'What were you thinking?' she asked.
'It's not symmetrical.'
'No?'
'The decorative panels at the side—look—the diagonals run the same way.'
It was hard to make out—the stone was weathered and stained with lichen—but there was no mistaking the anomaly.
'I never noticed before,' she said quietly. 'What does it mean?'
'I don't know. Probably nothing.' He glanced over at her. 'It's a bit overblown, don't you think?'
'Overblown?'
'The arch. For the setting, I mean.'
'I don't know the word.'
'Overblown. It means . . . pretentious.'
'No, I do. It's just—'
He broke off, aware that he was in danger of sounding a bit, well, overblown himself.
'No, tell me,' she insisted. 'I think I know what you mean.'
The triumphal arch was a classical architectural form that had been revived during the Renaissance, he explained, but so far he'd found no precedent for this one in any of the other gardens that he'd researched. Moreover, its inclusion seemed at odds with the discreet symbolism and subtle statements of the rest of the cycle.
Maybe Antonella was being polite, but she asked if he had any other insights he was willing to share with her. He should have confessed it was early days still, but the prospect of a leisurely stroll in her company overrode these thoughts.
The amphitheater that fell away down the slope behind them was not exclusive to Villa Docci, he explained, although it was narrower and more precipitous than the one in the Sacro Bosco, the Sacred Wood, at Bomarzo near Rome. Interestingly, Pier Francesco Orsini had also dedicated that garden to his deceased wife, Giulia Farnese, although the parallels stopped there. The memorial garden at Villa Docci was an exercise in restraint compared to the riotous imagination on display in the Sacro Bosco, with its mausolea, nymphaea, loggias and temples, and its stupefying array of bizarre creatures carved from solid rock: sirens, sphinxes, dragons, lions, a giant turtle, even an African war elephant holding a dead soldier in its trunk.
The more temperate approach at Villa Docci was exemplified by the statue of Flora on the plinth near the top of the amphitheater. The corkscrew pose, with the left leg bent and resting on a perch, was a traditional stance, typical of the mid-to-late sixteenth century—a form that had found its highest expression in the sculptures of Giambologna and Ammannati. In fact, as the file pointed out, the statue of Flora was closely modeled on Giambologna's marble Venus in the Boboli Gardens in Florence, although like many of the imitations spawned by that masterpiece, it lacked the original's grace and vitality.
'I don't know about the others,' said Antonella as they circled beneath Flora, 'but for me she is alive.'
Her look challenged him to contest the assertion. When he didn't, she added, 'Touch her leg.'
He wished she hadn't said it. He also wished she hadn't reached out and run her hand up the back of the marble calf from the heel to the crook of the knee, because it left him no choice but to follow suit.
He tried to experience something—he
'What do you feel?' asked Antonella.
'I feel,' he replied, 'like a sweaty Englishman molesting a naked statue in the presence of a complete stranger.'
Antonella gave a sudden loud laugh, her hand shooting to her mouth.
'I'm sorry,' she said. 'Maybe you will see her differently with time.'
'Maybe.'
'Go on, please.'
'Really?'
'I come here every day if I can.'
It wasn't surprising, he continued, that the statue of Flora had been modeled on Venus, given the close link between the two goddesses. Both were associated with fertility and the season of spring. Indeed, it was quite possible that the goddess of love and the goddess of flowers appeared alongside each other in two of the most celebrated paintings to come out of the Renaissance: Sandro Botticelli's
'Really?'
'It's a new theory, very new.'
'Ah,' said Antonella skeptically.
'You're right, it's probably nothing.' He shrugged, knowing full well that it wasn't, not for her, not if she visited the garden as often as she claimed to.