"Don't be afraid, my child. No harm shall come to you," whispered Father

Pifferi. But the good Capuchin himself was trembling visibly.

The Procurator General was gentle and polite, but he dismissed the Chief

of Police, and would have dismissed the Capuchin also, but for vehement

protests.

"Very well, I see no objection; sit down again," he said.

It was a strange three-cornered interview. Father Pifferi, quaking with

fear, thought he was there to protect Roma. The Procurator General,

smiling and serene, thought she had come to complete a secret scheme of

personal revenge. And Roma herself, sitting erect in her chair, in her

black Eton coat and straw hat, and with her wonderful eyes turning

slowly from face to face, thought only of Rossi, and was silent and

calm.

The secretary opened his portfolio on the table and prepared to write.

The Procurator General sat in front of Roma and leaned slightly forward.

"You are Donna Roma Volonna, daughter of the late Prince Prospero

Volonna?"

"I am."

"You were born in England and lived there as a child?"

"Yes."

"Although you were young when you lost your father, you have a perfect

recollection both of him and of his associates?"

"Of some of his associates."

"One of them was a young man who lived in his house as a kind of adopted

son?"

"Yes."

"You are aware that your father was unhappily involved in political

troubles?"

"I am."

"You know that he was arrested on a serious charge?"

"I do."

"You also know that, when condemned to death by a military tribunal for

conspiring against the person of the late sovereign, his sentence was

commuted by the King, but that one of his associates, condemned at the

same time, and for the same crime, escaped all punishment because he was

not then at the disposition of the law?"

"Yes."

"That was the young man who lived with him as his adopted son?"

"It was."

There was a moment's pause during which nothing could be heard but the

quick breathing of the Capuchin and the scratching of the secretary's

pen.

"During the past few months you have made the acquaintance in Rome of

the Deputy David Rossi?"

"I have."

The Capuchin moved in his seat. "Acquaintance! The lady is married to

the Deputy."

The Procurator General's eyes rose perceptibly. "Married!"

"That is to say religiously married, which is all the Church thinks

necessary."




readonlinefreebook.com Copyright 2016 - 2024