ALESSANDRO FRANCATELLI.
In order that the reader should fully
understand the stirring incidents which yet remain
to be told, it is necessary for us to explain certain
particulars connected with Alessandro Francatelli,
the brother of the beautiful Flora. It will be
recollected that this young man accompanied the Florentine
envoy to Constantinople, in the honorable capacity
of secretary, some few years previous to the commencement
of our tale.
Alessandro was strikingly handsome,
tall, well-formed, and of great physical strength.
His manners were pleasing, his conversation agreeable
to a degree. Indeed, he had profited so well by
the lessons of the excellent-hearted Father Marco,
that his mind was well stored with intellectual wealth.
He was, moreover, a finished musician, and played
the violin, at that period a rare accomplishment, to
perfection. In addition to all these qualifications,
he was a skillful versifier, and composed the most
beautiful extemporaneous poetry, apparently without
an effort. But his disposition was by no means
light or devoted to pursuits which worldly-minded
persons would consider frivolous. For he himself
was worldly-minded, keen, shrewd, far-seeing, and ambitious.
He deplored the ruin which had overtaken his family,
and longed ardently to rebuild its fortunes, adding
thereto the laurels of glory and the honors of rank.
The situation which he enjoyed in
the establishment of the Florentine envoy appeared
to him the stepping-stone to the attainment of these
objects, but the embassy had not been long settled
at Constantinople, when Alessandro found that his
master was one who, being ignorant himself, was jealous
of the talents displayed by others. Great interest
had alone procured the envoy the post which he held
as negotiator plenipotentiary with the Ottoman Porte,
on behalf of the Republic of Florence; and the Turkish
reis-effendi, or minister of foreign affairs,
soon perceived that the Christian embassador was quite
incompetent to enter into the intricacies of treaties
and the complex machinery of diplomacy. But suddenly
the official notes which the envoy addressed to the
reis-effendi began to exhibit a sagacity
and an evidence of far-sighted policy which contrasted
strongly with the imbecility which had previously
characterized those communications. It was at
that period a part of the policy of the Ottoman Port
to maintain spies in the household of all the foreign
embassadors residing in Constantinople; and through
this agency the reis-effendi discovered that
the Florentine envoy had condescended to avail himself
of the brilliant talents of his secretary, Alessandro
Francatelli, to infuse spirit into his official notes.
The reis-effendi was himself
a shrewd and sagacious man; and he recognized in the
abilities evinced by the youthful secretary, those
elements which, if properly developed, would form a
great politician. The Turkish Minister accordingly
resolved to leave no stone unturned, in order to entice
so promising an individual into the service of the
sultan. To accomplish this object indirect means
were at first attempted; and the secret agents of
the minister sounded Alessandro upon the subject.
He listened to them at first in silence, but not unwillingly.
They grew bolder, and their speech became more open.
He encouraged them to lay bare their aims; and they
hinted to him how glorious a career might be opened
to him were he to enter the service of the high and
mighty sultan, Solyman the Magnificent, who then sat
upon the proud throne of the Ottoman Empire.
The more attentively Alessandro listened,
the less reserved became those who were instructed
to undermine his fidelity toward his master, the Florentine
Envoy. They represented to him how Christians,
who had abjured their creed and embraced the Moslem
faith, had risen to the highest offices, even to the
post of grand vizier, or prime minister of the empire.
Alessandro was completely master of his emotions; he
had not studied for some years in the school of diplomacy
without learning how to render the expression of his
countenance such as at any moment to belie the real
state of his feelings. He did not, therefore,
suffer the spies and agents of the reis-effendi
to perceive how deep an impression their words had
made upon him; but he said and looked enough to convince
them that the topics of their discourse would receive
the most serious consideration at his hands.
His mind was already made up to accept the overtures
thus made to him; but he affected to hesitate, for
he saw that his services were ardently longed for,
and he resolved to drive as advantageous a bargain
as possible.
He was one afternoon lounging through
the principal bezestein or bazaar, when he was struck
by the elegant form, imposing air, and rich apparel
of a lady who rode slowly along upon a mule, attended
by four female slaves on foot. The outlines of
her figure shaped the most admirable symmetry he had
ever beheld; and though her countenance was concealed
by a thick veil, in accordance with the custom of
the East, yet he seemed to have been impressed with
an instinctive conviction that the face beneath that
invidious covering was eminently beautiful. Moreover,
the eyes whose glances flashed through the two holes
which were formed in the veil so as to permit the
enjoyment of the faculty of sight, were gloriously
brilliant, yet black as jet. Once, too, when the
lady raised her delicate white hand, sparkling with
jewels, to arrange the folds of that hated veil, Alessandro
caught a rapid, evanescent glimpse of a neck as white
as snow.
The little procession stopped at the
door of a merchant’s shop in the bazaar; the
slaves assisted the lady to dismount, and she entered
the warehouse, followed by her dependents, the mule
being left in charge of one of the numerous porters
who thronged in the bezestein.
Alessandro lingered near the door,
and he beheld the merchant displaying various pieces
of rich brocade before the eyes of the lady, who,
however, scrupulously retained the dense veil over
her countenance. Having made her purchases, which
were taken charge of by one of the slaves, the lady
came forth again; and Alessandro, forgetting that his
lingering near now amounted to almost an act of rudeness,
was chained to the spot, lost in admiration of her
elegant gesture, her graceful yet dignified carriage,
and the exquisite contour of her perfect shape.
Her feet and ankles, appearing beneath the full trousers,
that were gathered in just at the commencement of
the swell of the leg, were small and beautifully shaped;
and so light was her tread, that she scarcely seemed
to touch the ground on which she walked.
As the lady issued from the door of
the merchant’s shop, she cast a rapid but inquiring
look toward Alessandro, though whether in anger or
curiosity he was unable to determine, for the eyes
only could he see, and it was impossible for him to
read the meaning of the glances they sent forth, when
unassisted by a view of the general expression worn
by her countenance at the same time.
Accident, however, favored him far
more than he could have possibly anticipated.
At the very moment when the lady’s head was turned
toward him, she tripped over the cordage of a bale
of goods that had shortly before been opened beneath
the painted awning over the front of the shop, and
she would have fallen had not Alessandro sprung forward
and caught her in his arms.
She uttered a faint scream, for her
veil had shifted aside from its proper position; and
her countenance was thus revealed to a man, and that
man evidently by his dress a Christian!
Instantly recovering her self-possession,
she readjusted her veil, gave a gentle but graceful
inclination of the head toward Alessandro, mounted
her mule by the assistance of the slaves, and rode
away at a somewhat hasty pace. Alessandro stood
gazing after her until she turned the angle of the
nearest street, and it struck him that her glance was
for an instant cast rapidly back toward him, ere she
disappeared from his view.
And no wonder that he stood thus rooted
to the spot, following her with his eyes; for the
countenance which accident had revealed to him was
already impressed upon his heart. It was one of
those lovely Georgian faces, oval in shape, and with
a complexion formed of milk and roses, which have
at all times been prized in the East, as the very perfection
of female beauty; a face which, without intellectual
expression, possesses an ineffable witchery, and all
the charms calculated to fascinate the beholder.
The eyes were black as jet, the hair of a dark auburn,
and luxuriantly rich in its massive beauty; the lips
were of bright vermilion, and between them were two
rows of pearl, small and even. The forehead was
high and broad, and white as marble, with the delicate
blue veins visible through the transparent complexion.
Alessandro was ravished as he reflected
on the wondrous beauty thus for a moment revealed
to him, but his raptures speedily changed to positive
grief when he thought how improbable it was that this
fair creature would ever cross his path again.
He entered the warehouse, made a small purchase, and
inquired casually of the Turkish merchant if he knew
who the lady was. The reply was in the negative,
but the merchant informed Alessandro that he had no
doubt the lady was of some rank, from the profound
respect with which her slaves treated her, and from
the readiness with which she paid the prices demanded
of her for the goods she had purchased, Turkish ladies
generally being notorious for their disposition to
drive a hard bargain with traders.
Alessandro returned to the suburb
of Pera, in which the mansion of the Florentine Embassy
was situated his mind full of the beautiful
creature whose countenance he had seen for a moment,
and whose soft form he had also for a moment a
single moment held in his arms. He
could not apply himself to the duties of his office,
but feigned indisposition and retired to the privacy
of his own apartment. And never did that chamber
seem so lonely, so cold, so cheerless. His entire
disposition appeared to have become suddenly changed;
he felt that the world now contained something the
possession of which was positively necessary to his
happiness. One sole idea absorbed all his thoughts:
the most lovely countenance which, in his estimation,
he had ever seen was so indelibly reflected in the
mirror of his mind, that his imagination could contemplate
naught besides. He knew not that whenever he went
abroad, he was watched by one of the spies of the
reis-effendi; and he was therefore surprised
when, on the following day, that secret agent of the
minister whispered in his ear, “Christian, thou
lovest and it depends on thyself whether
thou wilt be loved in return!”
Alessandro was stupefied at these
words. His secret was known, or at least suspected.
He questioned the individual who had thus addressed
him, and he found that the incident of the preceding
day was indeed more than suspected it was
known. He besought to know who the lady was;
but the spy would not, or could not satisfy him.
He, however, promised that he would endeavor to ascertain
a point in which Alessandro appeared to be so deeply
interested. The intriguing spirit of Turkish dependents
is notorious: the reader will not therefore be
surprised when we state that in a few days the spy
made his appearance in Alessandro’s presence
with a countenance denoting joyous tidings. The
young Italian was impatient to learn the results of
the agent’s inquiries.
“I know not who the lady is,”
was the reply; “but this much I have to impart
to you, signor that she did not behold
you the other day with indifference; that she is grateful
for the attention you paid in offering your aid to
save her from perhaps a serious accident and
that she will grant you a few moments’ interview
this evening, provided you assent to certain conditions
to be imposed upon you, respecting the preliminary
arrangements for your meeting.”
“Name them! name them!”
exclaimed Alessandro, wild with joy, and almost doubting
whether he were not in the midst of a delicious dream.
“That you consent to be blindfolded
while being conducted into her presence that
you maintain the most profound silence while with those
who will guide you to her abode and that
you return from the interview under the same circumstances.”
“I should be unworthy the interest
which she deigns to manifest in my behalf, were I
to refuse compliance with those terms,” answered
Alessandro.
“An hour after sunset,”
said the spy, “you will meet me at the gate of
the Mosque of Selimya;” and with those words
he hurried away, leaving the young Florentine in a
state of excited hope, amounting to a delirium of
joy.
Alessandro was well aware that adventures,
such as the one in which he found himself suddenly
involved, were by no means uncommon in the East; and
that ladies of the most unimpeachable virtue, as well
as of the highest rank, frequently accorded interviews
of this private nature to those men who were fortunate
enough to merit their attention such visits
being the first step toward matrimonial connections.
But then he remembered that he was a Christian, and
the fair object of his devotion was probably of the
Moslem faith. What, then, would be the result?
Was some wealthy lady of high rank about to abandon
her creed for his sake? or would the sacrifice of
his faith be required as the only condition on which
his complete happiness might be achieved? He knew
not cared but little; it was sufficient
for him that he was to meet the charming being whose
image had never once quitted his mind, from the first
moment he had seen her in the bezestein!
Even before the appointed hour was
Alessandro pacing the square in front of the splendid
temple which the Sultan Selim the conqueror
of Egypt had erected, and which bore his
imperial name. At length the agent, for whom
he waited, made his appearance. This man, though
actually a Turkish dependent in the service of the
Florentine Envoy, was, as before stated, neither more
nor less than one of the numerous spies placed by
the reis-effendi round the person of
that embassador. Alessandro was aware of this,
in consequence of the offers and representations that
had been made to him through the means of this agent,
and though the youth suspected that the man knew more
concerning the beauteous idol of his heart than he
had chosen to admit, yet he had seen enough to convince
him of the inutility of questioning him on that head.
It was, therefore, in silence that
Alessandro followed his guide through several by-streets
down to the margin of the waters of the Golden Horn.
There a boat, in which two rowers and a female slave
were seated, was waiting.
“Here, must you be blindfolded,” said
the spy.
For a few moments Alessandro hesitated,
in regret that he had gone so far with this adventure.
He had heard fearful tales of dark deeds committed
on the waters of the Bosporus and the Golden Horn;
and he himself, when roving during his leisure hours
along the verdant banks of those waters, had seen
the livid corpse float with the tale-telling bow-string
fastened round the neck.
The spy seemed to divine his thoughts.
“You hesitate, signor,”
he said; “then let us retrace our way. But
remember,” he added in a low tone, “that
were treachery intended, it would be as easy to perform
the deed where you now stand, as on the bosom of that
star-lit gulf.”
Alessandro hesitated no longer, but
suffered himself to be completely hooded in a cap
which the spy drew over his countenance. He was
then conducted into the boat and guided to a seat
next to the female slave. The spy leapt upon
the strand, the boatmen plied their oars, and the
skiff shot away from the bank, no one uttering a word.