I haven't told him, your
reverence; it's my silly tender-heartedness that won't let me. He's always been
like one of my own creatures to me—" and she confounded Odo by bursting
into tears.
The abate stood on the doorstep. He was a tall stout man
with a hooked nose and lace ruffles. His nostrils were stained with snuff and
he took a pinch from a tortoise-shell box set with the miniature of a lady;
then he looked down at Odo and shrugged his shoulders.
Odo
was growing sick with apprehension. It was two days before the appointed time
for his weekly instruction and he had not prepared his catechism. He had not
even thought of it—and the abate could use the cane.
Odo stood silent and envied girls, who are not disgraced by crying. The tears
were in his throat, but he had fixed principles about crying. It was his
opinion that a little boy who was a cavaliere might weep when he was angry or
sorry, but never when he was afraid; so he held his head high and put his hand
to his side, as though to rest it on his sword.
The abate sneezed and tapped his snuff-box.
"Come,
come, cavaliere, you must be brave—you must be a man; you have duties, you have
responsibilities. It's your duty to console your mother—the poor lady is
plunged in despair. Eh? What's that? You haven't told him? Cavaliere, your
illustrious father is no more."
Odo
stared a moment without understanding; then his grief burst from him in a great
sob, and he hid himself against Filomena's apron, weeping for the father in
damascened armour and scarlet cloak.
"Come,
come," said the abate impatiently. "Is
supper laid? for we must be gone as soon as the mist
rises." He took the little boy by the hand. "Would it not distract
your mind to recite the catechism?" he inquired.
"No,
no!" cried Odo with redoubled sobs.
"Well,
then, as you will. What a madman!" he exclaimed to Filomena. "I
warrant it hasn't seen its father three times in its life. Come in, cavaliere;
come to supper."
Filomena
had laid a table in the stone chamber known as the bailiff's parlour, and
thither the abate dragged his charge and set him down
before the coarse tablecloth covered with earthen platters. A tallow dip threw
its flare on the abate's big aquiline face as he sat
opposite Odo, gulping the hastily prepared frittura and the thick purple wine
in its wicker flask. Odo could eat nothing. The tears still ran down his cheeks
and his whole soul was possessed by the longing to steal back and see whether
the figure of the knight in the scarlet cloak had vanished from the chapel
wall. The abate sat in silence, gobbling his food like
the old black pig in the yard. When he had finished he stood up, exclaiming:
"Death comes to us all, as the hawk said to the chicken. You must be a
man, cavaliere." Then he stepped into the kitchen, and called out for the
horses to be put to.
The
farm hands had slunk away to one of the outhouses, and Filomena and Jacopone
stood bowing and curtseying as the carriage drew up at the kitchen door. In a
corner of the big vaulted room the little foundling was washing the dishes,
heaping the scraps in a bowl for herself and the
fowls. Odo ran back and touched her arm. She gave a start and looked at him
with frightened eyes. He had nothing to give her, but he said: "Good-bye,
Momola"; and he thought to himself that when he was grown up and had a
sword he would surely come back and bring her a pair of shoes and a panettone.
The abate was calling him, and the next moment he found himself lifted into the
carriage, amid the blessings and lamentations of his foster-parents; and with a
great baying of dogs and clacking of whipcord the horses clattered out of the
farmyard, and turned their heads toward Pianura.
The
mist had rolled back and fields and vineyards lay bare to the winter moon. The
way was lonely, for it skirted the marsh, where no one lived; and only here and
there the tall black shadow of a crucifix ate into the whiteness of the road.
Shreds of vapour still hung about the hollows, but beyond these fold on fold of
translucent hills melted into a sky dewy with stars. Odo cowered in his corner,
staring out awestruck at the unrolling of the strange white landscape. He had
seldom been out at night, and never in a carriage; and there was something
terrifying to him in this flight through the silent moon-washed fields, where
no oxen moved in the furrows, no peasants pruned the mulberries, and not a
goat's bell tinkled among the oaks. He felt himself alone in a ghostly world
from which even the animals had vanished, and at last he averted his eyes from
the dreadful scene and sat watching the abate, who had fixed a reading-lamp at
his back, and whose hooked-nosed shadow, as the springs jolted him up and down,
danced overhead like the huge Pulcinella at the fair of Pontesordo.
The
gleam of a lantern woke Odo. The horses had stopped at the gates of Pianura,
and the abate giving the pass-word, the carriage rolled under the gatehouse and
continued its way over the loud cobble-stones of the ducal streets.
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