<h2><SPAN name="Ch4">Chapter 4</SPAN>: Carried Off.</h2>
<p>It was with a feeling of considerable discomfort, and some awe,
that Francis Hammond followed his conductor to the chamber of the
Council. It was a large and stately apartment. The decorations were
magnificent, and large pictures, representing events in the wars of
Venice, hung round the walls. The ceiling was also superbly
painted. The cornices were heavily gilded. Curtains of worked
tapestry hung by the windows, and fell behind him as he entered the
door.</p>
<p>At a table of horseshoe shape eleven councillors, clad in the
long scarlet robes, trimmed with ermine, which were the
distinguishing dress of Venetian senators, were seated--the doge
himself acting as president. On their heads they wore black velvet
caps, flat at the top, and in shape somewhat resembling the flat
Scotch bonnet. Signor Polani and his companions were seated in
chairs, facing the table.</p>
<p>When Francis entered the gondolier was giving evidence as to the
attack upon his boat. Several questions were asked him when he had
finished, and he was then told to retire. The usher then brought
Francis forward.</p>
<p>"This is Messer Francisco Hammond," he said.</p>
<p>"Tell your story your own way," the doge said.</p>
<p>Francis related the story of the attack on the gondola, and the
escape of the ladies in his boat.</p>
<p>"How came you, a foreigner and a youth, to interfere in a fray
of this kind?" one of the councillors asked.</p>
<p>"I did not stop to think of my being a stranger, or a youth,"
Francis replied quietly. "I heard the screams of women in distress,
and felt naturally bound to render them what aid I could."</p>
<p>"Did you know who the ladies were?"</p>
<p>"I knew them only by sight. My friend Matteo Giustiniani had
pointed them out to me, on one occasion, as being the daughters of
Signor Polani, and connections of his. When their gondola had
passed mine, a few minutes previously, I recognized their faces by
the light of the torches in their boat."</p>
<p>"Were the torches burning brightly?" another of the council
asked; "because it may be that this attack was not intended against
them, but against some others."</p>
<p>"The light was bright enough for me to recognize their faces at
a glance," Francis said, "and also the yellow and white sashes of
their gondoliers."</p>
<p>"Did you see any badge or cognizance, either on the gondola or
on the persons of the assailants?"</p>
<p>"I did not," Francis said. "They certainly wore none. One of the
torches in the Polani gondola had been extinguished in the fray,
but the other was still burning, and, had the gondoliers worn
coloured sashes or other distinguishing marks, I should have
noticed them."</p>
<p>"Should you recognize, were you to see them again, any of the
assailants?"</p>
<p>"I should not," Francis said. "They were all masked."</p>
<p>"You say you struck down the one who appeared to be their leader
with an oar, as he was about to leap into your boat. How was it the
oar was in your hand instead of that of your gondolier?"</p>
<p>"I was myself rowing," Francis said. "In London, rowing is an
amusement of which boys of all classes are fond, and since I have
been out here with my father I have learned to row a gondola; and
sometimes, when I am out of an evening, I take an oar as well as my
gondolier, enjoying the exercise and the speed at which the boat
goes along. I was not rowing when the signora's boat passed me, but
upon hearing the screams, I stood up and took the second oar, to
arrive as quickly as possible at the spot. That was how it was that
I had it in my hand, when the man was about to leap into the
boat."</p>
<p>"Then there is nothing at all, so far as you know, to direct
your suspicion against anyone as the author of this attack?"</p>
<p>"There was nothing," Francis said, "either in the gondola
itself, or in the attire or persons of those concerned in the fray,
which could give me the slightest clue as to their identity."</p>
<p>"At any rate, young gentleman," the doge said, "you appear to
have behaved with a promptness, presence of mind, and courage--for
it needs courage to interfere in a fray of this sort--beyond your
years; and, in the name of the republic, I thank you for having
prevented the commission of a grievous crime. You will please to
remain here for the present. It may be that, when the person
accused of this crime appears before us, you may be able to
recognize his figure."</p>
<p>It was with mixed feelings that Francis heard, a minute or two
later, the usher announce that Signor Ruggiero Mocenigo was
without, awaiting the pleasure of their excellencies.</p>
<p>"Let him enter," the doge said.</p>
<p>The curtains fell back, and Ruggiero Mocenigo entered with a
haughty air. He bowed to the council, and stood as if expecting to
be questioned.</p>
<p>"You are charged, Ruggiero Mocenigo," the doge said, "with being
concerned in an attempt to carry off the daughters of Signor
Polani, and of taking part in the killing of three servitors of
that gentleman."</p>
<p>"On what grounds am I accused?" Ruggiero said haughtily.</p>
<p>"On the ground that you are a rejected suitor for the elder
lady's hand, and that you had uttered threats against her father,
who, so far as he knows, has no other enemies."</p>
<p>"This seems somewhat scanty ground for an accusation of such
gravity," Ruggiero said sneeringly. "If every suitor who grumbles,
when his offer is refused, is to be held responsible for every
accident which may take place in the lady's family, methinks that
the time of this reverend and illustrious council will be largely
occupied."</p>
<p>"You will remember," the doge said sternly, "that your previous
conduct gives good ground for suspicion against you. You have
already been banished from the state for two years for
assassination, and such reports as reached us of your conduct in
Constantinople, during your exile, were the reverse of
satisfactory. Had it not been so, the prayers of your friends, that
your term of banishment might be shortened, would doubtless have
produced their effect."</p>
<p>"At any rate," Ruggiero said, "I can, with little difficulty,
prove that I had no hand in any attempt upon Signor Polani's
daughters last night, seeing that I had friends spending the
evening with me, and that we indulged in play until three o'clock
this morning--an hour at which, I should imagine, the Signoras
Polani would scarcely be abroad."</p>
<p>"At what time did your friends assemble?"</p>
<p>"At nine o'clock," Ruggiero said. "We met by agreement in the
Piazza, somewhat before that hour, and proceeded together on foot
to my house."</p>
<p>"Who were your companions?"</p>
<p>Ruggiero gave the names of six young men, all connections of his
family, and summonses were immediately sent for them to attend
before the council.</p>
<p>"In the meantime, Messer Francisco Hammond, you can tell us
whether you recognize in the accused one of the assailants last
night."</p>
<p>"I cannot recognize him, your excellency," Francis said; "but I
can say certainly that he was not the leader of the party, whom I
struck with my oar. The blow fell on the temple, and assuredly
there would be marks of such a blow remaining today."</p>
<p>As Francis was speaking, Ruggiero looked at him with a cold
piercing glance, which expressed the reverse of gratitude for the
evidence which he was giving in his favour, and something like a
chill ran through him as he resumed his seat behind Signor Polani
and his friends.</p>
<p>There was silence for a quarter of an hour. Occasionally the
members of the council spoke in low tones to each other, but no
word was spoken aloud, until the appearance of the first of the
young men who had been summoned. One after another they gave their
evidence, and all were unanimous in declaring that they had spent
the evening with Ruggiero Mocenigo, and that he did not leave the
room, from the moment of his arrival there soon after nine o'clock,
until they left him at two in the morning.</p>
<p>"You have heard my witnesses," Ruggiero said, when the last had
given his testimony; "and I now ask your excellencies, whether it
is right that a gentleman, of good family, should be exposed to a
villainous accusation of this kind, on the barest grounds of
suspicion?"</p>
<p>"You have heard the evidence which has been given, Signor
Polani," the doge said. "Do you withdraw your accusation against
Signor Mocenigo?"</p>
<p>"I acknowledge, your excellency," Signor Polani said, rising,
"that Ruggiero Mocenigo has proved that he took no personal part in
the affair, but I will submit to you that this in no way proves
that he is not the author of the attempt. He would know that my
first suspicion would fall upon him, and would, therefore,
naturally leave the matter to be carried out by others, and would
take precautions to enable him to prove, as he has done, that he
was not present. I still maintain that the circumstances of the
case, his threats to me, and the fact that my daughter will
naturally inherit a portion of what wealth I might possess, and
that, as I know and can prove, Ruggiero Mocenigo has been lately
reduced to borrowing money of the Jews, all point to his being the
author of this attempt, which would at once satisfy his anger
against me, for having declined the honour of his alliance, and
repair his damaged fortunes."</p>
<p>There were a few words of whispered consultation between the
councillors, and the doge then said:</p>
<p>"All present will now retire while the council deliberates. Our
decision will be made known to the parties concerned, in due
time."</p>
<p>On leaving the palace, Signor Polani and his friends walked
together across the Piazza, discussing the turn of events.</p>
<p>"He will escape," Polani said. "He has two near relations on the
council, and however strong our suspicions may be, there is really
no proof against him. I fear that he will go free. I feel as
certain as ever that he is the contriver of the attempt; but the
precautions he has taken seem to render it impossible to bring the
crime home to him. However, it is no use talking about it any more,
at present.</p>
<p>"You will, I hope, accompany me home, Signor Francisco, and
allow me to present you formally to my daughters. They were too
much agitated, last night, to be able to thank you fully for the
service you had rendered them.</p>
<p>"Matteo, do you come with us."</p>
<p>Three days passed, and no decision of the council had been
announced, when, early in the morning, one of the state messengers
brought an order that Francis should be in readiness, at nine
o'clock, to accompany him. At that hour a gondola drew up at the
steps. It was a covered gondola, with hangings, which prevented any
from seeing who were within. Francis took his seat by the side of
the official, and the gondola started at once.</p>
<p>"It looks very much as if I was being taken as a prisoner,"
Francis said to himself. "However, that can hardly be, for even if
Ruggiero convinced the council that he was wholly innocent of this
affair, no blame could fall on me, for I neither accused nor
identified him. However, it is certainly towards the prisons we are
going."</p>
<p>The boat, indeed, was passing the Piazzetta without stopping,
and turned down the canal behind, to the prisons in rear of the
palace. They stopped at the water gate, close to the Bridge of
Sighs, and Francis and his conductor entered. They proceeded along
two or three passages, until they came to a door where an official
was standing. A word was spoken, and they passed in.</p>
<p>The chamber they entered was bare and vaulted, and contained no
furniture whatever, but at one end was a low stone slab, upon which
something was lying covered with a cloak. Four of the members of
the council were standing in a group, talking, when Francis
entered. Signor Polani, with two of his friends, stood apart at one
side of the chamber. Ruggiero Mocenigo also, with two of his
companions, stood on the other side.</p>
<p>Francis thought that the demeanour of Ruggiero was somewhat
altered from that which he had assumed at the previous
investigation, and that he looked sullen and anxious.</p>
<p>"We have sent for you, Francisco Hammond, in order that you may,
if you can, identify a body which was found last night, floating in
the Grand Canal."</p>
<p>One of the officials stepped forward and removed the cloak,
showing on the stone slab the body of a young man. On the left
temple there was an extensive bruise, and the skin was broken.</p>
<p>"Do you recognize that body?"</p>
<p>"I do not recognize the face," Francis said, "and do not know
that I ever saw it before."</p>
<p>"The wound upon the temple which you see, is it such as, you
would suppose, would be caused by the blow you struck an unknown
person, while he was engaged in attacking the gondola of Signor
Polani?"</p>
<p>"I cannot say whether it is such a wound as would be caused by a
blow with an oar," Francis said; "but it is certainly, as nearly as
possible, on the spot where I struck the man, just as he was
leaping, sword in hand, into my gondola."</p>
<p>"You stated, at your examination the other day, that it was on
the left temple you struck the blow."</p>
<p>"I did so. I said at once that Signor Ruggiero Mocenigo could
not have been the man who led the assailants, because had he been
so he would assuredly have borne a mark from the blow on the left
temple."</p>
<p>"Look at the clothes. Do you see anything there which could lead
you to identify him with your assailant?"</p>
<p>"My assailant was dressed in dark clothes, as this one was.
There was but one distinguishing mark that I noticed, and this is
wanting here. The light of the torch fell upon the handle of a
dagger in his girdle. I saw it but for a moment, but I caught the
gleam of gems. It was only a passing impression, but I could swear
that he carried a small gold or yellow metal-handled dagger, and I
believe that it was set with gems, but to this I should not like to
swear."</p>
<p>"Produce the dagger found upon the dead man," one of the council
said to an official.</p>
<p>And the officer produced a small dagger with a fine steel blade
and gold handle, thickly encrusted with gems.</p>
<p>"Is this the dagger?" the senator asked Francis.</p>
<p>"I cannot say that it is the dagger," Francis replied; "but it
closely resembles it, if it is not the same."</p>
<p>"You have no doubt, I suppose, seeing that wound on the temple,
the dagger found in the girdle, and the fact that the body has
evidently only been a few days in the water, that this is the man
whom you struck down in the fray on the canal?"</p>
<p>"No, signor, I have no doubt whatever that it is the same
person."</p>
<p>"That will do," the council said. "You can retire; and we thank
you, in the name of justice, for the evidence you have given."</p>
<p>Francis was led back to the gondola, and conveyed to his
father's house. An hour later Signor Polani arrived.</p>
<p>"The matter is finished," he said, "I cannot say satisfactorily
to me, for the punishment is wholly inadequate to the offence, but
at any rate he has not got off altogether unpunished. After you
left, we passed from the prison into the palace, and then the whole
council assembled, as before, in the council chamber. I may tell
you that the body which was found was that of a cousin and intimate
of Ruggiero Mocenigo. The two have been constantly together since
the return of the latter from Constantinople. It was found, by
inquiry at the house of the young man's father, that he left home
on the evening upon which the attack was committed, saying that he
was going to the mainland, and might not be expected to return for
some days.</p>
<p>"The council took it for granted, from the wound in his head,
and the fact that a leech has testified that the body had probably
been in the water about three days, that he was the man that was
stunned by your blow, and drowned in the canal. Ruggiero urged that
the discovery in no way affected him; and that his cousin had, no
doubt, attempted to carry off my daughter on his own account. There
was eventually a division among the council on this point, but
Maria was sent for, and on being questioned, testified that the
young man had never spoken to her, and that, indeed, she did not
know him even by sight; and the majority thereupon came to the
conclusion that he could only have been acting as an instrument of
Ruggiero's.</p>
<p>"We were not in the apartment while the deliberation was going
on, but when we returned the president announced that, although
there was no absolute proof of Ruggiero's complicity in the affair,
yet that, considering his application for my daughter's hand, his
threats on my refusal to his request, his previous character, and
his intimacy with his cousin, the council had no doubt that the
attempt had been made at his instigation, and therefore sentenced
him to banishment from Venice and the islands for three years."</p>
<p>"I should be better pleased if they had sent him back to
Constantinople, or one of the islands of the Levant," Mr. Hammond
said. "If he is allowed to take up his abode on the mainland, he
may be only two or three miles away, which, in the case of a man of
his description, is much too near to be pleasant for those who have
incurred his enmity."</p>
<p>"That is true," Signor Polani agreed, "and I myself, and my
friends, are indignant that he should not have been banished to a
distance, where he at least would have been powerless for fresh
mischief. On the other hand, his friends will doubtless consider
that he has been hardly treated. However, as far as my daughters
are concerned, I will take good care that he shall have no
opportunity of repeating his attempt; for I have ordered them, on
no account whatever, to be absent from the palazzo after the shades
of evening begin to fall, unless I myself am with them; and I shall
increase the number of armed retainers in the house, by bringing
some of my men on shore from a ship which arrived last night in
port. I cannot believe that even Ruggiero would have the insolence
to attempt to carry them off from the house by force; but when one
has to deal with a man like this, one cannot take too great
precautions."</p>
<p>"I have already ordered my son, on no account, to be out after
nightfall in the streets. In his gondola I do not mind, for unless
the gondoliers wear badges, it is impossible to tell one boat from
another after dark. Besides, as he tells me, his boat is so fast
that he has no fear whatever of being overtaken, even if recognized
and chased. But I shall not feel comfortable so long as he is here,
and shall send him back to England on the very first occasion that
offers."</p>
<p>"I trust that no such occasion may occur just yet, Signor
Hammond. I should be sorry, indeed, for your son to be separated so
soon from us. We must talk the matter over together, and perhaps
between us we may hit on some plan by which, while he may be out of
the reach of the peril he has incurred on behalf of my family, he
may yet be neither wasting his time, nor altogether separated from
us."</p>
<p>For the next fortnight Francis spent most of his time at the
Palazzo Polani. The merchant was evidently sincere in his
invitation to him to make his house his home; and if a day passed
without the lad paying a visit, would chide him gently for
deserting them. He himself was frequently present in the balcony,
where the four young people--for Matteo Giustiniani was generally
of the party--sat and chatted together, the gouvernante sitting
austerely by, with at times a strong expression of disapproval on
her countenance at their laughter and merriment, although--as her
charges' father approved of the intimacy of the girls with their
young cousin and this English lad--she could offer no open
objections. In the afternoon, the party generally went for a long
row in a four-oared gondola, always returning home upon the
approach of evening.</p>
<p>To Francis this time was delightful. He had had no sister of his
own; and although he had made the acquaintance of a number of lads
in Venice, and had accompanied his father to formal entertainments
at the houses of his friends, he had never before been intimate in
any of their families. The gaiety and high spirits of the two
girls, when they were in the house, amused and pleased him,
especially as it was in contrast to the somewhat stiff and
dignified demeanour which they assumed when passing through the
frequented canals in the gondola.</p>
<p>"I do not like that woman Castaldi," Francis said one evening
as, after leaving the palazzo, Giuseppi rowed them towards the
Palazzo Giustiniani, where Matteo was to be landed.</p>
<p>"Gouvernantes are not popular, as a class, with young men,"
Matteo laughed.</p>
<p>"But seriously, Matteo, I don't like her; and I am quite sure
that, for some reason or other, she does not like me. I have seen
her watching me, as a cat would watch a mouse she is going to
spring on."</p>
<p>"Perhaps she has not forgiven you, Francisco, for saving her two
charges, and leaving her to the mercy of their assailants."</p>
<p>"I don't know, Matteo. Her conduct appeared to me, at the time,
to be very strange. Of course, she might have been paralysed with
fright, but it was certainly curious the way she clung to their
dresses, and tried to prevent them from leaving the boat."</p>
<p>"You don't really think, Francis, that she wanted them to be
captured?"</p>
<p>"I don't know whether I should be justified in saying as much as
that, Matteo, and I certainly should not say so to anyone else, but
I can't help thinking that such was the case. I don't like her
face, and I don't like the woman. She strikes me as being
deceitful. She certainly did try to prevent my carrying the girls
off and, had not their dresses given way in her hands, she would
have done so. Anyhow, it strikes me that Ruggiero must have had
some accomplice in the house. How else could he have known of the
exact time at which they would be passing along the Grand Canal?
For, that the gondola was in waiting to dash out and surprise them,
there is no doubt.</p>
<p>"I was asking Signora Giulia, the other day, how it was they
were so late, for she says that her father never liked their being
out after dusk in Venice, though at Corfu he did not care how late
they were upon the water. She replied that she did not quite know
how it happened. Her sister had said, some time before, that she
thought it was time to be going, but the gouvernante--who was
generally very particular--had said that there was no occasion to
hurry, as their father knew where they were, and would not be
uneasy. She thought the woman must have mistaken the time, and did
not know how late it was.</p>
<p>"Of course, this proves nothing. Still I own that, putting all
the things together, I have my suspicions."</p>
<p>"It is certainly curious, Francisco, though I can hardly believe
it possible that the woman could be treacherous. She has been for
some years in the service of the family, and my cousin has every
confidence in her."</p>
<p>"That may be, Matteo; but Ruggiero may have promised so highly
that he may have persuaded her to aid him. He could have afforded
to be generous, if he had been successful."</p>
<p>"There is another thing, by the bye, Francisco, which did not
strike me at the time; but now you speak of it, may be another link
in the chain. I was laughing at Maria about their screaming, and
saying what a noise the three of them must have made, and she said,
'Oh, no! there were only two of us--Giulia and I screamed for aid
at the top of our voices; but the signora was as quiet and brave as
possible, and did not utter a sound.'"</p>
<p>"That doesn't agree, Matteo, with her being so frightened as to
hold the girls tightly, and almost prevent their escape, or with
the row she made, sobbing and crying, when she came back. Of course
there is not enough to go upon; and I could hardly venture to speak
of it to Signor Polani, or to accuse a woman, in whom he has
perfect confidence, of such frightful treachery on such vague
grounds of suspicion. Still I do suspect her; and I hope, when I go
away from Venice, you will, as far as you can, keep an eye upon
her."</p>
<p>"I do not know how to do that," Matteo said, laughing; "but I
will tell my cousins that we don't like her, and advise them, in
future, not on any account to stay out after dusk, even if she
gives them permission to do so; and if I learn anything more to
justify our suspicions, I will tell my cousin what you and I think,
though it won't be a pleasant thing to do. However, Ruggiero is
gone now, and I hope we sha'n't hear anything more about him."</p>
<p>"I hope not, Matteo; but I am sure he is not the man to give up
the plan he has once formed easily, any more than he is to forgive
an injury.</p>
<p>"However, here we are at your steps. We will talk the other
matter over another time. Anyhow, I am glad I have told you what I
thought, for it has been worrying me. Now that I find you don't
think my ideas about her are altogether absurd, I will keep my eyes
more open than ever in future. I am convinced she is a bad one, and
I only hope we may be able to prove it."</p>
<p>"You have made me very uncomfortable, Francisco," Matteo said as
he stepped ashore; "but we will talk about it again tomorrow."</p>
<p>"We shall meet at your cousin's in the evening. Before that
time, we had better both think over whether we ought to tell anyone
our suspicions, and we can hold a council in the gondola on the way
back."</p>
<p>Francis did think the matter over that night. He felt that the
fact told him by Giulia, that the gouvernante had herself been the
means of their staying out later than usual on the evening of the
attack, added great weight to the vague suspicions he had
previously entertained; and he determined to let the matter rest no
longer, but that the next day he would speak to Signor Polani, even
at the risk of offending him by his suspicions of a person who had
been, for some years, in his confidence. Accordingly, he went in
the morning to the palazzo, but found that Signor Polani was
absent, and would not be in until two or three o'clock in the
afternoon. He did not see the girls, who, he knew, were going out
to spend the day with some friends.</p>
<p>At three o'clock he returned, and found that Polani had just
come in.</p>
<p>"Why, Francisco," the merchant said when he entered, "have you
forgotten that my daughters will be out all day?"</p>
<p>"No, signor, I have not forgotten that, but I wish to speak to
you. I dare say you will laugh at me, but I hope you will not think
me meddlesome, or impertinent, for touching upon a subject which
concerns you nearly."</p>
<p>"I am sure you will not be meddlesome or impertinent,
Francisco," Signor Polani said reassuringly, for he saw that the
lad was nervous and anxious. "Tell me what you have to say, and I
can promise you beforehand that, whether I agree with you or not in
what you may have to say, I shall be in no way vexed, for I shall
know you have said it with the best intentions."</p>
<p>"What I have to say, sir, concerns the Signora Castaldi, your
daughters' gouvernante. I know, sir, that you repose implicit
confidence in her; and your judgment, formed after years of
intimate knowledge, is hardly likely to be shaken by what I have to
tell you. I spoke to Matteo about it, and, as he is somewhat of my
opinion, I have decided that it is, at least, my duty to tell you
all the circumstances, and you can then form your own
conclusions."</p>
<p>Francis then related the facts known to him. First, that the
assailants of the gondola must have had accurate information as to
the hour at which they would come along; secondly, that it was at
the gouvernante's suggestion that the return had been delayed much
later than usual; lastly, that when the attack took place, the
gouvernante did not raise her voice to cry for assistance, and that
she had, at the last moment, so firmly seized their dresses, that
it was only by tearing the girls from her grasp that he had been
enabled to get them into the boat.</p>
<p>"There may be nothing in all this," he said when he had
concluded. "But at least, sir, I thought that it was right you
should know it; and you will believe me, that it is only anxiety as
to the safety of your daughters that has led me to speak to
you."</p>
<p>"Of that I am quite sure," Signor Polani said cordially, "and
you were perfectly right in speaking to me. I own, however, that I
do not for a moment think that the circumstances are more than mere
coincidences. Signora Castaldi has been with me for upwards of ten
years. She has instructed and trained my daughters entirely to my
satisfaction. I do not say that she is everything that one could
wish, but, then, no one is perfect, and I have every confidence in
her fidelity and trustworthiness. I own that the chain you have put
together is a strong one, and had she but lately entered my
service, and were she a person of whom I knew but little, I should
attach great weight to the facts, although taken in themselves they
do not amount to much. Doubtless she saw that my daughters were
enjoying themselves in the society of my friends, and in her
kindness of heart erred, as she certainly did err, in allowing them
to stay longer than she should have done.</p>
<p>"Then, as to her not crying out when attacked, women behave
differently in cases of danger. Some scream loudly, others are
silent, as if paralysed by fear. This would seem to have been her
case. Doubtless she instinctively grasped the girls for their
protection, and in her fright did not even perceive that a boat had
come alongside, or know that you were a friend trying to save them.
That someone informed their assailants of the whereabouts of my
daughters, and the time they were coming home, is clear; but they
might have been seen going to the house, and a swift gondola have
been placed on the watch. Had this boat started as soon as they
took their seat in the gondola on their return, and hastened, by
the narrow canals, to the spot where their accomplices were
waiting, they could have warned them in ample time of the approach
of the gondola with my daughters.</p>
<p>"I have, as you may believe, thought the matter deeply over, for
it was evident to me that the news of my daughters' coming must
have reached their assailants beforehand. I was most unwilling to
suspect treachery on the part of any of my household, and came to
the conclusion that the warning was given in the way I have
suggested.</p>
<p>"At the same time, Francisco, I thank you deeply for having
mentioned to me the suspicions you have formed, and although I
think that you are wholly mistaken, I certainly shall not neglect
the warning, but shall watch very closely the conduct of my
daughters' gouvernante, and shall take every precaution to put it
out of her power to play me false, even while I cannot, for a
moment, believe she would be so base and treacherous as to attempt
to do so."</p>
<p>"In that case, signor, I shall feel that my mission has not been
unsuccessful, however mistaken I may be, and I trust sincerely that
I am wholly wrong. I thank you much for the kind way in which you
have heard me express suspicions of a person in your
confidence."</p>
<p>The gravity with which the merchant had heard Francis' story
vanished immediately he left the room, and a smile came over his
face.</p>
<p>"Boys are boys all the world over," he said to himself, "and
though my young friend has almost the stature of a man, as well as
the quickness and courage of one, and has plenty of sense in other
matters, he has at once the prejudices and the romantic ideas of a
boy. Had Signora Castaldi been young and pretty, no idea that she
was treacherous would have ever entered his mind; but what young
fellow yet ever liked a gouvernante, who sits by and works at her
tambour frame, with a disapproving expression on her face, while he
is laughing and talking with a girl of his own age. I should have
felt the same when I was a boy. Still, to picture the poor signora
as a traitoress, in the pay of that villain Mocenigo, is too
absurd. I had the greatest difficulty in keeping my gravity when he
was unfolding his story. But he is an excellent lad, nevertheless.
A true, honest, brave lad, with a little of the bluffness that they
say all his nation possess, but with a heart of gold, unless I am
greatly mistaken."</p>
<p>At seven o'clock, Francis was just getting into his gondola to
go round again to Signor Polani's, when another gondola came along
the canal at the top of its speed, and he recognized at once the
badge of the Giustiniani. It stopped suddenly as it came abreast of
his own boat, and Matteo, in a state of the highest excitement,
jumped from his own boat into that of Francis.</p>
<p>"What is the matter, Matteo? What has happened?"</p>
<p>"I have terrible news, Francisco. My cousins have both
disappeared."</p>
<p>"Disappeared!" Francis repeated in astonishment "How have they
disappeared?"</p>
<p>"Their father has just been round to see mine. He is half mad
with grief and anger. You know they had gone to spend the day at
the Persanis?"</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," Francis exclaimed; "but do go on, Matteo. Tell me
all about it, quickly."</p>
<p>"Well, it seems that Polani, for some reason or other, thought
he would go and fetch them himself, and at five o'clock he arrived
there in his gondola, only to find that they had left two hours
before. You were right, Francisco, it was that beldam Castaldi. She
went with them there in the morning, and left them there, and was
to have come in the gondola for them at six. At three o'clock she
arrived, saying that their father had met with a serious accident,
having fallen down the steps of one of the bridges and broken his
leg, and that he had sent her to fetch them at once.</p>
<p>"Of course, they left with her instantly. Polani questioned the
lackeys, who had aided them to embark. They said that the gondola
was not one of his boats, but was apparently a hired gondola, with
a closed cabin. The girls had stopped in surprise as they came down
the steps, and Maria said, 'Why, this is not our gondola!'</p>
<p>"Castaldi replied, 'No, no; our own gondolas had both gone off
to find and bring a leech, and as your father was urgently wanting
you, I hailed the first passing boat. Make haste, dears, your
father is longing for you.'</p>
<p>"So they got on board at once, and the gondola rowed swiftly
away. That is all I know about it, except that the story was a lie,
that their father never sent for them, and that up to a quarter of
an hour ago they had not reached home."</p>
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