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personalities and leave the essential part of the thing as it is, the committee will very much regret that they canโ€™t take the responsibility of printing it. If I cut out the political truth and make all the hard names apply to no one but the partyโ€™s enemies, the committee will praise the thing up to the skies, and you and I will know itโ€™s not worth printing. Rather a nice point of metaphysics: Which is the more desirable condition, to be printed and not be worth it, or to be worth it and not be printed? Well, signora?โ€

โ€œI do not think you are tied to any such alternative. I believe that if you were to cut out the personalities the committee would consent to print the pamphlet, though the majority would, of course, not agree with it; and I am convinced that it would be very useful. But you would have to lay aside the spitefulness. If you are going to say a thing the substance of which is a big pill for your readers to swallow, there is no use in frightening them at the beginning by the form.โ€

He sighed and shrugged his shoulders resignedly. โ€œI submit, signora; but on one condition. If you rob me of my laugh now, I must have it out next time. When His Eminence, the irreproachable Cardinal, turns up in Florence, neither you nor your committee must object to my being as spiteful as I like. Itโ€™s my due!โ€

He spoke in his lightest, coldest manner, pulling the chrysanthemums out of their vase and holding them up to watch the light through the translucent petals. โ€œWhat an unsteady hand he has,โ€ she thought, seeing how the flowers shook and quivered. โ€œSurely he doesnโ€™t drink!โ€

โ€œYou had better discuss the matter with the other members of the committee,โ€ she said, rising. โ€œI cannot form any opinion as to what they will think about it.โ€

โ€œAnd you?โ€ He had risen too, and was leaning against the table, pressing the flowers to his face.

She hesitated. The question distressed her, bringing up old and miserable associations. โ€œIโ โ€”hardly know,โ€ she said at last. โ€œMany years ago I used to know something about Monsignor Montanelli. He was only a canon at that time, and Director of the theological seminary in the province where I lived as a girl. I heard a great deal about him fromโ โ€”someone who knew him very intimately; and I never heard anything of him that was not good. I believe that, in those days at least, he was really a most remarkable man. But that was long ago, and he may have changed. Irresponsible power corrupts so many people.โ€

The Gadfly raised his head from the flowers, and looked at her with a steady face.

โ€œAt any rate,โ€ he said, โ€œif Monsignor Montanelli is not himself a scoundrel, he is a tool in scoundrelly hands. It is all one to me which he isโ โ€”and to my friends across the frontier. A stone in the path may have the best intentions, but it must be kicked out of the path, for all that. Allow me, signora!โ€ He rang the bell, and, limping to the door, opened it for her to pass out.

โ€œIt was very kind of you to call, signora. May I send for a vettura? No? Good afternoon, then! Bianca, open the hall-door, please.โ€

Gemma went out into the street, pondering anxiously. โ€œMy friends across the frontierโ€โ โ€”who were they? And how was the stone to be kicked out of the path? If with satire only, why had he said it with such dangerous eyes?

IV

Monsignor Montanelli arrived in Florence in the first week of October. His visit caused a little flutter of excitement throughout the town. He was a famous preacher and a representative of the reformed Papacy; and people looked eagerly to him for an exposition of the โ€œnew doctrine,โ€ the gospel of love and reconciliation which was to cure the sorrows of Italy. The nomination of Cardinal Gizzi to the Roman State Secretaryship in place of the universally detested Lambruschini had raised the public enthusiasm to its highest pitch; and Montanelli was just the man who could most easily sustain it. The irreproachable strictness of his life was a phenomenon sufficiently rare among the high dignitaries of the Roman Church to attract the attention of people accustomed to regard blackmailing, peculation, and disreputable intrigues as almost invariable adjuncts to the career of a prelate. Moreover, his talent as a preacher was really great; and with his beautiful voice and magnetic personality, he would in any time and place have made his mark.

Grassini, as usual, strained every nerve to get the newly arrived celebrity to his house; but Montanelli was no easy game to catch. To all invitations he replied with the same courteous but positive refusal, saying that his health was bad and his time fully occupied, and that he had neither strength nor leisure for going into society.

โ€œWhat omnivorous creatures those Grassinis are!โ€ Martini said contemptuously to Gemma as they crossed the Signoria square one bright, cold Sunday morning. โ€œDid you notice the way Grassini bowed when the Cardinalโ€™s carriage drove up? Itโ€™s all one to them who a man is, so long as heโ€™s talked about. I never saw such lion-hunters in my life. Only last August it was the Gadfly; now itโ€™s Montanelli. I hope His Eminence feels flattered at the attention; a precious lot of adventurers have shared it with him.โ€

They had been hearing Montanelli preach in the cathedral; and the great building had been so thronged with eager listeners that Martini, fearing a return of Gemmaโ€™s troublesome headaches, had persuaded her to come away before the Mass was over. The sunny morning, the first after a week of rain, offered him an excuse for suggesting a walk among the garden slopes by San Niccolo.

โ€œNo,โ€ she answered; โ€œI should like a walk if you have time; but not to the hills. Let us keep along the Lungโ€™Arno; Montanelli will pass on

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