Marina, under the yellow glare of
the lamp in the dark oak cabinet, worked fitfully,
with broken, lifeless strokes, at the designs before
her; while her father, feigning absorption in some
new drawings which lay spread out within touch of
his strong-veined hands, watched her furtively from
the other side of the table.
“Thou art restless,” he
said, suddenly and sternly; “what aileth thee?”
Her lip quivered, but she did not
look up, while with an effort she steadied the movement
of her hand and continued her work. “My
hand hath no cunning to-night, and it vexeth me, my
father.”
“It is poor work when the heart
is lacking,” he answered, in a tone charged
with irritation. “I also have seen a thing
which hath taken my heart from me.”
The color deepened in her cheeks and
the pencil strokes came more falteringly, but she
answered nothing.
“Nay, then!” he exclaimed,
more brusquely than his wont, as he stretched out
his hand and arrested her movement. “What
I have to say to thee importeth much.”
She flushed and paled with the struggle
of the moment, then a beautiful calm came over her
face; she laid down her pencil and, quietly dropping
her hands in her lap, she turned to him with a smile
that might have disarmed an angrier man it
was full of tenderness, though it was shadowed by
pain.
It relaxed his sternness, and, after
a moment’s hesitation, he came around the table
and sat down beside her.
“To-night is the fête at Ca’
Giustiniani, for the young noble of their house.”
He waited for her to speak, but she
did not tremble now, though he was searching her face.
“Yes, father, I know.”
“And, Marina I do not understand and
it is a grief to me ”
She nestled to him closely and tried
to slip one of her slender hands between his, which
were tightly strained together in a knotted clasp,
as if he would make them the outlet for some unbearable
emotion.
The previous evening was the first
they had not passed together since the death of Zuanino;
her father had sent her word that he had matter which
would occupy him alone, and all day Marina had been
heavy-hearted, going at matins and at vespers quite
alone to the Madonna at the Duomo, that she might
take comfort and counsel.
Girolamo did not respond to her caress,
though his tone softened a little as he proceeded
with his tale and her arm stole round him.
“Yesterday, at the stabilimento
Beroviero, we were summoned by a call of our Capo
of the Ten to witness the approval that should be passed
on the exhibit of that stabilimento; we all, of the
Guild of Murano, were there as always. And foremost
among the productions, most marvelous for beauty,
was a fabric of their lucent crystal thou
knowest it, Marina? My child how came
thy face there? Thy face, Marina set
round with lustrous pearls!”
He folded her to his breast with sudden
passion, and stooped his head to her shoulder for
an instant, lifting it quickly that she might not feel
the sobbing of his breath which, even more than his
broken words, betrayed his anguish.
“Dearest father, it was because
I loved thee so much that I would not have thee suffer
from my pain, that I told thee not. Never again
will I hold aught from thee.”
“Thy pain, Marina? and thy face and
for the young noble, Giustiniani? I do not understand.”
“Father, because I could grant
him nothing and he would give me everything, and because because
God sent the love and the Madonna hath made me feel
that it would be sweet, I granted him only this my
portrait because he pleaded so one could
not resist; and because he said it would win the consent
of all to see that he treated me like a queen!”
“Nay; one comes not in secret
to steal the love of a queen.”
“My father,” answered
the maiden proudly, for he had drawn away from her,
“there is no stealing of that which I would gladly
yield him, if it were thy pleasure and that of the
Ca’ Giustiniani! And there would have
been no secret; but I to spare thee pain
of knowing that I suffered I would not
let him come to plead with thee.”
“Why shouldst thou suffer?”
“It is hard to lose thy love
when only I told thee not because I would spare thee
pain! Father I have only thee!”
Her courage broke in a quick sob.
“Nay, then nay, then,”
he faltered softly, stroking her bowed head; “he
is no man to love, if he would let thee suffer; he
should take thee before them all if
he would be worthy ”
The low, intense, interrupted words
were a brave surrender.
“Ay, my father, it is like Marco to hear thee
speak!”
“Then let him come and make
thee Lady of the Giustiniani, like a true knight!”
exclaimed the old man fiercely.
“Ay, father, so would he; but
I have told him that thou and I are not less proud
than those of his own house, and without their consent
it may not be.”
“Nay, I care not for their house only
for thy happiness; he shall wed thee, and my home
is thine; I have enough for thee and him; he shall
not make thee suffer.”
They were close together now, father
and daughter a beautiful group in the yellow
lamplight against the dark background that surrounded
them like an impassible fate; her face was a study
of happiness, tenderness, suffering, and strength;
her father wrapped her close in his protecting arms,
and thus she could bear everything. They were
silent for a while: he trying to accept the revelation
in its strangeness, she planning how she should make
him understand.
“I am glad thou knowest it,
dear father,” she said at length, very softly.
“I have thy love I can bear everything.”
“Nay, thou shalt have nothing
to bear! Thou shalt be Lady of the Giustiniani what
means the portrait else?”
“It is like Marco again!”
she cried, with a little pleased laugh. “He
said because I would make him no promise
until all consented that he would take
me thus before all the world, and that should make
them consent.”
“Nay, let him come out from
his house and take thee! I also, of the people,
bear an ancient name, and I have kept it honorable.
Pietro, the earliest master of our beautiful art,
was thine ancestor. The Giustinian stoops not
in taking thee.”
“He is noble enough to be thy
son, my father and chivalrous as thou but
we are too noble to let him do aught unbefitting his
noble house; for thou knowest the Giustiniani are
like princes in Venice, and Marco is their only son.
He oweth duty to the Republic; and this day, in the
Ducal Palace, hath he sworn his oath of allegiance.”
“First should it have been to thee!”
“Ay, first it was to me,”
she answered serenely; “he would not have it
otherwise; it is only my promise that is lacking.
This will I not give until the Giustiniani make me
welcome, or there would be no happiness for Marco.
He shall not lose, in loving me. The Signor Giustinian
Giustiniani is so stern and one of the Chiefs I
would not vex him and bring down the displeasure of
the Ten; I would bring my Marco happiness not
pain.”
“Oh, the courage of young hearts!”
the old man exclaimed with a thrill of pride and amazement.
“Never had Giustinian a prouder bride. And
already thou hast won my heart for this lover of thine,
who hath hope of taking thee from thy old father,
yet stays at thy bidding.”
“He hath said that he would
be here ere the fête began,” she answered timidly,
“since already, through the portrait, thou must
know the truth; and it would seem unknightly, or as
if he feared thy displeasure, if he came not this
day to pay thee his duty. Father, methinks there
is already a stir below ”
“Thou shouldst make thyself
brave!” her father exclaimed, with a quick,
anxious glance at her simple home toilette. “He
will pass from thee to many noble ladies in the palazzo
Giustiniani all in bravery of festival.”
“Nay, my father, so he found
me; I would not hold him by devices, of which I know
naught. There will be much to suffer, and these
trifles cannot enter into anything so deep and real.
I would rather he should change to-day if
he could be light enough to change. Besides,”
she faltered, with a quick, charming blush, “I
think it is already his step without; and to-night
he will have so few moments to spare me Marco!”
Coming forward through the shadow
of the doorway, the young noble deferent,
masterful, unrenouncing was a suitor not
easily to be baffled by any claims of Venice.
Girolamo turned quickly to his child,
then looked away, for her face made a radiance in
the room; he, her father, who had loved her through
all the days of her maiden life with a great tenderness,
had never known the fullness of her beauty until now;
the soft folds of the simple robe flowing away from
her into the surrounding shadow left the pure young
charm of her head and face in luminous relief, as the
brilliant young noble, in embroidered velvet and silken
hose and jeweled clasps a type of sumptuous
modern day Venice stepped forward into the
little circle of light, bowing before her with courtly
deference.
The vision of those youthful faces
made it easy to forget the outward contrast a
mere accident of birth.
Girolamo Magagnati had promised himself
that he would be a true knight to his beloved child;
he would question and prove this bold young noble
who claimed, with such presumption, so great a prize not
humbly suing, as he should have done; he would make
him tremble and wait; he should learn that his daughter
was not to be the more easily won because she was
of the people! Then, with the fullness of his
vow upon him, and with a heart loving indeed, but
brave as proud, he had raised his eyes and beheld
a vision in which neither nobles nor people held part only
a maiden, glorified by her love and trust; and a lover prince
or peasant it mattered not for on his face
it was luminously written that in all the world there
was for him none other than she. And the vision,
like an apprehension of Truth rare and
very beautiful conquered Girolamo, because
he was strong enough to yield.
“It is but a moment that I have
for this dearest claim of the day,” said Marcantonio
Giustiniani, turning to the older man with winning
courtesy; “and sooner should I have come to
the father of Marina to crave the grace I cannot do
without, but that she bade me tarry. Yet now she
herself hath spoken?”
He looked from one to the other questioningly.
“There are no secrets between
us,” Girolamo answered with dignity, while weighing
some words that should welcome his daughter’s
suitor with discretion and reserve.
But the maiden broke in timidly:
“And he is not angry, Marco mio!”
“Nay, my favor is for him who
truly honors my daughter and proves himself worthy;
for her happiness is dear to me. But the difficulties
are great, as she herself hath told me.”
“A little time and there shall
be none!” cried Marcantonio, joyously.
“For to-day, when first I have taken my seat
in the Council, not more solemnly have I sworn allegiance
to the Republic than I would pray Messer Magagnati
to bear me witness that Marina and none
other will I wed!”
“Give him thy hand, my daughter,
for thy face confesseth thee; and to-day his lady
should grant him so much grace.”
“Yet, Marco for thy
sake I make no vows to thee. Only this
will I tell thee,” she added, in a voice that
was very soft and low, as he sealed his lover’s
vow on her fluttering hand. “For me, also,
there is no other!”
“And I bring thee a ‘boccolo,’
Marina, since thou art of the people and wouldst have
me remember all thy traditions,” he cried gaily.
“Yet this one hath a fragrance like none other
that hath ever blossomed on the festa of San
Marco my blessed patron! for
I culled it from the garland which my mother bade
her maidens for a token make about the table where
thy portrait is displayed.”
He raised the rosebud to his lips
before he placed it in her hand.
“And the Senator Giustinian
Giustiniani?” Girolamo questioned, in his grave,
deep voice, concealing his triumph.
But Marcantonio had already answered
to the timid question of Marina’s eyes, with
a ringing tone of assurance.
“And for my father we must have courage!”