<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX</h2></div>
<p class='c006' ><span class='sc'>The</span> ball ended, the guests gone, Villa Vivalanti forgot its
one burst of gaiety, and settled down again to its usual state
of peaceful somnolence. The days were growing warmer.
White walls simmering in the sunshine, fragrant garden
borders resonant with the hum of insects, the cool green of
the ilex grove, the sleepy, slow drip of the fountain—it was
all so beautifully Italian, and so very, very lonely! During
the hot mid-days Marcia would sit by the ruins of the old
villa or pace the shady ilex walks with her feelings in a
tumult. She had seen neither Paul Dessart nor Laurence
Sybert since the evening of her birthday, and that moment
by the fountain when the three had faced each other silently
was not a pleasant memory. It was one, however, which
recurred many times a day.</p>
<p class='c007' >Of Sybert Marcia heard no news whatever. In reply to
her casual question as to when he would be at the villa again,
her uncle had remarked that just at present Sybert had
more important things to think of than taking a villeggiatura
in the Sabine hills. But of Paul Dessart and the
Roystons most unexpected news had come. Paul’s father
had had an ‘attack’ brought on by overwork, and they
were all of them going home. The letters were written on
the train <i>en route</i> for Cherbourg; a long letter from Margaret,
a short one from Eleanor. The latter afforded some
food for reflection, but the reflection did not bring enlightenment.</p>
<p class='c012' >‘<span class='sc'>Dear Marcia</span>’ (it ran):</p>
<p class='c013' >‘I am sorry not to see you again, and (to be quite frank)
I am equally sorry not to have seen Mr. Sybert again. I feel
that if I had had more time, and half a chance, I might have
accomplished something in the interests of science.</p>
<p class='c013' >‘Margaret told you, of course, that Paul is going back with
us. We hope his father’s illness isn’t serious, but he preferred
to go. There is nothing to keep him in Rome, he
says. Poor fellow! you must write him a nice letter.
Don’t worry too much about him, though; he won’t blow
his brains out.</p>
<p class='c013' >‘I <i>could</i> tell you something. I have just the tiniest suggestion
of a suspicion which—granted fair winds and a
prosperous voyage—may arrive at the dignity of news by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_199' id='Page_199'>199</SPAN></span>
the time we reach the other side. However, you don’t
deserve to hear it, and I shan’t tell. Have I aroused your
curiosity sufficiently? If so, <i>c’est tout</i>.</p>
<p class='c013' >‘I shall hope to see you in Pittsburg this autumn. That,
my dear Marcia, is merely a polite phrase and is not strictly
true. I shall hope, rather, to see you in Paris or Rome or
Vienna. I am afraid that I have the wander-habit to the
end. The world is too big for one to settle down permanently
in one place—and that place Pittsburg; is it not so?
One can never be happy for thinking of all the things that
are happening in all of the places where one is not.</p>
<p class='c013' ><i>‘Au revoir</i>, then, till autumn; we’ll play on the Champs-Elysées
together.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r c004' >
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>‘<span class='sc'>Eleanor.</span>’</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007' >A letter had come also from Marcia’s father, which put
her in an uncomfortably unsettled frame of mind. It was
written in the Copley vein of humorous appreciation of the
situation; but, for all that, she could see underneath that
she had hurt him. He disavowed all knowledge and
culpability in the Triple Alliance and the Abyssinian war.
He regretted the fact that the taxes were heavy, but he had
had no hand in making up Italy’s financial budget. As to
wheat, there were many reasons why Italy could not afford
it, aside from the fact that it was dear. Marcia could give
what she wished to the peasants to make up for her erring
father, and he inclosed a blank cheque to her order—surely
an excessive sign of penitence on the part of a business man.
The letter closed with the statement that he was lonely
without her, and that she must come back to America next
winter and keep her old father out of mischief.</p>
<p class='c007' >She read the last few sentences over twice, with a rising
lump in her throat. It was true. Poor man, he must be
lonely! She ought to have tried to take her mother’s place,
and to have made a home for him before now. Her duty
suddenly presented itself very clearly, and it appeared as
uninviting as duties usually do. A few months before she
would not have minded, but now Italy had got its hold upon
her. She did not wish to go; she wished only to sit in the
sunshine, happy, unthinking, and let the days slip idly by.
A picture flashed over her of what the American life would
be—a brownstone house on Fifth Avenue in the winter, a
country place in the Berkshires in the summer; an aunt of
her mother’s for chaperon, her father’s friends—lawyers and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_200' id='Page_200'>200</SPAN></span>
bankers and brokers who talked railroads and the Stock
Exchange; for interests she would have balls and receptions,
literary clubs and charities. Marcia breathed a
doleful sigh. Her memories of the New York house were
dreary; it was not a life she cared to renew. But nothing
of all this did she let her father know. She sent a gracefully
forgiving letter, with the promise that she would come home
for the winter, and not a hint that the home-coming was not
her own desire.</p>
<p class='c007' >It seemed that, things having once commenced to change,
everything was going. Mr. Copley himself exploded the
next bombshell. He came back from Rome one night with
the announcement that the weather was getting pretty
hot, and the family ought to leave next week for Switzerland.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, Uncle Howard, not yet!’ Marcia cried. ‘Let us
wait until the end of June. It isn’t too hot till then. Up
here in the hills it’s pleasant all summer. I don’t want to
leave the villa.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Rome is hot just now in more ways than one,’ he returned.
‘I’d feel safer to have you in Switzerland or up in
the Tyrol during the excitement. Goodness only knows
what’s going to happen next. I’m expecting to wake up in
the middle of a French revolution every morning, and I
should like to have you out of the country before the
beheading begins.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘There isn’t really any danger of a revolution?’ she
asked breathlessly.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Not in a country where every other man’s a soldier and
the government’s in command. But there have been houses
broken into and a good many acts of lawlessness, and we’re
rather lonely off here.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I hate to think of going away,’ Marcia sighed. ‘We’ll
come back in the autumn, won’t we, Uncle Howard?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, yes, if you like. I dare say we could manage a
month or so out here before we go into the palazzo for the
winter.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And I’ll be going back to America for the winter,’ she
sighed.</p>
<p class='c007' >He looked at her with a slight smile.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Are you the girl, Marcia, who used to preach sermons to
your uncle about Americans living abroad?’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_201' id='Page_201'>201</SPAN></span>
Marcia reflected his smile somewhat wanly.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘And I’m practising my own preaching, am I not?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, well,’ he said, ‘when the time comes you can do as
you please. Your father can get along without you one
year more.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘No, I think I ought to go, for of course he must be lonely
but—I should like to stay! It seems more like home than
any place I’ve ever been in. I’ve really never <i>belonged</i>
anywhere before, and I like so much to be with you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Poor little girl! You have had a chequered career.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes, Uncle Howard, I have; and it keeps on being
chequered! I haven’t been in the villa three months, but
really I don’t remember ever having lived so long in one
place before. It’s been nice, hasn’t it? I hate dreadfully
to have it end. It seems like shutting away a whole part of
my life that can never come back.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, well, if you feel that way about it, I’ll buy the villa
and we can come out every spring. You can bring your
father over, and we will dip him in the waters of Lethe, too.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m afraid he wouldn’t be dipped,’ she laughed. ‘He’d
be running a cable connexion out here and setting up a
ticker on the terrace, so that he could watch the stock
market as well as the view.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Mr. Copley’s mouth twitched slightly at the picture.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘We must all ride our hobbies, I suppose, or the world
would be a very dreary world indeed.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She looked up at him and hesitated.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Uncle Howard, do you and papa—that is—do you mind
my asking?—are you very good friends?’</p>
<p class='c007' >Mr. Copley frowned a moment without replying. ‘Well
Marcia, he’s a good deal older than I, and we’re not particularly
congenial.’ He straightened his shoulders with a
laugh. ‘Oh, well, there’s no use concealing disagreeable
truths. It appears they will out in the end. As a matter of
fact, your father and I haven’t had anything to do with each
other for the past ten years. The first move was on his part,
when he wrote about you last fall—you didn’t know that
you came as an olive-branch, did you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I didn’t know; he didn’t tell me anything about it, but
I—well, I sort of guessed. I’m sorry about it, Uncle Howard.
I’m sure that it’s just because you don’t understand
each other.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_202' id='Page_202'>202</SPAN></span>
‘I’m afraid we never have understood each other, and I
doubt if we ever can, but we’ll make another effort.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It’s so hard to like people when you don’t understand
them, and so easy when you do,’ said Marcia.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘It facilitates matters,’ he agreed.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I think I’m beginning to understand Mr. Sybert,’ she
added somewhat vaguely. ‘He’s different, when you
understand him, from the way you thought he was when you
didn’t understand him.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Ah, Sybert!’ Mr. Copley raised his head and brought
his eyes back from the edge of the landscape. ‘I thought I
knew him, but he’s been a revelation to me this spring.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘How do you mean?’ Marcia asked, striving to keep out
of her tone the interest that was behind it.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, the way he’s taken hold of things. It seems an
absurd thing to say, but I believe he’s had almost as much
influence as the police in quieting the trouble. He has an
unbelievably strong hold on the people—how he got it, I
don’t know. He understands them as well as an Italian,
and yet he is a foreigner, which gives him, in some ways, a
great advantage. They trust him because they think that,
being a foreigner, he has nothing to make out of it. He’s a
marvellous fellow when it comes to action.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You never would guess it to look at him!’ she returned.
‘Why does he pretend to be so bored?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Be so bored? Well, I suppose there are some things
that do bore him; and the ones that don’t, bore other
people. His opinions are not universally popular in Rome,
and being a diplomatist, I dare say he thinks it as well to
keep them to himself.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What are his opinions?’ she asked tentatively. ‘I
don’t like to accuse him of being an anarchist, since he
assures me that he’s not. But when a man wants to overthrow
the government——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Nonsense! Sybert doesn’t want to overthrow the
government any more than I do. Just at present it’s under
the control of a few corrupt politicians, but that’s a thing
that’s likely to happen in any country, and it’s only a
temporary evil. The Italians will be on their feet again in a
year or so, all the better for their shaking-up, and Sybert
knows it. He’s got more real faith in the government than
most of the Italians I know.’</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_203' id='Page_203'>203</SPAN></span>
‘But he talks against it terribly.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Well, he sees the evil. He’s been looking at it pretty
closely, and he knows it’s there; and when Sybert feels a
thing he feels it strongly. But,’ Copley smiled, ‘while he
says things himself against the country, you’ll find he’ll not
let any one else say them.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What do people think about him now—being mixed up
in all these riots?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, just now he’s mixed up in the right side, and the
officials are very willing to pat him on the back. But as for
the populace, I’m afraid he’s not making himself over-liked.
They have a most immoral tendency to sympathize with the
side that’s against the law, and they can’t understand their
friends not sympathizing with the same side. It’s a pretty
hard thing for him to have to tell these poor fellows to be
quiet and go back to their work and starve in silence.’
Copley sighed and folded his arms. ‘I am sorry, Marcia,
you don’t like Sybert better. There are not many like him.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia let the observation pass without comment.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >The next morning, as Mrs. Copley and Marcia were sitting
on the loggia listlessly engaged with books and embroidery,
there came whirring down the avenue the contessa’s immaculate
little victoria, with the yellow coronet emblazoned on
the sides, with the coachman and footman in the Torrenieri
livery, green with yellow pipings. It was a gay little affair;
it matched the contessa. She stepped out, pretty and
debonair, in a fluttering pale-green summer gown, and ran
forward to the loggia with a little exclamation of distress.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘<i>Cara signora, signorina</i>, I am desolated! We must part!
Is it not sad? I go with Bartolomeo’ (Bartolomeo was the
count) ‘to plant olive orchards on his estate in the Abruzzi.
Is it not lonely, that—to spend the summer in an empty
castle on the top of a mountain, with only a view for company?
And my friends at the baths or the lakes or in
Switzerland, or—oh, everywhere except on my mountain-top!’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia laughed at the contessa’s despair.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘But why do you go, contessa, if you do not like it?’ she
inquired.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘But my husband likes it. He has a passion for farming;
after roulette, it it his chief amusement. He is very pastoral—Bartolomeo.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_204' id='Page_204'>204</SPAN></span>
He adores the mountain and the view and
the olive orchards. And in Italy, signorina, the wife has to
do as the husband wishes.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m afraid the wives have to do that the world over,
contessa.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Ah, no, signorina, you cannot tell me that; I have seen.
In America the husband does as the wife wishes. It is a
beautiful country, truly. You have many charming
customs. Yes, I will give you good advice: you will be
wise to marry an American. They do not like mountain-tops.
But perhaps you will visit me on my mountain-top?’
she asked. ‘The view—ah, the beautiful view! It is not
so bad.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m afraid not, contessa. We are leaving for the Tyrol
ourselves a week from to-morrow.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘So soon! Every one is going. Truly, the world comes
to an end next week in Rome.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia found herself growing unexpectedly cordial
toward their guest; even the contessa appeared suddenly
dear as she was about to be snatched away. She bade her
an almost affectionate farewell, and stood by the balustrade
waving her handkerchief until the carriage disappeared.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Will marvels never cease?’ she asked her aunt. ‘I
think—I really think that I like the contessa!’</p>
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