“Perhaps Tommaso is hungry,” suggested an English lady who sat opposite.
“Maso, please,” corrected Mrs. Roscoe; “Tommaso is as ugly as Thomas.”
“I dare say he has not nourishment enough,” continued the first speaker; “at his age that is so important. Why not order for him an extra chop at luncheon?”
“Thank Mrs. Goldsworthy for her interest in you, Maso,” said his mother.
Maso grew red, and hastily crammed so much bread into his mouth that both of his cheeks were widely distended at the same time.
“I have read in the journal, Madame Roscoe, of a gerate fire in your countree—a town entire? I hope you lose not by it?” This inquirer was a grave little woman from Lausanne, the widow of a Swiss pastor.
Mrs. Roscoe gave a shrug. “My interests are not of that kind. Where was the fire, may I ask?”
“But in your countree, Amereekar. Voyons: the citee of Tam-Tampico.”
Mrs. Roscoe laughed as she helped herself to fish—a fish tied with yellow ribbons, and carrying a yellow lily in his mouth. “When we were at Mentone an old lady informed me one day of the arrival of some of my ‘countrypeople.’ ‘Now,’ she said, ‘you will not be the only Americans in the house.’ At dinner they appeared. They were Chilians. I said to my friend, ‘They are not my countrypeople; they are South Americans.’ She answered, severely: ‘I suppose you say that because they are Southerners! But now that so many years have passed since that dreadful war of yours was brought to a close, I should think it would be far wiser to drop such animosities.’” No one laughed over this story save an American who was within hearing.
This American, a Vermont man, had arrived at the pension several days before, and already he had formed a close and even desperate friendship with Mrs. Roscoe, pursuing her, accompanied by his depressed wife, to her bedroom (she had no sitting-room), where, while trying to find a level place on her slippery yellow sofa, he had delivered himself as follows: “Wife—she kept saying, ‘You ought to go abroad; you aren’t well, and it ’ll do you good; they say it’s very sociable over there if you stay at the pensions.’” (He gave this word a political pronunciation.) “All I can say is—if this is their pension!” And he slapped his thigh with a resounding whack, and laughed sarcastically.
The beef now came round, a long slab of mahogany color, invisibly divided into thin slices, the whole decked with a thick dark sauce which contained currants, citron, and raisins.
“We miss Mr. Willoughby sadly,” observed Mrs. Goldsworthy, with a sigh, as she detached a slice. “Only last night he was here.”
“I cannot say I miss him,” remarked Mrs. Roscoe.
“You do not? Pray tell us why?” suggested the curate, eagerly.
“Well, he’s so black-letter; so early-English; so ‘Merrily sungen the monks of Ely.’ In Baedeker, you know.”
“He is very deep, if you mean that,” said Mrs. Goldsworthy, reprovingly.
“Deep? I should call him wide; he is all over the place. If you speak of a cat, he replies with a cataract; of a plate, with Plato; of the cream, with cremation. I don’t see how he manages to live in England at all; there isn’t standing-room there for his feet. But perhaps he soars; he is a sort of a Cupid, you know. What will become of him if they make him a bishop? For how can a bishop flirt? The utmost he can do is to say, ‘I will see you after service in the vestry.’”
The curate was laughing in gentlemanlike gulps. He was extremely happy. The Rev. Algernon Willoughby, of Ely, had been admired, not to say adored, in that pension for seven long weeks.
The dinner went on through its courses, and by degrees the red wine flew from the glasses to the faces. For as wine of the country in abundance, without extra charge, was one of the attractions of Casa Corti, people took rather more of it than they cared for, on the thoroughly human principle of getting something for nothing. At length came a pudding, violently pink in hue, and reposing on a bed of rose-leaves.
“Why, the pudding’s redder than we are!” remarked Mrs. Roscoe, with innocent surprise.
Her own cheeks, however, looked very cool in the universal flush; her smooth complexion had no rose tints. This lack of pink was, in truth, one of the faults of a face which had many beauties. She was small and fair; her delicately cut features were extremely pretty—“pretty enough to be copied as models for drawing-classes,” some one had once said. Her golden hair, which fell over her forehead in a soft, rippled wave, was drawn up behind after the latest fashion of Paris; her eyes were blue, and often they had a merry expression; her little mouth was almost like that of a child, with its pretty lips and infantile, pearly teeth. In addition, her figure was slender and graceful; her hands and feet and ears were noticeably small. To men Violet Roscoe’s attire always appeared simple; the curate, for instance, if obliged to bear witness, would have said that the costume of each and every other lady in the room appeared to him more ornamented than that of his immediate neighbor. A woman, however, could have told this misled male that the apparently simple dress had cost more, probably, than the combined attire of all the other ladies, save perhaps the rich velvet of Madame Corti.
After nuts and figs, and a final draining of glasses, Madame Corti gave the signal (no one would have dared to leave the table before that sign), and her seventy rose. Smiling, talking, and fanning themselves, they passed across the hall to the salon, where presently tea was served in large gold-banded coffee-cups, most of which were chipped at the edges. The ladies took tea, and chatted with each other; they stood by the piano, and walked up and down, before beginning the regular occupations of the evening—namely, whist, chess, the reading of the best authorities on art, or doing something in the way of embroidery and wool-work, or a complicated construction with bobbins that looked like a horse-net. There were jokes; occasionally there was a ripple of mild laughter. Madame Corti, intrenched behind her own particular table, read the London Times with the aid of a long-handled eye-glass. How she did despise all these old maids, with their silver ornaments, and their small economies, with their unmounted photographs pinned on the walls of their bedrooms, and their talk of Benozzo, and Nicolo the Pisan! She hated the very way they held their teacups after dinner, poised delicately, almost gayly, with the little finger extended, as if to give an air of festal lightness to the scene. Promptly at nine o’clock she disappeared; an hour later her brougham was taking her to an Italian gathering, where there would also be conversation, but conversation of a very different nature. Teresa Corti, when she had escaped from her pension, was one of the wittiest women in Pisa; her wit was audacious, ample, and thoroughly Italian. There was, indeed, nothing English about her save her knowledge of the language, and the trace of descent from an English great-grandfather in her green eyes and crinkled yellow hair.
Mrs. Roscoe did not remain in the drawing-room five minutes; she never took tea, she did not play whist or chess, and she detested fancy-work. She was followed to the stairway by her curate, who was urging her to remain and play backgammon. “It’s not such a bad game; really it’s not,” he pleaded, in his agreeable voice.
“Nothing is a bad game if one is amused,” answered Mrs. Roscoe, severely. She was seldom severe. But this evening she was tired.
“Oh, how early you’ve come up! I’m awful glad,” said Maso, as she entered her bedroom on the third floor. It was a large room, shabbily furnished in yellow, the frescoed walls representing the Bay of Naples. Maso was lying on the rug, with his dog by his side.
“Why are you in the dark?” said his mother. There was a smouldering fire on the hearth; for though the day had been fine (it was the 15th of March), the old palace had a way of developing unexpected shivers in the evening. In spite of these shivers, however, this was the only room where there was a fire. Mrs. Roscoe lighted the lamp and put on the pink shade; then she drew the small Italian sticks together on the hearth, threw on a dozen pine cones, and with the bellows
blew the whole into a brilliant blaze. Next she put a key into the Bay of Naples, unlocked a wave, and drew out a small Vienna coffee-pot.
“Are we going to have coffee? Jolly!” said the boy.
His mother made the coffee; then she took from the same concealed cupboard, which had been drilled in the solid stone of the wall, a little glass jug shaped like a lachrymal from the catacombs, which contained cream; sugar in a bowl; cakes, and a box of marrons glacés. Maso gave a Hi! of delight as each dainty appeared, and made his dog sit on his hind legs. “I say, mother, what were they all laughing about at dinner? Something you said?”
“They always laugh; they appear never to have heard a joke before. That about the bishops, now, that is as old as the hills.” Leaning back in her easy-chair before the fire, with Maso established at her feet, enjoying his cake and coffee, she gave a long yawn. “Oh, what a stupid life!”
Maso was well accustomed to this exclamation. But when he had his mother to himself, and when the room was so bright and so full of fragrant aromas, he saw no reason to echo it. “Well, I think it’s just gay!” he answered. “Mr. Tiber, beg!” Mr. Tiber begged, and received a morsel of cake.
Mrs. Roscoe, after drinking her coffee, had taken up a new novel. “Perhaps you had better study a little,” she suggested.
Maso made a grimace. But as the coffee was gone and the cakes were eaten, he complied—that is, he complied after he had made Mr. Tiber go through his tricks. This took time; for Mr. Tiber, having swallowed a good deal of cake himself, was lazy. At last, after he had been persuaded to show to the world the excellent education he had received, his master decided to go on with his own, and went to get his books, which were on the shelf at the other end of the long room. It pleased him to make this little journey on his heels, with his toes sharply upturned in the air—a feat which required much balancing.
“That is the way you run down the heels of your shoes so,” his mother remarked, glancing at his contortions.
“It doesn’t hurt them much on the carpet,” replied the boy.
“Mercy! You don’t go staggering through the streets in that way, do you?”
“Only back streets.”
He was now returning in the same obstructed manner, carrying his books. He placed them upon the table where the lamp was standing; then he lifted Mr. Tiber to the top of the same table and made him lie down; next, seating himself, he opened a battered school-book, a United States History, and, after looking at the pictures for a while, he began at last to repeat two dates to himself in a singsong whisper. Maso was passing through the period when a boy can be very plain, even hideous, in appearance, without any perception of the fact in the minds of his relatives, who see in him the little toddler still, or else the future man; other persons, however, are apt to see a creature all hands and feet, with a big uncertain mouth and an omnipresent awkwardness. Maso, in addition to this, was short and ill developed, with inexpressive eyes and many large freckles. His features were not well cut; his complexion was pale; his straight hair was of a reddish hue. None of the mother’s beauties were repeated in the child. Such as he was, however, she loved him, and he repaid her love by a deep adoration; to him, besides being “mother,” she was the most beautiful being in the whole world, and also the cleverest. He was intensely proud of the admiration she excited, and was always on the watch for it; at the table, awkward, constrained, with downcast eyes, he yet saw every glance that was directed towards her, and enjoyed each laugh which her words created. Mrs. Roscoe’s purse was a light one; worse than that, an uncertain one; but Maso, personally, had known nothing but indulgence and ease all his life.
While he was vaguely murmuring his dates, and rocking himself backward and forward in time with the murmur, there came a tap at the door. It was Miss Spring. “I have looked in to bid you good-bye,” she said, entering. “I am going to Munich to-morrow.”
“Isn’t that sudden?” said Mrs. Roscoe. “The torn chair is the most comfortable. Have a marron?”
“Thank you; I seldom eat sweets. No, it is not sudden.”
“Shall I make you a cup of coffee?”
“Thank you; I don’t take coffee.”
Mrs. Roscoe pushed a footstool across the rug.
“Thank you; I never need footstools.”
“Superior to all the delights of womankind!”
Miss Spring came out of her abstraction and laughed. “Not superior; only bilious and long-legged.” Then her face grew grave again. “Do you consider Pisa an attractive place for a permanent residence?” she inquired, fixing her eyes upon her hostess, who, having offered all the hospitable attentions in her power, was now leaning back again, her feet on a hassock.
“Attractive? Heavens! no.”
“Yet you stay here? I think I have seen you here, at intervals, for something like seven years?”
“Don’t count them; I hate the sound,” said Mrs. Roscoe. “My wish is—my hope is—to live in Paris. I get there once in a while, and then I always have to give it up and come away. Italy is cheap, and Pisa is the cheapest place in Italy.”
“So that is your reason for remaining,” said Miss Spring, reflectively.
“What other reason on earth could there be?”
“The equable climate.”
“I hate equable climates. No, we’re not here for climates. Nor for Benozzo; nor for Nicolo the Pisan, and that everlasting old sarcophagus that they are always talking about; nor for the Leaning Tower, either. I perfectly hate the Leaning Tower!”
Miss Spring now undertook a joke herself. “It is for the moderns, then. You are evidently a Shelley worshipper.”
“Do I look like one?” demanded Violet Roscoe, extending her arms a little, with the palms of the hands displayed, as if to call attention to her entire person.
“I cannot say that you do,” replied Miss Spring, after surveying her. “I should think New York would please you as a place of residence,” she went on, after a moment. “If you do not like Italy, why do you not go home?”
“Why don’t you?” retorted Violet, taking a marron and crunching it.
“Well answered. But Newburyport is not to me what I should think New York might be to you; Newburyport has much to learn. However, we all have our reasons, I suppose.”
“Mine are not mysterious,” said Violet, continuing to crunch. “I have a better time abroad than I do at home; that’s all.”
Miss Spring gazed at the fire. “I may as well acknowledge that it was those very things that brought me here in the beginning, the things you don’t care for; Nicolo and the revival of sculpture; the early masters. But I have not found them satisfying. I have tried to care for that sarcophagus; but the truth is that I remain perfectly cold before it. And the Campo Santo frescos seem to me out of drawing. As to the Shelley memories, do you know what I thought of the other day? Suppose that Shelley and Byron were residing here at this moment—Shelley with that queerness about his first wife hanging over him, and Byron living as we know he lived in the Toscanelli palace—do you think that these ladies in the pension who now sketch the Toscanelli and sketch Shelley’s windows, who go to Lerici and rave over Casa Magni, who make pilgrimages to the very spot on the beach where Byron and Trelawny built the funeral pyre—do you think that a single one of them would call, if it were to-day, upon Mary Shelley? Or like to have Shelley and Byron dropping in here for afternoon tea, with the chance of meeting the curates?”
“If they met them, they couldn’t out-talk them,” answered Violet, laughing. “Curates always want to explain something they said the day before. As to the calling and the tea, what would you do?”
“I should be consistent,” responded Miss Spring, with dignity. “I should call. And I should be happy to see them here in return.”
“Well, you’d be safe,” said Violet. “Shelley, Byron, Trelawny, all together, would never dare to flirt with Roberta Sprin
g!” She could say this without malice, for her visitor was undeniably a handsome woman.
Miss Spring, meanwhile, had risen; going to the table, she put on her glasses and bent over Maso’s book. “History?”
“Yes, ’m. I haven’t got very far yet,” Maso answered.
“Reader. Copy-book. Geography. Spelling-book. Arithmetic,” said Miss Spring, turning the books over one by one. “The Arithmetic appears to be the cleanest.”
“Disuse,” said Mrs. Roscoe, from her easy-chair. “As I am Maso’s teacher, and as I hate arithmetic, we have never gone very far. I don’t know what we shall do when we get to fractions!”
“And what is your dog doing on the table, may I ask?” inquired the visitor, surveying Mr. Tiber coldly.
“Oh, he helps lots. I couldn’t study at all without him,” explained Maso, with eagerness.
“Indeed?” said Miss Spring, turning the gaze of her glasses from the dog to his master. “How’s that?”
Maso was always rather afraid of the tall Roberta; he curled the pages of his History with stubby fingers and made no reply.
“If you won’t tell, Maso, I shall,” said his mother; “I shall do it to make you ashamed of your baby ways. He divides each lesson, Miss Spring, into four parts, if you please; then, as each part is learned (or supposed to be learned), Mr. Tiber has to sit on his hind legs and wave a paw. Then, when all four parts are done, Mr. Tiber has to lie on the book. Book after book is added to the pile, and finally Mr. Tiber is on top of a monument. But he is so used to it that he does not mind it much. After the last lesson is learned, then Mr. Tiber, as a celebration, has to go through all the tricks. And there are twenty-two.”
“Well!” said Miss Spring. She never could comprehend what she called “all this dog business” of the Roscoes. And their dog language (they had one) routed her completely. “Twenty-two!”
“An’ gherry kinnin, idn’t they?” Maso was whispering to his pet.
“Why did you name him Mr. Tiber?” pursued the visitor, in her grave voice.
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