PAGE 7
Marny’s Shadow
by
“My mind was made up instantly. I determined to follow the affair to the end.
“‘Yes, I’ll go,’ and I pulled my umbrella into shape, opened it with a flop, and stepped from the shelter of the doorway into the pelt of the driving rain.
“We kept on up the Fondamenta, crossed the bridge by the side of the Canal of San Vio as far as the Caffe Calcina, and then out on the Zattero, which was being soused with the waves of the Giudecca breaking over the coping of its pavement. Hugging the low wall of Clara Montalba’s garden, he keeping out of the wind as best he could, we passed the church of San Rosario and stopped at the same low door opening into the building next to Pietro’s wine-shop–the one I had seen him enter when I was painting. The caffe was still open, for the glow of its lights streamed out upon the night and was reflected in the rain-drenched pavement. Then a thought struck me:
“‘Come in here a moment,’ I said to him, and I pushed in Pietro’s door.
“‘Pietro,’ I called out, so that everybody in the caffe could hear, ‘I’m going up to Mr. Diffendorfer’s room. Better get a fiasco of Chianti ready–the old kind you have in the cellar. When I want it I’ll send for it.’ If I was going into a trap it was just as well to let somebody know whom I was last seen with. The boys had seen me go out with him, but nobody knew where he lived or where he had taken me. I was ashamed of it as soon as I had said it, but somehow I felt as if it were just as well to keep my eyes open.
“Diffendorfer pushed past me and called out to Pietro, in a half-angry tone:
“‘No, don’t you send it. I’ve got all the wine we’ll want,’ turned on his heel, held his door open for me to pass in, and slammed it behind us.
“It was pitch-dark inside as we mounted the stairs one step at a time until we reached the second flight, where the light from a smouldering wick of a fiorentina set in a niche in the wall shed a dim glow. At the sound of our footsteps a door was opened in a passageway on our left, a head thrust out, and as suddenly withdrawn. The same thing happened on the third landing. Diffendorfer paid no attention to these intrusions, and kept on down a long corridor ending in a door. I didn’t like the heads–it looked as if they were waiting for Diffendorfer to bring somebody home, and so I slipped my umbrella along in my hand until I could use it as a club, and waited in the dark until he had found the key-hole, unlocked the door, and thrown it open. All I saw was the gray light of the windows opposite this door, which made a dim silhouette of Diffendorfer’s figure. Then I heard the scraping of a match, and a gas-jet flashed.
“‘Come in,’ called Diffendorfer, in a cheery tone. ‘Wait till I punch up the fire. Here, take this seat,’ and he moved a great chair close to the grate.
“I have seen a good many rooms in my time, but I must say this one took the breath out of me for an instant. The walls were hung in old tapestries, the furniture was of the rarest. There were three or four old armchairs that looked as if they had been stolen out of the Doge’s Palace.
“Diffendorfer continued punching away at the fire until it burst into a blaze.
“In another moment he was on his feet again, saying he had forgotten something. Then he entered the next room–there were three in the suite–unlocked a closet, brought back a mouldy-looking bottle and two Venetian glasses, moved up a spider-legged, inlaid table, and said, as he placed the bottle and glasses beside me: