she had never loved any one yet.
But she pitied Gianluca with all her
heart. That was the most she could do for that
part of him which was nothing to her, and her face
grew very sad as she thought of what he might be suffering,
and of how hard it must be to die so young, with all
the world before one. She could not imagine herself
as ever dying.
She sat still a long time and tried
to think of what she should do. But her thoughts
wandered, and presently she found that she was asking
herself whether it were her destiny to be fatal to
those who loved her. But the mere idea of fatality
displeased her as something which could oppose her,
and perhaps defy her. After all, Gianluca might
not die. She looked over Taquisara’s letter
again.
He was a man who meant what he said,
and he wrote in earnest. There was something
in him that appealed to her, as like to like.
He had been rude and had spoken almost insolently,
and even now he dared to write that he meant what
he had said and only regretted the words he had used.
For them, indeed, his apology was sufficient for
the rest, she was undecided. She went on to what
referred to Gianluca, and her face grew grave and
sad again. It must be true.
She laid the letter in the drawer
where she kept Gianluca’s, but in a separate
corner, by itself. Then she took up her pen to
write to Gianluca, intending to take up the daily
written conversation at the point where she had last
broken off, on the previous evening. With an
effort, she wrote a few words, and then stopped short
and leaned back in her chair, staring at the tapestry.
It was a grim farce to write about her streets and
her houses and her charities to a man who was dying and
who loved her. Yet she could not speak of his
illness without letting him know that Taquisara had
informed her of it. She tried to go on, and stopped
again. Poor Gianluca he was so young!
All at once her pity overflowed unexpectedly, and
she felt the tears in her eyes and on her cheeks.
She brushed them away, and left her letter unfinished.
Half an hour later she was with Don
Teodoro, busy about her usual occupations and plans.
But she was absent-minded, and matters did not go
well. She left him earlier than usual and shut
herself up in her own room. She had not been
there a quarter of an hour, however, before she felt
stifled and oppressed by the close solitude, and she
came out again and climbed to the top of the dungeon
tower, where the little plot of cabbages had been
converted into a tiny flower garden, and the roses
were all in bloom.
With the rising of her pity had come
the desire to see Gianluca and talk with him.
She could not tell why she wished it so much, after
having felt so horribly indifferent at first, but
the wish was there, and like all her wishes, now,
it must be satisfied without delay. She was supremely
powerful in her little mountain town, and on the whole
she was using her power very wisely. But her
dominant character was rapidly growing despotic, and
it irritated her strangely to want anything which
she could not have. She had almost forgotten that
society had any general claims upon people who chance
to belong to it, and the sudden recollection that
if she went down to Naples, she could not go and see
Gianluca, even under his father’s and mother’s
roof, and talk with him if she pleased, was indescribably
offensive to her over-grown sense of independence.
Nor could she invite herself to Avellino to pay a visit
to Gianluca’s mother. She understood enough
of the customs of the world with which she had really
lived so little, to know that such a thing was impossible.
If she could not see him in Naples
and could not go to see him at his father’s
place, he must come to Muro. It flashed upon her
that she had a right to ask the whole Della Spina
family to spend a week with her if she chose.
They might think it extraordinary if they pleased it
would be an invitation, after all, and the worst that
could happen would be that the old Duchessa might
refuse it. But Veronica never anticipated refusals.
As for Gianluca, if he were well enough
to be taken to Avellino, he could be brought to Muro.
A journey by carriage was no more tiring than one
by railway, and the change and excitement would perhaps
do him good. The more she thought of the possibility
of her plan as compared with the impracticable nature
of any other which suggested itself, the more she
looked forward with pleasure to seeing him and
the more clearly it seemed to her an act of kindness
to give him an opportunity of seeing her.
And between her réflexions, strengthening
her intention and hastening her action, there returned
the real and deep sorrow she felt at the thought of
losing her best friend, and the genuine pity she now
felt for him, apart from the selfish consideration
which had come first.
In the singular and anomalous position
she had created for herself, there was no one whom
she could consult. As for asking Don Teodoro’s
opinion, it never entered her head, for it would have
been impossible to do so without confiding to him
the nature of her friendship with Gianluca. She
would not do that now. She had first told Bianca
Corleone frankly enough of the exchange of letters,
but she herself had not then known what that secret
friendship was to mean in her life, nor how she and
Gianluca would almost conceal it from each other.
Besides, she was accustomed now to impose her will
upon the old priest as she imposed it upon every one
in her surroundings. When she asked his advice,
it was about matters of expediency, and that happened
every day, but she would not have thought of taking
counsel with him about any action which concerned
herself. If society chanced to be in opposition
to her, society must either give way or make the best
of it, or break with her. But it was certainly
within the bounds of social tradition and custom that
she should ask such of her friends as she chose, to
stay with her under her own roof.
One small practical difficulty met
her, and it was characteristic of her that it was
the only one to which she paid any attention after
she had made up her mind. She could have found
fifty rooms for guests in the castle, but there were
certainly not three which were now sufficiently furnished
to be habitable as bedrooms. She had changed the
face of the town in three months, but she had not
at all improved her own establishment. There
were foresters and men occupied upon the estates who
came and went as their work required, and there were
generally four or five of them in the house; but she
was served by women, and there was not a man-servant
in the place. She had only five horses in her
stable. She glanced at the black frock she wore
and smiled, realizing for the first time what Elettra
had meant by protesting against her wearing it any
longer.
But none of the details were of a
nature to check such a woman in anything she really
wished. If she chose to be waited on by women
and to wear old clothes, that was her affair and concerned
no one else. As for a little furniture more or
less, she could get all she wanted from Naples in
three or four days.