Part 59 (2/2)

One day, the month having pa.s.sed again, Stefanone came for his money. It was very little, and the old peasant would willingly have undertaken that the work should be done for nothing. But he was interested in Paul Griggs, and he was growing very impatient because he could not get an opportunity of falling upon Lord Redin in a quiet place. He had formed a new plan of almost childlike simplicity. When Griggs had paid him the money, he lingered a moment and looked about the room.

”Signore, you have changed the furniture,” he observed. ”That chair was formerly here. This table used to be there. There are a thousand changes.”

”Yes,” said Griggs, taking up his pen to go on with his work. ”You have good eyes,” he added good-naturedly.

”Two,” a.s.sented Stefanone; ”each better than the other. For instance, I will tell you. When that chair was by the window, there was a little table beside it. On the table was the work-basket of your poor Signora, whom may the Lord preserve in glory! Is it truth?”

”Yes,” answered Griggs, with perfect indifference. ”It is quite true.”

The allusion did not pain him, the man who was talking with Stefanone.

It would perhaps hurt the other man when he thought of it later.

”Signore,” said Stefanone, who evidently had something in his mind, ”I was thinking in the night, and this thought came to me. The dead are dead. Requiescant! It is better for the living to live in holy peace.

You never see the father of the Signora. There is bad blood between you.

This was my thought--let them be reconciled, and spend an evening together. They will speak of the dead one. They will shed tears. They will embrace. Let the enmity be finished. In this way they will enjoy life more.”

”You are crazy, Stefanone,” answered Griggs, impatiently. ”But how do you know who is the father of the Signora?”

”Every one knows it, Signore!” replied the peasant, with well-feigned sincerity. ”Every one knows that it is the great English lord who lives at the hotel in the Piazza di Spagna this year. Signore, I have said a word. You must not take it ill. Enmity is bad. Friends.h.i.+p is a good thing. And then it is simple. With maccaroni one makes acquaintance again. There is the Falcone, but it would be better here. We will cook the maccaroni in the kitchen; you will eat on this table. What are all these papers for? Study, study! A dish of good paste is better, with cheese. I will bring a certain wine--two flasks. Then you will be friends, for you will drink together. And if the English lord drinks too much, I will go home with him to the hotel in the Piazza di Spagna. But you will only have to go to bed. Once in a year, what is it to be a little gay with good wine? At least you will be good friends. Then things will end well.”

Griggs looked at Stefanone curiously, while the old peasant was speaking, for he knew the people well, and he suspected something though he did not know what to think.

”Perhaps some day we may take your advice,” he said coldly. ”Good morning, Stefanone; I have much to write.”

”I remove the inconvenience,” answered Stefanone, in the stock Italian phrase for taking leave.

”No inconvenience,” replied Griggs, civilly, as is the custom. ”But I have to work.”

”Study, study!” grumbled Stefanone, going towards the door. ”What does it all conclude, this great study? Headache. For a flask of wine you have the same thing, and the pleasure besides. It is enough. Signore,”

he added, reluctantly turning the handle, ”I go. Think of what I have said to you. Sometimes an old man says a wise word.”

He went away very much discontented with the result of the conversation.

His mind was a medley of cunning and simplicity backed by an absolutely unforgiving temper and great caution. His plan had seemed exceedingly good. Lord Redin and Griggs would have supped together, and the former would very naturally have gone home alone. Stefanone was oddly surprised that Griggs should not have acceded to the proposition at once, though in reality there was not the slightest of small reasons for his doing so.

It was long since anything had happened to rouse Griggs into thinking about any individual human being as anything more than a bit of the world's furniture, to be worn out and thrown away in the course of time, out of sight. But something in the absolutely gratuitous nature of Stefanone's advice moved his suspicions. He saw, with his intimate knowledge of the Roman peasant's character, the whole process of the old wine-seller's mind, if only, in the first place, the fellow had the desire to hara.s.s Dalrymple. That being granted, the rest was plain enough. Dalrymple, if he really came to supper with Griggs, would stay late into the night and finish all the wine there might be. On his way home through the deserted streets, Stefanone could kill him at his leisure and convenience, and n.o.body would be the wiser. The only difficulty lay in establis.h.i.+ng some sufficient reason why Stefanone should wish to kill him at all, and in this Griggs signally failed, which was not surprising.

All at once, as generally happened now, he lost all interest in the matter and returned to his work; or rather, to speak as he might have spoken, he set his mechanical self to work for him, while his own being disappeared in blank indifference and unconsciousness. But on the following day, which chanced to be a Sunday, he went out in the morning for a walk. He rarely worked on Sundays, having long ago convinced himself that a day of rest was necessary in the long run.

As he was coming home, he saw Lord Redin walking far in front of him down the Corso, easily recognizable by his height and his loose, swinging gait. Griggs had not proceeded many steps further when Stefanone pa.s.sed him, walking at a swinging stride. The peasant had probably seen him, but chose to take no notice of him. Griggs allowed him to get a fair start and then quickened his own pace, so as to keep him in view. Lord Redin swung along steadily and turned up the Via Condotti. Stefanone almost ran, till he, too, had turned the corner of the street. Griggs, without running, nearly overtook him as he took the same turn a moment later.

It was perfectly clear that Stefanone was d.o.g.g.i.ng the Scotchman's steps. The latter crossed the Piazza di Spagna, and entered the deep archway of his hotel. The peasant slackened his speed at once and lounged across the square towards the foot of the great stairway which leads up to the Trinita de' Monti. Griggs followed him, and came up with him just as he sat down upon a step beside one of the big stone posts, to take breath and light his pipe. The man looked up, touched his hat, smiled, and struck a sulphur match, which he applied to the tobacco in the red clay bowl before the sulphur was half burned out, after the manner of his kind.

”You have taken a walk, Signore,” he observed, puffing away at the willow stem and watching the match.

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