Home > Authors Index > Hall Caine > Eternal City > This page
The Eternal City, a novel by Hall Caine |
||
Part 1. The Holy Roman Empire - Chapter 8 |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
_ PART ONE. THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE CHAPTER VIII Roma had taken refuge in the council-room. There had been much business that morning, and a copy of the constitutional statute lay open on a large table, which had a plate-glass top with photographs under the surface. In this passionless atmosphere, so little accustomed to such scenes, Roma sat in her wounded pride and humiliation, with her head down, and her beautiful white hands over her face. She heard measured footsteps approaching, and then a hand touched her on the shoulder. She looked up and drew back as if the touch stung her. Her lips closed sternly, and she got up and began to walk about the room, and then she burst into a torrent of anger. "Did you hear them? The cats! How they loved to claw me, and still purr and purr! Before the sun is set the story will be all over Rome! It has run off already on the hoofs of that woman's English horses. To-morrow morning it will be in every newspaper in the kingdom. Olga and Lena and every woman of them all who lives in a glass house will throw stones. 'The new Pompadour! Who is she?' Oh, I could die of vexation and shame!" The Baron leaned against the table and listened, twisting the ends of his moustache. "The Court will turn its back on me now. They only wanted a good excuse to put their humiliations upon me. It's horrible! I can't bear it. I won't. I tell you, I won't!" But the lips, compressed with scorn, began to quiver visibly, and she threw herself into a chair, took out her handkerchief, and hid her face on the table. At that moment Felice came into the room to say that the Commendatore Angelelli had returned and wished to speak with his Excellency. "I will see him presently," said the Baron, with an impassive expression, and Felice went out silently, as one who had seen nothing. The Baron's calm dignity was wounded. "Be so good as to have some regard for me in the presence of my servants," he said. "I understand your feelings, but you are much too excited to see things in their proper light. You have been publicly insulted and degraded, but you must not talk to me as if it were my fault." "Then whose is it? If it is not your fault, whose fault is it?" she said, and the Baron thought her red eyes flashed up at him with an expression of hate. He took the blow full in the face, but made no reply, and his silence broke her answer. "No, no, that was too bad," she said, and she reached over to him, and he kissed her and then sat down beside her and took her hand and held it. At the next moment her brilliant eyes had filled with tears and her head was down and the hot drops were falling on to the back of his hand. "I suppose it is all over," she said. "Don't say that," he answered. "We don't know what a day may bring forth. Before long I may have it in my power to silence every slander and justify you in the eyes of all." At that she raised her head with a smile and seemed to look beyond the Baron at something in the vague distance, while the glass top of the table, which had been clouded by her breath, cleared gradually, and revealed a large house almost hidden among trees. It was a photograph of the Baron's castle in the Alban hills. "Only," continued the Baron, "you must get rid of that man Bruno." "I will discharge him this very day--I will! I will! I will!" There was an intense bitterness in the thought that what David Rossi had said must have come of what her own servant told him--that Bruno had watched her in her own house day by day, and that time after time the two men had discussed her between them. "I could kill him," she said. "Bruno Rocco?" "No, David Rossi." "Have patience; he shall be punished," said the Baron. "How?" "He shall be put on his trial." "What for?" "Sedition. The law allows a man to say what he will about a Prime Minister, but he must not foretell the overthrow of the King. The fellow has gone too far at last. He shall go to Santo Stefano." "What good will that do?" "He will be silenced--and crushed." She looked at the Baron with a sidelong smile, and something in her heart, which she did not understand, made her laugh at him. "Do you imagine you can crush a man like that by trying and condemning him?" she said. "He has insulted and humiliated me, but I'm not silly enough to deceive myself. Try him, condemn him, and he will be greater in his prison than the King on his throne." The Baron twisted the ends of his moustache again. "Besides," she said, "what benefit will it be to me if you put him on trial for inciting the people to rebellion against the King? The public will say it was for insulting yourself, and everybody will think he was punished for telling the truth." The Baron continued to twist the ends of his moustache. "Benefit!" She laughed ironically. "It will be a double injury. The insult will be repeated in public again and again. First the advocate for the crown will read it aloud, then the advocate for the defence will quote it, and then it will be discussed and dissected and telegraphed until everybody in court knows it by heart and all Europe has heard of it." The Baron made no answer, but watched the beautiful face, now very pale, behind which conflicting thoughts seemed to wriggle like a knot of vipers. Suddenly she leaped up with a spring. "I know!" she cried. "I know! I know! I know!" "Well?" "Give the man to me, and I will show you how to escape from this humiliating situation." "Roma?" said the Baron, but he had read her thought already. "If you punish him for this speech you will injure both of us and do no good to the King." "It's true." "Take him in a serious conspiracy, and you will be doing us no harm and the King some service." "No doubt." "You say there is a mystery about David Rossi, and you want to know who he is, who his father was, and where he spent the years he was away from Rome." "I would certainly give a good deal to know." "You want to know what vile refugee in London filled him with his fancies, what conspiracies he is hatching, what secret societies he belongs to, and, above all, what his plans and schemes are, and whether he is in league with the Vatican." She spoke so rapidly that the words sputtered out of her quivering lips. "Well?" "Well, I will find it all out for you." "My dear Roma!" "Leave him to me, and within a month you shall know"--she laughed, a little ashamed--"the inmost secrets of his soul." She was walking to and fro again, to prevent the Baron from looking into her face, which was now red over its white, like a rose moon in a stormy sky. The Baron thought. "She is going to humble the man by her charms--to draw him on and then fling him away, and thus pay him back for what he has done to-day. So much the better for me if I may stand by and do nothing. A strong Minister should be unmoved by personal attacks. He should appear to regard them with contempt." He looked at her, and the brilliancy of her eyes set his heart on fire. The terrible attraction of her face at that moment stirred in him the only love he had for her. At the same time it awakened the first spasm of jealousy. "I understand you, Roma," he said. "You are splendid! You are irresistible! But remember--the man is one of the incorruptible." She laughed. "No woman who has yet crossed his path seems to have touched him, and it is the pride of all such men that no woman ever can." "I've seen him," she said. "Take care! As you say, he is young and handsome." She tossed her head and laughed again. The Baron thought: "Certainly he has wounded her in a way no woman can forgive." "And what about Bruno?" he said. "He shall stay," she answered. "Such men are easy enough to manage." "You wish me to liberate David Rossi and leave you to deal with him?" "I do! Oh, for the day when I can turn the laugh against him as he has turned the laugh against me! At the top of his hopes, at the height of his ambitions, at the moment when he says to himself, 'It is done'--he shall fall." The Baron touched the bell. "Very well!" he said. "One can sometimes catch more flies with a spoonful of honey than with a hogshead of vinegar. We shall see." A moment later the Chief of Police entered the room. "The Honourable Rossi is safely lodged in prison," he said. "Commendatore," said the Baron, pointing to the book lying open on the table, "I have been looking again at the statute, and now I am satisfied that a Deputy can be arrested by the authorisation of Parliament alone." "But, Excellency, if he is taken in the act, according to the forty-fifth article, the parliamentary immunity ceases." "Commendatore, I have given you my opinion, and now it is my wish that the Honourable David Rossi should be set at liberty." "Excellency!" "Be so good as to liberate him instantly, and let your officers see him safely through the streets to his home in the Piazza Navona." The little head like a hen's went down like a hatchet, and Commendatore Angelelli backed out of the room. _ |