Saracinesca Part 28
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"The Duca d'Astrardente--"
"Well, what of him?"
"Is dead."
"Dead!" repeated Giovanni in a loud voice, that echoed to the vaulted roof of the dining-room.
"It is not true," said old Saracinesca; "I saw him in the street this morning."
"Nevertheless, your Excellency," replied Pasquale, "it is quite true. The gates of the palace were already draped with black before the Ave Maria this evening; and the porter, who is a nephew of mine, had _crepe_ upon his hat and arm. He told me that the Duca fell down dead of a stroke in the Signora d.u.c.h.essa's room at half-past twelve to-day."
"Is that all you could learn?" asked the Prince.
"Except that the Signora d.u.c.h.essa was overcome with grief," returned the servant, gravely.
"I should think so--her husband dead of an apoplexy! It is natural," said the Prince, looking at Giovanni. The latter was silent, and tried to eat as though, nothing had happened--inwardly endeavouring not to rejoice too madly at the terrible catastrophe. In his effort to control his features, the blood rushed to his forehead, and his hand trembled violently. His father saw it, but made no remark.
"Poor Astrardente!" he said. "He was not so bad as people thought him."
"No," replied Giovanni, with a great effort; "he was a very good man."
"I should hardly say that," returned his father, with a grim smile of amus.e.m.e.nt. "I do not think that by the greatest stretch of indulgence he could be called good."
"And why not?" asked the younger man, sharply s.n.a.t.c.hing at any possible discussion in order to conceal his embarra.s.sment.
"Why not, indeed! Why, because he had a goodly share of original sin, to which he added others of his own originating but having an equal claim to originality."
"I say I think he was a very good man," repeated Giovanni, maintaining his point with an air of conviction.
"If that is your conception of goodness, it is no wonder that you have not attained to sanct.i.ty," said the old man, with a sneer.
"It pleases you to be witty," answered his son. "Astrardente did not gamble; he had no vices of late. He was kind to his wife."
"No vices--no. He did not steal like a fraudulent bank-clerk, nor try to do murder like Del Ferice. He did not deceive his wife, nor starve her to death. He had therefore no vices. He was a good man."
"Let us leave poor Del Ferice alone," said Giovanni.
"I suppose you will pity him now," replied the Prince, sarcastically.
"You will talk differently if he dies and you have to leave the country at a moment's notice, like Spicca this morning."
"I should be very sorry if Del Ferice died. I should never recover from it. I am not a professional duellist like Spicca. And yet Casalverde deserved his death. I can quite understand that Del Ferice might in the excitement of the moment have lunged at me after the halt was cried, but I cannot understand how Casalverde could be so infamous as not to cross his sword when he himself called. It looked very much like a preconcerted arrangement. Casalverde deserved to die, for the safety of society.
I should think that Rome had had enough of duelling for a while."
"Yes; but after all, Casalverde did not count for much. I am not sure I ever saw the fellow before in my life. And I suppose Del Ferice will recover. There was a story this morning that he was dead; but I went and inquired myself, and found that he was better. People are much shocked at this second duel. Well, it could not be helped. Poor old Astrardente!
So we shall never see his wig again at every ball and theatre and supper-party! There was a man who enjoyed his life to the very end!"
"I should not call it enjoyment to be built up every day by one's valet, like a card-house, merely to tumble to pieces again when the pins are taken out," said Giovanni.
"You do not seem so enthusiastic in his defence as you were a few minutes ago," said the Prince, with a smile.
Giovanni was so much disturbed at the surprising news that he hardly knew what he said. He made a desperate attempt to be sensible.
"It appears to me that moral goodness and personal appearance are two things," he said, oracularly. The Prince burst into a loud laugh.
"Most people would say that! Eat your dinner, Giovanni, and do not talk such arrant nonsense."
"Why is it nonsense? Because you do not agree with me?"
"Because you are too much excited to talk sensibly," said his father. "Do you think I cannot see it?"
Giovanni was silent for a time. He was angry at his father for detecting the cause of his vagueness, but he supposed there was no help for it. At last Pasquale left the room. Old Saracinesca gave a sigh of relief.
"And now, Giovannino," he said familiarly, "what have you got to say for yourself?"
"I?" asked his son, in some surprise.
"You! What are you going to do?"
"I will stay at home," said Giovanni, shortly.
"That is not the question. You are wise to stay at home, because you ought to get yourself healed of that scratch. Giovanni, the Astrardente is now a widow."
"Seeing that her husband is dead--of course. There is vast ingenuity in your deduction," returned the younger man, eyeing his father suspiciously.
"Do not be an idiot, Giovannino. I mean, that as she is a widow, I have no objection to your marrying her."
"Good G.o.d, sir!" cried Giovanni, "what do you mean?"
"What I say. She is the most beautiful woman in Rome. She is one of the best women I know. She will have a sufficient jointure. Marry her. You will never be happy with a silly little girl just out of a convent You are not that sort of man. The Astrardente is not three-and-twenty, but she has had five years of the world, and she has stood the test well. I shall be proud to call her my daughter."
In his excitement Giovanni sprang from his seat, and rus.h.i.+ng to his father's side, threw his arms round his neck and embraced him. He had never done such a thing in his life. Then he remained standing, and grew suddenly thoughtful.
"It is heartless of us to talk in this way," he said. "The poor man is not buried yet."
"My dear boy," said the old Prince, "Astrardente is dead. He hated me, and was beginning to hate you, I fancy. We were neither of us his friends, at any rate. We do not rejoice at his death; we merely regard it in the light of an event which modifies our immediate future. He is dead, and his wife is free. So long as he was alive, the fact of your loving her was exceedingly unfortunate: it was injuring you and doing a wrong to her. Now, on the contrary, the greatest good fortune that can happen to you both is that you should marry each other."
"That is true," returned Giovanni. In the suddenness of the news, it had not struck him that his father would ever look favourably upon the match, although the immediate possibility of the marriage had burst upon him as a great light suddenly rising in a thick darkness. But his nature, as strong as his father's, was a little more delicate, a shade less rough; and even in the midst of his great joy, it struck him as heartless to be discussing the chances of marrying a woman whose husband was not yet buried. No such scruple disturbed the geniality of the old Prince. He was an honest and straightforward man--a man easily possessed by a single idea--and he was capable of profound affections. He had loved his Spanish wife strongly in his own fas.h.i.+on, and she had loved him, but there was no one left to him now but his son, whom he delighted in, and he regarded the rest of the world merely as p.a.w.ns to be moved into position for the honour and glory of the Saracinesca. He thought no more of a man's life than of the end of a cigar, smoked out and fit to be thrown away.
Astrardente had been nothing to him but an obstacle. It had not struck him that he could ever be removed; but since it had pleased Providence to take him out of the way, there was no earthly reason for mourning his death. All men must die--it was better that death should come to those who stood in the way of their fellow-creatures.
"I am not at all sure that she will consent," said Giovanni, beginning to walk up and down the room.
"Bah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed his father. "You are the best match in Italy. Why should any woman refuse you?"
"I am not so sure. She is not like other women. Let us not talk of it now. It will not be possible to do anything for a year, I suppose. A year is a long time. Meanwhile I will go to that poor man's funeral."
"Of course. So will I."
And they both went, and found themselves in a vast crowd of acquaintances. No one had believed that Astrardente could ever die, that the day would ever come when society should know his place no more; and with one consent everybody sent their carriages to the funeral, and went themselves a day or two later to the great requiem Ma.s.s in the parish church. There was nothing to be seen but the great black catafalque, with Corona's household of servants in deep mourning liveries kneeling behind it. Relations she had none, and the dead man was the last of his race-- she was utterly alone.
Saracinesca Part 28
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Saracinesca Part 28 summary
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