Part 14 (1/2)
This done, Salvator easily persuaded himself that he should soon be set at liberty, and the artist recovered his unconcern, and almost his usual good spirits. The country around him was full of romantic studies for his pencil. He had, besides, found in the society of the children of Pietratesta two charming companions. He instructed them in the elements of his art; and his pupils, to both of whom the study was quite new, seemed never to grow tired of their task.
In a moment of good humor, he drew caricatures of each member of the band, which created a great deal of amus.e.m.e.nt. Then he drew, with great care, the portraits of the two children. This attention profoundly touched the heart of the mother, and her tender sympathy, almost wasting among these unfeeling men, found a secret pleasure in rendering the captivity of the young painter less unhappy and less hard. She conversed with him familiarly, and it gave her great pleasure to see the care which he took to instruct her children.
So Salvator Rosa, to whom the band gave quite a considerable degree of liberty, never dreamed of taking improper advantage of it. Thanks to his fancy and his recklessness as an artist, he almost forgot that he was the prisoner of a cruel master, and that his life was in peril.
But the ransom, which he had sent for, came not. Whether the letters he had written failed to reach their destination, or whether his friends were deaf to his request for a.s.sistance, he received no answer. He wrote repeatedly, but always with the same result.
And so the months slipped by, and the chief began to grow impatient at the long delay. His wife had more than once calmed his anger, and prevented any catastrophe. At length several weeks went by, in which the expeditions of the band were unfruitful. The provisions were running low, and Pietratesta saw in his captive one unprofitable mouth. Sivora, his wife, felt her influence to be growing weaker and weaker under the increasing dest.i.tution and continued delay.
One day Pietratesta encountered his prisoner, and, addressing him in an irritated voice,--
”Well?” he said, as if his question needed no other explanation.
”Nothing yet,” responded Salvator Rosa, sadly.
”Ah, this is too much!” cried the brigand. ”I begin to think you are playing with me. But do you know the price Pietratesta makes those pay who cross him?”
”Alas! I am far from trying to deceive you. You know that I have done all in my power to obtain my ransom. I have written to various persons; your own men have taken my letters. You see that it is not my fault.”
”It is always the fault of prisoners when their ransom is not paid.”
”Wait a little longer. I will write again to-day.”
”Wait! wait! A whole year, month after month, has gone by, and you repeat the same old story. A year--an age for me--I have waited. Do you think I have been making unmeaning threats? Do you expect to abuse my patience with impunity? It has given out at last--the more so as,”
added he, now that he felt his anger increasing, ”I ought to have settled this affair a long while ago. This is your last day, observe me.”
At a sign from their chief, four bandits seized the young man, and bound him. As Salvator was led away, he cast one sad look at the dwelling where he had pa.s.sed many happy hours, and from which he was going to his death. For a moment he stopped to say farewell to the children, who were standing at the door crying and stretching out their little naked brown arms towards him.
A few moments later, Sivora, who had been gathering flowers in the mountains, returned home. Observing that her husband, as well as Salvator, was absent, and her children in tears, she guessed the painful truth.
”Where is Salvator?” she asked of the eldest.
”They have bound him, and carried him away,” responded the child, still crying.
”Which way?”
”Down yonder,” was the reply of the child, pointing with its finger in the direction of a rocky cliff already too well known for its horrible scenes.
”Alas, wretched man!” exclaimed Sivora, almost frantically, as she comprehended the new crime her husband was about to commit. She sat down for a moment, covered her face with her hands--a prey to the most unspeakable anxiety. Then, rising suddenly, her eyes flas.h.i.+ng with determination,--
”Come!” she said, resolutely; ”come, my children. Perhaps we may yet be in time.”
And, taking the hands of her little ones, who followed her with difficulty, but yet eagerly, she darted away at a rapid pace in the direction taken by the brigands.
While the men were hurrying Salvator along, the chief maintained a profound silence. His band followed him as dumb as slaves who go to execute the will of their master, which they know is law. They soon arrived at the summit of a cliff, which overhung a yawning abyss beneath. After having taken one look over the precipice, and examined the neighborhood rapidly, Pietratesta cried, ”Halt!” and the whole body came to a rest.
”There is just a quarter of an hour for you to live,” he said, turning to his prisoner. ”You have time to die like a Christian. Make your prayer.”
The young man hesitated for a moment, threw his agitated eyes around, then, kneeling on the rock, he prayed earnestly. The men stood unmoved, as if they had been statues cut from stone.