THE AVENGER’S SECRET.
It was the first time that Baldassarre
had been in the Piazza del Duomo since
his escape. He had a strong desire to hear the
remarkable monk preach again, but he had shrunk from
reappearing in the same spot where he had been seen
half naked, with neglected hair, with a rope round
his neck in the same spot where he had
been called a madman. The feeling, in its freshness,
was too strong to be overcome by any trust he had in
the change he had made in his appearance; for when
the words “some madman, surely,”
had fallen from Tito’s lips, it was not their
baseness and cruelty only that had made their viper
sting it was Baldassarre’s instantaneous
bitter consciousness that he might be unable to prove
the words false. Along with the passionate desire
for vengeance which possessed him had arisen the keen
sense that his power of achieving the vengeance was
doubtful. It was as if Tito had been helped by
some diabolical prompter, who had whispered Baldassarre’s
saddest secret in the traitor’s ear. He
was not mad; for he carried within him that piteous
stamp of sanity, the clear consciousness of shattered
faculties; he measured his own feebleness. With
the first movement of vindictive rage awoke a vague
caution, like that of a wild beast that is fierce but
feeble or like that of an insect whose little
fragment of earth has given way, and made it pause
in a palsy of distrust. It was this distrust,
this determination to take no step which might betray
anything concerning himself, that had made Baldassarre
reject Piero di Cosimo’s friendly
advances.
He had been equally cautious at the
hospital, only telling, in answer to the questions
of the brethren there, that he had been made a prisoner
by the French on his way from Genoa. But his
age, and the indications in his speech and manner
that he was of a different class from the ordinary
mendicants and poor travellers who were entertained
in the hospital, had induced the monks to offer him
extra charity: a coarse woollen tunic to protect
him from the cold, a pair of peasant’s shoes,
and a few danari, smallest of Florentine coins,
to help him on his way. He had gone on the road
to Arezzo early in the morning; but he had paused at
the first little town, and had used a couple of his
danari to get himself shaved, and to have his
circle of hair clipped short, in his former fashion.
The barber there had a little hand-mirror of bright
steel: it was a long while, it was years, since
Baldassarre had looked at himself, and now, as his
eyes fell on that hand-mirror, a new thought shot
through his mind. “Was he so changed that
Tito really did not know him?” The thought
was such a sudden arrest of impetuous currents, that
it was a painful shock to him; his hand shook like
a leaf, as he put away the barber’s arm and
asked for the mirror. He wished to see himself
before he was shaved. The barber, noticing his
tremulousness, held the mirror for him.
No, he was not so changed as that.
He himself had known the wrinkles as they had been
three years ago; they were only deeper now: there
was the same rough, clumsy skin, making little superficial
bosses on the brow, like so many cipher-marks; the
skin was only yellower, only looked more like a lifeless
rind. That shaggy white beard it was
no disguise to eyes that had looked closely at him
for sixteen years to eyes that ought to
have searched for him with the expectation of finding
him changed, as men search for the beloved among the
bodies cast up by the waters. There was something
different in his glance, but it was a difference that
should only have made the recognition of him the more
startling; for is not a known voice all the more thrilling
when it is heard as a cry? But the doubt was
folly: he had felt that Tito knew him.
He put out his hand and pushed the mirror away.
The strong currents were rushing on again, and the
energies of hatred and vengeance were active once
more.
He went back on the way towards Florence
again, but he did not wish to enter the city till
dusk; so he turned aside from the highroad, and sat
down by a little pool shadowed on one side by alder-bushes
still sprinkled with yellow leaves. It was a
calm November day, and he no sooner saw the pool than
he thought its still surface might be a mirror for
him. He wanted to contemplate himself slowly,
as he had not dared to do in the presence of the barber.
He sat down on the edge of the pool, and bent forward
to look earnestly at the image of himself.
Was there something wandering and
imbecile in his face something like what
he felt in his mind?
Not now; not when he was examining
himself with a look of eager inquiry: on the
contrary, there was an intense purpose in his eyes.
But at other times? Yes, it must be so:
in the long hours when he had the vague aching of
an unremembered past within him when he
seemed to sit in dark loneliness, visited by whispers
which died out mockingly as he strained his ear after
them, and by forms that seemed to approach him and
float away as he thrust out his hand to grasp them in
those hours, doubtless, there must be continual frustration
and amazement in his glance. And more horrible
still, when the thick cloud parted for a moment, and,
as he sprang forward with hope, rolled together again,
and left him helpless as before; doubtless, there
was then a blank confusion in his face, as of a man
suddenly smitten with blindness.
Could he prove anything? Could
he even begin to allege anything, with the confidence
that the links of thought would not break away?
Would any believe that he had ever had a mind filled
with rare knowledge, busy with close thoughts, ready
with various speech? It had all slipped away
from him that laboriously-gathered store.
Was it utterly and for ever gone from him, like the
waters from an urn lost in the wide ocean? Or,
was it still within him, imprisoned by some obstruction
that might one day break asunder?
It might be so; he tried to keep his
grasp on that hope. For, since the day when
he had first walked feebly from his couch of straw,
and had felt a new darkness within him under the sunlight,
his mind had undergone changes, partly gradual and
persistent, partly sudden and fleeting. As he
had recovered his strength of body, he had recovered
his self-command and the energy of his will; he had
recovered the memory of all that part of his life
which was closely enwrought with his emotions; and
he had felt more and more constantly and painfully
the uneasy sense of lost knowledge. But more
than that once or twice, when he had been
strongly excited, he had seemed momentarily to be in
entire possession of his past self, as old men doze
for an instant and get back the consciousness of their
youth: he seemed again to see Greek pages and
understand them, again to feel his mind moving unbenumbed
among familiar ideas. It had been but a flash,
and the darkness closing in again seemed the more
horrible; but might not the same thing happen again
for longer periods? If it would only come and
stay long enough for him to achieve a revenge devise
an exquisite suffering, such as a mere right arm could
never inflict!
He raised himself from his stooping
attitude, and, folding his arms, attempted to concentrate
all his mental force on the plan he must immediately
pursue. He had to wait for knowledge and opportunity,
and while he waited he must have the means of living
without beggary. What he dreaded of all things
now was, that any one should think him a foolish,
helpless old man. No one must know that half
his memory was gone: the lost strength might
come again; and if it were only for a little while,
that might be enough.
He knew how to begin to get the information
he wanted about Tito. He had repeated the words
“Bratti Ferravecchi” so constantly after
they had been uttered to him, that they never slipped
from him for long together. A man at Genoa, on
whose finger he had seen Tito’s ring, had told
him that he bought that ring at Florence, of a young
Greek, well-dressed, and with a handsome dark face,
in the shop of a rigattiere called Bratti Ferravecchi,
in the street also called Ferravecchi. This
discovery had caused a violent agitation in Baldassarre.
Until then he had clung with all the tenacity of
his fervent nature to his faith in Tito, and had not
for a moment believed himself to be wilfully forsaken.
At first he had said, “My bit of parchment has
never reached him; that is why I am still toiling
at Antioch, But he is searching; he knows where I
was lost: he will trace me out, and find me at
last.” Then, when he was taken to Corinth,
he induced his owners, by the assurance that he should
be sought out and ransomed, to provide securely against
the failure of any inquiries that might be made about
him at Antioch; and at Corinth he thought joyfully,
“Here, at last, he must find me. Here he
is sure to touch, whichever way he goes.”
But before another year had passed, the illness had
come from which he had risen with body and mind so
shattered that he was worse than worthless to his owners,
except for the sake of the ransom that did not come.
Then, as he sat helpless in the morning sunlight,
he began to think, “Tito has been drowned, or
they have made him a prisoner too. I shall
see him no more. He set out after me, but misfortune
overtook him. I shall see his face no more.”
Sitting in his new feebleness and despair, supporting
his head between his hands, with blank eyes and lips
that moved uncertainly, he looked so much like a hopelessly
imbecile old man, that his owners were contented to
be rid of him, and allowed a Genoese merchant, who
had compassion on him as an Italian, to take him on
board his galley. In a voyage of many months
in the Archipelago and along the seaboard of Asia
Minor, Baldassarre had recovered his bodily strength,
but on landing at Genoa he had so weary a sense of
his desolateness that he almost wished he had died
of that illness at Corinth. There was just one
possibility that hindered the wish from being decided:
it was that Tito might not be dead, but living in
a state of imprisonment or destitution; and if he
lived, there was still a hope for Baldassarre
faint, perhaps, and likely to be long deferred, but
still a hope, that he might find his child, his cherished
son again; might yet again clasp hands and meet face
to face with the one being who remembered him as he
had been before his mind was broken. In this
state of feeling he had chanced to meet the stranger
who wore Tito’s onyx ring, and though Baldassarre
would have been unable to describe the ring beforehand,
the sight of it stirred the dormant fibres, and he
recognised it. That Tito nearly a year after
his father had been parted from him should have been
living in apparent prosperity at Florence, selling
the gem which he ought not to have sold till the last
extremity, was a fact that Baldassarre shrank from
trying to account for: he was glad to be stunned
and bewildered by it, rather than to have any distinct
thought; he tried to feel nothing but joy that he
should behold Tito again. Perhaps Tito had thought
that his father was dead; somehow the mystery would
be explained. “But at least I shall meet
eyes that will remember me. I am not alone in
the world.”
And now again Baldassarre said, “I
am not alone in the world; I shall never be alone,
for my revenge is with me.”
It was as the instrument of that revenge,
as something merely external and subservient to his
true life, that he bent down again to examine himself
with hard curiosity not, he thought, because
he had any care for a withered, forsaken old man,
whom nobody loved, whose soul was like a deserted
home, where the ashes were cold upon the hearth, and
the walls were bare of all but the marks of what had
been. It is in the nature of all human passion,
the lowest as well as the highest, that there is a
point where it ceases to be properly egoistic, and
is like a fire kindled within our being to which everything
else in us is mere fuel.
He looked at the pale black-browed
image in the water till he identified it with that
self from which his revenge seemed to be a thing apart;
and he felt as if the image too heard the silent language
of his thought.
“I was a loving fool I
worshipped a woman once, and believed she could care
for me; and then I took a helpless child and fostered
him; and I watched him as he grew, to see if he would
care for me only a little care for me
over and above the good he got from me. I would
have torn open my breast to warm him with my life-blood
if I could only have seen him care a little for the
pain of my wound. I have laboured, I have strained
to crush out of this hard life one drop of unselfish
love. Fool! men love their own delights; there
is no delight to be had in me. And yet I watched
till I believed I saw what I watched for. When
he was a child he lifted soft eyes towards me, and
held my hand willingly: I thought, this boy will
surely love me a little: because I give my life
to him and strive that he shall know no sorrow, he
will care a little when I am thirsty the
drop he lays on my parched lips will be a joy to him...
Curses on him! I wish I may see him lie with
those red lips white and dry as ashes, and when he
looks for pity I wish he may see my face rejoicing
in his pain. It is all a lie this
world is a lie there is no goodness but
in hate. Fool! not one drop of love came with
all your striving: life has not given you one
drop. But there are deep draughts in this world
for hatred and revenge. I have memory left for
that, and there is strength in my arm there
is strength in my will and if I can do
nothing but kill him ”
But Baldassarre’s mind rejected
the thought of that brief punishment. His whole
soul had been thrilled into immediate unreasoning belief
in that eternity of vengeance where he, an undying
hate, might clutch for ever an undying traitor, and
hear that fair smiling hardness cry and moan with
anguish. But the primary need and hope was to
see a slow revenge under the same sky and on the same
earth where he himself had been forsaken and had fainted
with despair. And as soon as he tried to concentrate
his mind on the means of attaining his end, the sense
of his weakness pressed upon him like a frosty ache.
This despised body, which was to be the instrument
of a sublime vengeance, must be nourished and decently
clad. If he had to wait he must labour, and his
labour must be of a humble sort, for he had no skill.
He wondered whether the sight of written characters
would so stimulate his faculties that he might venture
to try and find work as a copyist: that
might win him some credence for his past scholarship.
But no! he dared trust neither hand nor brain.
He must be content to do the work that was most like
that of a beast of burden: in this mercantile
city many porters must be wanted, and he could at
least carry weights. Thanks to the justice that
struggled in this confused world in behalf of vengeance,
his limbs had got back some of their old sturdiness.
He was stripped of all else that men would give coin
for.
But the new urgency of this habitual
thought brought a new suggestion. There was something
hanging by a cord round his bare neck; something apparently
so paltry that the piety of Turks and Frenchmen had
spared it a tiny parchment bag blackened
with age. It had hung round his neck as a precious
charm when he was a boy, and he had kept it carefully
on his breast, not believing that it contained anything
but a tiny scroll of parchment rolled up hard.
He might long ago have thrown it away as a relic
of his dead mother’s superstition; but he had
thought of it as a relic of her love, and had kept
it. It was part of the piety associated with
such brevi, that they should never be opened,
and at any previous moment in his life Baldassarre
would have said that no sort of thirst would prevail
upon him to open this little bag for the chance of
finding that it contained, not parchment, but an engraved
amulet which would be worth money. But now a
thirst had come like that which makes men open their
own veins to satisfy it, and the thought of the possible
amulet no sooner crossed Baldassarre’s mind
than with nervous fingers he snatched the breve
from his neck. It all rushed through his mind the
long years he had worn it, the far-off sunny balcony
at Naples looking towards the blue waters, where he
had leaned against his mother’s knee; but it
made no moment of hesitation: all piety now was
transmuted into a just revenge. He bit and tore
till the doubles of parchment were laid open, and
then it was a sight that made him pant there
was an amulet. It was very small, but
it was as blue as those far-off waters; it was an
engraved sapphire, which must be worth some gold ducats.
Baldassarre no sooner saw those possible ducats
than he saw some of them exchanged for a poniard.
He did not want to use the poniard yet, but he longed
to possess it. If he could grasp its handle and
try its edge, that blank in his mind that
past which fell away continually would not
make him feel so cruelly helpless: the sharp steel
that despised talents and eluded strength would be
at his side, as the unfailing friend of feeble justice.
There was a sparkling triumph under Baldassarre’s
black eyebrows as he replaced the little sapphire
inside the bits of parchment and wound the string
tightly round them.
It was nearly dusk now, and he rose
to walk back towards Florence. With his danari
to buy him some bread, he felt rich: he could
lie out in the open air, as he found plenty more doing
in all corners of Florence. And in the next few
days he had sold his sapphire, had added to his clothing,
had bought a bright dagger, and had still a pair of
gold florins left. But he meant to hoard
that treasure carefully: his lodging was an outhouse
with a heap of straw in it, in a thinly inhabited
part of Oltrarno, and he thought of looking about for
work as a porter.
He had bought his dagger at Bratti’s.
Paying his meditated visit there one evening at dusk,
he had found that singular rag-merchant just returned
from one of his rounds, emptying out his basketful
of broken glass and old iron amongst his handsome
show of miscellaneous second-hand goods. As
Baldassarre entered the shop, and looked towards the
smart pieces of apparel, the musical instruments, and
weapons, which were displayed in the broadest light
of the window, his eye at once singled out a dagger
hanging up high against a red scarf. By buying
the dagger he could not only satisfy a strong desire,
he could open his original errand in a more indirect
manner than by speaking of the onyx ring. In
the course of bargaining for the weapon, he let drop,
with cautious carelessness, that he came from Genoa,
and had been directed to Bratti’s shop by an
acquaintance in that city who had bought a very valuable
ring here. Had the respectable trader any more
such rings?
Whereupon Bratti had much to say as
to the unlikelihood of such rings being within reach
of many people, with much vaunting of his own rare
connections, due to his known wisdom, and honesty.
It might be true that he was a pedlar he
chose to be a pedlar; though he was rich enough to
kick his heels in his shop all day. But those
who thought they had said all there was to be said
about Bratti when they had called him a pedlar, were
a good deal further off the truth than the other side
of Pisa. How was it that he could put that ring
in a stranger’s way? It was, because he
had a very particular knowledge of a handsome young
signor, who did not look quite so fine a feathered
bird when Bratti first set eyes on him as he did at
the present time. And by a question or two Baldassarre
extracted, without any trouble, such a rough and rambling
account of Tito’s life as the pedlar could give,
since the time when he had found him sleeping under
the Loggia de’ Cerchi. It never occurred
to Bratti that the decent man (who was rather deaf,
apparently, asking him to say many things twice over)
had any curiosity about Tito; the curiosity was doubtless
about himself, as a truly remarkable pedlar.
And Baldassarre left Bratti’s
shop, not only with the dagger at his side, but also
with a general knowledge of Tito’s conduct and
position of his early sale of the jewels,
his immediate quiet settlement of himself at Florence,
his marriage, and his great prosperity.
“What story had he told about
his previous life about his father?”
It would be difficult for Baldassarre
to discover the answer to that question. Meanwhile,
he wanted to learn all he could about Florence.
But he found, to his acute distress, that of the new
details he learned he could only retain a few, and
those only by continual repetition; and he began to
be afraid of listening to any new discourse, lest it
should obliterate what he was already striving to
remember.
The day he was discerned by Tito in
the Piazza del Duomo, he had the fresh
anguish of this consciousness in his mind, and Tito’s
ready speech fell upon him like the mockery of a glib,
defying demon.
As he went home to his heap of straw,
and passed by the booksellers’ shops in the
Via del Garbo, he paused to look at
the volumes spread open. Could he by long gazing
at one of those books lay hold of the slippery threads
of memory? Could he, by striving, get a firm
grasp somewhere, and lift himself above these waters
that flowed over him?
He was tempted, and bought the cheapest
Greek book he could see. He carried it home
and sat on his heap of straw, looking at the characters
by the light of the small window; but no inward light
arose on them. Soon the evening darkness came;
but it made little difference to Baldassarre.
His strained eyes seemed still to see the white pages
with the unintelligible black marks upon them.