<h2><SPAN name="Ch3">Chapter 3</SPAN>: On The Grand Canal.</h2>
<p>Giuseppi, next morning, heard the announcement of the
determination of Francis, to interfere no further in the matter of
the conspiracy at San Nicolo, with immense satisfaction. For the
last few nights he had scarcely slept, and whenever he dozed off,
dreamed either of being tortured in dungeons, or of being murdered
in his gondola; and no money could make up for the constant terrors
which assailed him. In his waking moments he was more anxious for
his employer than for himself, for it was upon him that the
vengeance of the conspirators would fall, rather than upon a young
gondolier, who was only obeying the orders of his master.</p>
<p>It was, then, with unbounded relief that he heard Francis had
decided to go no more out to San Nicolo.</p>
<p>During the next few days Francis went more frequently than usual
to the Piazza of Saint Mark, and had no difficulty in recognizing
there the various persons he had seen in the hut, and in
ascertaining their names and families. One of the citizens he had
failed to recognize was a large contractor in the salt works on the
mainland. The other was the largest importer of beasts for the
supply of meat to the markets of the city.</p>
<p>Francis was well satisfied with the knowledge he had gained. It
might never be of any use to him, but it might, on the other hand,
be of importance when least expected.</p>
<p>As a matter of precaution he drew up an exact account of the
proceedings of the two nights on the lagoons, giving an account of
the meeting, and the names of the persons present, and placed it in
a drawer in his room. He told Giuseppi what he had done.</p>
<p>"I do not think there is the least chance of our ever being
recognized, Giuseppi. There was not enough light for the man to
have made out our features. Still there is nothing like taking
precautions, and if--I don't think it is likely, mind--but if
anything should ever happen to me--if I should be missing, for
example, and not return by the following morning--you take that
paper out of my drawer and drop it into the Lion's Mouth. Then, if
you are questioned, tell the whole story."</p>
<p>"But they will never believe me, Messer Francisco," Giuseppi
said in alarm.</p>
<p>"They will believe you, because it will be a confirmation of my
story; but I don't think that there is the least chance of our ever
hearing anything further about it."</p>
<p>"Why not denounce them at once without putting your name to it,"
Giuseppi said. "Then they could pounce upon them over there, and
find out all about it for themselves?"</p>
<p>"I have thought about it, Giuseppi, but there is something
treacherous in secret denunciations. These men have done me no
harm, and as a foreigner their political schemes do not greatly
concern me. I should not like to think I had sent twelve men to the
dungeons and perhaps to death."</p>
<p>"I think it's a pity you ever went there at all, Messer
Francisco."</p>
<p>"Well, perhaps it is, Giuseppi; but I never thought it would
turn out a serious affair like this. However, I do wish I hadn't
gone now; not that I think it really matters, or that we shall ever
hear anything more of it. We may, perhaps, some day see the result
of this conspiracy, that is, if its objects are such as I guess
them to be; namely, to form a party opposed to war with Hungary,
Padua, or Genoa."</p>
<p>For some days after this Francis abstained from late excursions
in the gondola. It was improbable that he or Giuseppi would be
recognized did their late passenger meet them. Still, it was
possible that they might be so; and when he went out he sat quietly
among the cushions while Giuseppi rowed, as it would be a
pair-oared gondola the stranger would be looking for. He was sure
that the conspirator would feel uneasy when the boat did not come
to the rendezvous, especially when they found that, on three
successive days, figures were marked as had been arranged on the
column at the corner of the Piazzetta.</p>
<p>Giuseppi learned indeed, a week later, that inquiries had been
made among the gondoliers for a boat rowed by two brothers,
Giovanni and Beppo; and the inquirer, who was dressed as a retainer
of a noble family, had offered five ducats reward for information
concerning it. No such names, however, were down upon the register
of gondoliers licensed to ply for hire. Giuseppi learned that the
search had been conducted quietly but vigorously, and that several
young gondoliers who rowed together had been seen and
questioned.</p>
<p>The general opinion, among the boatmen, was that some lady must
have been carried off, and that her friends were seeking for a clue
as to the spot to which she had been taken.</p>
<p>One evening Francis had been strolling on the Piazza with
Matteo, and had remained out later than he had done since the night
of his last visit to San Nicolo. He took his seat in the gondola,
and when Giuseppi asked him if he would go home, said he would
first take a turn or two on the Grand Canal as the night was close
and sultry.</p>
<p>There was no moon now, and most of the gondolas carried torches.
Giuseppi was paddling quietly, when a pair-oared gondola shot past
them, and by the light of the torch it carried, Francis recognized
the ladies sitting in it to be Maria and Giulia Polani with their
duenna; two armed retainers sat behind them. They were, Francis
supposed, returning from spending the evening at the house of some
of their friends. There were but few boats now passing along the
canal.</p>
<p>Polani's gondola was a considerable distance ahead, when Francis
heard a sudden shout of, "Mind where you are going!"</p>
<p>Then there was a crash of two gondolas striking each other,
followed by an outburst of shouts and cries of alarm, with, Francis
thought, the clash of swords.</p>
<p>"Row, Giuseppi!" he exclaimed, leaping from his seat and
catching up the other oar; and with swift and powerful strokes the
two lads drove the gondola towards the scene of what was either an
accident, or an attempt at crime.</p>
<p>They had no doubt which it was when they arrived at the spot. A
four-oared gondola lay alongside that of the Polanis, and the
gondoliers with their oars, and the two retainers with their
swords, had offered a stout resistance to an armed party who were
trying to board her from the other craft, but their resistance was
well nigh over by the time Francis brought his gondola
alongside.</p>
<p>One of the retainers had fallen with a sword thrust through his
body, and a gondolier had been knocked overboard by a blow from an
oar. The two girls were standing up screaming, and the surviving
retainer was being borne backwards by three or four armed men, who
were slashing furiously at him.</p>
<p>"Quick, ladies, jump into my boat!" Francis exclaimed as he came
alongside, and, leaning over, he dragged them one after the other
into his boat, just as their last defender fell.</p>
<p>With a fierce oath the leader of the assailants was about to
spring into the gondola, when Francis, snatching up his oar, smote
him with all his strength on the head as he was in the act of
springing, and he fell with a heavy splash into the water between
the boats.</p>
<p>A shout of alarm and rage rose from his followers, but the
gondolas were now separated, and in another moment that of Francis
was flying along the canal at the top of its speed.</p>
<p>"Calm yourselves, ladies," Francis said. "There is no fear of
pursuit. They will stop to pick up the man I knocked into the
canal, and by the time they get him on board we shall be out of
their reach."</p>
<p>"What will become of the signora?" the eldest girl asked, when
they recovered a little from their agitation.</p>
<p>"No harm will befall her, you may be sure," Francis said. "It
was evidently an attempt to carry you off, and now that you have
escaped they will care nothing for your duenna. She seemed to have
lost her head altogether, for as I lifted you into the boat she
clung so fast to your garments that I fancy a portion of them were
left in her grasp."</p>
<p>"Do you know where to take us? I see you are going in the right
direction?" the girl asked.</p>
<p>"To the Palazzo Polani," Francis said. "I have the honour of
being a friend of your cousin, Matteo Giustiniani, and being with
him one day when you passed in your gondola, he named you to
me."</p>
<p>"A friend of Matteo!" the girl repeated in surprise. "Pardon me,
signor, I thought you were two passing gondoliers. It was so dark
that I could not recognize you; and, you see, it is so unusual to
see a gentleman rowing."</p>
<p>"I am English, signora, and we are fond of strong exercise, and
so after nightfall, when it cannot shock my friends, I often take
an oar myself."</p>
<p>"I thank you, sir, with all my heart, for my sister and myself,
for the service you have rendered us. I can hardly understand what
has passed, even now it seems like a dream. We were going quietly
along home, when a large dark gondola dashed out from one of the
side canals, and nearly ran us down. Our gondolier shouted to warn
them, but they ran alongside, and then some men jumped on board,
and there was a terrible fight, and every moment I expected that
the gondola would have been upset. Beppo was knocked overboard, and
I saw old Nicolini fall; and then, just as it seemed all over, you
appeared suddenly by our side, and dragged us on board this boat
before I had time to think."</p>
<p>"I am afraid I was rather rough, signora, but there was no time
to stand on ceremony. Here is the palazzo."</p>
<p>The boat was brought up by the side of the steps. Francis leapt
ashore and rang the bell, and then assisted the girls to land. In a
minute the door was thrown open, and two servitors with torches
appeared. There was an exclamation of astonishment as they saw the
young ladies alone with a strange attendant.</p>
<p>"I will do myself the honour of calling tomorrow to inquire if
you are any the worse for your adventure, signora."</p>
<p>"No, indeed," the eldest girl said. "You must come up with us
and see our father. We must tell him what has happened; and he will
be angry indeed, did we suffer our rescuer to depart without his
having an opportunity of thanking him."</p>
<p>Francis bowed and followed the girls upstairs. They entered a
large, very handsomely furnished apartment where a tall man was
sitting reading.</p>
<p>"Why, girls," he exclaimed as he rose, "what has happened? you
look strangely excited. Where is your duenna? and who is this young
gentleman who accompanies you?"</p>
<p>"We have been attacked, father, on our way home," both the girls
exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Attacked?" Signor Polani repeated. "Who has dared to venture on
such an outrage?"</p>
<p>"We don't know, father," Maria said. "It was a four-oared
gondola that ran suddenly into us. We thought it was an accident
till a number of men, with their swords drawn, leaped on board.
Then Nicolini and Francia drew their swords and tried to defend us,
and Beppo and Jacopo both fought bravely too with their oars; but
Beppo was knocked overboard, and I am afraid Nicolini and Francia
are killed, and in another moment they would have got at us, when
this young gentleman came alongside in his gondola, and dragged us
on board, for we were too bewildered and frightened to do anything.
One of them--he seemed the leader of the party--tried to jump on
board, but our protector struck him a terrible blow with his oar,
and he fell into the water, and then the gondola made off, and, so
far as we could see, they did not chase us."</p>
<p>"It is a scandalous outrage, and I will demand justice at the
hands of the council.</p>
<p>"Young sir, you have laid me under an obligation I shall never
forget. You have saved my daughter from the worst calamity that
could befall her. Who is it to whom I am thus indebted?"</p>
<p>"My name is Francis Hammond. My father is an English merchant
who has, for the last four years, established himself here."</p>
<p>"I know him well by repute," Polani said. "I trust I shall know
more of him in the future.</p>
<p>"But where is your duenna, girls?"</p>
<p>"She remained behind in the gondola, father; she seemed too
frightened to move."</p>
<p>"The lady seemed to have lost her head altogether," Francis
said. "As I was lifting your daughters into my gondola, in a very
hasty and unceremonious way--for the resistance of your servitors
was all but overcome, and there was no time to be lost--she held so
tightly to their robes that they were rent in her hands."</p>
<p>Signor Polani struck a gong.</p>
<p>"Let a gondola be manned instantly," he said, "and let six of
you take arms and go in search of our boat. Let another man at once
summon a leech, for some of those on board are, I fear, grievously
wounded, if not killed."</p>
<p>But there was no occasion to carry out the order concerning the
boat, for before it was ready to start the missing gondola arrived
at the steps, rowed by the remaining gondolier. The duenna was
lifted out sobbing hysterically, and the bodies of the two
retainers were then landed. One was dead; the other expired a few
minutes after being brought ashore.</p>
<p>"You did not observe anything particular about the gondola,
Maria, or you, Giulia?"</p>
<p>"No, father, I saw no mark or escutcheon upon it, though they
might have been there without my noticing them. I was too
frightened to see anything; it came so suddenly upon us."</p>
<p>"It was, as far as I noticed, a plain black gondola," Francis
said. "The men concerned in the affair were all dressed in dark
clothes, without any distinguishing badges."</p>
<p>"How was it you came to interfere in the fray, young gentleman?
Few of our people would have done so, holding it to be a dangerous
thing, for a man to mix himself up in a quarrel in which he had no
concern."</p>
<p>"I should probably have mixed myself up in it, in any case, when
I heard the cry of women," Francis replied; "but, in truth, I
recognized the signoras as their gondola passed mine, and knew them
to be cousins of my friend Matteo Giustiniani. Therefore when I
heard the outcry ahead, I naturally hastened up to do what I could
in the matter."</p>
<p>"And well you did it," Polani said heartily. "I trust that the
man you felled into the water is he who is the author of this
outrage. I do not think I need seek far for him. My suspicions
point very strongly in one direction, and tomorrow I will lay the
matter before the council and demand reparation."</p>
<p>"And now, signor, if you will permit me I will take my leave,"
Francis said. "The hour is late, and the signoras will require rest
after their fright and emotion."</p>
<p>"I will see you tomorrow, sir. I shall do myself the honour of
calling early upon your father, to thank him for the great service
you have rendered me."</p>
<p>Signor Polani accompanied Francis to the steps, while two
servants held torches while he took his seat in the gondola, and
remained standing there until the barque had shot away beyond the
circle of light.</p>
<p>"We seem fated to have adventures, Giuseppi."</p>
<p>"We do indeed, Messer Francisco, and this is more to my liking
than the last. We arrived just at the nick of time; another half
minute and those young ladies would have been carried off. That was
a rare blow you dealt their leader. I fancy he never came up again,
and that that is why we got away without being chased."</p>
<p>"I am of that opinion myself, Giuseppi."</p>
<p>"If that is the case we shall not have heard the last of it,
Messer Francisco. Only someone of a powerful family would venture
upon so bold a deed, as to try to carry off ladies of birth on the
Grand Canal, and you may find that this adventure has created for
you enemies not to be despised."</p>
<p>"I can't help it if it has," Francis said carelessly. "On the
other hand, it will gain for me an influential friend in Signor
Polani, who is not only one of the richest merchants of Venice, but
closely related to a number of the best families of the city."</p>
<p>"His influence will not protect you against the point of a
dagger," Giuseppi said. "Your share in this business cannot but
become public, and I think that it would be wise to give up our
evening excursions at present."</p>
<p>"I don't agree with you, Giuseppi. We don't go about with
torches burning, so no one who meets us is likely to recognize us.
One gondola in the dark is pretty much like another, and however
many enemies I had, I should not be afraid of traversing the
canals."</p>
<p>The next morning, at breakfast time, Francis related to his
father his adventure of the previous evening.</p>
<p>"It is a mistake, my son, to mix yourself up in broils which do
not concern you; but in the present instance it may be that your
adventure will turn out to be advantageous to your prospects.
Signor Polani is one of the most illustrious merchants of Venice.
His name is known everywhere in the East, and there is not a port
in the Levant where his galleys do not trade. The friendship of
such a man cannot but be most useful to me.</p>
<p>"Upon the other hand, you will probably make some enemies by
your interference with the plans of some unscrupulous young noble,
and Venice is not a healthy city for those who have powerful
enemies; still I think that the advantages will more than balance
the risk.</p>
<p>"However, Francis, you must curb your spirit of adventure. You
are not the son of a baron or count, and the winning of honour and
glory by deeds of arms neither befits you, nor would be of
advantage to you in any way. A trader of the city of London should
be distinguished for his probity and his attention to business; and
methinks that, ere long, it will be well to send you home to take
your place in the counting house under the eye of my partner, John
Pearson.</p>
<p>"Hitherto I have not checked your love for arms, or your
intercourse with youths of far higher rank than your own; but I
have been for some time doubting the wisdom of my course in
bringing you out here with me, and have regretted that I did not
leave you in good hands at home. The events of last night show that
the time is fast approaching when you can no longer be considered a
boy, and it will be better for you to turn at once into the groove
in which you are to travel, than to continue a mode of life which
will unfit you for the career of a city trader."</p>
<p>Francis knew too well his duty towards his father to make any
reply, but his heart sank at the prospect of settling down in the
establishment in London. His life there had not been an unpleasant
one, but he knew that he should find it terribly dull, after the
freedom and liberty he had enjoyed in Venice. He had never,
however, even to himself, indulged the idea that any other career,
save that of his father, could be his; and had regarded it as a
matter of course that, some day, he would take his place in the
shop in Cheapside.</p>
<p>Now that it was suddenly presented to him as something which
would shortly take place, a feeling of repugnance towards the life
came over him. Not that he dreamt for a moment of trying to induce
his father to allow him to seek some other calling. He had been
always taught to consider the position of a trader of good
standing, of the city of London, as one of the most desirable
possible. The line between the noble and the citizen was so
strongly marked that no one thought of overstepping it. The
citizens of London were as proud of their position and as tenacious
of their rights as were the nobles themselves. They were ready
enough to take up arms to defend their privileges and to resist
oppression, whether it came from king or noble; but few indeed,
even of the wilder spirits of the city, ever thought of taking to
arms as a profession.</p>
<p>It was true that honour and rank were to be gained, by those who
rode in the train of great nobles to the wars, but the nobles drew
their following from their own estates, and not from among the
dwellers in the cities; and, although the bodies of men-at-arms and
archers, furnished by the city to the king in his wars, always did
their duty stoutly in the field, they had no opportunity of
distinguishing themselves singly. The deeds which attracted
attention, and led to honour and rank, were performed by the
esquires and candidates for the rank of knighthood, who rode behind
the barons into the thick of the French chivalry.</p>
<p>Therefore Francis Hammond had never thought of taking to the
profession of arms in his own country; though, when the news
arrived in Venice of desperate fighting at sea with the Genoese, he
had thought, to himself, that the most glorious thing in life must
be to command a well-manned galley, as she advanced to the
encounter of an enemy superior in numbers. He had never dreamed
that such an aspiration could ever be satisfied--it was merely one
of the fancies in which lads so often indulge.</p>
<p>Still, the thought that he was soon to return and take his place
in the shop in Chepe was exceedingly unpleasant to him.</p>
<p>Soon after breakfast the bell at the water gate rang loudly, and
a minute later the servant entered with the news that Signor Polani
was below, and begged an interview. Mr. Hammond at once went down
to the steps to receive his visitor, whom he saluted with all
ceremony, and conducted upstairs.</p>
<p>"I am known to you by name, no doubt, Signor Hammond, as you are
to me," the Venetian said, when the first formal greetings were
over. "I am not a man of ceremony, nor, I judge, are you; but even
if I were, the present is not an occasion for it. Your son has
doubtless told you of the inestimable service, which he rendered to
me last night, by saving my daughters, or rather my eldest
daughter--for it was doubtless she whom the villains sought--from
being borne off by one of the worst and most disreputable of the
many bad and disreputable young men of this city."</p>
<p>"I am indeed glad, Signor Polani, that my son was able to be of
service to you. I have somewhat blamed myself that I have let him
have his own way so much, and permitted him to give himself up to
exercises of arms, more befitting the son of a warlike noble than
of a peaceful trader; but the quickness and boldness, which the
mastery of arms gives, was yesterday of service, and I no longer
regret the time he has spent, since it has enabled him to be of aid
to the daughters of Signor Polani."</p>
<p>"A mastery of arms is always useful, whether a man be a
peace-loving citizen, or one who would carve his way to fame by
means of his weapons. We merchants of the Mediterranean might give
up our trade, if we were not prepared to defend our ships against
the corsairs of Barbary, and the pirates who haunt every inlet and
islet of the Levant now, as they have ever done since the days of
Rome. Besides, it is the duty of every citizen to defend his native
city when attacked. And lastly, there are the private enemies, that
every man who rises but in the smallest degree above his fellows is
sure to create for himself.</p>
<p>"Moreover, a training in arms, as you say, gives readiness and
quickness, it enables the mind to remain calm and steadfast amidst
dangers of all sorts, and, methinks, it adds not a little to a
man's dignity and self respect to know that he is equal, man to
man, to any with whom he may come in contact. Here in Venice we are
all soldiers and sailors, and your son will make no worse merchant,
but rather the better, for being able to wield sword and
dagger.</p>
<p>"Even now," he said with a smile, "he has proved the advantage
of his training; for, though I say it not boastfully, Nicholas
Polani has it in his power to be of some use to his friends, and
foremost among them he will henceforward count your brave son, and,
if you will permit him, yourself.</p>
<p>"But you will, I trust, excuse my paying you but a short visit
this morning, for I am on my way to lay a complaint before the
council. I have already been round to several of my friends, and
Phillipo Giustiniani and some six others, nearest related to me,
will go with me, being all aggrieved at this outrage to a family
nearly connected. I crave you to permit me to take your son with
me, in order that he may be at hand, if called upon, to say what he
knows of the affair."</p>
<p>"Assuredly it is his duty to go with you if you desire it;
although I own I am not sorry that he could see, as he tells me, no
badge or cognizance which would enable him to say aught which can
lead to the identification of those who would have abducted your
daughter. It is but too well known a fact that it is dangerous to
make enemies in Venice, for even the most powerful protection does
not avail against the stab of a dagger."</p>
<p>"That is true enough," the merchant said. "The frequency of
assassinations is a disgrace to our city; nor will it ever be put
down until some men of high rank are executed, and the seignory
show that they are as jealous of the lives of private citizens, as
they are of the honour and well being of the republic."</p>
<p>Francis gladly threw aside his books when he was told that
Signor Polani desired him to accompany him, and was soon seated by
the side of the merchant in his gondola.</p>
<p>"How old are you, my friend?" the merchant asked him, as the
boat threaded the mazes of the canals.</p>
<p>"I am just sixteen, signor."</p>
<p>"No more!" the merchant said in surprise. "I had taken you for
well-nigh two years older. I have but just come from the Palazzo
Giustiniani, and my young kinsman, Matteo, tells me that in the
School of Arms there are none of our young nobles who are your
match with rapier or battleaxe."</p>
<p>"I fear, sir," Francis said modestly, "that I have given up more
time to the study of arms than befits the son of a sober
trader."</p>
<p>"Not at all," the Venetian replied. "We traders have to defend
our rights and our liberties, our goods and our ships, just as much
as the nobles have to defend their privileges and their castles.
Here in Venice there are no such distinctions of rank as there are
elsewhere. Certain families, distinguished among the rest by their
long standing, wealth, influence, or the services they have
rendered to the state, are of senatorial rank, and constitute our
nobility; but there are no titles among us. We are all citizens of
the republic, with our rights and privileges, which cannot be
infringed even by the most powerful; and the poorest citizen has an
equal right to make himself as proficient in the arms, which he may
be called upon to wield in defence of the state, as the Doge
himself. In your country also, I believe, all men are obliged to
learn the use of arms, to practise shooting at the butts, and to
make themselves efficient, if called upon to take part in the wars
of the country. And I have heard that at the jousts, the champions
of the city of London have ere now held their own against those of
the court."</p>
<p>"They have done so," Francis said; "and yet, I know not why, it
is considered unseemly for the sons of well-to-do citizens to be
too fond of military exercises."</p>
<p>"The idea is a foolish one," the Venetian said hotly. "I myself
have, a score of times, defended my ships against corsairs and
pirates, Genoese, and other enemies. I have fought against the
Greeks, and been forced to busy myself in more than one serious
fray in the streets of Constantinople, Alexandria, and other ports,
and have served in the galleys of the state. All men who live by
trade must be in favour of peace; but they must also be prepared to
defend their goods, and the better able they are to do it, the more
the honour to them.</p>
<p>"But here we are at the Piazzetta."</p>
<p>A group of nobles were standing near the landing place, and
Signor Polani at once went up to them, and introduced Francis to
them as the gentleman who had done his daughter and their kinswoman
such good service. Francis was warmly thanked and congratulated by
them all.</p>
<p>"Will you wait near the entrance?" Signor Polani said. "I see
that my young cousin, Matteo, has accompanied his father, and you
will, no doubt, find enough to say to each other while we are with
the council."</p>
<p>The gentlemen entered the palace, and Matteo, who had remained
respectfully at a short distance from the seniors, at once joined
his friend.</p>
<p>"Well, Francis, I congratulate you heartily, though I feel quite
jealous of you. It was splendid to think of your dashing up in your
gondola, and carrying off my pretty cousins from the clutches of
that villain, Ruggiero Mocenigo, just as he was about to lay his
hands on them."</p>
<p>"Are you sure it was Ruggiero, Matteo?"</p>
<p>"Oh, there can't be any doubt about it. You know, he had asked
for Maria's hand, and when Polani refused him, had gone off
muttering threats. You know what his character is. He is capable of
any evil action; besides, they say that he has dissipated his
patrimony, in gaming and other extravagances at Constantinople, and
is deep in the hands of the Jews. If he could have succeeded in
carrying off Maria it would more than have mended his fortunes, for
she and her sister are acknowledged to be the richest heiresses in
Venice. Oh, there is not a shadow of doubt that it's he.</p>
<p>"You won't hear me saying anything against your love of prowling
about in that gondola of yours, since it has brought you such a
piece of good fortune--for it is a piece of good fortune, Francis,
to have rendered such a service to Polani, to say nothing of all
the rest of us who are connected with his family. I can tell you
that there are scores of young men of good birth in Venice, who
would give their right hand to have done what you did."</p>
<p>"I should have considered myself fortunate to have been of
service to any girls threatened by violence, though they had only
been fishermen's daughters," Francis said; "but I am specially
pleased because they are relatives of yours, Matteo."</p>
<p>"To say nothing to their being two of the prettiest girls in
Venice," Matteo added slyly.</p>
<p>"That counts for something too, no doubt," Francis said
laughing, "though I didn't think of it.</p>
<p>"I wonder," he went on gravely, "whether that was Ruggiero whom
I struck down, and whether he came up again to the surface. He has
very powerful connections, you know, Matteo; and if I have gained
friends, I shall also have gained enemies by the night's work."</p>
<p>"That is so," Matteo agreed. "For your sake, I own that I hope
that Ruggiero is at present at the bottom of the canal. He was
certainly no credit to his friends; and although they would of
course have stood by him, I do not think they will feel, at heart,
in any way displeased to know that he will trouble them no longer.
But if his men got him out again, I should say you had best be
careful, for Ruggiero is about the last man in Venice I should care
to have as an enemy. However, we won't look at the unpleasant side
of the matter, and will hope that his career has been brought to a
close."</p>
<p>"I don't know which way to hope," Francis said gravely. "He will
certainly be a dangerous enemy if he is alive; and yet the thought
of having killed a man troubles me much."</p>
<p>"It would not trouble me at all if I were in your place," Matteo
said. "If you had not killed him, you may be very sure that he
would have killed you, and that the deed would have caused him no
compunction whatever. It was a fair fight, just as if it had been a
hostile galley in mid-sea; and I don't see why the thought of
having rid Venice of one of her worst citizens need trouble you in
any way."</p>
<p>"You see I have been brought up with rather different ideas to
yours, Matteo. My father, as a trader, is adverse to fighting of
all kinds--save, of course, in defence of one's country; and
although he has not blamed me in any way for the part I took, I can
see that he is much disquieted, and indeed speaks of sending me
back to England at once."</p>
<p>"Oh, I hope not!" Matteo said earnestly. "Hitherto you and I
have been great friends, Francis, but we shall be more in future.
All Polani's friends will regard you as one of themselves; and I
was even thinking, on my way here, that perhaps you and I might
enter the service of the state together, and get appointed to a war
galley in a few years."</p>
<p>"My father's hair would stand up at the thought, Matteo; though,
for myself, I should like nothing so well. However, that could
never have been. Still I am sorry, indeed, at the thought of
leaving Venice. I have been very happy here, and I have made
friends, and there is always something to do or talk about; and the
life in London would be so dull in comparison. But here comes one
of the ushers from the palace."</p>
<p>The official came up to them, and asked if either of them was
Messer Francisco Hammond, and, finding that he had come to the
right person, requested Francis to follow him.</p>
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