Voices from the Past Part 87
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Rimini's gulls, black-tipped gulls, followed his boat, ate out of his hands-perched on my shoulders. Ah, those wings! Those flights!
Occasionally, I slept at Rimini's thatch, where ducks always woke me. It was pleasant to wake to the quackings of Rimini's pets. His drake had been his pet for years, I won't guess how many. But I remember his glossy plumage and proud head, and how gluttonous he was.
When Rimini's pretty wife (woman) became bedridden I prescribed omitting meat. She agreed, through our sign language. Within a week she was out of bed. Rimini had a festa, to honor her recovery. Poor man, he thought me something of a wizard, an ogre, because I could explain to him what the interior of the stomach was like.
February 13
Francesco and I have spent hours at the Chateau Romorantin, where remodeling of the old rambling building goes badly. The weather is mean. Cough weather. Stormy.
Romorantin is no place to live in February. My drawing papers go limp there.
The King is seldom around; his disreputable workers look as if they had come out of a tenth century nightmare. Some have quit because of the weather; I am told that the head architect is sick.
My supervision nets me nothing, does not help the King.
Francesco groans as we make the rounds of inspection.
Enroute to Cloux the carriage breaks an axle as we near the chateau and manor house. Rain. A few days later we backtrack to Romorantin on horses. Carriages would not get through. The sun comes out... Francesco and I work in the main salon.
As I work on my rendering of the new staircase, an old pine tree crashes against a window, shattering it.
Workers sn.i.g.g.e.r as I jump and drop my pad. The present stair may collapse at any moment.
We eat lunch before a handsome Gothic fireplace. A woodcutter tosses on chunks... I continue working...the King appears...he is gone before I can speak to him.
Romorantin again: the Queen occupies a wing that has been recently renovated-she and her court. I have learned that when the King is too preoccupied with his current mistress, the Queen moves in. Up go her tapestries. Up go her pictures. In go her dogs, cats, guards, maids, pages- and favorite chef.
As Francesco and I strolled through corridors, hunting for the illusive architect (now recovered), we find doors open into the Queen's suites; there is sun; the weather has improved; at one of the open doorways, Francesco grabbed my arm, and exclaimed:
"Maestro...look...look in there!"
"Where?"
"To the right...through the door...on that easel...that's your painting, your Leda and her swan!"
I can't believe what I see!
"Yes...yes..." I mumble.
"It's your painting, your missing canvas. How did the Queen get it?"
"Come...we'll find out about it...come away...don't go inside."
"But it's yours."
It was seven or eight years ago that my Leda painting disappeared. We blamed this one and that one. We offered a reward. The Duke promised to help...
Back at Cloux we have talked and talked about Leda.
What can I say to the King?
Why has he never mentioned the picture? Had he purchased it from someone? Had his father purchased it?
Was it a gift? Or is it a copy? We could ascertain that if we could inspect the painting. There were too many questions for the moment. We needed to think. We needed to concentrate on our work for a few days.
We will talk to people at Romorantin...some of the Queen's girls will talk...perhaps what Francesco saw is an excellent copy.
The weather improves...but I am depressed: I will not return to Romorantin.
In the sun (cold sun), Francesco and I ride slowly along the Loire. I hope to see Magnifico.
HORSES...
Francis has some of the finest horses in France. His stables are comparable to those of the Medici's.
Though I seldom ride now, except to walk the horse or shake my depression, I still visit the stables: I can spend hours there among their warm bodies: I note ears, nostrils, teeth, manes, tails, rumps, shoulders, hides, colors.
Colts.
Mares.
Stallions.
Favorites!
Sickly animals become mine: I feed them, pamper them, talk to them, comb and brush them...hostlers are sometimes irritated... I do not care...in that stabled world I become one with animal life.
I gather grain and fill a trough.
An old girl needs water: how grateful she is! This beautiful pinto needs liniment.
Horses...
My drawings show their ill.u.s.trious qualities, their courage, their stamina.
Cloux
A young Parisian portrait artist visited me; he was wearing a new grey velvet suit (in the King's honor, he pointed out). With arms crossed on his boyish chest he defended his dedication to portraiture.
Voices from the Past Part 87
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Voices from the Past Part 87 summary
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