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"There would have been few tears in high quarters if Del Ferice had been killed yesterday; there will be few to-day over the death of poor Casalverde."
"Bah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Astrardente. "If Antonelli had heard of these affairs he would have stopped them soon enough."
Valdarno glanced behind him, and, bending a little, whispered in Astrardente's ear--
"They were both Liberals, you must know."
"Liberals?" repeated the old dandy, with a cynical sneer. "Nonsense, I say! Liberals? Yes, in the way you are a Liberal, and Donna Tullia Mayer, and Spicca himself, who has just killed that other Liberal, Casalverde.
Liberals indeed! Do you flatter yourself for a moment that Antonelli is afraid of such Liberals as you are? Do you think the life of Del Ferice is of any more importance to politics than the life of that dog there?"
It was Astrardente's habit to scoff mercilessly at all the petty manifestations of political feeling he saw about him in the world. He represented a cla.s.s distinct both from the Valdarno set and from the men represented by the Saracinesca--a cla.s.s who despised everything political as unworthy of the attention of gentlemen, who took everything for granted, and believed that all was for the best, provided that society moved upon rollers and so long as no one meddled with old inst.i.tutions.
To question the wisdom of the munic.i.p.al regulations was to attack the Government itself; to attack the Government was to cast a slight upon his Holiness the Pope, which was rank heresy, and very vulgar into the bargain. Astrardente had seen a great deal of the world, but his ideas of politics were almost childishly simple--whereas many people said that his principles in relation to his fellows were fiendishly cynical. He was certainly not a very good man; and if he pretended to no reputation for devoutness, it was probable that he recognised the absurdity of his attempting such a pose. But politically he believed in Cardinal Antonelli's ability to defy Europe with or without the aid of France, and laughed as loudly at Louis Napoleon's old idea of putting the sovereign Pontiff at the head of an Italian federation, as he jeered at Cavour's favourite phrase concerning a free Church in a free State. He had good blood in him, and the hereditary courage often found with it. He had a certain skill in matters worldly; but his wit in things political seemed to belong to an earlier generation, and to be incapable of receiving new impressions.
But Valdarno, who was vain and set great value on his opinions, was deeply offended at the way Astrardente spoke of him and his friends. In his eyes he was risking much for what he considered a good object, and he resented any contemptuous mention of Liberal principles, whenever he dared. No one cared much for Astrardente, and certainly no one feared him; nevertheless in those times men hesitated to defend anything which came under the general head of Liberalism, when they were likely to be overheard, or when they could not trust the man to whom they were speaking. If no one feared Astrardente, no one trusted him either.
Valdarno consequently judged it best to smother his annoyance at the old man's words, and to retaliate by striking him in a weak spot.
"If you despise Del Ferice as much as you say," he remarked, "I wonder that you tolerate him as you do."
"I tolerate him. Toleration is the very word--it delightfully expresses my feelings towards him. He is a perfectly harmless creature, who affects immense depth of insight into human affairs, and who cannot see an inch before his face. Dear me! yes, I shall always tolerate Del Ferice, poor fellow!"
"You may not be called upon to do so much longer," replied Valdarno.
"They say he is in a very dangerous condition."
"Ah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Astrardente, putting up his eyegla.s.s at his companion.
"Ah, you don't say so!"
There was something so insolent in the old man's affected stare that even the foolish and good-natured Valdarno lost his temper, being already somewhat irritated.
"It is a pity that you should be so indifferent. It is hardly becoming.
If you had not tolerated him as you have, he might not be lying there at the point of death."
Astrardente stared harder than ever.
"My dear young friend," he said, "your language is the most extraordinary I ever heard. How in the world can my treatment of that unfortunate man have had anything to do with his being wounded in a duel?"
"My dear old friend," replied Valdarno, impudently mimicking the old man's tone, "your simplicity surpa.s.ses anything I ever knew. Is it possible that you do not know that this duel was fought for your wife?"
Astrardente looked fixedly at Valdarno; his eyegla.s.s dropped from his eye, and he turned ashy pale beneath his paint. He staggered a moment, and steadied himself against the door of a shop. They were just pa.s.sing the corner of the Piazza di Sciarra, the most crowded crossing of the Corso.
"Valdarno," said the old man, his cracked voice dropping to a hoa.r.s.er and deeper tone, "you must explain yourself or answer for this."
"What! Another duel!" cried Valdarno, in some scorn. Then, seeing that his companion looked ill, he took him by the arm and led him rapidly through the crowd, across the Arco dei Carbognani. Entering the Caffe Aragno, a new inst.i.tution in those days, both men sat down at a small marble table. The old dandy was white with emotion; Valdarno felt that he was enjoying his revenge.
"A gla.s.s of cognac, Duke?" he said, as the waiter came up. Astrardente nodded, and there was silence while the man brought the cordial. The Duca lived by an invariable rule, seeking to balance the follies of his youth by excessive care in his old age; it was long, indeed, since he had taken a gla.s.s of brandy in the morning. He swallowed it quickly, and the stimulant produced its effect immediately; he readjusted his eyegla.s.s, and faced Valdarno sternly.
"And now," he said, "that we are at our ease, may I inquire what the devil you mean by your insinuations about my wife?"
"Oh," replied Valdarno, affecting great indifference, "I only say what everybody says. There is no offence to the d.u.c.h.essa."
"I should suppose not, indeed. Go on."
"Do you really care to hear the story?" asked the young man.
"I intend to hear it, and at once," replied Astrardente.
"You will not have to employ force to extract it from me, I can a.s.sure you," said Valdarno, settling himself in his chair, but avoiding the angry glance of the old man. "Everybody has been repeating it since the day before yesterday, when it occurred. You were at the Frangipani ball--you might have seen it all. In the first place, you must know that there exists another of those beings to whom you extend your merciful toleration--a certain Giovanni Saracinesca--you may have noticed him?"
"What of him?" asked Astrardente, fiercely.
"Among other things, he is the man who wounded Del Ferice, as I daresay you have heard. Among other things concerning him, he has done himself the honour of falling desperately, madly in love with the d.u.c.h.essa d'Astrardente, who--"
"What?" cried the old man in a cracked voice, as Valdarno paused.
"Who does you the honour of ignoring his existence on most occasions, but who was so unfortunate as to recall him to her memory on the night of the Frangipani ball. We were all sitting in a circle round the d.u.c.h.essa's chair that night, when the conversation chanced to turn upon this same Giovanni Saracinesca, a fire-eating fellow with a bad temper. He had been away for some days; indeed he was last seen at the Apollo in your box, when they gave 'Norma'--"
"I remember," interrupted Astrardente. The mention of that evening was but a random shot. Valdarno had been in the club-box, and had seen Giovanni when he made his visit to the Astrardente; he had not seen him again till the Frangipani ball.
"Well, as I was saying, we spoke of Giovanni, and every one had something to say about his absence. The d.u.c.h.essa expressed her curiosity, and Del Ferice, who was with us, proposed calling him--he was at the other end of the room, you see--that he might answer for himself. So I went and brought him up. He was in a very bad humour--"
"What has all this absurd story got to do with the matter?" asked the old man, impatiently.
"It is the matter itself. The irascible Giovanni is angry at being questioned, treats us all like mud under his feet, sits down by the d.u.c.h.essa and forces us to go away. The d.u.c.h.essa tells him the story, with a laugh no doubt, and Giovanni's wrath overflows. He goes in search of Del Ferice, and nearly strangles him. The result of these eccentricities is the first duel, leading to the second."
Astrardente was very angry, and his thin gloved hands twitched nervously at the handle of his stick.
"And this," he said, "this string of trivial ball-room incident, seems to you a sufficient pretext for stating that the duel was about my wife?"
"Certainly," replied Valdarno, coolly. "If Saracinesca had not been for months openly devoting himself to the d.u.c.h.essa--who, I a.s.sure you, takes no kind of notice of him--"
"You need not waste words--"
"I do not,--and if Giovanni had not thought it worth while to be jealous of Del Ferice, there would have been no fighting."
"Have you been telling your young friends that my wife was the cause of all this?" asked Astrardente, trembling with a genuine rage which lent a certain momentary dignity to his feeble frame and painted face.
"Why not?"
"Have you or have you not?"
"Certainly--if you please," returned Valdarno insolently, enjoying the old man's fury.
"Then permit me to tell you that you have taken upon yourself an outrageous liberty, that you have lied, and that you do not deserve to be treated like a gentleman."
Astrardente got upon his feet and left the cafe without further words.
Valdarno had indeed wounded him in a weak spot, and the wound was mortal.
His blood was up, and at that moment he would have faced Valdarno sword in hand, and might have proved himself no mean adversary, so great is the power of anger to revive in the most decrepit the energies of youth. He believed in his wife with a rare sincerity, and his blood boiled at the idea of her being rudely spoken of as the cause of a scandalous quarrel, however much Valdarno insisted upon it that she was as indifferent to Giovanni as to Del Ferice. The story was a shallow invention upon the face of it. But though the old man told himself so again and again as he almost ran through the narrow streets towards his house, there was one thought suggested by Valdarno which rankled deep. It was true that Giovanni had last been seen in the Astrardente box at the opera; but he had not remained five minutes seated by the d.u.c.h.essa before he had suddenly invented a shallow excuse for leaving; and finally, there was no doubt that at that very moment Corona had seemed violently agitated.
Giovanni had not reappeared till the night of the Frangipani ball, and the duel had taken place on the very next morning. Astrardente could not reason--his mind was too much disturbed by his anger against Valdarno; but a vague impression that there was something wrong in it all, drove him homewards in wild excitement. He was ill, too, and had he been in a frame of mind to reflect upon himself, he would have noticed that his heart was beating with ominous irregularity. He did not even think of taking a cab, but hurried along on foot, finding, perhaps, a momentary relief in violent exertion. The old blood rushed to his face in good earnest, and shamed the delicately painted lights and shadows touched in by the master-hand of Monsieur Isidore, the cosmopolitan valet.
Valdarno remained seated in the cafe, rather disturbed at what he had done. He certainly had had no intention of raising such a storm; he was a weak and good-natured fellow, whose vanity was easily wounded, but who was not otherwise very sensitive, and was certainly not very intelligent.