<h2><SPAN name="Ch6">Chapter 6</SPAN>: The Hut On San Nicolo.</h2>
<p>At seven o'clock all was in readiness for a start. Signor Polani
set out alone in his gondola, and picked up Francis, and four men,
at a secluded spot some distance from the house. A messenger had
been sent, two hours before, to the captain of one of the merchant
ships lying in the port. He at once put ten men into a large boat,
and rowed down to within half a mile of the island. Here a grapnel
was thrown overboard, most of the men lay down in the bottom, and
the captain, according to his instructions, kept a sharp lookout to
see that no boat left San Nicolo--his instructions being to
overhaul any boat coming out, and to see that no one was concealed
on board it.</p>
<p>There he remained until Polani's gondola rowed past him. After
it had gone a few hundred yards, the grapnel was got up, the men
took to their oars and followed the gondola, keeping so far behind
that it would not seem there was any connection between them.</p>
<p>Francis made for the narrow channel which separated San Nicolo
from the next island, and then directed the gondola to be run
ashore, where a low sand hill, close by, hid them from the sight of
anyone on the lookout. A few minutes later the ship's boat
arrived.</p>
<p>Francis now led the way direct for the hut, accompanied by
Polani and six men, while four sailors advanced, at a distance of a
hundred yards on either flank, to cut off anyone making for the
water.</p>
<p>"We may as well go fast," he said, "for we can scarcely get
there without being seen by a lookout, should there be one on the
sand hills, and the distance is so short that there will be no
possibility of their carrying your daughters off, before we get
there."</p>
<p>"The faster the better," the merchant said. "This suspense is
terrible."</p>
<p>Accordingly, the party started at a brisk run. Francis kept his
eyes on the spot where he believed the hut lay.</p>
<p>"I see no one anywhere near there," he said, as they came over
one of the sand ridges. "Had there been anyone on the watch I think
we should see him now."</p>
<p>On they ran, until, passing over one of the sand hills, Francis
came to a standstill. The hut lay in the hollow below them.</p>
<p>"There is the house, signor. Now we shall soon know."</p>
<p>They dashed down the short slope, and gathered round the
door.</p>
<p>"Within there, open!" the merchant shouted, hammering with the
hilt of his sword on the door.</p>
<p>All was silent within.</p>
<p>"Break it down!" he said; and two of the sailors, who had
brought axes with them, began to hew away at the door.</p>
<p>A few blows, and it suddenly opened, and two men dressed as
fishermen appeared in the doorway.</p>
<p>"What means this attack upon the house of quiet people?" they
demanded.</p>
<p>"Bind them securely," Polani said, as he rushed in, followed
closely by Francis, while those who followed seized the men.</p>
<p>Polani paused as he crossed the threshold, with a cry of
disappointment--the hut was empty. Francis was almost equally
disappointed.</p>
<p>"If they are not here, they are near by," Francis said to
Polani. "Do not give up hope. I am convinced they are not far off;
and if we search we may find a clue. Better keep your men outside.
We can search more thoroughly by ourselves."</p>
<p>The merchant told his men, who had seized and were binding the
two occupants of the hut, to remain outside. The inside of the hut
differed in no way from the ordinary dwelling of fishermen, except
that a large table stood in the middle of it, and there were some
benches against the walls. Some oars stood in one corner, and some
nets were piled close to them. A fire burned in the open hearth,
and a pot hung over it, and two others stood on the hearth.</p>
<p>"Let us see what they have got here," Francis said, while the
merchant leaned against the table with an air of profound
depression, paying no attention to what he was doing.</p>
<p>"A soup," Francis said, lifting the lid from the pot over the
fire, "and, by the smell, a good one."</p>
<p>Then he lifted the other pots simmering among the burning
brands.</p>
<p>"A ragout of kid and a boiled fish. Signor Polani, this is no
fisherman's meal. Either these men expect visitors of a much higher
degree than themselves, or your daughters are somewhere close.</p>
<p>"Oh! there is a door."</p>
<p>"It can lead nowhere," Polani said. "The sand is piled up to the
roof on that side of the house."</p>
<p>"It is," Francis agreed; "but there may be a lower room there,
completely covered with the sand. At any rate, we will see."</p>
<p>He pushed against the door, but it did not give in the
slightest.</p>
<p>"It may be the sand," he said. "It may be bolts."</p>
<p>He went to the outside door, and called in the sailors with the
hatchets.</p>
<p>"Break open that door," he said.</p>
<p>"There is a space behind," he exclaimed, as the first blow was
given. "It is hollow, I swear. It would be a different sound
altogether if sand was piled up against it."</p>
<p>A dozen blows and the fastenings gave, and, sword in hand, the
merchant and Francis rushed through.</p>
<p>Both gave a shout of delight. They were in a room built out at
the back of the hut. It was richly furnished, and hangings of
Eastern stuffs covered the walls. A burning lamp hung from the
ceiling. Two men stood irresolute with drawn swords, having
apparently turned round just as the door gave way; for as it did
so, two figures struggled to their feet from a couch behind them,
for some shawls had been wrapped round their heads, and with a cry
of delight rushed forward to meet their rescuers. Seated at the end
of the couch, with bowed down head, was another female figure.</p>
<p>"Maria--Giulia!" the merchant exclaimed, as, dropping his sword,
he clasped his daughters in his arms.</p>
<p>Francis, followed by the two sailors with hatchets, advanced
towards the men.</p>
<p>"Drop your swords and surrender," he said. "Resistance is
useless. There are a dozen men outside."</p>
<p>The men threw their swords down on the ground.</p>
<p>"Lead them outside, and bind them securely," Francis said.</p>
<p>For the next minute or two, few words were spoken. The girls
sobbed with delight on their father's breast, while he himself was
too moved to do more than murmur words of love and thankfulness.
Francis went quietly out and spoke to the captain, who went in to
the inner room, touched the sitting figure on the shoulder, and,
taking her by the arm, led her outside.</p>
<p>"Come in, Francis," Polani called a minute later.</p>
<p>"My dears, it is not me you must thank for your rescue. It is
your English friend here who has again restored you to me. It is to
him we owe our happiness, and that you, my child, are saved from
the dreadful fate of being forced to be the wife of that villain
Mocenigo.</p>
<p>"Embrace him, my dears, as a brother, for he has done more than
a brother for you. And now tell me all that has happened since I
last saw you."</p>
<p>"You know, father, the message that was brought us, that you had
been hurt and wanted us home?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my dears, that I learned soon afterwards. I went at five
o'clock to fetch you home, and found that you had gone, and
why."</p>
<p>"Well, father, directly we had taken our seats in the cabin of
the gondola, our gouvernante closed the doors, and soon afterwards
she slid to the two shutters before the windows. We cried out in
surprise at finding ourselves in the dark, but she bade us be
quiet, in a tone quite different to any in which she had ever
spoken to us before. We were both frightened, and tried to push
back the shutters and open the door, but they were fastened firmly.
I suppose there was some spring which held them. Then we screamed;
but I could feel that the inside was all thickly padded. I suppose
our voices could not be heard outside. I thought so, because once I
thought I heard the gondoliers singing, but it was so faint that I
could not be sure. Then the air seemed stiflingly close, and I
fainted; and when I came to myself one of the windows was open, and
Giulia said she had promised we would not scream, but I think we
were beyond the canals then, for I could see nothing but the sky as
we passed along. When I was better the windows were almost shut
again, so that we could not see out, though a little air could get
in; then the gondola went on for a long time.</p>
<p>"At last it stopped, and she said we must be blindfolded. We
said we would not submit to it, and she told us unless we let her
do it, the men would do it. So we submitted, and she wrapped shawls
closely over our heads. Then we were helped ashore, and walked some
distance. At last the shawls were taken off our heads, and we found
ourselves here, and here we have been ever since."</p>
<p>"You have not been ill treated in any way, my children?" the
merchant asked anxiously.</p>
<p>"Not at all, father. Until today, nobody has been into this room
besides ourselves and that woman. The door was generally left a
little open for air, for you see there are no windows here. She
used to go into the next room and come back with our food. We could
see men moving about in there, but they were very quiet, and all
spoke in low tones.</p>
<p>"You may think how we upbraided our gouvernante for her
treachery, and threatened her with your anger. She told us we
should never be found, and that I might as well make up my mind to
marry Ruggiero Mocenigo, for if I did not consent quietly, means
would be found to compel me to do so. I said I would die first, but
she used to laugh a cruel laugh, and say he would soon be here with
the priest, and that it mattered not whether I said yes or no. The
ceremony would be performed, and then Ruggiero would sail away with
me to the East, and I should be glad enough then to make peace
between him and you. But he never came. I think she became anxious,
for she went away twice for three or four hours, and locked us in
here when she went.</p>
<p>"That, father, is all we know about it. Where are we?"</p>
<p>"You are at San Nicolo."</p>
<p>"On the island!" Maria exclaimed in surprise. "She told us we
were on the mainland. And now, how did you find us?"</p>
<p>"I will tell you as we go home, Maria."</p>
<p>"Yes, that will be better, father. Giulia and I long for a
breath of fresh air, and the sight of the blue sky."</p>
<p>"Giulia has not had so much to frighten her as you have," her
father said.</p>
<p>"Yes, I have, father; for she said I was to go across the seas
with Maria, and that Ruggiero would soon find a husband for me
among his friends. I told her she was a wicked woman, over and over
again, and we told her that we were sure you would forgive, and
even reward her, if she would take us back again to you. When she
was away, we thought we would try to make our escape behind, and we
made a little hole in the boards; but the sand came pouring in, and
we found we were underground, though how we got there we didn't
know, for we had not come down any steps. So we had to give up the
idea of escape."</p>
<p>"You are partly underground," her father said, "for, as you will
see when you get out, the sand has drifted up at the back of the
hut to the roof, and has altogether hidden this part of the hut; so
that we did not know that there was more than one room, and I
should never have thought of breaking into that door, had it not
been for Francisco. And now come along, my dears. Let us wait here
no longer."</p>
<p>The sailors and servitors broke into a cheer as the girls came
out of the hut.</p>
<p>"Shall we put a torch to this place?" Francis asked Polani.</p>
<p>"No, Francisco. It must be searched thoroughly first.</p>
<p>"Captain Lontano, do you order four of your men to remain here,
until some of the officials of the state arrive. If anyone comes
before that, they must seize them and detain them as prisoners. The
state will investigate the matter to the bottom."</p>
<p>Now that they were in the open air, the merchant could see that
the close confinement and anxiety had told greatly upon his
daughters. Both were pale and hollow eyed, and looked as if they
had suffered a long illness. Seeing how shaken they were, he
ordered one of the retainers to go to the gondola, and tell the men
to row it round to the nearest point to the hut. The party then
walked along down to the shore.</p>
<p>In a few minutes the gondola arrived. Polani, his two daughters,
and Francis took their places in it. The four men, bound hand and
foot, were laid in the bottom of the ship's boat; the gouvernante
was made to take her place there also, and the sailors were told to
follow closely behind the gondola, which was rowed at a very slow
pace.</p>
<p>On the way, Polani told his daughters of the manner in which
Francis had discovered the place of concealment.</p>
<p>"Had it not been for him, my dears, we should certainly not have
found you, and that villain would have carried out his plans,
sooner or later. He would either have given his guards the slip,
or, when no evidence was forthcoming against him, they would have
been removed. He would then have gone outside the jurisdiction of
the republic, obtained a ship with a crew of desperadoes, sailed
round to the seaward side of San Nicolo, and carried you off.
Nothing could have saved you, and your resistance would, as that
woman told you, have been futile."</p>
<p>"We shall be grateful to you all our lives, Francisco," Maria
said. "We shall pray for you always, night and morning.</p>
<p>"Shall we not, Giulia?"</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed," the young girl said simply. "We shall love him
all our lives."</p>
<p>"Answer for yourself, Giulia," Maria said with a laugh, her
spirits returning in the bright sunshine and fresh air. "When
Francisco asks for my love, it will be quite soon enough to say
what I think about it."</p>
<p>"I should never have courage enough to do that, signora. I know
what you would say too well."</p>
<p>"What should I say?" Maria asked.</p>
<p>"You would say I was an impudent boy."</p>
<p>Maria laughed.</p>
<p>"I cannot think of you as a boy any longer, Francisco," she said
more gravely. "I have, perhaps, regarded you as a boy till now,
though you did save us so bravely before; but you see you are only
my own age, and a girl always looks upon a boy of her own age as
ever so much younger than she is herself. Besides, too, you have
none of the airs of being a man, which some of my cousins have; and
never pay compliments or say pretty things, but seem altogether
like a younger brother. But I shall think you a boy no more. I know
you better now."</p>
<p>"But I am a boy," Francis said, "and I don't want to be thought
anything else. In England we keep young longer than they do here,
and a boy of my age would not think of speaking to his elders,
unless he was first addressed.</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with your prisoners, signor?"</p>
<p>"I shall take them direct to my house, and then go and report
the recovery of my daughters, and their capture. Officials will at
once be sent, with a gondola, to take them off to the prison. There
can be no question now as to the part Mocenigo has played in this
business, and no doubt he will be brought here a prisoner at once.
Even his nearest connections will not dare to defend conduct so
outrageous, especially when public indignation has been so
excited.</p>
<p>"You do not know, girls, what a stir has been caused in the city
on your account. If it had not been for the citizen guard, I
believe the Mocenigo Palace would have been burned down; and
Ruggiero's connections have scarcely dared to show their faces in
the streets, since you have been missing. You see, every father of
a family felt personally grieved, for if the nobles were permitted,
with impunity, to carry off the daughters of citizens, who could
feel safe?</p>
<p>"When this is all over I shall take you, for a time, back to our
home in Corfu. It is not good for girls to be the subject of public
talk and attention."</p>
<p>"I shall be very glad, father," Giulia said. "I love our home at
Corfu, with its gardens and flowers, far better than the palazzo
here. The air is always soft and balmy, while here it is so hot
sometimes by day, and so damp and foggy in the evening. I shall be
glad to go back again."</p>
<p>"And you, Maria?"</p>
<p>"I shall be very happy there, father, but I like Venice
best."</p>
<p>"You are getting to an age to enjoy gaiety, Maria; and it is
natural you should do so. However, it will not be necessary for you
to be long absent. In a city like Venice there are always fresh
subjects for talk, and the most exciting piece of scandal is but a
three days' wonder. A few weeks at Corfu will restore your nerves,
which cannot but have been shaken by what you have gone through,
and you will come back here more disposed than ever to appreciate
the gaieties of Venice."</p>
<p>"As long as it is for only a few weeks, father, I shall not
care; for you know I am very fond, too, of our beautiful home
there. Still, I do like Venice."</p>
<p>They had now reached the steps of the Palazzo Polani. They had
not proceeded by way of the Grand Canal, as the merchant was
anxious that his daughters should reach their home unrecognized,
as, had they been noticed, it would have given rise to no little
excitement, and they had had more than enough of this, and needed
quiet and repose. Besides, until the prisoners were in the safe
custody of the officials of the state, it was in every way
desirable that the events of the morning should remain unknown.</p>
<p>Their return home created quite a tumult of joy in the house.
The preparations that had been made had been kept a profound
secret, as the merchant could not be sure but that some other
member of his household was in the pay of Mocenigo. Thus, until the
girls alighted at the steps, none in the house were aware that any
clue had been obtained as to their hiding place. The women ran down
with cries of joy. The men would have shouted and cheered, had not
Polani held up his hand.</p>
<p>"The signoras have had more than enough excitement," he said.
"They are grateful to you for your goodwill and affection, but for
the present they need quiet. They may have more to go through
today. I pray you that no word, as to their return, be said outside
the house. I would not that the news were whispered in the city,
till the seignory decide what is to be done in the matter."</p>
<p>As soon as the girls had gone upstairs to their rooms, the
ship's boat came alongside, and the prisoners were carried into the
house, glances of indignation and anger being cast at the
gouvernante, who had, as soon as she was placed on board the boat,
closely veiled herself; and some of the women broke out into
threats and imprecations.</p>
<p>"Captain Lontano, the servants will show you a room where your
men can guard the prisoners. You had better remain with them
yourself. Let no one, except your own men, enter the room."</p>
<p>Giuseppi was on the steps, and Francis stepped up to him and
eagerly asked, "What news of the gondola?"</p>
<p>"I found her, stove in and full of water, behind the piles close
to the steps. Someone must have pushed her there, to be out of the
way of the traffic. She has several holes in her bottom, besides
being stove in at the gunwale where the other boat struck her. They
must have thrust the ends of their oars through her planks, out of
sheer spite, when they found that we had escaped them. Father and I
have towed her round to your steps, but I doubt whether she is
worth repairing."</p>
<p>"Well, we can't help it, Giuseppi. She has done her work; and if
every two ducats I lay out were to bring in as good a harvest, I
should have no reason to complain."</p>
<p>Having seen the prisoners safely placed, the merchant
returned.</p>
<p>"I think, Francisco, you must go with me. They will be sure to
want to question you."</p>
<p>"I shall have to say what were my reasons for thinking your
daughters were hid in that hut, signor," Francis said as the
gondola rowed towards Saint Mark's; "and I can only do that by
telling of that secret meeting. I do not want to denounce a number
of people, besides Ruggiero. I have no evidence against them, and
do not know what they were plotting, nor have I any wish to create
for myself more enemies. It is quite enough to have incurred the
enmity of all the connections of the house of Mocenigo."</p>
<p>"That is true enough, Francisco, but I do not see how it is to
be avoided. Unfortunately, you did recognize others besides
Ruggiero."</p>
<p>"Quite so, signor, and I am not going to tell a lie about it,
whatever the consequences may be. Still, I wish I could get out of
it."</p>
<p>"I wish you could, Francis, but I do not see any escape for it,
especially as you say you did not recognize Ruggiero as the
passenger you carried."</p>
<p>"No, signor, I did not. It might have been he, but I cannot say.
He was wrapped in a cloak, and I did not see his features."</p>
<p>"It is a pity, Francisco, for had you known him, the statement
that, moved by curiosity, you followed him and saw him into that
hut, would have been sufficient without your entering into the
other matter. Most of my countrymen would not hesitate about
telling a lie, to avoid mixing themselves up further in such a
matter, for the dangers of making enemies are thoroughly
appreciated here; but you are perfectly right, and I like your
steady love of the truth, whatever the consequences to yourself;
but certainly as soon as the matter is concluded, it will be better
for you to quit Venice for a time."</p>
<p>"Are you going to the council direct, signor?"</p>
<p>"No. I am going first to the magistrates, to tell them that I
have in my hands five persons, who have been engaged in carrying
off my daughters, and beg them to send at once to take them into
their custody. Then I shall go before the council, and demand
justice upon Mocenigo, against whom we have now conclusive
evidence. You will not be wanted at the magistracy. My own
evidence, that I found them keeping guard over my daughters, will
be quite sufficient for the present, and after that the girls'
evidence will be sufficient to convict them, without your name
appearing in the affair at all.</p>
<p>"I will try whether I cannot keep your name from appearing
before the council also. Yes, I think I might do that; and as a
first step, I give you my promise not to name you, unless I find it
absolutely necessary. You may as well remain here in the gondola
until I return."</p>
<p>It was upwards of an hour before Signor Polani came back to the
boat.</p>
<p>"I have succeeded," he said, "in keeping your name out of it. I
first of all told my daughters' story, and then said that, having
obtained information that Ruggiero, before he was banished from
Venice, was in the habit of going sometimes at night to a hut on
San Nicolo, I proceeded thither, and found my daughters concealed
in the hut whose position had been described to me. Of course, they
inquired where I had obtained the information; but I replied that,
as they knew, I had offered a large reward which would lead to my
daughters' discovery, and that this reward had attracted one in the
secret of Mocenigo, but that, for the man's own safety, I had been
compelled to promise that I would not divulge his name.</p>
<p>"Some of the council were inclined to insist, but others pointed
out that, for the ends of justice, it mattered in no way how I
obtained the information. I had, at any rate, gone to the island
and found my daughters there; and their evidence, if it was in
accordance with what I had stated, was amply sufficient to bring
the guilt of the abduction of my daughters home to Ruggiero,
against whom other circumstances had already excited suspicion. A
galley has already started for the mainland, with orders to bring
him back a prisoner, and the girls are to appear to give evidence
tomorrow. The woman, Castaldi, is to be interrogated by the council
this afternoon, and I have no doubt she will make a full
confession, seeing that my daughters' evidence is, in itself,
sufficient to prove her guilt, and that it can be proved, from
other sources, that it was she who inveigled them away by a false
message from me."</p>
<p>"I am glad indeed, signor, that I am not to be called, and that
this affair of the conspiracy is not to be brought up. I would,
with your permission, now return home. Giuseppi took a message to
my father from me, the first thing, explaining my absence; and I
told him, when we left your house, to go at once to tell him that
your daughters had been recovered, and that I should return before
long. Still, he will want to hear from me as to the events of the
night."</p>
<p>"Will you also tell him, Francisco, that I will call upon him
this afternoon. I have much to say to him."</p>
<p>"I am glad Signor Polani is coming," Mr. Hammond said, when his
son gave him the message. "I am quite resolved that you shall quit
Venice at once. I do not wish to blame you for what you have done,
which, indeed, is likely to have a favourable effect upon your
fortunes; but that, at your age, you have mixed yourself up in
adventures of this kind, taken part in the affairs of great houses,
and drawn upon yourself the enmity of one of the most powerful
families of Venice, is altogether strange and improper for a lad of
your years, and belonging to the family of a quiet trader. I have
been thinking about it all this morning, and am quite resolved that
the sooner you are out of Venice the better. If I saw any way of
sending you off before nightfall I would do so.</p>
<p>"Signor Polani has, you say, so far concealed from the council
the fact that you have been mixed up in this business; but there is
no saying how soon it may come out. You know that Venice swarms
with spies, and these are likely, before many hours, to learn the
fact of your midnight arrival at Polani's house; and as no orders
were given for the preparation of this expedition to the island
before that time, it will not need much penetration to conclude
that you were the bearer of the news that led to the discovery of
the maidens. Besides which, you accompanied the expedition, and
acted as its guide to the hut. Part of this they will learn from
the servants of the house, part of it they may get out from the
sailors, who, over their wine cups, are not given to reticence. The
council may not have pressed Polani on this point, but, take my
word for it, some of them, at least, will endeavour to get to the
bottom of it, especially Mocenigo's connections, who will naturally
be alarmed at the thought that there is somewhere a traitor among
their own ranks.</p>
<p>"The affair has become very serious, Francis, and far beyond the
compass of a boyish scrape, and no time must be lost in getting you
out of Venice. I have no doubt Polani will see the matter in the
same light, for he knows the ways of his countrymen even better
than I do."</p>
<p>The interview between the two traders was a long one. At its
conclusion Francis was sent for.</p>
<p>"Francis," his father said, "Signor Polani has had the kindness
to make me offers of a most generous nature."</p>
<p>"Not at all, Messer Hammond," the Venetian interrupted. "Let
there be no mistake upon that score. Your son has rendered me
services impossible for me ever to repay adequately. He has laid me
under an obligation greater than I can ever discharge. At the same
time, fortunately, I am in a position to be able to further his
interests in life.</p>
<p>"I have proposed, Francisco, that you shall enter my house at
once. You will, of course, for some years learn the business, but
you will do so in the position which a son of mine would occupy,
and when you come of age, you will take your place as a partner
with me.</p>
<p>"Your father will return to England. He informs me that he is
now longing to return to his own country, and has for some time
been thinking of doing so. I have proposed to him that he shall act
as my agent there. Hitherto I have not traded direct with England;
in future I shall do so largely. Your father has explained to me
somewhat of his transactions, and I see there is good profit to be
made on trade with London, by a merchant who has the advantage of
the advice and assistance of one, like your father, thoroughly
conversant in the trade. Thus, I hope that the arrangement will be
largely to our mutual advantage. As to yourself, you will probably
be reluctant to establish yourself for life in this country; but
there is no reason why, in time, when your father wishes to retire
from business, you should not establish yourself in London, in
charge of the English branch of our house."</p>
<p>"I am most grateful to you for your offer, signor, which is
vastly beyond anything that my ambition could ever have aspired to.
I can only say that I will try my best to do justice to your
kindness to me."</p>
<p>"I have no fear as to that, Francisco," the merchant said. "You
have shown so much thoughtfulness, in this business, that I shall
have no fear of entrusting even weighty affairs of business in your
hands; and you must remember always that I shall still consider
myself your debtor. I thoroughly agree with your father's views as
to the necessity for your leaving Venice, as soon as possible. In a
few months this matter will have blown over, the angry feelings
excited will calm down, and you will then be able to come and go in
safety; but at present you were best out of the town, and I have,
therefore, arranged with your father that you shall embark tonight
on board the Bonito, which sails tomorrow. You will have much to
say to your father now, but I hope you will find time to come
round, and say goodbye to my daughters, this evening."</p>
<p>"Your adventures, Francis," Mr. Hammond said when the merchant
had left them, "have turned out fortunate, indeed. You have an
opening now beyond anything we could have hoped for. Signor Polani
has expressed himself most warmly. He told me that I need concern
myself no further with your future, for that would now be his
affair. The arrangement that he has made with me, will enable me to
hold my head as high as any in the City, for it will give me almost
a monopoly of the Venetian trade; and although he said that he had
long been thinking of entering into trade direct with England,
there is no doubt that it is his feeling towards you, which has
influenced him now in the matter.</p>
<p>"My business here has more than answered my expectations, in one
respect, but has fallen short in another. I have bought cheaply,
and the business should have been a very profitable one; but my
partner in London is either not acting fairly by me, or he is
mismanaging matters altogether. This offer, then, of Signor Polani
is in every respect acceptable. I shall give up my own business and
start anew, and selling, as I shall, on commission, shall run no
risk, while the profits will be far larger than I could myself
make, for Polani will carry it on on a great scale.</p>
<p>"As for you, you will soon learn the ways of trade, and will be
able to come home and join me, and eventually succeed me in the
business.</p>
<p>"No fairer prospect could well open to a young man, and if you
show yourself as keen in business, as you have been energetic in
the pursuits you have adopted, assuredly a great future is open to
you, and you may look to be one of the greatest merchants in the
city of London. I know not yet what offers Polani may make you
here, but I hope that you will not settle in Venice permanently,
but will always remember that you are an Englishman, and the son of
a London citizen, and that you will never lose your love for your
native land.</p>
<p>"And yet, do not hurry home for my sake. Your two brothers will
soon have finished their schooling, and will, of course, be
apprenticed to me as soon as I return; and if, as I hope, they turn
out steady and industrious; they will, by the time they come to
man's estate, be of great assistance to me in the business.</p>
<p>"And now, you will be wanting to say goodbye to your friends. Be
careful this last evening, for it is just when you are thinking
most of other matters, that sudden misfortune is likely to come
upon you."</p>
<p>Delighted with his good fortune--rather because it opened up a
life of activity, instead of the confinement to business that he
had dreaded, than for the pecuniary advantages it offered--Francis
ran downstairs and, leaping into his father's gondola, told Beppo
to take him to the Palazzo Giustiniani. On the way he told Beppo
and his son that the next day he was leaving Venice, and was going
to enter the service of Signor Polani.</p>
<p>Giuseppi ceased rowing, and, throwing himself down at the bottom
of the gondola, began to sob violently, with the abandonment to his
emotions common to his race. Then he suddenly sat up.</p>
<p>"If you are going, I will go too, Messer Francisco. You will
want a servant who will be faithful to you. I will ask the padrone
to let me go with you.</p>
<p>"You will let me go, will you not, father? I cannot leave our
young master, and should pine away, were I obliged to stop here to
work a gondola; while he may be wanting my help, for Messer
Francisco is sure to get into adventures and dangers. Has he not
done it here in Venice? and is he not sure to do it at sea, where
there are Genoese and pirates, and perils of all kinds?</p>
<p>"You will take me with you, will you not, Messer Francisco? You
will never be so hard hearted as to go away and leave me
behind?"</p>
<p>"I shall be very glad to have you with me, Giuseppi, if your
father will give you leave to go. I am quite sure that Signor
Polani will make no objection. In the first place, he would do it
to oblige me, and in the second, I know that it is his intention to
do something to your advantage. He has spoken to me about it
several times, for you had your share of the danger when we first
rescued his daughters, and again when we were chased by that
four-oared gondola. He has been too busy with the search for his
daughters to give the matter his attention, but I know that he is
conscious of his obligation to you, and that he intends to reward
you largely. Therefore, I am sure that he will offer no objection
to your accompanying me.</p>
<p>"What do you say, Beppo?"</p>
<p>"I do not like to stand in the way of the lad's wishes, Messer
Francisco; but, you see, he is of an age now to be very useful to
me. If Giuseppi leaves me, I shall have to hire another hand for
the gondola, or to take a partner."</p>
<p>"Well, we will talk it over presently," Francis said. "Here we
are at the steps of the palazzo, and here comes Matteo himself. It
is lucky I was not five minutes later, or I should have missed
him."</p>
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