<SPAN name="11c"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<p>NEXT.</p>
<p>Lieut. Worthington's leave had nearly expired. He must rejoin
his<br/>
ship; but he waited till the last possible moment in order to
help his<br/>
sister through the move to Albano, where it had been decided that
Amy<br/>
should go for a few days of hill air before undertaking the
longer<br/>
journey to Florence.</p>
<p>It was a perfect morning in late March when the pale little
invalid was<br/>
carried in her uncle's strong arms, and placed in the carriage
which was<br/>
to take them to the old town on the mountain slopes which they
had seen<br/>
shining from far away for so many weeks past. Spring had come in
her<br/>
fairest shape to Italy. The Campagna had lost its brown and tawny
hues<br/>
and taken on a tinge of fresher color. The olive orchards were
budding<br/>
thickly. Almond boughs extended their dazzling shapes across the
blue<br/>
sky. Arums and acanthus and ivy filled every hollow, roses nodded
from<br/>
over every gate, while a carpet of violets and cyclamen and
primroses<br/>
stretched over the fields and freighted every wandering wind
with<br/>
fragrance.</p>
<p>When once the Campagna with its long line of aqueducts,
arches, and<br/>
hoary tombs was left behind, and the carriage slowly began to
mount the<br/>
gradual rises of the hill, Amy revived. With every breath of the
fresher<br/>
air her eyes seemed to brighten and her voice to grow stronger.
She held<br/>
Mabel up to look at the view; and the sound of her laugh, faint
and<br/>
feeble as it was, was like music to her mother's ears.</p>
<p>Amy wore a droll little silk-lined cap on her head, over which
a downy<br/>
growth of pale-brown fuzz was gradually thickening. Already it
showed a<br/>
tendency to form into tiny rings, which to Amy, who had always
hankered<br/>
for curls, was an extreme satisfaction. Strange to say, the same
thing<br/>
exactly had happened to Mabel; her hair had grown out into soft
little<br/>
round curls also! Uncle Ned and Katy had ransacked Rome for
this<br/>
baby-wig, which filled and realized all Amy's hopes for her
child. On<br/>
the same excursion they had bought the materials for the pretty
spring<br/>
suit which Mabel wore, for it had been deemed necessary to
sacrifice<br/>
most of her wardrobe as a concession to possible fever-germs.
Amy<br/>
admired the pearl-colored dress and hat, the fringed jacket and
little<br/>
lace-trimmed parasol so much, that she was quite consoled for the
loss<br/>
of the blue velvet costume and ermine muff which had been the
pride of<br/>
her heart ever since they left Paris, and whose destruction they
had<br/>
scarcely dared to confess to her.</p>
<p>So up, up, up, they climbed till the gateway of the old town
was passed,<br/>
and the carriage stopped before a quaint building once the
residence of<br/>
the Bishop of Albano, but now known as the Hôtel de la
Poste. Here they<br/>
alighted, and were shown up a wide and lofty staircase to their
rooms,<br/>
which were on the sunny side of the house, and looked across a
walled<br/>
garden, where roses and lemon trees grew beside old fountains
guarded by<br/>
sculptured lions and heathen divinities with broken noses and a
scant<br/>
supply of fingers and toes, to the Campagna, purple with distance
and<br/>
stretching miles and miles away to where Rome sat on her seven
hills,<br/>
lifting high the Dome of St. Peter's into the illumined air.</p>
<p>Nurse Swift said that Amy must go to bed at once, and have a
long rest.<br/>
But Amy nearly wept at the proposal, and declared that she was
not a bit<br/>
tired and couldn't sleep if she went to bed ever so much. The
change of<br/>
air had done her good already, and she looked more like herself
than for<br/>
many weeks past. They compromised their dispute on a sofa, where
Amy,<br/>
well wrapped up, was laid, and where, in spite of her
protestations, she<br/>
presently fell asleep, leaving the others free to examine and
arrange<br/>
their new quarters.</p>
<p>Such enormous rooms as they were! It was quite a journey to go
from one<br/>
side of them to another. The floors were of stone, with squares
of<br/>
carpet laid down over them, which looked absurdly small for the
great<br/>
spaces they were supposed to cover. The beds and tables were of
the<br/>
usual size, but they seemed almost like doll furniture because
the<br/>
chambers were so big. A quaint old paper, with an enormous
pattern of<br/>
banyan trees and pagodas, covered the walls, and every now and
then<br/>
betrayed by an oblong of regular cracks the existence of a hidden
door,<br/>
papered to look exactly like the rest of the wall.</p>
<p>These mysterious doors made Katy nervous, and she never rested
till she<br/>
had opened every one of them and explored the places they led to.
One<br/>
gave access to a queer little bathroom. Another led, through a
narrow<br/>
dark passage, to a sort of balcony or loggia overhanging the
garden. A<br/>
third ended in a dusty closet with an artful chink in it from
which you<br/>
could peep into what had been the Bishop's drawing-room but which
was<br/>
now turned into the dining-room of the hotel. It seemed made
for<br/>
purposes of espial; and Katy had visions of a long line of
reverend<br/>
prelates with their ears glued to the chink, overhearing what was
being<br/>
said about them in the apartment beyond.</p>
<p>The most surprising of all she did not discover till she was
going to<br/>
bed on the second night after their arrival, when she thought she
knew<br/>
all about the mysterious doors and what they led to. A little<br/>
unexplained draught of wind made her candle flicker, and betrayed
the<br/>
existence of still another door so cunningly hid in the wall
pattern<br/>
that she had failed to notice it. She had quite a creepy feeling
as she<br/>
drew her dressing-gown about her, took a light, and entered the
narrow<br/>
passage into which it opened. It was not a long passage, and
ended<br/>
presently in a tiny oratory. There was a little marble altar,
with a<br/>
kneeling-step and candlesticks and a great crucifix above. Ends
of wax<br/>
candles still remained in the candlesticks, and bunches of dusty
paper<br/>
flowers filled the vases which stood on either side of them. A
faded<br/>
silk cushion lay on the step. Doubtless the Bishop had often
knelt<br/>
there. Katy felt as if she were the first person to enter the
place<br/>
since he went away. Her common-sense told her that in a hotel
bedroom<br/>
constantly occupied by strangers for years past, some one
<i>must</i> have<br/>
discovered the door and found the little oratory before her;
but<br/>
common-sense is sometimes less satisfactory than romance. Katy
liked to<br/>
think that she was the first, and to "make believe" that no one
else<br/>
knew about it; so she did so, and invented legends about the
place which<br/>
Amy considered better than any fairy story.</p>
<p>Before he left them Lieutenant Worthington had a talk with his
sister<br/>
in the garden. She rather forced this talk upon him, for
various<br/>
things were lying at her heart about which she longed for
explanation;<br/>
but he yielded so easily to her wiles that it was evident he was
not<br/>
averse to the idea.</p>
<p>"Come, Polly, don't beat about the bush any longer," he said
at last,<br/>
amused and a little irritated at her half-hints and little
feminine<br/>
<i>finesses</i>. "I know what you want to ask; and as there's no
use<br/>
making a secret of it, I will take my turn in asking. Have I any
chance,<br/>
do you think?"</p>
<p>"Any chance?—about Katy, do you mean? Oh, Ned, you make me so
happy."</p>
<p>"Yes; about her, of course."</p>
<p>"I don't see why you should say 'of course,'" remarked his
sister, with<br/>
the perversity of her sex, "when it's only five or six weeks ago
that I<br/>
was lying awake at night for fear you were being gobbled up by
that<br/>
Lilly Page."</p>
<p>"There was a little risk of it," replied her brother,
seriously. "She's<br/>
awfully pretty and she dances beautifully, and the other fellows
were<br/>
all wild about her, and—well, you know yourself how such things
go. I<br/>
can't see now what it was that I fancied so much about her, I
don't<br/>
suppose I could have told exactly at the time; but I can tell
without<br/>
the smallest trouble what it is in—the other."</p>
<p>"In Katy? I should think so," cried Mrs. Ashe, emphatically;
"the two<br/>
are no more to be compared than—than—well, bread and syllabub!
You can<br/>
live on one, and you can't live on the other."</p>
<p>"Come, now, Miss Page isn't so bad as that. She is a nice girl
enough,<br/>
and a pretty girl too,—prettier than Katy; I'm not so far gone
that I<br/>
can't see that. But we won't talk about her, she's not in the
present<br/>
question at all; very likely she'd have had nothing to say to me
in any<br/>
case. I was only one out of a dozen, and she never gave me reason
to<br/>
suppose that she cared more for me than the rest. Let us talk
about this<br/>
friend of yours; have I any chance at all, do you think,
Polly?"</p>
<p>"Ned, you are the dearest boy! I would rather have Katy for a
sister<br/>
than any one else I know. She's so nice all through,—so true and
sweet<br/>
and satisfactory."</p>
<p>"She is all that and more; she's a woman to tie to for life,
to be<br/>
perfectly sure of always. She would make a splendid wife for any
man.<br/>
I'm not half good enough for her; but the question is,—and you
haven't<br/>
answered it yet, Polly,—what's my chance?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," said his sister, slowly.</p>
<p>"Then I must ask herself, and I shall do so to-day."</p>
<p>"I don't know," repeated Mrs. Ashe. "'She is a woman,
therefore to be<br/>
won:' and I don't think there is any one ahead of you; that is
the best<br/>
hope I have to offer, Ned. Katy never talks of such things; and
though<br/>
she's so frank, I can't guess whether or not she ever thinks
about them.<br/>
She likes you, however, I am sure of that. But, Ned, it will not
be wise<br/>
to say anything to her yet."</p>
<p>"Not say anything? Why not?"</p>
<p>"No. Recollect that it is only a little while since she looked
upon you<br/>
as the admirer of another girl, and a girl she doesn't like very
much,<br/>
though they are cousins. You must give her time to get over
that<br/>
impression. Wait awhile; that's my advice, Ned."</p>
<p>"I'll wait any time if only she will say yes in the end. But
it's hard<br/>
to go away without a word of hope, and it's more like a man to
speak<br/>
out, it seems to me."</p>
<p>"It's too soon," persisted his sister. "You don't want her to
think<br/>
you a fickle fellow, falling in love with a fresh girl every time
you<br/>
go into port, and falling out again when the ship sails. Sailors
have<br/>
a bad reputation for that sort of thing. No woman cares to win a
man<br/>
like that."</p>
<p>"Great Scott! I should think not! Do you mean to say that is
the way my<br/>
conduct appears to her, Polly?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't mean just that; but wait, dear Ned, I am sure it
is<br/>
better."</p>
<p>Fortified by this sage counsel, Lieutenant Worthington went
away next<br/>
morning, without saying anything to Katy in words, though perhaps
eyes<br/>
and tones may have been less discreet. He made them promise that
some<br/>
one should send a letter every day about Amy; and as Mrs.
Ashe<br/>
frequently devolved the writing of these bulletins upon Katy, and
the<br/>
replies came in the shape of long letters, she found herself
conducting<br/>
a pretty regular correspondence without quite intending it.
Ned<br/>
Worthington wrote particularly nice letters. He had the knack,
more<br/>
often found in women than men, of giving a picture with a few
graphic<br/>
touches, and indicating what was droll or what was characteristic
with<br/>
a single happy phrase. His letters grew to be one of Katy's
pleasures;<br/>
and sometimes, as Mrs. Ashe watched the color deepen in her
cheeks<br/>
while she read, her heart would bound hopefully within her. But
she was<br/>
a wise woman in her way, and she wanted Katy for a sister very
much; so<br/>
she never said a word or looked a look to startle or surprise
her, but<br/>
left the thing to work itself out, which is the best course
always in<br/>
love affairs.</p>
<p>Little Amy's improvement at Albano was something remarkable.
Mrs. Swift<br/>
watched over her like a lynx. Her vigilance never relaxed. Amy
was made<br/>
to eat and sleep and walk and rest with the regularity of a
machine; and<br/>
this exact system, combined with the good air, worked like a
charm. The<br/>
little one gained hour by hour. They could absolutely see her
growing<br/>
fat, her mother declared. Fevers, when they do not kill,
operate<br/>
sometimes as spring bonfires do in gardens, burning up all the
refuse<br/>
and leaving the soil free for the growth of fairer things; and
Amy<br/>
promised in time to be only the better and stronger for her
hard<br/>
experience.</p>
<p>She had gained so much before the time came to start for
Florence, that<br/>
they scarcely dreaded the journey; but it proved worse than
their<br/>
expectations. They had not been able to secure a carriage to
themselves,<br/>
and were obliged to share their compartment with two English
ladies, and<br/>
three Roman Catholic priests, one old, the others young. The
older<br/>
priest seemed to be a person of some consequence; for quite a
number of<br/>
people came to see him off, and knelt for his blessing devoutly
as the<br/>
train moved away. The younger ones Katy guessed to be seminary
students<br/>
under his charge. Her chief amusement through the long dusty
journey was<br/>
in watching the terrible time that one of these young men was
having<br/>
with his own hat. It was a large three-cornered black affair,
with sharp<br/>
angles and excessively stiff; and a perpetual struggle seemed to
be<br/>
going on between it and its owner, who was evidently unhappy when
it was<br/>
on his head and still more unhappy when it was anywhere else. If
he<br/>
perched it on his knees it was sure to slide away from him and
fall with<br/>
a thump on the floor, whereupon he would pick it up, blushing
furiously<br/>
as he did so. Then he would lay it on the seat when the train
stopped at<br/>
a station, and jump out with an air of relief; but he invariably
forgot,<br/>
and sat down upon it when he returned, and sprang up with a look
of<br/>
horror at the loud crackle it made; after which he would tuck it
into<br/>
the baggage-rack overhead, from which it would presently
descend,<br/>
generally into the lap of one of the staid English ladies, who
would<br/>
hand it back to him with an air of deep offence, remarking to
her<br/>
companion,—</p>
<p>"I never knew anything like it. Fancy! that makes four times
that hat<br/>
has fallen on me. The young man is a feedgit! He's the most
feegitty<br/>
creature I ever saw in my life."</p>
<p>The young <i>seminariat</i> did not understand a word she
said; but the<br/>
tone needed no interpreter, and set him to blushing more
painfully than<br/>
ever. Altogether, the hat was never off his mind for a moment.
Katy<br/>
could see that he was thinking about it, even when he was
thumbing his<br/>
Breviary and making believe to read.</p>
<p>At last the train, steaming down the valley of the Arno,
revealed fair<br/>
Florence sitting among olive-clad hills, with Giotto's
beautiful<br/>
Bell-tower, and the great, many-colored, soft-hued Cathedral, and
the<br/>
square tower of the old Palace, and the quaint bridges over the
river,<br/>
looking exactly as they do in the photographs; and Katy would
have felt<br/>
delighted, in spite of dust and fatigue, had not Amy looked so
worn out<br/>
and exhausted. They were seriously troubled about her, and for
the<br/>
moment could think of nothing else. Happily the fatigue did no
permanent<br/>
harm, and a day or two of rest made her all right again. By
good<br/>
fortune, a nice little apartment in the modern quarter of the
city had<br/>
been vacated by its winter occupants the very day of their
arrival, and<br/>
Mrs. Ashe secured it for a month, with all its conveniences
and<br/>
advantages, including a maid named Maria, who had been servant to
the<br/>
just departed tenants.</p>
<p>Maria was a very tall woman, at least six feet two, and had a
splendid<br/>
contralto voice, which she occasionally exercised while busy over
her<br/>
pots and pans. It was so remarkable to hear these grand arias
and<br/>
recitatives proceeding from a kitchen some eight feet square,
that Katy<br/>
was at great pains to satisfy her curiosity about it. By aid of
the<br/>
dictionary and much persistent questioning, she made out that
Maria in<br/>
her youth had received a partial training for the opera; but in
the end<br/>
it was decided that she was too big and heavy for the stage, and
the<br/>
poor "giantess," as Amy named her, had been forced to abandon
her<br/>
career, and gradually had sunk to the position of a
maid-of-all-work.<br/>
Katy suspected that heaviness of mind as well as of body must
have stood<br/>
in her way; for Maria, though a good-natured giantess, was by no
means<br/>
quick of intelligence.</p>
<p>"I do think that the manner in which people over here can make
homes for<br/>
themselves at five minutes' notice is perfectly delightful,"
cried Katy,<br/>
at the end of their first day's housekeeping. "I wish we could do
the<br/>
same in America. How cosy it looks here already!"</p>
<p>It was indeed cosy. Their new domain consisted of a parlor in
a corner,<br/>
furnished in bright yellow brocade, with windows to south and
west; a<br/>
nice little dining-room; three bedrooms, with dimity-curtained
beds; a<br/>
square entrance hall, lighted at night by a tall slender brass
lamp<br/>
whose double wicks were fed with olive oil; and the aforesaid
tiny<br/>
kitchen, behind which was a sleeping cubby, quite too small to be
a good<br/>
fit for the giantess. The rooms were full of
conveniences,—easy-chairs,<br/>
sofas, plenty of bureaus and dressing-tables, and corner
fireplaces like<br/>
Franklin stoves, in which odd little fires burned on cool days,
made of<br/>
pine cones, cakes of pressed sawdust exactly like Boston brown
bread cut<br/>
into slices, and a few sticks of wood thriftily adjusted, for
fuel is<br/>
worth its weight in gold in Florence. Katy's was the smallest of
the<br/>
bedrooms, but she liked it best of all for the reason that its
one big<br/>
window opened on an iron balcony over which grew a Banksia
rose-vine<br/>
with a stem as thick as her wrist. It was covered just now with
masses<br/>
of tiny white blossoms, whose fragrance was inexpressibly
delicious and<br/>
made every breath drawn in their neighborhood a delight. The
sun<br/>
streamed in on all sides of the little apartment, which filled
a<br/>
narrowing angle at the union of three streets; and from one
window and<br/>
another, glimpses could be caught of the distant heights about
the<br/>
city,—San Miniato in one direction, Bellosguardo in another, and
for<br/>
the third the long olive-hung ascent of Fiesole, crowned by its
gray<br/>
cathedral towers.</p>
<p>It was astonishing how easily everything fell into train about
the<br/>
little establishment. Every morning at six the English baker left
two<br/>
small sweet brown loaves and a dozen rolls at the door. Then
followed<br/>
the dairyman with a supply of tiny leaf-shaped pats of freshly
churned<br/>
butter, a big flask of milk, and two small bottles of thick
cream, with<br/>
a twist of vine leaf in each by way of a cork. Next came a
<i>contadino</i><br/>
with a flask of red Chianti wine, a film of oil floating on top
to keep<br/>
it sweet. People in Florence must drink wine, whether they like
it or<br/>
not, because the lime-impregnated water is unsafe for use without
some<br/>
admixture.</p>
<p>Dinner came from a <i>trattoria</i>, in a tin box, with a pan
of coals inside<br/>
to keep it warm, which box was carried on a man's head. It was
furnished<br/>
at a fixed price per day,—a soup, two dishes of meat, two
vegetables,<br/>
and a sweet dish; and the supply was so generous as always to
leave<br/>
something toward next day's luncheon. Salad, fruit, and fresh
eggs Maria<br/>
bought for them in the old market. From the confectioners came
loaves of<br/>
<i>pane santo</i>, a sort of light cake made with arrowroot
instead of flour;<br/>
and sometimes, by way of treat, a square of <i>pan forte da
Siena</i>,<br/>
compounded of honey, almonds, and chocolate,—a mixture as
pernicious<br/>
as it is delicious, and which might take a medal anywhere for the
sure<br/>
production of nightmares.</p>
<p>Amy soon learned to know the shops from which these delicacies
came.<br/>
She had her favorites, too, among the strolling merchants who
sold<br/>
oranges and those little sweet native figs, dried in the sun
without<br/>
sugar, which are among the specialties of Florence. They, in
their<br/>
turn, learned to know her and to watch for the appearance of her
little<br/>
capped head and Mabel's blond wig at the window, lingering about
till<br/>
she came, and advertising their wares with musical modulations,
so<br/>
appealing that Amy was always running to Katy, who acted as<br/>
housekeeper, to beg her to please buy this or that, "because it
is my<br/>
old man, and he wants me to so much."</p>
<p>"But, chicken, we have plenty of figs for to-day."</p>
<p>"No matter; get some more, please do. I'll eat them all;
really, I<br/>
will."</p>
<p>And Amy was as good as her word. Her convalescent appetite was
something<br/>
prodigious.</p>
<p>There was another branch of shopping in which they all took
equal<br/>
delight. The beauty and the cheapness of the Florence flowers are
a<br/>
continual surprise to a stranger. Every morning after breakfast
an old<br/>
man came creaking up the two long flights of stairs which led to
Mrs.<br/>
Ashe's apartment, tapped at the door, and as soon as it opened,
inserted<br/>
a shabby elbow and a large flat basket full of flowers. Such
flowers!<br/>
Great masses of scarlet and cream-colored tulips, and white and
gold<br/>
narcissus, knots of roses of all shades, carnations, heavy-headed
trails<br/>
of wistaria, wild hyacinths, violets, deep crimson and orange<br/>
ranunculus, <i>giglios</i>, or wild irises,—the Florence emblem,
so deeply<br/>
purple as to be almost black,—anemones, spring-beauties, faintly
tinted<br/>
wood-blooms tied in large loose nosegays, ivy, fruit<br/>
blossoms,—everything that can be thought of that is fair and
sweet.<br/>
These enticing wares the old man would tip out on the table. Mrs.
Ashe<br/>
and Katy would select what they wanted, and then the process
of<br/>
bargaining would begin, without which no sale is complete in
Italy. The<br/>
old man would name an enormous price, five times as much as he
hoped to<br/>
get. Katy would offer a very small one, considerably less than
she<br/>
expected to give. The old man would dance with dismay, wring his
hands,<br/>
assure them that he should die of hunger and all his family with
him if<br/>
he took less than the price named; he would then come down half a
franc<br/>
in his demand. So it would go on for five minutes, ten, sometimes
for a<br/>
quarter of an hour, the old man's price gradually descending, and
Katy's<br/>
terms very slowly going up, a cent or two at a time. Next the
giantess<br/>
would mingle with the fray. She would bounce out of her kitchen,
berate<br/>
the flower-vender, snatch up his flowers, declare that they smelt
badly,<br/>
fling them down again, pouring out all the while a voluble tirade
of<br/>
reproaches and revilings, and looking so enormous in her
excitement that<br/>
Katy wondered that the old man dared to answer her at all.
Finally,<br/>
there would be a sudden lull. The old man would shrug his
shoulders, and<br/>
remarking that he and his wife and his aged grandmother must go
without<br/>
bread that day since it was the Signora's will, take the money
offered<br/>
and depart, leaving such a mass of flowers behind him that Katy
would<br/>
begin to think that they had paid an unfair price for them and to
feel a<br/>
little rueful, till she observed that the old man was absolutely
dancing<br/>
downstairs with rapture over the good bargain he had made, and
that<br/>
Maria was black with indignation over the extravagance of her
ladies!</p>
<p>"The Americani are a nation of spend-thrifts," she would
mutter to<br/>
herself, as she quickened the charcoal in her droll little range
by<br/>
fanning it with a palm-leaf fan; "they squander money like water.
Well,<br/>
all the better for us Italians!" with a shrug of her
shoulders.</p>
<p>"But, Maria, it was only sixteen cents that we paid, and look
at those<br/>
flowers! There are at least half a bushel of them."</p>
<p>"Sixteen cents for garbage like that! The Signorina would
better let me<br/>
make her bargains for her. <i>Già! Già!</i> No
Italian lady would have paid<br/>
more than eleven sous for such useless <i>roba</i>. It is evident
that the<br/>
Signorina's countrymen eat gold when at home, they think so
little of<br/>
casting it away!"</p>
<p>Altogether, what with the comfort and quiet of this little
home, the<br/>
numberless delightful things that there were to do and to see,
and<br/>
Viessieux's great library, from which they could draw books at
will<br/>
to make the doing and seeing more intelligible, the month at<br/>
Florence passed only too quickly, and was one of the times to
which<br/>
they afterward looked back with most pleasure. Amy grew
steadily<br/>
stronger, and the freedom from anxiety about her after their
long<br/>
strain of apprehension was restful and healing beyond expression
to<br/>
both mind and body.</p>
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