There Was In Florence A Lady
by
I
The soft wind of an Italian spring stirred among the leaves outside. The windows of the studio, left open to the morning air, were carefully shaded. The scent of mulberry blossoms drifted in. The chair on the model-stand, adjusted to catch the light, was screened from the glare; and the light falling on the rich drapery flung across its back brought out a dull carmine in the slender, bell-shaped flowers near by, and dark gleams of old oak in the carved chair. The chair was empty; but the two men in the studio were facing it, as if a presence were still there.
The painter, sketching idly on the edge of his drawing-board, leaned back to survey the child’s head that developed under his pencil. “She will not come this morning, then?” he asked almost indifferently.
The older man shook his head. “She said not. She may change her mind.”
The painter glanced up quickly. He could see nothing in the face of the other, and he devoted himself anew to the child’s head. “It does not matter,” he said. “I can work on the background–if I feel like working at all,” he added, after a moment’s pause.
The older man stared moodily at the floor. He flicked a pair of long riding-gloves lightly through his fingers. He glanced toward the easel standing in front of the painter, a little to the left. “It is barbarous that you have had to waste so much time!” he broke out. “How long is it? Two–no, three years last Christmas time since you began. And there it stands.” The figure on the easel, erect, tranquil, in the old chair, seemed to half shrug its shapely shoulders in defense of the unfinished face. He looked at it severely. The severity changed to something else. “And it is so perfect–damnably perfect,” he said irritably.
The artist raised his eyebrows the least trifle. A movement so slight might have indicated scrutiny of his own work. “You are off for the day?” he asked, glancing at the riding-whip and hat on a table by the door.
“Yes; I shall run up, perhaps, as far as Pistoia. Going to see the new altarpiece.” He took up the hat and whip. He waited, fingering them indecisively. “She seems to me more fickle than ever, this last month or two.”
“I see that she is restless.” The painter spoke in a low tone, half hesitating. “I have wondered whether–I had hoped that the Bambino”–he touched the figure lightly with his foot–“might not be needed.”
The other started. He stared at him a full minute. His eyes fell. “No, no such good luck,” he said brusquely. “It is only caprice.”
The draperies near him parted. A boyish figure appeared in the opening. “Castino wishes me to say that the musicians wait,” said the youth.
The painter rose and came toward him, a smile of pleasure on his face. “Tell them that there will be no sitting to-day, Salai,” he said, laying his hand, half in greeting, half in caress, on the youth’s shoulder.
“Yes, Signor.” Salai saluted and withdrew.
The painter turned again to the older man. “It was a happy thought of yours, Zano–the music. She delights in it. I almost caught, one day last week, while they were playing, that curve about the lips.”
They stood for a moment in silence, looking toward the portrait. The memory of a haunting smile seemed to flicker across the shaded light.
“Well, I am off.” The man held out his hand.
The artist hesitated a second. Then he raised the hand in his supple fingers and placed it to his lips. “A safe journey to you, Signor,” he said, in playful formality.
“And a safe return, to find our Lady Lisa in better temper,” laughed the other. The laugh passed behind the draperies.
The artist remained standing, his eyes resting absently on the rich colors of the Venetian tapestry through which his friend had disappeared. His face was clouded with thought. He had the look of a man absorbed in a problem, who has come upon an unexpected complication.