<h2 class='c009'>CHAPTER XI</h2></div>
<p class='c006' ><span class='sc'>Marcia</span> was awakened the next morning by Bianca
knocking at the door, with the information that Gervasio
wished to get up, and that, as his clothes were very ragged,
she had taken the liberty the night before of throwing them
away.</p>
<p class='c007' >For an instant Marcia blinked uncomprehendingly;
then, as the events of the evening flashed through her
mind, she sat up in bed, and solicitously clasping her
knees in her hands, considered the problem. She felt,
and not without reason, that Gervasio’s future success at
the villa depended largely on the impression he made at
this, his first formal appearance. She finally dispatched
Bianca to try him with one of Gerald’s suits, and to be very
sure that his face was clean. Meanwhile she hurried
through with her own dressing in order to be the first to
inspect his rehabilitation.</p>
<p class='c007' >As she was putting the last touches to her hair she heard
a murmur of voices on the terrace, and peering out cautiously,
beheld her uncle and Sybert lounging on the parapet
engaged with cigarettes. She had not been dreaming,
then; those were Sybert’s steps she had heard the night
before. She puckered her brow over the puzzle and peered
out again. Whatever had happened last night, there was
nothing electrical in the air this morning. The two had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_100' id='Page_100'>100</SPAN></span>
apparently shoved all inflammable subjects behind them
and were merely waiting idly until coffee should be served.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was a beautifully peaceful spring morning that she
looked out upon. The two men on the terrace appeared
to be in mood with the day—careless, indifferent loungers,
nothing more. And last night? She recalled their low,
fierce, angry tones; and the lines in her forehead deepened.
This was a chameleon world, she thought. As she stood
watching them, Gervasio for the moment forgotten, Gerald
ran up to the two with some childish prattle which called
forth a quick, amused laugh. Sybert stretched out a lazy
hand and drew the boy toward him. Carefully balancing
his cigarette on the edge of one of the terra-cotta vases,
he rose to his feet and tossed the little fellow in the air
four or five times. Gerald screamed with delight and
called for more. Sybert laughingly declined, as he resumed
his cigarette and his seat on the balustrade.</p>
<p class='c007' >The little play recalled Marcia to her duty. With a
shake of her head at matters in general, she gave them
up, and turned her face toward Gervasio’s quarters. Bianca
was on her knees before the boy, giving the last
touches to his sailor tie, and she turned him slowly around
for inspection. His appearance was even more promising
than Marcia had hoped for. With his dark curls still
damp from their unwonted ablutions, clad in one of Gerald’s
baggiest sailor-suits of red linen with a rampant
white collar and tie, except for his bare feet (which would
not be forced into Gerald’s shoes) he might have been a
little princeling himself, backed by a hundred noble ancestors.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia sank down on her knees beside him. ‘You
little dear!’ she exclaimed as she kissed him.</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio was not used to caresses, and for a moment he
drew back, his brown eyes growing wide with wonder.
Then a smile broke over his face, and he reached out a
timid hand and patted her confidingly on the cheek. She
kissed him again in pure delight, and taking him by the
hand, set out forthwith for the loggia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘<i>Ecco!</i> my friends. Isn’t he beautiful?’ she demanded.</p>
<p class='c007' >Mr. Copley and Sybert sprang to their feet and came
forward interestedly.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_101' id='Page_101'>101</SPAN></span>
‘Who denies now that it’s clothes that make the man?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I can’t say but that he was as picturesque last night,’
her uncle returned; ‘but he’s undoubtedly cleaner this
morning.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Where’s Gerald?’ asked Sybert. ‘Let’s see what he
has to say of the new arrival.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gerald, who had but just discovered Marcellus, was
delightedly romping in the garden with him, and was
dragged away under protest and confronted with the
stranger. He examined him in silence a moment and
then remarked, ‘He’s got my cloves on.’ And suddenly,
as a terrible idea dawned upon him, he burst out: ‘Is he
a new bruvver? ‘Cause if he is you can take him away.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, my dear!’ his mother remonstrated in horror.
‘He’s a little Italian boy.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gerald was visibly relieved. He examined Gervasio
again from this new point of view.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I want to go wifout my shoes and socks,’ he declared.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, but he’s going to wear shoes and socks, too, as soon
we can get some to fit him,’ said Marcia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Do you want to see my lizhyards?’ Gerald asked
insinuatingly, suddenly making up his mind and pulling
Gervasio by the sleeve.</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio backed away.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You must talk to him in Italian, Gerald,’ Sybert suggested.
‘He’s like Marietta: he doesn’t understand anything
else. I should like to have another look at those
lizards myself,’ he added. ‘Come on, Gervasio,’ and
taking a boy by each hand, he strode off toward the
fountain.</p>
<p class='c007' >Mrs Copley looked after them dubiously, but Marcia
interposed, ‘He’s a dear little fellow, Aunt Katherine,
and it will be good for Gerald to have some one to play
with.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Marcia’s right, Katherine; it won’t hurt him any,
and I doubt if the boy’s Italian is much worse than Bianca’s.’</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >Thus Gervasio’s formal installation at the villa. For
the first week or so his principal activity was eating, until
he was in the way of becoming as rosy-cheeked as Gerald
himself. During the early stages of his career he was
consigned to the kitchen, where François served him
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_102' id='Page_102'>102</SPAN></span>
with soup and macaroni to the point of bursting. Later,
having learned to wield a knife and fork without disaster,
he was advanced to the nursery, where he supped with
Gerald under the watchful eye of Granton.</p>
<p class='c007' >Taken all in all, Gervasio proved a valuable addition
to the household. He was sweet-tempered, eager to
please, and pitifully grateful for the slightest kindness.
He became Gerald’s faithful henchman and implicitly
obeyed his commands, with only an occasional rebellion
when they were over-oppressive. He was quick to learn,
and it was not long before he was jabbering in a mixture of
Italian and English with a vocabulary nearly as varied as
Gerald’s own.</p>
<p class='c007' >The first week following Gervasio’s advent was a period
of comparative quiet at the villa, but one fairly disturbing
little contretemps occurred to break the monotony.</p>
<p class='c007' >The boy had been promised a reward of sweet chocolate
as soon as he should learn to wear shoes and stockings
with a smiling face—shoes and stockings being, in his
eyes, an objectionable feature of civilization. When it
came time for payment, however, Marcia discovered that
there was no sweet chocolate in the house, and, not to
disappoint him, she ordered Gerald’s pony-carriage, and
taking with her the two boys and a groom, set out for
Castel Vivalanti and the baker’s. Had she stopped to
think, she would have known that to take Gervasio to
Castel Vivalanti in broad daylight was not a wise proceeding.
But it was a frequent characteristic of the Copleys
that they did their thinking afterward. The spectacle
of Gervasio Delano in a carriage with the <i>principino</i>, and
in new clothes, with his face washed, very nearly occasioned
a mob among his former playmates. The carriage was
besieged, and Marcia found it necessary to distribute a
considerable largess of copper before she could rid herself
of her following.</p>
<p class='c007' >As she laughingly escaped from the crowd and drove
out through the gateway a man stepped forward from
the corner of the wall and motioned her to stop. For a
moment a remembrance of her aunt’s <i>rencontre</i> with the
Camorrist flashed through her mind, and then she smiled
as she reflected that it was broad daylight and in full sight
of the town. She pulled the pony to a standstill and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_103' id='Page_103'>103</SPAN></span>
asked him what he wanted. He was Gervasio’s stepfather,
he said. They were poor, hard-working people and did
not have enough to eat, but they were very lonely without
the boy and wished to have him back. Even American
princes, he added, couldn’t take poor people’s children away
without their permission. And he finished by insinuating
that if he were paid enough he might reconsider the matter.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia did not understand all that he said, but as Gervasio
began to cry, and at the same time clasped both
hands firmly about the seat in an evident determination
to resist all efforts to dislodge him, she saw what he meant,
and replied that she would tell the police. But the man
evidently thought that he had the upper hand of the
situation, and that she would rather buy him off than let
the boy go. With a threatening air, he reached out and
grasped Gervasio roughly by the arm. Gervasio screamed,
and Marcia, before she thought of possible consequences,
struck the man a sharp blow with the whip and at the same
time lashed the pony into a gallop. They dashed down
the stony road and around the corners at a perilous rate,
while the man shouted curses from the top of the hill.</p>
<p class='c007' >They reached the villa still bubbling with excitement
over the adventure, and caused Mrs. Copley no little
alarm. But when Marcia greeted her uncle’s arrival that
night with the story, he declared that she had done just
right; and without waiting for dinner, he remounted
his horse, and galloping back to Castel Vivalanti, rode
straight up to the door of the little <i>trattoria</i>, where the
fellow was engaged in drinking wine and cursing Americans.
There he told him, before an interested group of witnesses,
that Gervasio was not his child; that since he could not
treat him decently he had forfeited all claim to him;
and that if he tried to levy any further blackmail he would
find himself in prison. Wherewith he wheeled his horse’s
head about and made a spectacular exit from the town.
If anything were needed to strengthen Gervasio’s position
with Mr. Copley, this incident answered the purpose.</p>
<p class='c007' >As a result of the adventure, Marcia, for the time,
dropped Castel Vivalanti from her calling-list and extended
her acquaintance in the other direction. She came
to be well known as she galloped about the country-side
on a satin-coated little sorrel (born and bred in Kentucky),
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_104' id='Page_104'>104</SPAN></span>
followed by a groom on a thumping cob, who always
respectfully drew up behind her when she stopped. As
often as she could think of any excuse, she visited the
peasants in their houses, laughing gaily with them over her
own queer grammar. It was an amused curiosity which
at first actuated her friendliness. Their ingenious comments
and naïve questions in regard to America proved an
ever-diverting source of interest; but after a little, as she
understood them better, she grew to like them for their
own stanch virtues. When she looked about their gloomy
little rooms, with almost no furnishing except a few copper
pots and kettles and a tawdry picture of the Madonna,
and saw what meagre, straitened lives they led, and yet
how bravely they bore them, her amusement changed to
respect. Their quick sympathy and warm friendliness
awakened an answering spark, and it was not long before
she had discovered for herself the lovable charm of the
Italian peasant.</p>
<p class='c007' >She explored, in the course of her rides, many a forgotten
little mountain village topping a barren crag of the Sabines,
and held by some Roman prince in almost the same feudal
tenure as a thousand years ago. They were picturesque
enough from below, these huddling grey-stone hamlets
shooting up from the solid rock; but when she had climbed
the steeply winding path and had looked within, she found
them miserable and desolate beyond belief. She was
coming to see the under side of a great deal of picturesqueness.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >Meanwhile, though life was moving in an even groove
at Villa Vivalanti, the same could not be said of the rest
of Italy. Each day brought fresh reports of rioting
throughout the southern provinces, and travellers hurrying
north reported that every town of any size was under
martial law. In spite of reassuring newspaper articles,
written under the eye of the police, it was evident that
affairs were fast approaching a crisis. There was not much
anxiety felt in the immediate neighbourhood of Rome,
for the capital was too great a stronghold of the army
to be in actual danger from mobs. The affair, if anything,
was regarded as a welcome diversion from the tediousness
of Lent, and the embassies and large hotels where the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_105' id='Page_105'>105</SPAN></span>
foreigners congregated were animated by a not unpleasurable
air of excitement.</p>
<p class='c007' >Conflicting opinions of every sort were current. Some
shook their heads wisely, and said that in their opinion
the matter was much more serious than appeared on the
surface. They should not be surprised to see the scenes
of the French Commune enacted over again; and they
intimated further, that since it had to happen, they were
very willing to be on hand in time to see the fun.</p>
<p class='c007' >Many expressed the belief that the trouble had nothing
to do with the price of bread; the wheat famine was
merely a pretext for stirring up the people. It was well
known that the universities, the younger generation of
writers and newspaper men, even the ranks of the army,
were riddled with socialism. What more likely than that
the socialists and the church adherents had united to
overthrow the government, intending as soon as their
end was accomplished to turn upon each other and fight
it out for supremacy? It was the opinion of these that
the government should have adopted the most drastic
measures possible, and was doing very foolishly in catering
to the populace by putting down the <i>dazio</i>. Still others
held that the government should have abolished the <i>dazio</i>
long before, and that the people in the south did very well
to rise and demand their rights. And so the affairs of the
unfortunate Neapolitans were the subject of conversation
at every <i>table d’hôte</i> in Rome; and the <i>forestieri</i> sojourning
within the walls derived a large amount of entertainment
from the matter.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia Copley, however, had heard little of the gathering
trouble. She did not read the papers, and her uncle
did not mention the matter at home. He was too sick at
heart to dwell on it uselessly, and it was not a subject he
cared to discuss with his niece. His family, indeed, saw
very little of him, for he had thrown himself into the work
of the Foreign Relief Committee with characteristic energy,
and he spent the most of his time in Rome. Marcia’s
interest in sight-seeing had come to a sudden halt since
the afternoon of Tre Fontane. She had ventured into
the city only once, and then merely to attend to the purchase
of clothes for Gervasio. The Roystons, on that occasion,
had been out when she called at their hotel, and her
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_106' id='Page_106'>106</SPAN></span>
feeling of regret was mingled largely with relief as she left
her card and retired in safety to Villa Vivalanti.</p>
<p class='c007' >She had not analysed her emotions very thoroughly, but
she felt a decided trepidation at the thought of seeing
Paul. The trepidation, however, was not altogether an
unpleasant sensation. The scene in the cloisters had
returned to her mind many times, and she had taken several
brief excursions into the future. What would he say
the next time they met? Would he renew the same
subject, or would he tacitly overlook that afternoon, and
for the time let everything be as it had been before? She
hoped that the latter would be the case. It would give a
certain piquancy to their relations, and she was not ready—just
at present—to make up her mind.</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul, on his side, had also pondered the question somewhat.
Events were not moving with the rapidity he
wished. Marcia, evidently, would not come into Rome,
and he could think of no valid excuse for going out to
the villa. His pessimistic forecast of events had proved
true. Holy Week found the Roystons still in the city,
treating themselves to orgies of church-going. As he
followed his aunt from church to church (there are in the
neighbourhood of three hundred and seventy-five in Rome,
and he says they visited them all that week) he indulged
in many speculations as to the state of Marcia’s mind in
regard to himself. At times he feared he had been over-precipitate;
at others, that he had not been precipitate
enough.</p>
<p class='c007' >His aunt and cousins returned from a flying visit to
the villa, with the report that Marcia had adopted a boy
and a dog and was solicitously engaged with their education.
‘What did she say about me, Madge?’ Paul boldly
inquired.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘She said you were a very impudent fellow,’ Margaret
retorted; and in response to his somewhat startled expression
she added more magnanimously: ‘You needn’t
be so vain as to think she said anything about you. She
never even mentioned your name.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul breathed a meditative ‘Ah!’ Marcia had not
mentioned his name. It was not such a bad sign, that:
she was thinking about him, then. If there were no other
man—and he was vain enough to take her at her word—nothing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_107' id='Page_107'>107</SPAN></span>
could be better for his cause than a solitary week
in the Sabine hills. He knew from present—and past—experience
that an Italian spring is a powerful stimulant
for the heart.</p>
<p class='c007' >On Tuesday of Holy Week Mrs. Royston wakened
slightly from her spiritual trance to observe that she had
scarcely seen Marcia for as much as a week, and that as
soon as Lent was over they must have the Copleys in to
luncheon at the hotel.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Where’s the use of waiting till Lent’s over?’ Paul
had inquired. ‘You needn’t make it a function. Just a
sort of—family affair. If you invite them for Thursday,
we can all go together to the tenebræ service at St. Peter’s.
As this is Miss Copley’s first Easter in Rome, she might be
interested.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Accordingly a note arrived at the villa on Wednesday
morning inviting the family—Gerald included—to breakfast
the next day with the Roystons in Rome. On Thursday
morning an acceptance—Gerald excluded—arrived
at the <i>Hôtel de Lourdres et Paris</i>, and was followed an hour
later by the Copleys themselves.</p>
<p class='c007' >The breakfast went off gaily. Paul was his most expansive
self, and the whole table responded to his mood.
It was with a sense of gratification that Marcia saw her
uncle, who had lately been so grave, laughingly exchanging
nonsense with the young man. She felt, though she would
scarcely have acknowledged it to herself, a certain property
right in Paul, and it pleased her subtly when he
pleased other people. She sat next to him at the table,
and occasionally, beneath his laughter and persiflage, she
caught an undertone of meaning. So long as they were
not alone and he could not go beyond a certain point,
she found their relations on a distinctly satisfying basis.</p>
<p class='c007' >In spite of Paul’s manœuvres, he did not find himself
alone with Marcia that afternoon. There was always a
cousin in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Copley, declining the
spectacle of the tenebræ in St. Peter’s—they had seen it
before—left shortly after luncheon. As they were leaving,
Mr. Copley remarked to Mrs. Royston—</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I will entrust my niece to your care, and please do
not lose sight of her until you put her in my hands for
the evening train. I wish no more such escapades as we
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_108' id='Page_108'>108</SPAN></span>
had the other day.’ And, to Marcia’s discomfort, the
adventures involving the rescue of Marcellus and Gervasio
were recounted in detail. For an unexplained reason,
she would have preferred the story of their origin to
remain in darkness.</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul’s face clouded slightly. ‘My objections to Sybert
grow rapidly,’ he remarked in an undertone.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia laughed. ‘If you could have seen him! He
never spoke a word to me all the way out in the train.
He sat with his arms folded and a frown on his brow, like—Napoleon
at Moscow.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul’s face brightened again. ‘Oh, I begin to like him,
after all,’ he declared.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >Toward five o’clock that evening every carriage in the
city seemed to be bent for the Ponte Sant’ Angelo. A
casual spectator would never have chosen a religious
function as the end of all this confusion. In the tangle
of narrow streets beyond the bridge the way was almost
blocked, and such progress as was possible was made at
a snail’s pace. The Royston party, in two carriages, not
unnaturally lost each other. The carriage containing
Marcia, Margaret, and Paul, getting into the jam in the
narrow Borgo Nuovo, arrived in the piazza of St. Peter’s
with wheels locked with a cardinal’s coach. The cardinal’s
coachman and theirs exchanged an unclerical
opinion of each other’s ability as drivers. The cardinal
advanced his head from the window with a mildly startled
air of reproof, and the Americans laughed gaily at the
situation. After a moment of scrutiny the cardinal
smiled back, and the four disembarked and set out on foot
across the piazza, leaving the men to sever the difficulty
at their leisure. He proved an unexpectedly cordial
person, and when they parted on the broad steps he held
out of his hand with a friendly smile and after a moment
of perplexed hesitation the three gravely shook it in turn.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Do you think we ought to have kissed it?’ Marcia inquired.
‘I would have done it, only I didn’t know how.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul laughed. ‘He knew we weren’t of the true faith.
No right-minded Catholic would laugh at nearly spilling
a cardinal in the street.’</p>
<p class='c007' >They stood aside by the central door looking for Mrs.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_109' id='Page_109'>109</SPAN></span>
Royston and Eleanor and watching the crowd surge past.
Paul was quite insistent that they should go in without
the others, but Marcia was equally insistent that they
wait. She had an intuitive feeling that there was safety
in numbers.</p>
<p class='c007' >For a wonder they presently espied Mrs. Royston bearing
down upon them, a small camp-stool clutched to her
portly bosom, and Eleanor panting along behind, a camp-stool
in either hand.</p>
<p class='c007' >Mrs. Royston caught sight of them with an expression
of relief.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘My dears, I was afraid I had lost you,’ she gasped.
‘We remembered, just as we got to the bridge, that we
hadn’t brought any chairs, and so we went back for them.
Paul, you should have thought of them yourself. I
suppose we’d better hurry in and get a good place.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul patiently possessed himself of the chairs and followed
the ladies, with a glance at Marcia which seemed
to say, ‘Is there this day living a more exemplary nephew
and gentleman than I?’</p>
<p class='c007' >The tenebræ service on Holy Thursday is the one time
in the year when St. Peter’s may be seen at night. The
great church looms vaster and emptier and more solemn
then than at any other time. The eye cannot penetrate
to the distant dome hidden in shadows. The long nave
stretches interminably into space, the chapels deepen and
broaden until they are churches themselves. The clustered
pillars reach upward till they are lost in the darkness.
What the eye cannot grasp the imagination seizes upon,
and the vast interior grows and widens until it seems to
stretch out arms to inclose all Christendom itself. On this
one night it does inclose all Rome—nobility and peasants,
Italians and foreigners: those who are of the faith, and
those who are merely spectators; those who come to worship;
those who come to be amused—St. Peter’s receives
them all with the same impartiality.</p>
<p class='c007' >Standing outside, it had seemed to them that the whole
city had flowed through the doors; but within, the church
was still approximately empty. As they walked down the
broad nave in the dimness of twilight, Marcia turned to the
young man beside her.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘At first I didn’t think St. Peter’s was impressive—that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_110' id='Page_110'>110</SPAN></span>
is, compared to Milan and Cologne and some of the other
cathedrals—but it’s like the rest of Rome, it grows and
grows until——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It comes to be the whole world,’ he supplied.</p>
<p class='c007' >By the bronze baldacchino Mrs. Royston spread her
camp-stools and sat down.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘This is the best place we could choose,’ she said contentedly
as she folded her hands. ‘We shan’t be very near
the choir, but we can hear just as well, and we shall have an
excellent view of the altar-washing and the sacred relics.’
She spoke in the tone of one who is picking out a stall for a
theatrical performance.</p>
<p class='c007' >From time to time friends of either the Roystons or
Marcia drifted up and, having paused to chat a few minutes,
passed on, giving place to others. As one group left them
with smiles and friendly bows, Marcia turned to Paul, who
was standing beside her.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It’s really dreadful,’ she said, ‘the way the foreigners
take possession of Rome. This might as well be a reception
at the Embassy. If I were the pope, I would put up a sign
on the door of St. Peter’s saying, “No <i>forestieri</i> admitted.”’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Ah, but there are no <i>forestieri</i> in the case of St. Peter’s;
it belongs to all nations.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia smiled at the young man and turned away; and
as she turned she caught, across an intervening stream of
heads, a face, looking in her direction, wearing about the
eyes a curiously quizzical expression. It was the face of a
middle-aged woman—an interesting face—not exactly
beautiful, but sparkling with intelligence. It seemed very
familiar to Marcia, and as her eyes lingered on it a moment
the quizzical expression gave place to one of amused
friendliness. The woman smiled and bowed and passed on.
Marcia bowed vaguely, and then it flashed through her
mind who it was—the lady who wrote, the ‘greatest gossip
in Rome,’ whom she had met at the studio tea so many
weeks before. She had forgotten all about her unknown
friend of that day, and now she turned quickly to Paul to
ask her identity. Paul was engaged in answering some
question of his aunt’s, and before she could gain his attention
again a hush swept over the great interior and everything
else was forgotten in the opening chorus of the
‘Miserere.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_111' id='Page_111'>111</SPAN></span>
The twilight had deepened, and the great white dome
shone dimly far above the blackness of the crowd. The
voices of the papal choir swelled louder and louder in the
solemn chant, and high and separate and alone rose the
clear, flute-like treble of the ‘Pope’s Nightingale.’ And as
an undertone, an accompaniment to the music, the shuffle
and murmur of thirty thousand listeners rose and fell like
the distant beat of surf.</p>
<p class='c007' >The candles on the altar showed dimly above their heads.
As the service continued, one by one the lights were extinguished.
After half an hour or so, the waiting and intensity
grew wearing. The crowd was pressing closer, and Margaret
Royston craned her neck, vainly trying to discover
how many candles remained. Paul, with ready imagination,
was answering his aunt’s questions as to the meaning
of the ceremonies. Margaret turned to Marcia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Poke this young priest in front of me,’ she whispered,
and ask him in Italian how many candles are left.’</p>
<p class='c007' >The young priest, overhearing the words, turned around
with an amused smile, obligingly stood on his tiptoes to look
at the altar, and replied in English that there were three.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Thank you,’ said Margaret; ‘I didn’t suppose you could
talk English.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I was born in Troy, New York.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Really?’ she laughed, and the two fell to comparing
the rival merits of the Hudson and the Tiber.</p>
<p class='c007' >He proved most friendly, carefully explaining to the
party the significance of the service and the meaning of the
different symbols. Mrs. Royston looked reproachfully at
her nephew, whose stories, it transpired, did not accord
with fact.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You really couldn’t expect me to know as much as a
professional, Aunt Eleanor,’ he unblushingly expostulated.
My explanations were more picturesque than his, at any
rate; and if they aren’t true, they ought to be.’</p>
<p class='c007' >The last candle was finally out, and for a moment the
great interior remained in darkness. Then a noise like the
distant rattle of thunder symbolized the rending of the veil,
and in an instant lights sprang out from every arch and pier
and dome. A long procession of cardinals, choristers, and
acolytes wound singing to the high altar—the ‘Altar of the
World.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_112' id='Page_112'>112</SPAN></span>
Marcia stood by the railing and watched their faces as
they filed past. They were such thoughtful, spiritual,
kindly faces that her respect for this great power—the
greatest power in Christendom—increased momentarily.
She felt a sort of shame to be there merely as a spectator.
She looked about at the faces of the peasants, and thought
what a barren, barren existence would be theirs without this
church, which promised the only joy they could ever hope
to have.</p>
<p class='c007' >When the ceremony of washing the altar with oil and wine
was ended, the young priest bade them a friendly good
evening. He could not wait for the holy relics, he said;
they had supper at the monastery at seven o’clock. He
hastily added, however, in response to the smile trembling
on Margaret’s lips, ‘Not that they are not the true relics and
very holy, but I have seen them several times before.’</p>
<p class='c007' >The relics were exhibited to the multitude from St.
Veronica’s balcony far above their heads. Paul whispered
to Marcia with a little laugh:</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Our friend the cardinal would be gratified, would he not,
to see his heretics bowing before St. Veronica’s handkerchief?
Look,’ he added, ‘at that peasant woman in her
blue skirt and scarlet kerchief. She has probably walked
fifty miles, with her baby strapped to a board. I suppose
she thinks the child will have good fortune the rest of his life
If he just catches a glimpse of a splinter of the true cross.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia looked at the woman standing beside her, a pilgrim
from the Abruzzi, judging from her dress. She was raising
an illumined face to the little balcony where the priest was
holding above their heads the holy relic. In her arms she
held a baby whose face she was turning upward also, while
she murmured prayers in his ears. Marcia’s glance wandered
away over the crowd—the poor pilgrim peasants whose
upturned faces, worn by work and poverty, were softened
for the moment into a holy awe. Then she raised her eyes
to the balcony where the priest in his white robes was holding
high above his head the shining silver cross in which was
incased St. Peter’s dearest relic, the tiny splinter of the true
cross. The light was centred on the little balcony; every
eye in the great concourse was fixed upon it. The priest
was fat, his face was red, his attitude theatrical. The whole
spectacle was theatrical. A quick revulsion of feeling
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_113' id='Page_113'>113</SPAN></span>
passed over her. A few moments before, as she watched the
procession of cardinals, she had been ready to admit the
spiritual significance of the scene; now she saw only its
spectacular side. It was merely a play, a delusion got up to
dazzle the poor peasants. This church was the only thing
they had in life, and, after all, what did it do for them?
What could St. Veronica’s handkerchief, what could a
splinter of the true cross, do to brighten their lives? It was
superstition, not religion, that was being offered to the
peasants of Italy.</p>
<p class='c007' >She looked again across the sea of upturned faces and
shook her head. ‘Isn’t it pitiful?’ she asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Isn’t it picturesque?’ echoed Paul.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘That priest up there knows he’s deluding all these people,
and he’s just as solemn as if he believed in the relics himself.
The church is still so hopelessly mediaeval!’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘That’s the beauty of the church,’ Paul objected. ‘It’s
still mediaeval, while the rest of the world is so hopelessly
nineteenth-century. I like to see these peasants believing
in St. Veronica’s handkerchief and the power of the sacred
Bambino to cure disease. I think it’s a beautiful exhibition
of faith in a world where faith is out of fashion. I don’t
blame the priests in the least for keeping it up. It’s a protest
against the age. They’re about the only artists left.
If I were a priest I’d learn prestidigitation, and substantiate
the efficacy of the relics with a miracle or so.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It’s simply fostering superstition.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Take their superstition away and you deprive them of
their most picturesque quality.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You don’t care for anything but what’s picturesque!’
she exclaimed in a tone half scornful.</p>
<p class='c007' >Paul did not answer. The ceremony was over and the
crowd was beginning to pour out. They turned with the
stream and wedged their way toward the right-hand
entrance, near which their carriages were waiting. Paul
manœuvred very adroitly so that the crowd should separate
them from the rest of the party at the door.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I will tell you what I care for most,’ he said in her ear as
they pushed out into the portico. ‘I care for you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She perceived his drift too late and looked back with an
air of dismay. The others were lost in the moving mass of
heads.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_114' id='Page_114'>114</SPAN></span>
Paul saw her glance and laughed. ‘You’re going to take
good care that we shan’t be alone together, aren’t you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia echoed his laugh. ‘Yes,’ she acknowledged
frankly; ‘I’m trying to.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It doesn’t matter. My time’s coming; you can’t put it
off.’ His hand touched hers hanging at her side and he
clasped it firmly. ‘Come here; we’ll get out of this crowd,’
and he pushed on outside and drew back into a corner by
one of the tall columns. The crowd surged past, flowing
down the steps like a river widening to the sea. Below
them the piazza was black with a tossing, moving mass of
carriages and people. The mass of the Vatican at their left
loomed a black bulk in the night, its hundreds of windows
shining in the reflected lights of the piazza like the eyes of a
great octopus. At another time Marcia might have looked
very curiously toward the palace. She might have wondered
if in one of those dark windows Leo was not standing brooding
over the throng of worshippers who had come that day.
How must a pope feel to see thirty thousand people go out
from under his roof—go out freely to their homes—while he
alone may not step across the threshold? At another time
she would have paused to play a little with the thought, but
now her attention was engaged. Paul still held her hand.</p>
<p class='c007' >He squared himself in front of her, with his back to the
crowd. ‘Have you been thinking about what I asked you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >Had she been thinking! She had been doing nothing
else. She looked at him reproachfully. ‘Let’s not talk
about it. The more I think, the more I don’t know.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘That’s an unfortunate state to be in. Perhaps I can
help you to make up your mind. Are you going to be in
love with me some day, Marcia—soon?’ he persisted.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I—I don’t know.’</p>
<p class='c007' >He leaned toward her, with his face very close to hers.
She shrank back further into the shadow. ‘There they
are!’ she exclaimed, as she caught sight of Eleanor’s head
above the crowd, and she tried to draw her hand away.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Never mind them. They won’t be here for three minutes.
You’ve got time enough to answer me.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Please, not now—Paul,’ she whispered.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘When?’ he insisted, keeping a firm hold of her hand.
‘The next time I see you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes—perhaps,’ and she turned away to greet the others.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_115' id='Page_115'>115</SPAN></span>
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