San Pietro and Bertuccio were waiting
at the doorway, both blinking sleepily in the morning
air. At San Pietro’s right side hung a
tiny pannier, covered by a fringed white napkin, above
which lay a small flask decorated with corn husk and
gay yarn, where red wine sparkled like rubies in the
sunshine. The varying degrees of the donkey’s
resignation were registered exactly in the changing
angles at which his right ear was cocked.
“Pronta!” called Assunta,
who was putting the finishing touches on saddle and
luncheon basket. “If the Signorina means
to climb the Monte Altiera she must start before the
sun is high.”
On the hillside above Daphne heard,
but her feet strayed only more slowly. She was
wandering with a face like that of a sky across which
thin clouds scud, in the grass about Hermes’
grave. In her hand was the letter of yesterday,
and in her eyes the memory of the days before.
“It is all too late,”
said Daphne, who had learned to talk aloud in this
world where no one understood. “The Greeks
were right in thinking that our lives are ruled by
mocking fate. I wonder what angry goddess cast
forgetfulness upon my mind, so that I forgot to tell
Apollo what this letter says.”
Daphne looked to the open sky, but
it gave no answer, and she paused by the laurel tree
with head bent down. Then, with a sudden, wistful
little laugh, she held out the letter and fastened
it to the laurel, tearing a hole in one corner to
let a small bare twig go through. With a blunt
pencil she scribbled on it in large letters:
“Let Apollo read, if he ever wanders this way.”
“He will never find it,”
said the girl, “and the rain will come and soak
it, and it will bleach in the sun. But nobody
else knows enough to read it, and I shall leave it
there on his sacred tree, as my last offering.
I suppose there is some saving grace even in the sacrifices
that go astray.”
Then she descended the hill, climbed
upon San Pietro’s back, and rode through the
gateway.
An hour later, Assunta, going to find
a spade in the tool-house, for she was transplanting
roses, came upon the Signorina’s caller of yesterday
standing near the tool-house with something in his
hand. The peasant woman’s face showed
neither awe nor fear; only lively curiosity gleamed
in the blinking brown eyes.
“Buon’ giorno,” said Apollo,
exactly as mortals do.
“Buon’ giorno, Altezza,”
returned Assunta.
“Is the Signorina at home?” asked the
intruder.
“But no!” cried Assunta.
“She has started to climb the very sky to-day,
Monte Altiera, and for what I can’t make out.
It only wears out Bertuccio’s shoes and the
asinetto’s legs.”
“Grazia,” said Apollo, moving away.
“Does his Highness think that
the Signorina resembles her sister, the Contessa?”
asked the peasant woman for the sake of a detaining
word.
“Not at all,” answered the visitor, and
he passed into the open road.
Then he turned over in his hand the
letter which he had taken from the laurel. Though
he had read it thee times he hardly understood as yet,
and his face was the face of one who sees that the
incredible has come to pass. The letter was
made up of fifteen closely written pages, and it told
the story of a young clergyman, who, convinced at last
that celibacy and the shelter of the Roman priesthood
were his true vocation, had, after long prayer and
much mediation, decided to flee the snares of the
world and to renounce its joys for the sake of bliss
the other side of life.
“When you receive this letter,
my dear Daphne,” wrote Eustace Denton, “I
shall have been taken into the brotherhood of Saint
Ambrose, for I wish to place myself in a position
where there will be no retracing my steps.”
The face of the reader on the Roman
hills, as it was lifted from the page again to the
sunshine, was full of the needless pity of an alien
faith.
Along the white road that led up the
mountain, and over the grass-grown path that climbed
the higher slopes, trod a solitary traveler.
Now his step was swift, as if some invisible spirit
of the wind were wafting him on; and again the pace
was slow and his head bent, as if some deep thought
stayed his speed. There were green slopes above,
green slopes below, and the world opened out as he
climbed on and up. Out and out sketched the
great Campagne, growing wider at each step, with the
gray, unbroken lines of aqueduct leading toward Rome
and the shining sea beyond.
On a great flat stone far up on the
heights sat two motionless figures: below them,
partly veiling the lower world, floated a thin mist
of cloud.
“This must be Olympus,” said Daphne.
“Any mountain is Olympus that touches the sky,”
answered Apollo.
“Where are the others?”
demanded the girl. “Am I not to know your
divine friends?”
“Don’t you see them?”
he asked as in surprise, “Aphrodite
just yonder in violet robe, and Juno, and Hermes with
winged feet”
“I am afraid I am a wee bit
blind, being but mortal,” answered Daphne.
“I can see nothing but you.”
Beside them on the rock, spread out
on oak leaves, lay clusters of purple grapes, six
black ripe olives, and a little pile of biscotti Inglesi.
The girl bent and poured from the curving flask red
wine that bubbled in the glass, then gave it to her
companion, saying: “Quick, before Hebe
gets here,” and the sound of their merriment
rung down the hillside.
“Hark!” whispered Daphne.
“I hear an echo of the unquenchable laughter
of the gods! They cannot be far away.”
From another stone near at hand Bertuccio
watched them with eyes that feigned not to see.
Bertuccio did not understand English, but he understood
everything else. Goodly shares of the nectar
and ambrosia of this feast had fallen to his lot,
and Bertuccio in his own way was almost as happy as
the lovers. In the soft grass near San Pietro
Martire nibbled peacefully, now and then lifting his
eyes to see what was going on. Once he brayed.
He alone, of all nature, seemed impervious to the
joy that had descended upon earth.
It was only an hour since Daphne had
been overtaken. Few words had sufficed for understanding,
and Bertuccio had looked away.
“My only fear was that I should
find you turned into a laurel tree,” said Apollo.
“I shall always be afraid of that.”
“Apollo,” said Daphne
irrelevantly, holding out to him a bunch of purple
grapes in the palm of her hand, “there is a practical
side to all this. People will have to know,
I am afraid. I must write to my sister.”
“I have reason to think that
the Countess Accolanti will not be displeased,”
he answered. There was a queer little look about
his mouth, but Daphne asked for no explanation.
“There is your father,” he suggested.
“Oh!” said Daphne.
“He will love you at once. His tastes
and mine are very much alike.”
The lover-god smiled, quite satisfied.
“You chose the steepest road
of all to-day, little girl,” he said. “But
it is not half so long nor so hard as the one I expected
to climb to find you.”
“You are tired!” said Daphne anxiously.
“Rest.”
Bertuccio was sleeping on his flat
rock; San Pietro lay down for a brief, ascetic slumber.
The lovers sat side by side, with the mystery of
beauty about them: the purple and gold of nearness
and distance; bright color of green grass near, sombre
tint of cypress and stone pine afar.
“I shall never really know whether
you are a god or not,” said Daphne dreamily.
“A very proper attitude for
a woman to have toward her husband,” he answered
with a smile. “I must try hard to live
up to the character. You will want to live on
Olympus, and you really ought, if you are going to
wear gowns woven of my sunbeams like the one you had
on yesterday. How shall I convince you that
Rome must do part of the time? You will want
me to make you immortal: that always happens when
a maiden marries a god.”
“I think you have done that already,”
said Daphne.