The Catholic World
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Chapter 27 : I'll drink--here, give me the gla.s.s--Here's to Count Spezzato: May he die l
I'll drink--here, give me the gla.s.s--Here's to Count Spezzato: May he die like a dog! May his carcase bring the birds and the wolves together! May his name be cursed and hated while the sun lasts! And may purgatory keep him till I pray for his release!"
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The man's pa.s.sion was something frightful to see, and I was more than half inclined to leave the place; but something, perhaps a distant murmur of the rising tide, compelled me to stay. I pretended sleep, allowing my head to sink, down upon the table.
He sat still for a few moments, and then commenced walking about the room, and abruptly asked:
"What brought you here, Alexis?"
"My master's horse, Signor Conrad."
"Good, my little fox; but why did you come on your master's horse?"
"Because my master wishes to reach Leghorn to-night, to meet his bride, Conrad."
"Then his is the special train ordered at nine, that I am to go with?"
exclaimed the guard eagerly.
"That is so, gentle Conrad; and now, having told you all, let me pay our hostess and go."
"Pay! No one pays for me, little fox; no, no, go; I will pay."
The courier took his departure, and the guard kept walking up and down the room, muttering to himself:
"To-night, it might be to-night. If he goes to Leghorn, he meets his future wife; another life, and perhaps a dozen. No, it must be to-night or never. Does his mother go? Fool that I am not to ask! Yes; it shall be to-night;" and he left the room.
What should be "to-night?" Some foul play of which the count would be the victim, no doubt. But how? when? That must be solved. To follow him, or to wait--which? To wait. It is always best to wait; I had learned this lesson already.
I waited. It was now rather more than half-past eight, and I had risen to go to the door when I saw the guard returning to the wine-shop with a man whose dress indicated the stoker.
"Come in, Guido; come in," said the guard; "and drink with me."
The man came in, and I was again absorbed in my book.
They seated themselves at the same table as before, and drank silently for a while; presently the guard began a conversation in some patois I could not understand; but I could see the stoker grow more and more interested as the name of Beatrix occurred more frequently.
As the talk went on, the stoker seemed pressing the guard on some part of the story with a most vindictive eagerness, repeatedly asking, "His name? The accursed! His name?"
At last the guard answered, "The Count Spezzato."
"The Count Spezzato!" said the stoker, now leaving the table, and speaking in Italian.
"Yes, good Guido; the man who will travel in the train we take to-night to Leghorn."
"He shall die! The accursed! He shall die to-night!" said the stoker.
"If I lose my life, the betrayer of my sister shall die!"
The guard, returning to the unknown tongue, seemed to be endeavoring to calm him; and I could only catch a repet.i.tion of the word "Empoli"
at intervals. Presently the stoker took from the seats beside him two tin bottles, such as you may see in the hands of mechanics who dine out; and I could see that one of them had rudely scratched on it the name "William Atkinson." I fancied the guard produced from his pocket a phial, and poured the contents into that bottle; but the action was so rapid, and the corner so dark, that I could not be positive; then rising, they stopped at the counter, had both bottles filled with brandy, and went out.
It was now time to get to the station; and, having paid my modest score, I went out.
A little in front of me, by the light from a small window, I saw these two cross themselves, grip each other's hands across right to right, left to left, and part.
The stoker had set down the bottles, and now taking them up followed the guard at a slower pace.
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Arrived at the station, I found the count, his mother, a female servant, and the courier.
The count came up to me, and said, in broken English, "You are the English to go to Leghorn with me? Very well, there is room. I like the English. You shall pay nothing, because I do not sell tickets; you shall go free. Is that so?"
I thanked him in the best Italian I could muster.
"Do not speak your Italian to me; I speak the English as a native; I can know all you shall say to me in your own tongue. See, here is the train special, as you call it. Enter, as it shall please you."
The train drew up to the platform; and I saw that the stoker was at his post, and that the engine-driver was an Englishman.
I endeavored in vain to draw his attention to warn him, and was compelled to take my seat, which I did in the compartment next the guard's break--the train consisting of only that carriage and another, in which were the count, his mother, and the servant.
The guard pa.s.sed along the train, locked the doors, and entered his box.
"The Florence goods is behind you, and the Sienna goods is due at Empoli Junction four minutes before you; mind you don't run into it,"
said the station-master, with a laugh.
"No fear; _we_ shall not run into _it_," said the guard, with a marked emphasis on the "we" and "it" that I recalled afterward.
The whistle sounded, and we were off. It was a drizzling dark night; and I lay down full length on the seat to sleep.
As I lay down a gleam of light shot across the carriage from a small c.h.i.n.k in the wood-work of the part.i.tion between the compartment I was in and the guard's box.
I was terribly anxious for the manner of the guard; and this seemed to be a means of hearing something more. I lay down and listened attentively.
"How much will you give for your life, my little fox?" said the guard.
"To-day, very little; when I am sixty, all I have, Conrad."
"But you might give something for it, to-night, sweet Alexis, if you knew it was in danger?"
"I have no fear; Conrad Ferrate has too often conducted a train for me to fear to-night."
"True, my good Alexis; but this is the last train he will ride with as guard, for to-morrow he will be the Count Spezzato."
"How? To-morrow? You joke, Conrad. The brandy was strong; but you who have drunk so much could hardly feel that."
"I neither joke, nor am I drunk; yet I shall be Count Spezzato to-morrow, good Alexis. Look you, my gentle fox, my sweet fox; if you do not buy your life of me, you shall die tonight. That is simple, sweet fox."
"Ay; but, Conrad, I am not in danger."