It was a surprisingly jolly garden, true enough. But though

Peter remained in it all day long--though he haunted the

riverside, and cast a million desirous glances, between the

trees, and up the lawns, towards Castel Ventirose--he enjoyed

no briefest vision of the Duchessa di Santangiolo.

Nor the next day; nor the next.

"Why does n't that old dowager ever come down and look after

her river?" he asked Marietta. "For all the attention she

gives it, the water might be undermining her property on both

sides."

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"That old dowager--?" repeated Marietta, blank.

"That old widow woman--my landlady--the Duchessa Vedova di

Santangiolo."

"She is not very old--only twenty-six, twenty-seven," said

Marietta.

"Don't try to persuade me that she is n't old enough to know

better," retorted Peter, sternly.

"But she has her guards, her keepers, to look after her

property," said Marietta.

"Guards and keepers are mere mercenaries. If you want a thing

well done, you should do it yourself," said Peter, with gloomy

sententiousness.

On Sunday he went to the little grey rococo parish church.

There were two Masses, one at eight o'clock, one at ten--and

the church was quite a mile from Villa Floriano, and up a hill;

and the Italian sun was hot--but the devoted young man went to

both.

The Duchessa was at neither.

"What does she think will become of her immortal soul?" he

asked Marietta.

On Monday he went to the pink-stuccoed village post-office.

Before the post-office door a smart little victoria, with a

pair of sprightly, fine-limbed French bays, was drawn up, ducal

coronets emblazoned on its panels.

Peter's heart began to beat.

And while he was hesitating on the doorstep, the door opened,

and the Duchessa came forth--tall, sumptuous, in white, with

a wonderful black-plumed hat, and a wonderful white-frilled

sunshade. She was followed by a young girl--a pretty,

dark-complexioned girl, of fourteen, fifteen perhaps, with

pleasant brown eyes (that lucent Italian brown), and in her

cheeks a pleasant hint of red (that covert Italian red, which

seems to glow through the thinnest film of satin).

Peter bowed, standing aside to let them pass.

But when he looked up, the Duchessa had stopped, and was

smiling on him.

His heart beat harder.

"A lovely day," said the Duchessa.

"Delightful," agreed Peter, between two heart-beats.--Yet he

looked, in his grey flannels, with his straw-hat and his

eyeglass, with his lean face, his even colour, his slightly

supercilious moustaches--he looked a very embodiment of

cool-blooded English equanimity.

"A trifle warm, perhaps?" the Duchessa suggested, with her air

of polite (or was it in some part humorous?) readiness to defer

to his opinion.




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