'I have found out, by application at the passport-office, that they have not left Florence—but what particular part of the city they have removed to, I have not yet had time to discover.'
'And pray why did they leave you, in the first place? Nanina is not a girl to do anything without a reason. She must have had some cause for going away. What was it?'
The little man hesitated, and made a fourth bow.
'You remember your private instructions to my wife and myself, when you first brought Nanina to our house?' he said, looking away rather uneasily while he spoke.
'Yes; you were to watch her, but to take care that she did not suspect you. It was just possible, at that time, that she might try to get back to Pisa without my knowing it; and everything depended on her remaining at Florence. I think, now, that I did wrong to distrust her; but it was of the last importance to provide against all possibilities, and to abstain from putting too much faith in my own good opinion of the girl. For these reasons, I certainly did instruct you to watch her privately. So far you are quite right; and I have nothing to complain of. Go on.'
'You remember,' resumed the little man, 'that the first consequence of our following your instructions was a discovery (which we immediately communicated to you) that she was secretly learning to write?'
'Yes; and I also remember sending you word not to show that you knew what she was doing; but to wait and see if she turned her knowledge of writing to account, and took or sent any letters to the post. You informed me, in your regular monthly report, that she nearer did anything of the kind.'
'Never, until three days ago; and then she was traced from her room in my house to the post-office with a letter, which she dropped into the box.'
'And the address of which you discovered before she took it from your house?'
'Unfortunately I did not,' answered the little man, reddening and looking askance at the priest, as if he expected to receive a severe reprimand.
But Father Rocco said nothing. He was thinking. Who could she have written to? If to Fabio, why should she have waited for months and months, after she had learned how to use her pen, before sending him a letter? If not to Fabio, to what other person could she have written?
'I regret not discovering the address—regret it most deeply,' said the little man, with a low bow of apology.
'It is too late for regret,' said Father Rocco, coldly. 'Tell me how she came to leave your house; I have not heard that yet. Be as brief as you can. I expect to be called every moment to the bedside of a near and dear relation, who is suffering from severe illness. You shall have all my attention; but you must ask it for as short a time as possible.'
'I will be briefness itself. In the first place, you must know that I have—or rather had—an idle, unscrupulous rascal of an apprentice in my business.'
The priest pursed up his mouth contemptuously.
'In the second place, this same good-for-nothing fellow had the impertinence to fall in love with Nanina.'
Father Rocco started, and listened eagerly.
'But I must do the girl the justice to say that she never gave him the slightest encouragement; and that, whenever he ventured to speak to her, she always quietly but very decidedly repelled him.'
'A good girl!' said Father Rocco. 'I always said she was a good girl. It was a mistake on my part ever to have distrusted her.'
'Among the other offenses,' continued the little man, 'of which I now find my scoundrel of an apprentice to have been guilty, was the enormity of picking the lock of my desk, and prying into my private papers.'
'You ought not to have had any. Private papers should always be burned papers.'
'They shall be for the future; I will take good care of that.'
'Were any of my letters to you about Nanina among these private papers?'
'Unfortunately they were. Pray, pray excuse my want of caution this time. It shall never happen again.'
'Go on. Such imprudence as yours can never be excused; it can only be provided against for the future. I suppose the apprentice showed my letters to the girl?'
'I infer as much; though why he should do so—'
'Simpleton! Did you not say that he was in love with her (as you term it), and that he got no encouragement?'
'Yes; I said that—and I know it to be true.'
'Well! Was it not his interest, being unable to make any impression on the girl's fancy, to establish some claim to her gratitude; and try if he could not win her that way? By showing her my letters, he would make her indebted to him for knowing that she was watched in your house. But this is not the matter in question now. You say you infer that she had seen my letters. On what grounds?'
'On the strength of this bit of paper,' answered the little man, ruefully producing a note from his pocket. 'She must have had your letters shown to her soon after putting her own letter into the post. For, on the evening of the same day, when I went up into her room, I found that she and her sister and the disagreeable dog had all gone, and observed this note laid on the table.'
Father Rocco took the note, and read these lines:
'I have just discovered that I have been watched and suspected ever since my stay under your roof. It is impossible that I can remain another night in the house of a spy. I go with my sister. We owe you nothing, and we are free to live honestly where we please. If you see Father Rocco, tell him that I can forgive his distrust of me, but that I can never forget it. I, who had full faith in him, had a right to expect that he should have full faith in me. It was always an encouragement to me to think of him as a father and a friend. I have lost that encouragement forever—and it was the last I had left to me!