Part 76 (2/2)
”I see what you suggest, Natalie,” he said at length. ”It is a serious matter. I should have said your suspicions were idle--that the thing was impossible--but for the fact that it has occurred before. Strange, now, if old ----, whose wisdom and foresight the world is beginning to recognize now, should be proved to be wise on this point too, as on so many others. He used always to say to us: 'When once you find a man unfaithful, never trust him after. When once a man has allowed himself to put his personal advantage before his duty to such a society as yours, it shows that somewhere or other there is in him the leaven of a self-seeker, which is fatal to all societies. Impose the heaviest penalties on such an offence; cast him out when you have the opportunity.' It would be strange, indeed; it would be like fate; it would appear as though the thing were in the blood, and must come out, no matter what warning the man may have had before. You know, Natalie, what your husband had to endure for his former lapse?”
She nodded her head.
For some time he was again silent, and there was a deeper air of reflection on his face than almost seemed natural to it, for he looked more of a soldier than a thinker.
”If there were any formality,” he said, almost to himself, ”in the proceedings, one might have just cause to intervene. But your husband, my Natalie,” he continued, addressing her directly, ”is well trusted by us. He has done us long and faithful service. We should be slow to put any slight upon him, especially that of suspicion.”
”That, Stefan,” said Natalie's mother, with courage, ”is a small matter, surely, compared with the possibility of your letting this man go to his death unjustly. You would countenance, then, an act of private revenge?
That is the use you would let the powers of your Society be put to? That is not what Janecki, what Rausch, what Falevitch looked forward to.”
The taunt was quite lost on him; he was calmly regarding Natalie. She had not stirred. After that one outburst of despairing appeal there was no more for her to say or to do. She could wait, mutely, and hear what the fate of her lover was to be.
”Unfortunately,” said the general, turning and looking up at the vast pink frontage of the villa, ”There are no papers here that one can appeal to. I only secured the temporary use of the villa, as being a more fitting place than some to receive the signorina your daughter. But it is possible the Secretary may remember something; he has a good memory. Will you excuse me, Natalie, for a few moments?”
He strode away toward the house. The mother went over to her daughter, and put a hand on her shoulder.
”Courage, Natalushka! You must not despair yet. Ah, my old friend Stefan has a kind heart; there were tears in his eyes when he turned away from your appeal to him. He does not forget old a.s.sociates.”
Von Zoesch almost immediately returned, still looking preoccupied. He drew Natalie's mother aside a few steps, and said,
”This much I may tell you, Natalie: in the proceedings four were concerned--your husband, Mr. Brand, Beratinsky, Reitzei. What do you know of these last two?”
”I? Alas, Stefan, I know nothing of them!”
”And we here little. They are your husband's appointment. I may also tell you, Natalie, that the Secretary is also of my opinion, that it is very unlikely your husband would be so audacious as to repeat his offence of former years, by conspiring to fix this duty on this man to serve his own interests. It would be too audacious, unless his temper had outrun his reason altogether.”
”But you must remember, Stefan,” she said, eagerly, ”that there was no one in England who knew that former story. He could not imagine that I was to be, unhappily, set free to go to my daughter--that I should be at her side when this trouble fell on her--”
”Nevertheless,” said he, gently interrupting her, ”you have appealed to us: we will inquire. It will be a delicate affair. If there has been any complicity, any unfairness, to summon these men hither would be to make firmer confederates of them than ever. If one could get at them separately, individually--”
He kept pressing his white mustache into his teeth with his forefinger.
”If Calabressa were not such a talker,” he said, absently. ”But he has ingenuity, the feather-brained devil.”
”Stefan, I could trust everything to Calabressa,” she said.
”In the mean time,” he said, ”I will not detain you. If you remain at the same hotel we shall be able to communicate with you. I presume your carriage is outside?”
”It is waiting for us a little way off.”
He accompanied them into the tessellated court-yard, but not to the gate. He bade good-bye to his elder friend; then he took the younger lady's hand and held it, and regarded her.
”Figliuola mia,” he said, with a kindly glance, ”I pity you if you have to suffer. We will hope for better things: if it is impossible, you have a brave heart.”
When they had left he went up the marble staircase and along the empty corridor until he reached a certain room.
”Granaglia, can you tell me where our friend Calabressa may happen to be at this precise moment?”
<script>