"If thou wert great and respected, they would undermine thy fortune and character, ere thou should"st put their system in danger--as thou art weak and poor, they will do thee some direct injury, unless thou art moderate. Before all, I warn thee that their system must stand!"
"Will G.o.d suffer this?"
"We may not enter into his secrets," returned the Bravo, devoutly crossing himself. "Did his reign end with this world, there might be injustice in suffering the wicked to triumph, but, as it is, we------ Yon boat approaches fast! I little like its air and movements."
"They are not fishermen, truly, for there are many oars and a canopy!"
"It is a gondola of the state!" exclaimed Jacopo, rising and stepping into his own boat, which he cast loose from that of his companion, when he stood in evident doubt as to his future proceedings. "Antonio, we should do well to row away."
"Thy fears are natural," said the unmoved fisherman, "and "tis a thousand pities that there is cause for them. There is yet time for one skilful as thou to outstrip the fleetest gondola on the ca.n.a.ls."
"Quick, lift thy anchor, old man, and depart, my eye is sure. I know the boat."
"Poor Jacopo! what a curse is a tender conscience! Thou hast been kind to me in my need, and if prayers from a sincere heart can do thee service, thou shalt not want them."
"Antonio!" cried the other, causing his boat to whirl away, and then pausing an instant like a man undecided--"I can stay no longer--trust them not--they are false as fiends--there is no time to lose--I must away."
The fisherman murmured an e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n of pity, as he waved a hand in adieu.
"Holy St. Anthony, watch over my own child, lest he come to some such miserable life!" he added, in an audible prayer--"There hath been good seed cast on a rock, in that youth, for a warmer or kinder heart is not in man. That one like Jacopo should live by striking the a.s.sa.s.sin"s blow!"
The near approach of the strange gondola now attracted the whole attention of the old man. It came swiftly towards him, impelled by six strong oars, and his eye turned feverishly in the direction of the fugitive. Jacopo, with a readiness that necessity and long practice rendered nearly instinctive, had taken a direction which blended his wake in a line with one of those bright streaks that the moon drew on the water, and which, by dazzling the eye, effectually concealed the objects within its width. When the fisherman saw that the Bravo had disappeared, he smiled and seemed at ease.
"Aye, let them come here," he said; "it will give Jacopo more time. I doubt not the poor fellow hath struck a blow, since quitting the palace, that the council will not forgive! The sight of gold hath been too strong, and he hath offended those who have so long borne with him. G.o.d forgive me, that I have had communion with such a man! but when the heart is heavy, the pity of even a dog will warm our feelings. Few care for me now, or the friendship of such as he could never have been welcome."
Antonio ceased, for the gondola of the state came with a rushing noise to the side of his own boat, where it was suddenly stopped by a backward sweep of the oars. The water was still in ebullition, when a form pa.s.sed into the gondola of the fisherman, the larger boat shot away again to the distance of a few hundred feet, and remained at rest.
Antonio witnessed this movement in silent curiosity; but when he saw the gondoliers of the state lying on their oars, he glanced his eye again furtively in the direction of Jacopo, saw that all was safe, and faced his companion with confidence. The brightness of the moon enabled him to distinguish the dress and aspect of a bare-footed Carmelite. The latter seemed more confounded than his companion, by the rapidity of the movement, and the novelty of his situation. Notwithstanding his confusion, however, an evident look of wonder crossed his mortified features when he first beheld the humble condition, the thin and whitened locks, and the general air and bearing of the old man with whom he now found himself.
"Who art thou?" escaped him, in the impulse of surprise.
"Antonio of the Lamines! A fisherman that owes much to St. Anthony, for favors little deserved."
"And why hath one like thee fallen beneath the Senate"s displeasure?"
"I am honest and ready to do justice to others. If that offend the great, they are men more to be pitied than envied."
"The convicted are always more disposed to believe themselves unfortunate than guilty. The error is fatal, and it should be eradicated from the mind, lest it lead to death."
"Go tell this to the patricians. They have need of plain counsel, and a warning from the church."
"My son, there is pride and anger, and a perverse heart in thy replies.
The sins of the senators--and as they are men, they are not without spot--can in no manner whiten thine own. Though an unjust sentence should condemn one to punishment, it leaves the offences against G.o.d in their native deformity. Men may pity him who hath wrongfully undergone the anger of the world, but the church will only p.r.o.nounce pardon on him who confesseth his errors, with a sincere admission of their magnitude."
"Have you come, father, to shrive a penitent?"
"Such is my errand. I lament the occasion, and if what I fear be true, still more must I regret that one so aged should have brought his devoted head beneath the arm of justice."
Antonio smiled, and again he bent his eyes along that dazzling streak of light which had swallowed up the gondola and the person of the Bravo.
"Father," he said, when a long and earnest look was ended, "there can be little harm in speaking truth to one of thy holy office. They have told thee there was a criminal here in the Lagunes, who hath provoked the anger of St. Mark?"
"Thou art right."
"It is not easy to know when St. Mark is pleased, or when he is not,"
continued Antonio, plying his line with indifference, "for the very man he now seeks has he long tolerated; aye, even in presence of the Doge.
The Senate hath its reasons which lie beyond the reach of the ignorant, but it would have been better for the soul of the poor youth, and more seemly for the Republic, had it turned a discouraging countenance on his deeds from the first."
"Thou speakest of another! thou art not then the criminal they seek!"
"I am a sinner, like all born of woman, reverend Carmelite, but my hand hath never held any other weapon than the good sword with which I struck the infidel. There was one lately here, that, I grieve to add, cannot say this!"
"And he is gone?"
"Father, you have your eyes, and you can answer that question for yourself. He is gone; though he is not far; still is he beyond the reach of the swiftest gondola in Venice, praised be St. Mark!"
The Carmelite bowed his head, where he was seated, and his lips moved, either in prayer or in thanksgiving.
"Are you sorry, monk, that a sinner has escaped?"
"Son, I rejoice that this bitter office hath pa.s.sed from me, while I mourn that there should be a spirit so depraved as to require it. Let us summon the servants of the Republic, and inform them that their errand is useless."
"Be not of haste, good father. The night is gentle, and these hirelings sleep on their oars, like gulls in the Lagunes. The youth will have more time for repentance, should he be undisturbed."
The Carmelite, who had risen, instantly reseated himself, like one actuated by a strong impulse.
"I thought he had already been far beyond pursuit," he muttered, unconsciously apologizing for his apparent haste.
"He is over bold, and I fear he will row back to the ca.n.a.ls, in which case you might meet nearer to the city--or there may be more gondolas of the state out--in short, father, thou wilt be more certain to escape hearing the confession of a Bravo, by listening to that of a fisherman, who has long wanted an occasion to acknowledge his sins."
Men who ardently wish the same result, require few words to understand each other. The Carmelite took, intuitively, the meaning of his companion, and throwing back his cowl, a movement that exposed the countenance of Father Anselmo, he prepared to listen to the confession of the old man.
"Thou art a Christian, and one of thy years hath not to learn the state of mind that becometh a penitent," said the monk, when each was ready.
"I am a sinner, father; give me counsel and absolution, that I may have hope."
"Thy will be done--thy prayer is heard--approach and kneel."
Antonio, who had fastened his line to his seat, and disposed of his net with habitual care, now crossed himself devoutly, and took his station before the Carmelite. His acknowledgments of error then began. Much mental misery clothed the language and ideas of the fisherman with a dignity that his auditor had not been accustomed to find in men of his cla.s.s. A spirit so long chastened by suffering had become elevated and n.o.ble. He related his hopes for the boy, the manner in which they had been blasted by the unjust and selfish policy of the state, his different efforts to procure the release of his grandson, and his bold expedients at the regatta, and the fancied nuptials with the Adriatic.
When he had thus prepared the Carmelite to understand the origin of his sinful pa.s.sions, which it was now his duty to expose, he spoke of those pa.s.sions themselves, and of their influence on a mind that was ordinarily at peace with mankind. The tale was told simply and without reserve, but in a manner to inspire respect, and to awaken powerful sympathy in him who heard it.
"And these feelings thou didst indulge against the honored and powerful of Venice!" demanded the monk, affecting a severity he could not feel.
"Before my G.o.d do I confess the sin! In bitterness of heart I cursed them; for to me they seemed men without feeling for the poor, and heartless as the marbles of their own palaces."
"Thou knowest that to be forgiven, thou must forgive. Dost thou, at peace with all of earth, forget this wrong, and can"st thou, in charity with thy fellows, pray to Him who died for the race, in behalf of those who have injured thee?"
Antonio bowed his head on his naked breast, and he seemed to commune with his soul.