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"She? Oh, no, she was not in my room at all. She is a great coquette, you know; I dare say she is amusing herself with the waiters in the kitchen. Poor thing! I hope she enjoys it."
I breathed freely; we were so far undiscovered. No one had as yet noticed our departure--no one had the least clew to my intentions, I opened the door of the pa.s.sage noiselessly, and we pa.s.sed out. Wrapping my wife's cloak more closely about her with much apparent tenderness, I led her quickly across the garden. There was no one in sight--we were entirely un.o.bserved. On reaching the exterior gate of the inclosure I left her for a moment, while I summoned a carriage, a common fiacre.
She expressed some surprise on seeing the vehicle.
"I thought we were not going far?" she said.
I rea.s.sured her on this point, telling her that I only desired to spare her all possible fatigue. Satisfied with this explanation, she suffered me to a.s.sist her into the carriage. I followed her, and calling to the driver, "A la Villa Guarda," we rattled away over the rough uneven stones of the back streets of the city.
"La Villa Guarda!" exclaimed Nina. "Where is that?"
"It is an old house," I replied, "situated near the place I spoke to you of, where the jewels are."
"Oh!"
And apparently contented, she nestled back in the carriage, permitting her head to rest lightly on my shoulder. I drew her closer to me, my heart beating with a fierce, terrible joy.
"Mine--mine at last!" I whispered in her ear. "Mine forever!"
She turned her face upward and smiled victoriously; her cool fragrant lips met my burning, eager ones in a close, pa.s.sionate kiss. Yes, I kissed her now--why should I not? She was as much mine as any purchased slave, and merited less respect than a sultan's occasional female toy.
And as she chose to caress me, I let her do so: I allowed her to think me utterly vanquished by the battery of her charms. Yet whenever I caught an occasional glimpse of her face as we drove along in the semi-darkness, I could not help wondering at the supreme vanity of the woman! Her self-satisfaction was so complete, and, considering her approaching fate, so tragically absurd!
She was entirely delighted with herself, her dress, and her conquest--as she thought--of me. Who could measure the height of the dazzling visions she indulged in; who could fathom the depths of her utter selfishness!
Seeing one like her, beautiful, wealthy, and above all--society knows I speak the truth--WELL DRESSED, for by the latter virtue alone is a woman allowed any precedence nowadays--would not all the less fortunate and lovely of her s.e.x feel somewhat envious? Ah, yes; they would and they do; but believe me, the selfish feminine thing, whose only sincere wors.h.i.+p is offered at the shrines of Fas.h.i.+on and Folly, is of all creatures the one whose life is to be despised and never desired, and whose death makes no blank even in the circles of her so-called best friends.
I knew well enough that there was not a soul in Naples who was really attached to my wife--not one who would miss her, no, not even a servant--though she, in her superb self-conceit, imagined herself to be the adored beauty of the city. Those who had indeed loved her she had despised, neglected, and betrayed. Musingly I looked down upon her as she rested back in the carriage, encircled by my arm, while now and then a little sigh of absolute delight in herself broke from her lips--but we spoke scarcely at all. Hate has almost as little to say as love!
The night was persistently stormy, though no rain fell--the gale had increased in strength, and the white moon only occasionally glared out from the ma.s.ses of white and gray cloud that rushed like flying armies across the sky, and her fitful light shone dimly, as though she were a spectral torch glimmering through a forest of shadow. Now and again bursts of music, or the blare of discordant trumpets, reached our ears from the more distant thoroughfares where the people were still celebrating the feast of Giovedi Gra.s.so, or the tinkle of pa.s.sing mandolins chimed in with the rolling wheels of our carriage; but in a few moments we were out of reach of even such sounds as these.
We pa.s.sed the outer suburbs of the city and were soon on the open road.
The man I had hired drove fast; he knew nothing of us, he was probably anxious to get back quickly to the crowded squares and illuminated quarters where the princ.i.p.al merriment of the evening was going on, and no doubt thought I showed but a poor taste in requiring to be driven away, even for a short distance, out of Naples on such a night of feasting and folly. He stopped at last; the castellated turrets of the villa I had named were faintly visible among the trees; he jumped down from his box and came to us.
"Shall I drive up to the house?" he asked, looking as though he would rather be spared this trouble.
"No," I answered, indifferently, "you need not. The distance is short, we will walk."
And I stepped out into the road and paid him his money.
"You seem anxious to get back to the city, my friend," I said, half jocosely.
"Si, davvero!" he replied, with decision, "I hope to get many a good fare from the Count Oliva's marriage-ball to-night."
"Ah! he is a rich fellow, that count," I said, as I a.s.sisted my wife to alight, keeping her cloak well m.u.f.fled round her so that this common fellow should not perceive the glitter of her costly costume; "I wish I were he!"
The man grinned and nodded emphatically. He had no suspicion of my ident.i.ty. He took me, in all probability, for one of those "gay gallants" so common in Naples, who, on finding at some public entertainment a "dama" to their taste, hurry her off, carefully cloaked and hooded, to a mysterious nook known only to themselves, where they can complete the romance of the evening entirely to their own satisfaction. Bidding me a lively buona notte, he sprung on his box again, jerked his horse's head violently round with a volley of oaths, and drove away at a rattling pace. Nina, standing on the road beside me, looked after him with a bewildered air.
"Could he not have waited to take us back?" she asked.
"No," I answered, brusquely; "we shall return by a different route.
Come."
And pa.s.sing my arm round her, I led her onward. She s.h.i.+vered slightly, and there was a sound of querulous complaint in her voice as she said:
"Have we to go much further, Cesare?"
"Three minutes, walk will bring us to our destination," I replied, briefly, adding in a softer tone, "Are you cold?"
"A little," and she gathered her sables more closely about her and pressed nearer to my side. The capricious moon here suddenly leaped forth like the pale ghost of a frenzied dancer, standing tiptoe on the edge of a precipitous chasm of black clouds. Her rays, pallidly green and cold, fell full on the dreary stretch of land before us, touching up with luminous distinctness those white mysterious milestones of the Campo Santo which mark where the journeys of men, women, and children began and where they left off, but never explain in what new direction they are now traveling. My wife saw and stopped, trembling violently.
"What place is this?" she asked, nervously.
In all her life she had never visited a cemetery--she had too great a horror of death.
"It is where I keep all my treasures," I answered, and my voice sounded strange and harsh in my own ears, while I tightened my grasp of her full, warm waist. "Come with me, my beloved!" and in spite of my efforts, my tone was one of bitter mockery. "With me you need have no fear! Come."
And I led her on, too powerless to resist my force, too startled to speak--on, on, on, over the rank dewy gra.s.s and unmarked ancient graves--on, till the low frowning gate of the house of my dead ancestors faced me--on, on, on, with the strength of ten devils in my arm as I held her--on, on, on, to her just doom!
CHAPTER x.x.xVI.
The moon had retreated behind a dense wall of cloud, and the landscape was enveloped in semi-darkness. Reaching the door of the vault, I unlocked it; it opened instantly, and fell back with a sudden clang.
She whom I held fast with my iron grip shrunk back, and strove to release herself from my grasp.
"Where are you going?" she demanded, in a faint tone. "I--I am afraid!"
"Of what?"--I asked, endeavoring to control the pa.s.sionate vibrations of my voice and to speak unconcernedly. "Because it is dark? We shall have a light directly--you will see--you--you," and to my own surprise I broke into a loud and violent laugh. "You have no cause to be frightened! Come!"
And I lifted her swiftly and easily over the stone step of the entrance and set her safely inside. INSIDE at last, thank Heaven! I shut the great gate upon us both and locked it! Again that strange undesired laugh broke from my lips involuntarily, and the echoes of the charnel house responded to it with unearthly and ghastly distinctness. Nina clung to me in the dense gloom.
"Why do you laugh like that?" she cried, loudly and impatiently. "It sounds horrible."
I checked myself by a strong effort.
"Does it? I am sorry--very sorry! I laugh because--because, cara mia, our moonlight ramble is so pleasant--and amusing--is it not?"
And I caught her to my heart and kissed her roughly. "Now," I whispered, "I will carry you--the steps are too rough for your little feet--dear, dainty, white little feet! I will carry you, you armful of sweetness!--yes, carry you safely down into the fairy grotto where the jewels are--SUCH jewels, and all for you--my love, my wife!"
And I raised her from the ground as though she were a young, frail child. Whether she tried to resist me or not I cannot now remember. I bore her down the moldering stairway, setting my foot on each crooked step with the firmness of one long familiar with the place. But my brain reeled--rings of red fire circled in the darkness before my eyes; every artery in my body seemed strained to bursting; the pent-up agony and fury of my soul were such that I thought I should go mad or drop down dead ere I gained the end of my long desire. As I descended I felt her clinging to me; her hands were cold and clammy on my neck, as though she were chilled to the blood with terror. At last I reached the lowest step--I touched the floor of the vault. I set my precious burden down. Releasing my clasp of her, I remained for a moment inactive, breathing heavily. She caught my arm--she spoke in a hoa.r.s.e whisper.
"What place is this? Where is the light you spoke of?"
I made no answer. I moved from her side, and taking matches from my pocket, I lighted up six large candles which I had fixed in various corners of the vault the night previously. Dazzled by the glare after the intense darkness, she did not at once perceive the nature of the place in which she stood. I watched her, myself still wrapped in the heavy cloak and hat that so effectually disguised my features. What a sight she was in that abode of corruption! Lovely, delicate, and full of life, with the s.h.i.+ne of her diamonds gleaming from under the folds of rich fur that shrouded her, and the dark hood falling back as though to display the sparkling wonder of her gold hair.
Suddenly, and with a violent shock, she realized the gloom of her surroundings--the yellow flare of the waxen torches showed her the stone niches, the tattered palls, the decaying trophies of armor, the drear shapes of worm-eaten coffins, and with a shriek of horror she rushed to me where I stood, as immovable as a statue clad in coat of mail, and throwing her arms about me clung to me in a frenzy of fear.