Rome appeared, all pearly gray, spread out before him, its lines a little blurred like a faded picture, under a Claude Lorrain sky, sprinkled with ethereal clouds, their n.o.ble grouping lending to the clear s.p.a.ces between an indescribable delicacy, as flowers lend a new grace to the verdure which surrounds them. On the distant heights the gray deepened gradually to amethyst. Long trailing vapours slid through the cypresses of the Monte Mario like waving locks through a comb of bronze. Close by, the pines of the Monte Pincio spread their sun-gilded canopies. Below, on the piazza, the obelisk of Pius VI. looked like a pillar of agate. Under this rich autumnal light everything took on a sumptuous air.
Divine Rome!
He feasted his eyes on the prospect before him. Looking down, he saw a group of red-robed clerics pa.s.s along by the church; then the black coach of a prelate with its two black, long-tailed horses; then other open carriages containing ladies and children. He recognised the Princess of Ferentino with Barbarella Viti, followed by the Countess of Lucoli driving a pair of ponies and accompanied by her great Danish hound. A perturbing breath of the old life pa.s.sed over his spirit, awakening indeterminate desires in his heart.
He left the window and returned to his lunch. The sun shone on the wall and lit up a dance of satyrs round a Silenus.
"The Duke of Grimiti and two other gentlemen," announced the servant.
The Duke entered with Ludovico Barbarisi and Giulio Musellaro. Andrea hastened forward to meet them and they greeted him warmly.
"You, Giulio!" exclaimed Sperelli, who had not seen his friend for more than two years. How long have you been in Rome?"
"Only a week. I was going to write to you to Schifanoja, but thought I would rather wait till you came back. And how are you? You are looking a little thin, but very well. It was only when I got back to Rome that I heard of your affair; otherwise, I would certainly have come from India to offer you my services. At the beginning of May, I was at Padmavati in the Bahara. What a heap of things I have to tell you!"
"And so have I!"
They shook hands heartily a second time. Sperelli seemed overjoyed. None of his friends were so dear to him as Musellaro, for his n.o.ble character, his keen and penetrating mind and rare culture.
"Ruggiero--Ludovico--sit down. Giulio, will you sit here?"
He offered them tea, cigarettes, liqueurs. The conversation grew very lively. Grimiti and Barbarisi gave the news of Rome, especially the more spicy items of society gossip. The aroma of the tea mingled with that of the tobacco.
"I have brought you a chest of tea," said Musellaro to Sperelli, "and much better tea too than your famous Kien Loung used to drink."
"Ah, do you remember, in London, how he used to make tea after the poetical method of the Great Emperor?"
"I say," said Grimiti, "do you know that the fair Clara Green is in Rome? I saw her on Sunday at the Villa Borghese. She recognised me and stopped her carriage to speak to me. She is as lovely as ever. You remember her pa.s.sion for you, and how she went on when she thought you were in love with Constance Landbrooke? She instantly asked for news of you."
"I should be very pleased to see her again. Does she still dress in green and wear sunflowers in her hat?
"Oh no. She has apparently abandoned the aesthetic for good and all. She goes in for feathers now. On Sunday, she was wearing an enormous hat a la Montpensier with a perfectly fabulous feather in it."
"The season is in full swing, I suppose?"
"Earlier than usual this year, both as to saints and sinners."
"Which of the saints are already in Rome?"
"Almost all--Giulia Moceto, Barbarella Viti, the Princess of Micigliano, Laura Miano, the Marchesa Ma.s.sa d"Alba, the Countess Lucoli----"
"I saw her just now from the window, driving. And I saw your cousin too with Barbarella Viti."
"My cousin is only here till to-morrow, then she goes back to Frascati.
On Wednesday, she gives a kind of garden party at the villa in the style of the Princess of Sagan. Costume is not absolutely _de rigueur_, but the ladies will all wear Louis XV. or Directoire hats. We are going."
"You are not leaving Rome again so soon, I hope?" Grimiti asked of Sperelli.
"I shall stay till the beginning of November. Then I am going to France for a fortnight to see about some horses. I shall be back in Rome about the end of the month."
"Talking of horses," said Ludovico, "Leonetto Lanza wants to sell _Campomorto_. You know it--a magnificent animal, a first-rate jumper.
That would be something for you."
"How much does he want for it?"
"Fifteen thousand lire, I think."
"Well, we might see----"
"Leonetto is going to be married directly. He got engaged this summer at Aix-les-Bains."
"I forgot to tell you," said Musellaro, "that Galeazzo Secinaro sends you his remembrances. We travelled back from India together. If you only knew of all Galeazzo"s doughty deeds on the journey! He is at Palermo now, but he will be in Rome in January."
"And Gino Bomminaco begs to be remembered to you," added Barbarisi.
"Ah, ha!" exclaimed the duke with a burst of laughter, "you should get Gino to tell you the story of his adventure with Donna Giulia Moceto.
You are, I fancy, in a position to give us some details on the subject of Donna Giulia."
Ludovico, too, began to laugh.
"Oh, I know," broke in Musellaro, "you have made the most tremendous conquests in Rome. _Gratulator tibi_!"
"But tell me--do tell me about this adventure," asked Andrea with impatient curiosity.
These subjects excited him. Encouraged by his friends, he launched forth into a discourse on female beauty, displaying the profound knowledge and fervour of a connoisseur, taking a pleasure in using the most highly-coloured expressions, with the subtle distinctions of an artist and a libertine. Indeed, had any one taken the trouble to write down the conversation of the four young men within these walls, hung with the voluptuous scenes of the Bacchic tapestries, it might well have formed the _Breviarium arcanum_ of upper-cla.s.s corruption at the end of the nineteenth century.
The shades of evening were falling, but the air was still permeated with light as a sponge absorbs the water. Through the windows, one caught a glimpse of the horizon and a band of orange against which the cypresses of the Monte Mario stood out sharply like the teeth of a great ebony rake. Ever and anon, came the cawing of the rooks, a.s.sembling in groups on the roof of the Villa Medici before descending on the Villa Borghese and into the narrow Valley of Sleep.
"What are you going to do this evening?" Barbarisi asked Andrea.
"I really don"t know."
"Well, then, come with us--dinner at eight, at Doney"s, to inaugurate his new restaurant at the Teatro n.a.z.ionale."
"Yes, come with us, do come with us!" entreated Giulio Musellaro.
"Besides the three of us," continued the duke, "there will be Giulia Arici, Bebe Silva and Maria Fortuna--That reminds me--capital idea!--you bring Clara Green."
"A capital idea!" echoed Ludovico Barbarisi.
"And where shall I find Clara Green?"
"At the Hotel de l"Europe, close by, in the Piazza di Spagna. A note from you would put her in the seventh heaven. She is certain to give up any other engagement she may have."
Andrea was quite agreeable to the plan.
"But it would be better if I called on her," he said. "She is pretty sure to be in now. Don"t you think so, Ruggiero?"
"Well, dress quick and come out with us now."