The Eternal City - Page 129/385

"Yes. The letters of prisoners are read and copied, and to smuggle out

by hand a written document is difficult or impossible. But at length a

way was discovered. Some one sent a phonograph and a box of cylinders to

one of the prisoners, and the little colony of exiled ones used to meet

at your father's house to hear the music. Among the cylinders were

certain blank ones. Your father spoke on to one of them, and when the

time came for the owner of the phonograph to leave Elba, he brought the

cylinder back with him. This is the cylinder your father spoke on to."

With an involuntary shudder she took out of his hands a circular

cardboard-box, marked in print on the outside: "Selections from Faust,"

and in pencil on the inside of the lid: "For the hands of D. L. only--to

be destroyed if Deputy David Rossi does not know where to find him."

The heavy rain had darkened the room, but by the red light of a dying

fire he could see that her face had turned white.

"And this contains my father's voice?" she said.

"His last message."

"He is dead--two years dead--and yet...."

"Can you bear to hear it?"

"Go on," she said, hardly audibly.

He took back the cylinder, put it on the phonograph, wound up the

instrument, and touched the lever. Through the strokes of the rain,

lashing the window like a hundred whips, the whizzing noise of the

machine began.

He was standing by her side, and he felt her hand on his arm.

Then through the sound of the rain and of the phonograph there came a

clear, full voice: "David Leone--your old friend Doctor Roselli sends you his dying

message...."

The hand on Rossi's arm clutched it convulsively, and, in a choking

whisper, Roma said: "Wait! Give me one moment."

She was looking around the darkening room as if almost expecting a

ghostly presence.

She bowed her head. Her breath came quick and fast.

"I am better now. Go on," she said.

The whirring noise began again, and after a moment the clear voice came

as before: "My son, the promise I made when we parted in London I fulfilled

faithfully, but the letter I wrote you never came to your hands. It was

meant to tell you who I was, and why I changed my name. That is too long

a story now, and I must be brief. I am Prospero Volonna. My father was

the last prince of that name. Except the authorities and their spies,

nobody in Italy knows me as Roselli and nobody in England as

Volonna--nobody but one, my poor dear child, my daughter Roma."