“What a good thing you patented it,” I said.
“They’ll get round that in some way, no doubt,” said Grand’mere. “But we got there first and that is the big advantage.”
Philip was thoughtful. “The most puzzling thing is that it should have been Charles.”
“He has hidden talents no doubt,” I said.
“He has never displayed them before. Even when we were there he seemed almost indifferent.”
“Well, it shows how mistaken one can be.”
“I should love to go back,” said Philip. “I want to visit some of the Italian towns. I did see one or two of them briefly. Rome … Venice … and Florence. It was Florence which caught my fancy. It was so wonderful to go out to the heights of Fiesole and look over the city. I shall go back there one day.” He was smiling at me. “You would enjoy it, Lenore,” he added.
I was happy. He looked at me so lovingly and I had never seen Grand’mere so happy. I knew it was because of Philip’s desire to marry me.
There was magic in that evening … sitting there with Grand’mere, dreams in her eyes, and Cassie looking so pleased with us all. Grand’mere and Philip exchanged glances as though there was some delightful conspiracy between them.
I wanted the night to go on and on. It was wonderful to be seventeen and no longer a child. Philip took my hand and pressed it. There was a question in his eyes.
Grand’mere was waiting, holding her breath, her lips moving as I had seen them do in silent prayer.
“Lenore,” said Philip, “you will, won’t you?”
And I said Yes.
What rejoicing there was!
Philip took the ring and put it on my finger. Grand’mere wept a little—but, she assured us, with pure happiness.
“It is my dearest dream come true.”
Cassie hugged me. “You’ll be a real sister now,” she said.
Grand’mere poured champagne into glasses and Philip put his arms about me and held me tightly while Grand’mere and Cassie raised their glasses to us.
“May the good God bless you,” said Grand’mere, “now … and always.”
The news of our engagement was received in various ways by members of the household. Lady Sallonger was at first inclined to be shocked. I knew exactly how her mind worked and she always considered every situation as to what effect it would have on her. Her first reaction was that Philip should have looked higher. It was hardly seemly that his choice should have fallen on one who was, in her mind, rather like a higher servant. Madame Cleremont, it was true, was in a rather special position and she had made certain demands which had been accepted when she came, but she was only a servant after all. Lady Sallonger was rather peevish. It was too much to present her with such a situation when poor Sir Francis had passed on and left heavy responsibilities on her shoulders. She was really too exhausted to deal with matters like this. People should have more consideration. Then she began to change her mind a little. I should be a daughter-in-law. I should be grateful to have risen to such a position in the household. She could make even more demands on my company; and I was useful to her. So perhaps it was not such a bad thing after all. At least it might have its compensations—and Philip was after all a younger son.
Julia was put out. It was galling to think of all she had gone through without having received one proposal yet, and without any help, on my seventeenth birthday I was engaged. Everyone would say that, in my position, it was as good a match as I could possibly make. So I had done well for myself and scored over Julia.
As for the servants they were dismayed. They did not care that someone who had occupied a minor position in the house should come to one of importance which would naturally fall to the wife of one of the sons. It was like the governess’s marrying the master of the house, which had been known to happen now and then.
“It was all wrong,” said Mrs. Dillon. “It was going against the laws of nature.”
Cassie, of course, was delighted.
When Julia came home to stay for a weekend at The Silk House to see her mother, she was accompanied by the Countess of Ballader. That lady took me aside. She seemed genuinely pleased. “Well done,” she said, with such approval that one would have thought that the whole purpose of a girl’s existence was to get a husband. “I said from the start that I wished it had been you I had to handle.”
Julia was cool to me during that weekend, and I was glad when she and the Countess left.
Then there was Charles. His attitude since Drake Aldringham had shown his contempt for him had been one of studied indifference. It was always as though he were unaware of my existence. He gave an amused smile when he was told of the engagement as though it were something of a joke.
Philip was as excited about the wedding as he had been about Sallon Silk. There was something single-minded about Philip; when a project lay ahead he was all enthusiasm to complete it. I liked that in him. In fact there was a great deal I liked about Philip. I believed I loved him, though I was not sure. I liked to be with him; I liked to talk to him; and best of all I liked the manner in which he treated me—as though I was very precious and he was going to spend his life looking after me.
Our wedding was to be in April. That gave us five months to prepare.
“There is absolutely no sense in waiting,” said Philip.
Grand’mere had long conversations with him. She talked at great length about “settlements.” I was appalled when I understood what she meant.
“Are you suggesting that Philip should make some payment?” I asked incredulously.
“It is done in France. There people face these facts. On the day you marry Philip he will settle a certain sum upon you and that money is yours … in case anything happens to him.”
” Happens to him?”
“Ah, mon enfant, one never knows. One cannot be too careful. There is an accident… and what is a poor widow to do? Is she to be thrown on the mercy of her husband’s family?”
“It is all so sordid.”
“You must bring a practical mind to these matters. It will not concern you. It will be arranged with the lawyers and Philip and me … for am I not your guardian?”
“Oh, Grand’mere,” I said, “I wish you wouldn’t. I don’t want Philip to have to pay money.”
”It is just a settlement… nothing more. It means that once you are married to him you are safe … secure …”
“But I am not marrying him for that!”
“You are not … but there are those who must watch for your rights. We have to be practical and this is a matter for your guardian and not for you.”
When I was alone with Philip I broached the matter with him.
He said: “Your grandmother is an astute business woman. She knows what she is about. She wants the best for you … and as I do, we are of one mind.”
“But all this talk of settlements is so mercenary.”
“It seems so, but it is the right thing to do. Don’t think about it. Your grandmother shall have what she wants for you. I thought Italy for our honeymoon. When I was in Florence I thought of you often. I kept saying to myself: I must show Lenore that, so this is exactly what I am going to do. So agree that it shall be Florence.”
“You are so good to me, Philip,” I said emotionally.
“That is what I intend to be … always, and you will be good to me. Ours will be the perfect marriage.”
“I hope that I shan’t disappoint you.”
“What nonsense! As if you could! So it is to be Florence then. It is so beautiful. It is the home of the greatest artists in the world. You sense it as you walk through those streets. We’ll go to the opera. That should be a splendid occasion. You shall have a beautiful gown of Sallon Silk. Your grandmother must make it. A special one for the opera.”
I laughed and said: “And you shall have a long black opera cloak and an opera hat … one of those which collapse and spring up and look so splendid.”
“And we shall walk through the streets to our albergo. We shall have a room with a balcony … perhaps overlooking a square and we shall think of the great Florentines who have worked in this unique city and given the world its greatest art.”
“It is going to be wonderful,” I said.
The weeks sped by. I was so happy. I knew that Grand’mere was right. This was the best thing that could have happened to me. Philip was in London a great deal. He was going to take three weeks’ holiday which should be our honeymoon. He could not make it longer.
Then we should come back to The Silk House for a while and later go to London. The house there was used jointly by Charles and Philip. Philip thought that later on we must have a place of our own. I thought so, too. The idea of Charles sharing our home was distasteful to me. I did not trust him. I never should again; and although he seemed to wish to forget that incident in the mausoleum, I could not entirely do so.
Grand’mere was blissfully busy making gowns for me. There was my wedding gown of white satin and Honiton lace. It was far too grand for the simple wedding we planned. But Grand’mere insisted on making it her way. Then there was my trousseau. She had listened to our talk of the honeymoon and how we planned to go to the Italian opera. She made me a dress of blue Sallon Silk and a black velvet cloak to go with it. When Philip came home from London, I wanted him to see it. He came up with something under his arm and when I stood before him in my Sallon Silk gown he unfurled a black cloak and put it on. Then he produced the opera hat.
We laughed. We paraded, arm-in-arm, round Grand’mere’s workroom singing La Traviata. Cassie clasped her hands with glee and Grand’mere watched, happier than I had ever known her before. I guessed she was thinking how different my story was from my mother’s.
It was to be a simple wedding. We both wanted that. There would be very few guests and soon after the ceremony we were to set out on our honeymoon.
Lady Sallonger was growing resigned though she was still a little resentful. “Three weeks,” she said. “It seems such a long lime. We shall have to finish The Woman in White before you go.”
“Miss Logan would read it to you,” I reminded her.
“She gets so hoarse … and she doesn’t put the feeling into it.”
“Cassie …”
“No, Cassie is even worse. She has no expression, and you don’t know whether it is the heroine or the villain talking. Oh dear, I don’t know why people want to have honeymoons. It can be so inconvenient.”
“I am flattered that you miss me so much,” I said.
“I am so helpless now … and with Sir Francis gone … there is no one to look after me.”
“We all look after you as we always did,” I protested. I was on a different status now … no longer merely the granddaughter of someone who worked for them but the prospective daughter-in-law. It gave me standing, and I intended to use it.
And so happily the weeks passed until my wedding day came.
It was a bright April day. The doctor who was a friend of the family “gave me away” and Charles was the best man.
As I stood there with Philip a shaft of sunshine came through the glass windows and shone on the plaque dedicated to that Sallonger who had bought the house and changed its name to Silk. Philip took my hand and put the ring on my finger and we vowed to cherish each other until death did us part.
We came down the aisle to the sound of Mendelssohn’s Wedding March and I caught sight of Grand’mere’s beaming face as I passed.
Then we went back to The Silk House and there was a small reception for the guests. We were congratulated and well-wished; and in due course it was time for us to prepare to leave.
Grand’mere was with me in my bedroom; she helped me out of my splendid wedding gown and into the dark blue alpaca coat and skirt which she had deemed ideal for travelling.
When I was ready she was beaming with pride and joy.
“You look beautiful,” she said, “and this is the happiest moment of my life.”
Then Philip and I set out for Florence.
They were days to treasure and remember for ever. I was happy. I now had no doubt whatsoever that Grand’mere had been right when she was eager for me to marry Philip. Now that we were in truth lovers, I had discovered a new happiness which was a revelation to me. This closeness to another person, this newly found intimacy was exciting, exhilarating and wonderful. I had never been lonely. Grand’mere had always been there, the centre of my life; but now there was Philip, and with him I had this special relationship. Philip was so good to me, anxious to make me happy. I was his first consideration. It made me feel humble in a way and very contented to be so loved. Grand’mere had known how it would be and that was why she had been so anxious for me to marry Philip.
Not only was he deeply enamoured of me, a gentle yet passionate lover, but he seemed to have an immense knowledge about so many subjects. I had always known that he was vitally interested in the production of silk—and I was learning that when Philip was interested, the smallest detail was of importance to him—but his love of music was great, and I had always been attracted by it, and when I was with him I came to a great understanding and therefore appreciation of it. He loved art. He was very knowledgeable about the painters of Florence, some of whom, like Cimabue and Masaccio, I had never heard of before. He was interested in the past and could talk so vividly of Florentine history that I almost saw it happening before my eyes.
As it was April there were not many visitors in Florence. I imagined that later on the place would be crowded for it was indeed one of the show places of Europe. There were very few people staying in the hotel which meant that we had the full attention of a staff which I was sure would be added to when the hotel was full.
The rooms were large and lofty; our bedroom had tiled walls of mauve and blue mosaic. The french windows opened onto a balcony so that we could look down on the street below. It was very large. I think it had once been a palace for there was a certain rather shabby grandeur about it. It was called simply Reggia. There was something about it which struck me as being rather eerie. I think I should have felt that more strongly if I had been alone. But as Philip and I were together I quite enjoyed the loneliness and that strange rather uncanny feeling that in this place strong emotions had occurred—some of them sinister, which added to the fascination.
They were golden days. Everything seemed exciting and amusing. Philip had a way of looking at things to make them so. I had thought he was obsessed by his business—and to a certain extent he was. We used to wander round the streets looking in the shop windows which displayed silks. He could never resist stopping and sometimes going into the shops to enquire about prices, to feel the weight of the material and caressing it fondly with his fingers. I used to laugh at him about it and tell him that the shopkeepers would be annoyed with him because he never bought anything.’ ‘Well,” he said,’ ‘that would be like taking coals to Newcastle.”
I loved the little shops on the Ponte Vecchio. We would pore over the trinkets and sometimes buy a stone or a bracelet or a little enamelled box. There was so much to interest us.
We were looked after by a lively Italian. I did not know what lie did in the hotel when it was full, but as there were so few guests he attached himself to us and became a kind of general factotum.
He brought our breakfast in the morning. He would draw back the curtains and stand surveying us with an indulgent smile. If we left clothes lying about he would hang them up, for he took a great interest in our clothes, particularly Philip’s. He spoke a little English interspersed with much Italian and obviously he liked to practise it on us. We were very amused by him and as the days passed we began to encourage him to talk.
He was tall… about Philip’s height; and he had dark brown hair and large dark soulful eyes.
He quickly discovered that we were on our honeymoon.
“How did you guess?” I asked.
He lifted his shoulders and raised his eyes to the painted ceiling.
“It is possibla to tella.” He put an “a” on the ends of most of his words and uttered them in a singsong voice which was totally un-English.
“Verra nisa,” he said. “Verra nisa.” And seemed to think the matter was a great joke.
He looked upon us as his proteges. When we ate in the restaurant he would come down and stand with the waiter watching us eat. If we did not do justice to one dish he would shake his head and ask anxiously: ”Notta nisa?” in that voice which made us want to laugh.
He was very dashing and dandy in appearance. One constantly saw him gazing at his reflection in mirrors with a look of complete satisfaction. His name was Lorenzo. Philip christened him Lorenzo the Magnificent.
As the days passed he became more and more loquacious. Philip had a certain understanding of Italian and between that and Lorenzo’s English we learned a great deal. We encouraged him to talk. Everything seemed incredibly amusing and we laughed a great deal. It was the best sort of laughter that had its roots in happiness rather than amusement. I think we were both so glad to be alive.
Lorenzo sensed this and it was as though he wanted to be part of it.
He wanted us to know what a fine fellow he was, beloved of the ladies. In fact, he conveyed to us, it grieved him that there were occasions when he had to shake them off. His hands were expressive and he made motions as though brushing away tiresome flies. He always placed himself conveniently near a mirror during these discourses so that he could throw glances at himself; he would pat his curls approvingly. But in spite of his blatant vanity there was something lovable about him and neither of us could resist talking to him.
As I said he was very interested in Philip’s clothes. Once we had come into the room and found him trying on Philip’s opera hat.
“Verra nisa,” he said, not in the least abashed to be caught.
We tried not to show surprise, but we were never really surprised at anything Lorenzo did.
“It suits you,” I said.
“In this … Lorenzo … he maka the big capture, aha?”
“I am sure you would. You wouldn’t be able to brush them off. You would have to take flight.”
Reverently he took the hat, collapsed it with almost childish pleasure and reluctantly put it into the box.
He used to tell us where to go and question us on our return. He was a source of great amusement to us. We laughed about his preening himself in Philip’s hat.
“Have you ever seen anyone so vain?” I asked.
Philip replied that he was probably no vainer than other people, but he just did not hide it.
“He sees himself as the great lover,” he went on. “Well, why not? It makes him happy. There is no doubt about that.”
There certainly was not.
Sometimes we would sit in one of the open-fronted restaurants drinking coffee or sipping an aperitif. We would talk about where we had been that day and what we proposed to do the next and we never failed to talk about the latest exploits of Lorenzo.
Magic days in a magic city. When I think of Florence I think of the heights of Fiesole; I think of houses encircled by sloping hills covered with vineyards, gardens and beautiful villas; I think of the rather austere Florentine buildings which gave a certain sinister grandeur to the streets; I remember particularly the Duomo—the Cathedral—and the church of San Lorenzo with its magnificent marbles and decorations of lapis lazuli, chalcedony and agate; I discovered a statue of Lorenzo de’ Medici— Lorenzo the Magnificent.
I swore it had a look of our Lorenzo. We tried to discover resemblances and asked ourselves whether our Lorenzo came here to study his famous namesake.
There was so much to see—a surfeit of riches. One should have lived there for a year and assimilated it gradually; the many palaces; il Bargello which had been a prison; the Palazzo Vec-chio; the Uffizi and the Palazzo Pitti; we loved to linger in the Piazza della Signoria with its collection of statues and Loggia dei Lanzi under whose porticos were some of the most exciting sculptures I had ever seen.
The weather was gently warm but not hot. The skies were blue and gave an added beauty to those all imposing buildings.
While we were looking at the sculptures in the Piazza della Signoria, I noticed a man standing nearby. He caught my eye and smiled.
“What a wonderful collection,” he said in English with a strong Italian accent.
“Beautiful,” I answered.
”Where would you find anything like it outside Italy?” added Philip.
“I would venture to say nowhere,” replied the man. “You are on holiday here?”
“Yes,” answered Philip.
“Your first visit?”
“Not mine … but my wife’s first.”
“You speak in English,” I commented. “How did you know we were?”
He smiled. “One has a way of knowing. Tell me, what part of England do you come from? I was there myself once.”
“We are near Epping Forest,” Philip told him. “Have you ever been there?”
“Oh yes. But it is beautiful … and so near the big city, is it not?”
“I see you are well informed.”
“You are staying here long?”
“We have another week after the end of this.” He raised his hat and bowed. “You must enjoy what time is left.”
When he had gone I said: “He was very affable.”
”He liked us because we were admiring the sights of his country.”
“You think that was what it was? He seemed quite interested in us … asking where we came from and when we were leaving.”
“That,” said Philip, “is just idle conversation.” He tucked his arm in mine and we went off in search of a restaurant where we could sit and watch the activity of the streets while we ate.
We went to the opera. I was wearing my blue Sallon Silk gown and Philip his black cloak and the hat for which Lorenzo had shown such fervent admiration.
Lorenzo came into our room on some pretext just as we were about to leave. He clasped his hands and stood regarding us with admiration; and I knew he was imagining himself in Philip’s hat and cloak. He clapped his hands and murmured: “Magnifco! Magnifico!”
That was a wonderful night—the last of the wonderful nights. It seems incredible looking back that one can be so oblivious of disaster so close.
The opera was Rigoletto; the singing was superb; the audience appreciative. I was completely enchanted by the magnificent voices of the Duke and his tragic jester. I thrilled to Gilda’s Caro nome and the quartette with the flirtatious philandering Duke intent on pursuing the girl from the tavern mingling with the tragedy of betrayed Gilda and the revengeful Rigoletto. I thought: I must tell Grand’mere all about this.
During the interval I looked up at one of the boxes and in it I saw the man who had spoken to us in the Piazza. He caught my eyes and recognized me, for he bowed his head in acknowledgement.
I said to Philip: “Look, there is that man.” Philip looked vague. “Do you remember we saw him in the Piazza?”
Philip nodded vaguely.
As we came out into the street I saw him again. He was standing as though waiting for someone. Again we acknowledged each other.
“Perhaps he is waiting for his conveyance,” I said.
We ourselves decided to walk to the Reggia.
That was an enchanted evening. I wanted it to go on and on. We stood, side by side, on our balcony for a while looking down.
“When there are no people in the streets they look sinister,” I said. ”One begins to ask oneself what violent deeds were done down there in days gone by.”
“That would apply to anywhere,” said practical Philip.
“But I think there is a special quality here. …”
“You are too fanciful, my darling,” said Philip drawing me inside.
We had spent the day walking and after dinner we were rather weary. Lorenzo had hovered about us while we ate in the almost deserted dining room.
“You do not go to the opera thisa night?” he asked.
“No. We were there last night,” Philip told him.
“It was wonderful,” I added.
“Verra nisa. Rigoletto, eh?”
“Yes. The singing was superb.”
“And tonight you notta go again?”
“Oh no,” said Philip. “Tonight we are going to retire early. We have some letters to write. We are rather tired so we shall have an early night.”
“That is gooda …”
We returned to our room. We wrote our letters. Mine was a long one to Grand’mere telling her about the wonderful sights of Florence and our visit to the opera. Philip had had news from the factory and was absorbed in replying.
We sat on the balcony for a while afterwards and went early to bed.
Next morning breakfast was late in arriving and when it did come it was not brought by Lorenzo but by one of the others.
“What has happened to Lorenzo?” I asked.
His English was not good. “Lorenzo … has gone.”
“Gone? Gone where?”
He set down the tray and looked blank, raising his hands in a gesture of helplessness.
When he had gone we talked about Lorenzo. What could have happened? It could not mean that he had gone altogether.
“I should have thought he would have told us if he were having a day off,” said Philip.
“It’s odd,” I agreed. “But then Lorenzo is rather odd. I daresay we shall hear in due course.”
But when we came downstairs no one knew of his whereabouts, and it was clear that they were as surprised as we were about his disappearance.
“He’s on some romantic mission, I daresay,” said Philip.
We went out and wandered about the city. We passed the Medici Palace and with our Lorenzo in mind we talked of that other Lorenzo, scion of that notorious family which had had sovereign power over Florence in the fifteenth century.
“Lorenzo il Magnifico,” mused Philip. “He must have been a very great man to be universally known as such. Well, he was magnificent. He gave much of his great wealth to encouraging art and literature and made Florence the centre of learning. You know, he gave great treasures to the library which he founded; he surrounded himself with some of the most famous sculptors and painters the world has ever known. That is magnificent. I believe he became too powerful in the end and that is not good for anybody; and by the time he died in Florence he had lost some of his power. The sons of great men often do not match their fathers and there followed troublous times for Florence.”
I could not stop thinking of our Lorenzo.
“I hope there is no trouble when he returns,” I said. “I should imagine they will not be very pleased with him … walking out like that without saying where he was going.”
We shopped on the Ponte Vecchio and walked along by the Arno where, Philip said, Dante had first encountered Beatrice.
I was rather glad to return to the Reggia because I could not get Lorenzo out of my mind.
There a shock awaited us.
As soon as we entered the hotel we knew that something was wrong. One of the waiters with two of the chambermaids came hurrying up to us. We had difficulty in understanding what they were saying for they all spoke at once and in Italian with only a smattering of English.
We could not believe that we had heard correctly. Lorenzo was dead.
It seemed he had been attacked soon after he left the hotel on the previous night. His body had been left in one of the little alleyways at the back of the hotel and discovered only this morning by a man on his way to work.
The manager came up.
“It is good that you are back,” he said. “The polizia they wish to speak… I must let them know that you are here. They wish to speak…”
We were astounded, wondering why they wished to see us, but we were so stunned remembering the exuberant laughing Lorenzo now dead that we could think of little else.
Two members of the police arrived to talk to us. One spoke fair English. He said they had not identified Lorenzo for some time because he was wearing a cloak with a label inside and that label was the name of a London tailor. They had thought that the victim of the attack was a visitor to Florence. But he was not unknown in the city and was soon identified. They surmised that the object of the attack was robbery, but it was difficult to say whether anything had been stolen.
We were puzzled. Then I remembered Lorenzo’s admiring himself in Philip’s opera hat. I said I wanted to go to our room. I did so. The hat box was empty; nor was the cloak in the wardrobe.
I hurried down to tell them.
As a result we were taken to see the bloodstained cloak. There was no doubt whatsoever. It was Philip’s. By that time the hat had been found. As soon as I saw it I guessed what had happened.
We were very upset for this touched us deeply. We had been amused by Lorenzo and enjoyed our encounters with him. I remembered that he had particularly asked us if we should be out that night, and knowing that we should not be, he had taken Philip’s cloak and hat and so had been mistaken for a wealthy tourist and met his death.
It was so tragic and we felt deeply involved because he had been killed in Philip’s clothes. I kept thinking of him, sauntering along, feeling himself to be a very fine figure of a man, irresistible to women. His vanity had killed him; but it was such a harmless, lovable vanity.
Poor Lorenzo—so full of life and so equipped to enjoy it and then, because of one foolish act… it was over.
That was the end of the honeymoon for us. We could no longer be happy in Florence. The place had taken on a new aspect. These streets with their fine buildings, full of shadows of a glorious past, were indeed sinister.
Wherever I went I saw Lorenzo … strolling out, pleased with life and himself, and then suddenly the assassin’s knife had descended on him.
“I think,” said Philip, “that it would be better if we went home.”