Presently she came to sit by Eleanor again, trying to amuse her by the account of a talk on the roadside, with an old
spaccapietre
, or stone-breaker, who had fought at Mentana.
Eleanor listened vaguely, hardly replying. But she watched the girl in her simple white dress, her fine head, her grave and graceful movements; she noticed the voice, so expressive of an inner self-mastery through all its gaiety. And suddenly the thought flamed through her—
‘If I told her!—if she knew that I had seen a letter from him this afternoon?—that he is in Italy?—that he is looking for
her
, day and night! If I just blurted it out—what would she say?—how would she take it?’
But not a word passed her lips. She began again to try and unravel the meaning of his letter. Why had he gone in search of them to the Abruzzi of all places?
Then, suddenly, she remembered.
One day at the villa, some Italian friends—a deputy and his wife—had described to them a summer spent in a wild nook of the Abruzzi. The young husband had possessed a fine gift of phrase. The mingled savagery and innocence of the people; the vast untrodden woods of chestnut and beech; the slowly advancing civilisation; the new railway line that seemed to the peasants a living and hostile thing, a kind of greedy fire-monster, carrying away their potatoes to market and their sons to the army; the contrasts of the old and new Italy; the joys of summer on the heights, of an unbroken Italian sunshine steeping a fresh and almost northern air: he had drawn it all, with the facility of the Italian, the broken, impressionist strokes of the modern. Why must Italians nowadays always rush north, to the lakes, or Switzerland or the Tyrol? Here in their own land, in the Abruzzi, and further south, in the Volscian and Calabrian mountains, were cool heights waiting to be explored, the savour of a primitive life, the traces of old cities, old strongholds, old faiths, a peasant world moreover, unknown to most Italians of the west and north, to be observed, to be made friends with.
They had all listened in fascination. Lucy especially. The thought of scenes so rarely seen, so little visited, existing so near to them, in this old old Italy, seemed to touch the girl’s imagination—to mingle as it were a breath from her own New World with the land of the Caesars.
‘One can ride everywhere?’ she had asked, looking up at the traveller.
‘Everywhere, mademoiselle.’
‘I shall come,’ she had said, drawing pencil circles on a bit of paper before her, with pleased intent eyes, like one planning.
And the Italian, amused by her enthusiasm, had given her a list of places where accommodation could be got, where hotels of a simple sort were beginning to develop, whence this new land that was so old could be explored by the stranger.
And Manisty had stood by, smoking and looking down at the girl’s graceful head, and the charming hand that was writing down the names.
Another pang of the past recalled,—a fresh one added!
For Torre Amiata had been forgotten, while Lucy’s momentary whim had furnished the clue which had sent him on his vain quest through the mountains.
‘I do think ‘—said Lucy, presently, taking Eleanor’s hand,—‘you haven’t coughed so much to-day?’
Her tone was full of anxiety, of tenderness.
Eleanor smiled. ‘I am very well,’ she said, dryly. But Lucy’s frown did not relax. This cough was a new trouble. Eleanor made light of it. But Marie sometimes spoke of it to Lucy with expressions which terrified one who had never known illness except in her mother.
Meanwhile Eleanor was thinking—‘Something will bring him here. He is writing to Father Benecke—Father Benecke to him. Some accident will happen—any day, any hour. Well—let him come!’
Her hands stiffened under her shawl that Lucy had thrown round her. A fierce consciousness of power thrilled through her weak frame. Lucy was hers! The pitiful spectacle of these six weeks had done its work. Let him come.
His letter was not unhappy!—far from it. She felt herself flooded with bitterness as she remembered the ardour that it breathed; the ardour of a lover to whom effort and pursuit are joys only second to the joys of possession.
But some day no doubt he would be unhappy—in earnest; if her will held. But it would hold.
After all, it was not much she asked. She might live till the winter; possibly a year. Not long, after all, in Lucy’s life or Manisty’s. Let them only wait a little.
Her hand burnt in Lucy’s cool clasp. Restlessly, she asked the girl some further questions about her walk.
‘I met the Sisters—the nuns—from Selvapendente, on the hill,’ said Lucy. ‘Such sweet faces some of them have.’
‘I don’t agree,’ said Eleanor petulantly. ‘I saw two of them yesterday. They smile at you, but they have the narrowest, stoniest eyes. Their pity would be very difficult to bear.’
A few minutes later Lucy left her for a moment, to give a message to Marie.
‘These Christians are hard—_hard_!’ thought Eleanor sharply, closing her tired lids.
Had Father Benecke ever truly weighed her case, her plea at all? Never! It had been the stereotyped answer of the priest and the preacher. Her secret sense resented the fact that he had been so little moved, apparently, by her physical state. It humiliated her that she should have brought so big a word as death into their debate—to no effect. Her thin cheek flushed with shame and anger.
The cracked bell which announced their meals tinkled from the sitting-room.
Eleanor dragged herself to her feet, and stood a moment by the parapet looking into the night.
‘I cough less?’ she thought. ‘Why?—for I get worse every day. That I may make less noise in dying? Well! one would like to go without ugliness and fuss. I might as well be dead now, I am so broken—so full of suffering. How I hide it all from that child! And what is the use of it—of living a single day or hour more?’
She was angry with Father Benecke; but she took care to see him again.
By means of a little note about a point in the article he was just completing, she recalled him.
They met without the smallest reference to the scene which had passed between them. He asked for her literary opinion with the same simplicity, the same outward deference as before. She was once more the elegant and languid woman, no writer herself, but born to be the friend and muse of writers. She made him feel just as clearly as before the clumsiness of a phrase, the
naivete
of a point of view.
And yet in truth all was changed between them. Their talk ranged further, sank deeper. From the controversy of science with the Vatican, from the position of the Old Catholics, or the triumph of Ultramontanism in France, it would drop of a sudden, neither knew how, and light upon some small matter of conduct or feeling, some ‘flower in the crannied wall,’ charged with the profoundest things—things most intimate, most searching, concerned with the eternal passion and trouble of the human will, the ‘body of this death,’ the ‘burden’ of the ‘Pilgrim’s Progress.’
Then the priest’s gentle insistent look would steal on hers; he would speak from his heart; he would reveal in a shrinking word or two the secrets of his own spiritual life, of that long inner discipline, which was now his only support in rebellion, the plank between him and the abyss.
She felt herself pursued; felt it with a mixture of fear and attraction. She had asked him to be her director; and then refused his advice. She had tried to persuade him that she was a sceptic and unbeliever. But he had not done with her. She divined the ardour of the Christian; perhaps the acuteness of the ecclesiastic. Often she was not strong enough to talk to him, and then he read to her—the books that she allowed him to choose. Through a number of indirect and gradual approaches he laid siege to her, and again and again did she feel her heart fluttering in his grasp, only to draw it back in fear, to stand once more on a bitter unspoken defence of herself that would not yield. Yet he recognised in her the approach of some crisis of feeling. She seemed herself to suspect it, and to be trying to ward it off, in a kind of blind anguish. Nothing meanwhile could be more touching than the love between her and Lucy. The old man looked on and wondered.
Day after day he hesitated. Then one evening, in Lucy’s absence, he found her so pale, and racked with misery—so powerless either to ask help, or to help herself, so resolute not to speak again, so clearly tortured by her own coercing will, that his hesitation gave way.
He walked down the hill, in a trance of prayer. When he emerged from it his mind was made up.
In the days that followed he seemed to Eleanor often agitated and ill at ease. She was puzzled, too, by his manner towards Lucy. In truth, he watched Miss Foster with a timid anxiety, trying to penetrate her character, to divine how presently she might feel towards him. He was not afraid of Mrs. Burgoyne, but he was sometimes afraid of this girl with her clear, candid eyes. Her fresh youth, and many of her American ways and feelings were hard for him to understand. She showed him friendship in a hundred pretty ways; and he met her sometimes eagerly, sometimes with a kind of shame-facedness.
Soon he began to neglect his work of a morning that he might wander out to meet the postman beyond the bridge. And when the man passed him by with a short ‘Non c’ e niente,’ the priest would turn homeward, glad almost that for one day more he was not called upon to face the judgment in Lucy Foster’s face on what he had done.
The middle of July was past. The feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel had come and gone, bringing processions and music, with a Madonna under a gold baldacchino, to glorify the little deserted chapel on the height.
Eleanor had watched the crowds and banners, the red-robed Compagni di Gesu, the white priests, and veiled girls, with a cold averted eye. Lucy looked back with a pang to Marinata, and to the indulgent pleasure that Eleanor had once taken in all the many-coloured show of Catholicism. Now she was always weary, and often fretful. It struck Lucy too that she was more restless than ever. She seemed to take no notice of the present—to be always living in the future—expecting, listening, waiting. The gestures and sudden looks that expressed this attitude of mind were often of the weirdest effect. Lucy could have thought her haunted by some unseen presence. Physically she was not, perhaps, substantially worse. But her state was more appealing, and the girl’s mind towards her more pitiful day by day.
One thing, however, she was determined on. They would not spend August at Torre Amiata. It would need stubbornness with Eleanor to bring her to the point of change. But stubbornness there should be.
One morning, a day or two after the festa, Lucy left Eleanor on the
loggia
, while she herself ran out for a turn before their midday meal. There had been fierce rain in the morning, and the sky was still thick with thunder clouds promising more.
She escaped into a washed and cooled world. But the thirsty earth had drunk the rain at a gulp. The hill which had been running with water was almost dry, the woods had ceased to patter; on all sides could be felt the fresh restoring impulse of the storm. Nature seemed to be breathing from a deeper chest—shaking her free locks in a wilder, keener air—to a long-silent music from the quickened river below.
Lucy almost ran down the hill, so great was the physical relief of the rain and the cloudy morning. She needed it. Her spirits, too, had been uneven, her cheek paler of late.
She wore a blue cotton dress, fitting simply and closely to the young rounded form. Round her shapely throat and the lace collar that showed Eleanor’s fancy and seemed to herself a little too elaborate for the morning, she wore a child’s coral necklace—a gleam of red between the abundant black of her hair and the soft blue of her dress. Her hat, a large Leghorn, with a rose in it, framed the sweet gravity of her face. She was more beautiful than when she had said good-bye to Uncle Ben on the Boston platform. But it was a beauty that for his adoring old heart would have given new meaning to ‘that sad word, Joy.’
She turned into the Sassetto and pushed upwards through its tumbled rocks and trees to the seat commanding the river and the mountains.
As she approached it, she was thinking of Eleanor and the future, and her eyes were absently bent on the ground.
But a scent familiar and yet strange distracted her. Suddenly, on the path in front of the seat, she saw a still burning cigarette, and on the seat a book lying.
She stopped short; then sank upon the seat, her eyes fixed upon the book.
It was a yellow-bound French novel, and on the outside was written in a hand she knew, a name that startled every pulse in her young body.
His
book? And that cigarette? Father Benecke neither smoked nor did he read French novels.
Beyond the seat the path branched, upwards to the Palazzo, and downwards to the river. She rose and looked eagerly over its steep edge into the medley of rock and tree below. She saw nothing, but it seemed to her that in the distance she heard voices talking—receding.
They had left the seat only just in time to escape her. Mr. Manisty had forgotten his book! Careless and hasty—how well she knew the trait! But he would miss it—he would come back.
She stood up and tried to collect her thoughts. If he was here, he was with Father Benecke. So the priest had betrayed the secret he had promised Mrs. Burgoyne to keep?
No, no!—that was impossible! It was chance—unkind, unfriendly chance.
And yet?—as she bit her lip in fear or bewilderment, her heart was rising like the Paglia after the storm—swelling, thundering within her.
‘What shall I—what shall I do?’ she cried under her breath, pressing her hands to her eyes.
Then she turned and walked swiftly homewards. Eleanor must not know—must not see him. The girl was seized with panic terror at the thought of what might be the effect of any sudden shock upon Mrs. Burgoyne.
Halfway up the hill, she stopped involuntarily, wringing her hands in front of her. It was the thought of Manisty not half a mile away, of his warm, living self so close to her that had swept upon her, like a tempest wind on a young oak.