Read Miss Garnet's Angel Online
Authors: Salley Vickers
Not knowing how to take this Julia said, âI'm sorry.'
The Monsignore blew his lips. âIt is only death! And I did not like him, God rest his soul. So, I tell this family “not tonight”. You will have some more prosecco?'
âThank you. It's very good.'
He drank with little, rapid gulps. âYou know it is quite peculiar telling this now. Every day of my life it is inside me. To speak it is strange.'
âPlease don't, if you don't want to.'
He patted her arm. âNo, no. I want to tell you and, you know, the greatest wisdoms are not those which are written
down but those which are passed between human beings who understand each other. There is a girl in the familyâvery beautiful. She has a figure like Sophia Lorenâdid I tell you my story about Pope John?'
âI don't think so.'
âOK, I tell you later. Remind me, please, or I will forget. Her mother says to me, “Please take her now. There is a boat. She can get to America but she must go first thing tomorrow.” I do not think it is safe but the mother is very insistent and the girl is very beautiful.' He sighed. âAnd I am a young manânot yet a priest!' Laughing. âSo I take the girl but I think to myself: Where can we hide that is safe until I know I can get her to the boat?” And then I think: OK. The little chapel.'
âThe Chapel-of-the-Plague?'
âJust so! By the way I like your Rudyard Kipling of the
Just So Stories.
“If you can keep your head when all about you, Are losing theirs⦔ It is a fine poem.'
âI like it too!'
âIt is to the point, because in fact I used to say it to myself very often in these times. Maybe I said it this particular night? I do not remember!'
Julia, who supposed he had been going to âremember', felt pleased: the Monsignore was not a man who painted the lily.
âAt that time the chapel was used only for certain festivalsâbaptisms or weddings. But I knew where the key was keptâunder the wellhead in the
campo.
And I knew it had a secret.'
âA secret?'
âIndeed. There is a passageway into the wall which once led to an adjoining palazzo. I knew this from the story I told you, when you were kind enough to call on me with Charles. Charles, by the way, does not believe these old stories because he is a rational man. It is one of the better things about the Catholic Church that it is not at all rational.'
Julia did not say that surely all Christianity was irrational. She did not want to interrupt the story.
âBut I know for sure, empirically, as Charles would say, that there is a passage because I have spent the night there!'
The Monsignore brought this out with a certain pride. Julia, sensing something, asked, âWith the beautiful girl?'
âWith the beautiful girl.' He nodded with satisfaction. âIsabella, she was called. A wonderful figure!' He carved a fulsome shape near his chest with his hands.
âGoodness!' Julia decided to be impressed. It was apparent that this was what was required of her.
âBut here is the point of the tale. We spend the night together in the chapel and maybe I put my arm around her because she is afraid. And I too, I am afraid also. But there is nothing more.' The blackbird eyes were tightly earnest.
âI'm sure there wasn't.'
âI know there was not for I am in fact virgin. I was not yet ordained but I was serious about my vocation and it would not have appeared right to me, in any case, to take advantage of this young woman's terrible experience. This is not to say I did not want it, you understand.'
âI am a virgin too.'
She did not know why she had said this and began to flush but the Monsignore reached across and patted her hand again. âGood, good, you keep me company. I do not think any longer there are too many of us intact! But you know, I think it is a pity if this is matter of shame to you. For me I am proud that I keep my virginity in spite of all the temptations I am sent! Of course, no one believes me.'
Julia, who was thinking that âtemptations' might make virginity less shameful, only said, rather weakly, âOh, I'm sure they do.'
The Monsignore gave one of his high little giggles. âLet me finish and you will see. After I get this girl to her boat I do not hear again from her, oh, for some time, until one day after the war is ended I receive a letter from America. It is from Isabella. She tells me how she made it to America and now is married to an American GI and I am happy for her. Also she has twins. I am happier still. Then the bombshell.
I have told no one,
she writes,
that the twins are yours.'
The Monsignore sat back like a conjurer who had produced an astonishing rabbit.
âBut,' Julia was puzzled, âI don't understand?'
âNeither did I,' said the Monsignore cheerfully. âHey, we are out of prosecco. They are so lazy when Constanze is not here. Oi! Prosecco,
per favore
!'
âReally,' said Julia, confused. âIt's fine. I've had enough.'
âBut I have not. Oi!'
When the replenished tray had been brought the Monsignore
resumed. âYou could have knocked me down with a feather from the wing of the Holy Ghost! Here I was, a young priest working in the Vatican, on my way to great things, concerned to make my mark, andâpresto!âI learn I am a father.'
âBut you saidâ¦' she didn't like to be explicit.
âThat I am virgin and so I am. I knew that, and now you know it too. The blessed Signore Himself, I am happy to say, knows itâbut the lovely Isabella it seems did not. I have thought about it many, many times,' said the Monsignore pouring himself another glass.
âAndâ¦?' It seemed almost impertinent to ask.
âAnd in the end this is the conclusion I reach. I believe that she herself did not know. Who knows what that night of extreme fear did to her? At any time she might have been handed over to the
fascisti
and for all we knew the concentration camps. She may never see again the family who have chosen her to take the passage of safety to America. In such circumstances the mind plays tricks. And after all, I am flattered she believes she and I had intercourse.'
âBut who was the father? The GI?'
âI think no. Maybe an encounter on the boat to America when she is confused? Who knows? Like so many things this is known only to the mind of God.'
âWhat happened to the children. The twins?'
âWell, this is the point. They grow up. Their mother and her husband get a divorce, as is so unfortunately common nowadays. I never knew what she had told her husband but
one day I receive a call. It is during the period I am working for the Secretary of State and we are in some pretty delicate negotiations with the USA about the troubles in Ireland. So, one day a man telephones to say he comes from America and asks if he may visit. When he turns up it is the son of Isabella.'
âAnd he believed you were his father?'
âApparently yes. It seems his mother told him and his brother this after her divorce. I think they do not get on so well with her husband and maybe she thinks to help them.'
Julia frowned. âTough on you, though, surely?'
The Monsignore gave another squeal of delight. âOh yes. Another feather of the Holy Ghost and I am knocked flat! And this, you see, is quite serious. I am in a sensitive position within the Vatican. Any scandal'âhe puffed his cheeksââand I am out on my backside.'
âSo what did you do?'
âI think about it very hard. Day and night. Shall I tell my boss, Ottaviani? He is a pretty hard taskmaster and would not tolerate anything improper. Maybe I go to the top and tell the Popeâwho, in fact, would not be so unsympathetic. In the end I decide to do nothing. The young man's mother has warned him it is a deadly secret. Also, I suspect she had told him that she is the love of my lifeâa romance which is not entirely untrue because certainly I have no greater experience of human love than the night I have spent with his mother. Maybe even he believes that it is out of this love for his mother that I have become a Catholic priest.'
âDisappointment, you mean?'
âWho knows? I never saw her again after that night and in any case it does not matter. I guessed he was not going to give me away. Of course, I had not met his brother but twins are alike, and so I felt in my bones I could trust the other brother too.'
Are twins always so alike? wondered Julia, thinking of Sarah and Toby.
âI was wrong, as it happens,' the Monsignore beamed. âSomeone spoke. Maybe Isabella repeated her delusion. In any case there grew up a rumour that I have sons in America whom I refer to as my “nephews” although it is kept always hush-hush. One of them is an academic and that is how Charles comes to know of the story. I heard him tell it to you at his party.'
Julia blushed. âI thought you had heard! Charles said you couldn't have.'
One blackbird eye winked at her. âIt is sensible sometimes to be deaf. But now, enough of me. I tell you this story for two reasons. One, because I like you and it is good to confess even if one has not, in fact, sinned. Two, because I wish to show you something. Sometimes a woman may say she has slept with a manâeven believe she has done soâand still it may not be so. I think you are a person with a brave spirit. If it is the case that your friend sleeps with this girl you will not lie to yourself. You will know. But do not make the mistake of believing bad news just for the reason that it is bad. We live in an age, God forgive us, where bad news is preferred
to good. “Vatican Priest Did Not Sleep With Beautiful Jewess” does not make a headline! Also, you know, now that I have met you I think it must also be the case that your friend liked you for yourself too. It is not reason enough that he hangs around only for the young boyâthere are other waysâ¦'
Julia made a face. âYes, but I was giving Nicco lessons. It was a perfect excuse to meet himâwith me as chaperone, you see!' And she knew for herself about that ravaging, feverish longing which got into your blood and raced through every mental process. Wise in the ways of humankind as this man was, was he likely to understand that?
The priest gave what might have been a sigh. âYou do not like my suggestion that your friend also liked you because, forgive me, you are intoxicated at present by the prospect of the worst. Believe me, I know that feeling. Luckily nowadays,' he raised a glass at her, âI am intoxicated only by this!'
They sat again in silence. Julia, who had been annoyed by his words, found herself trying to imagine the ugly little priest as a young, frightened man. What must it have been like hiding there with the distraught girl? âWhat was it like then, the chapel?'
âIt was place full of sweetness,' said the Monsignore. âI remember that I thought it was not surprising that the Angel Raphael had visited there.'
âYou believe he did?'
âCertainly the artist believed so.'
âThe artist?' she said, not knowing why she was near tears.
âDid I not say? There is a diptych painted by an anonymous master which stood always in the chapel: the story of Tobias and Raphael.'
âI know the story.'
âA very old and holy painting which performed many miracles.'
âYes?' Her breath hurt in her throat.
âThe night Isabella and I hid in the crypt, I hid the diptych there too. To hide it from the little corporal.'
âWas there a dog?'
âA dog?'
âYes. A dog in the painting of the angel.'
In her notebook she had written:
The dog and the angel arrive in the story simultaneously, just at the moment we are told Tobit and Sara are each contemplating death. Perhaps Tobit and Sara are different sides of the same coinâso the dog and the angel could be aspects each lacks, and needs in order to be cured?
The Monsignore appeared to be concentrating. âOf course,' he spoke slowly. âYou are right. I had forgotten there was a dog with himâthe dog is usually with the boy but in this case Tobiolo was on the other side, with his father.'
So it
was
the same panel. âWhat did the angel look like?'
Again the Monsignore paused. His eyes, hooded over, looked more like a dormant reptile's than a bird's. He stayed mute so long that Julia, thinking he had dropped off, had risen from her chair and was about to tiptoe away when he
opened his eyes suddenly and said, âI can see why this artist painted him the colour blueâthe colour of heaven. But when I saw him with my own eyes, it was impossible to say what he looked like.'
There was a silence and into it Julia felt pour out of her, unstoppered, an indescribable emotion. The Monsignore had closed his eyes again and one was twitching slightly as though trying half-heartedly to wink. Like an ineffable stream the feeling flowed from her, into the leafy courtyard, up over the high walls and into the multiple, timeless luminosity, of which Venice is but a version. After a while she sensed the Monsignore had truly fallen sleep and when he began to snore with his dog she got up quietly and left the courtyard.