he was on his feet.
"No! No!" he cried. "It is impossible. It is a mistake."
Father Ramoni turned quickly. The man who had been his faithful
servant for ten years in Marqua was very dear to him. "What is a
mistake, Pietro?" he asked, coming to the table.
"The Consistory," Father Pietro stammered, "the Consistory has made a
mistake. They have done an impossible thing. They have mixed our
names. This letter to the General--this letter--" he pointed to the
document on the table "--says that I have been made Archbishop of
Marqua."
Ramoni took the letter. As he read it he knew what Pietro had not
known. The news was genuine. The name signed at the letter's end
guaranteed that. Ramoni caught the edge of the table. The pain of the
blow gripped him relentlessly and he knew that it was a pain that would
stay. He had been passed over, ignored, set down for Pietro, who sat
weeping beside the table, his head buried in his hands.
"I can't take it," he was sobbing; "I am not able. It's a mistake, a terrible
mistake."
Ramoni put his hand on the other man's head. "It is true, Pietro," he
said. "You are Archbishop of Marqua. May God bless you!"
But he could say no more. Pietro was still weeping when Ramoni went
away, crossing the cloister on his way to his cell, where, with the door
closed behind him, he fought the battle of his soul.
II.
In the beginning Ramoni could not think. He sat looking dully at the
softened tones of the wall, trying to evolve some order of thought from
the chaos into which the shock of his disappointment had plunged his
mind. It was late in the night before the situation began to outline itself
dimly.
His first thought was, curiously enough, not of himself directly, but of
the people out in Marqua who were anxiously looking for his return as
their leader, confident of his appointment to the new Archbishopric. He
could not face them as the servant of another man. From the crowd afar
his thoughts traveled back to the crowd on the Pincio--the crowd that
welcomed him as the great missionary. He would go no more to the
Pincio, for now they would point him out with that cynical amusement
of the Romans as the man who had been shelved for his servant. He
resented the fate that had uprooted him from Rome ten years before,
sending him to Marqua. He resented the people he had converted,
Pietro, the Consistory--everything. For that black and bitter night the
Church, which he had loved and reverenced, looked to him like the root
of all injustice. The more he thought of the slight that had been put
upon him, the worse it became, till the thought arose in him that he
would leave the Community, leave Rome, leave it all. After long hours,
anger had full sway in the heart of Father Ramoni.
At midnight he heard the striking of the city's clocks through the
windows, the lattices of which he had forgotten to close. The sound of
the city brought back to him the words of the great prelate who had
returned with him to San Ambrogio from his first audience with the
Holy Father--"Filius urbis et orbis." How bitterly the city had treated
him!
A knock sounded at his door. He walked to it and flung it open. His
anger had come to the overflowing of speech. At first he saw only a
hand at the door-casing, groping with a blind man's uncertainty. Then
he saw the old General.
In the soul of Ramoni rose an awful revulsion against the old man.
Instantly, with a memory of that first day in the cloister garden, of
those following days that gave him the unexpected, uncanny glimpses
of the priest, he centered all his bitterness upon Denfili. So fearful was
his anger as he held it back with the rein of years of self-control, that he
wondered to see Father Denfili smiling.
"May I enter, my son?" he asked.
"You may enter."
The old man groped his way to a chair. Ramoni watched him with
glowering rage. When Father Denfili turned his sightless eyes upon
him he did not flinch.
"You are disappointed, my son?" the old man asked with a gentleness
that Ramoni could not apprehend, "and you can not sleep?"
Ramoni's anger swept the question aside. "Have you come here, Father
Denfili," he cried, "to find out how well you have finished the
persecution you began ten years ago? If you have, you may be quite
consoled. It is finished to-night." His anger, rushing over the gates, beat
down upon the old man, who sat wordless before its flood. It was a
passionate story
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