Read The Mermaid Garden Online
Authors: Santa Montefiore
“I hope he has a good night.”
“After the fright he had today, he’ll sleep like a baby.” He laughed.
“And so will I.”
Clementine climbed into her father’s car, and they motored up the
drive. She saw Rafa watching her in the mirror and waved out of the
window. He waved back. She knitted her fingers and took a deep, satis-
fied breath.
Grey dropped her off outside Joe’s, but instead of going inside, she
waited for her father to leave, then slunk off to find her Mini. She didn’t want to face Joe yet, she wanted to sit a while and feel close to Rafa, so she drove to the house that God forgot.
The moon was big and bright, drenching the landscape with enough
light for her to see her way down the field. She didn’t feel afraid on her 30067 The Mermaid Garden.indd 231
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own. It felt good to be out in the wind, blanketed by the night. It was too dark to enter the church, so she sat on the step at the entrance and leaned against the wall, listening to the rustling of leaves and the steady murmuring of the sea below. Moonlight caught the tips of waves as
they rose and fell, splashing them with silver. Tonight, the beauty didn’t make her feel melancholy, but happy. Her heart felt full and warm as
if it were a cupcake, just out of the oven. She knew now that there was such a thing as Big Love and that it could creep up on a person very
suddenly, almost before she recognized it. Well, she recognized it, all right, and, with a shudder of anticipation, she yearned to let it in.
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21.
Tuscany, 1971
Floriana lay on the beach, her gaze lost in eternity. She considered the stars, so bright and vibrant, and wondered how many of them had already burned themselves out long ago, leaving their light to shine on
like memories. She imagined death like that. Her mother might just
as well be dead, for she wasn’t ever coming back. Floriana accepted
that now. Once there had been an afterglow of memory as bright as
those stars, but now it, too, had run its course. She could barely re-
member what her mother looked like. She certainly had no recollec-
tion of her little brother. But she did often wonder where they were
and if her mother ever thought of her. Those meanderings of her mind
used to cause her pain, and in a strange way she had taken pleasure
from the discomfort, like the tongue that seeks the hurting tooth.
Now her heart had hardened and she felt nothing, not even resent-
ment.
It had been almost five years since Dante had left, and she thought
of him every day. She was almost sixteen, a young woman, yet inside
she was still the little girl peering in through the gates of La Magda-
lena; and she still loved him.
After he left she believed her world had imploded, and her will to
live had collapsed. Without Dante in her life, what was the point of
going on? She had sought comfort in the Church, for no one else cared
but Jesus, and He had reached out and touched her heart, whispering
quietly in her ear so that no one else could hear. He had told her to wait, that the day would surely come when Dante would return and ask her
to marry him. So, she had dried her tears and straightened her shoul-
ders and resolved to do exactly as He commanded, for Jesus and His
mother, Mary, loved her—and in case they got diverted by someone
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else’s troubles, she went to church every day to light a candle for Dante, and to remind Them that
her
prayers were a priority.
The following summer Costanza was invited up to La Magdalena
to play with Giovanna, the youngest Bonfanti child. It transpired that
Costanza’s mother had approached Signora Bonfanti at Mass and sug-
gested getting the girls together. Signora Bonfanti had been delighted, embracing Costanza’s mother like a long-lost friend. Contessa Aldorisio had not mentioned Floriana. She was keen for her daughter to
find girls of her own class to play with, now she was growing up. But
Costanza had insisted. She was too frightened to go on her own, and
well aware that it was Floriana who had captured their hearts, not her.
The countess had relented on the condition that once she was com-
fortable with Giovanna she leave Floriana behind, and besides, now
she and Signora Bonfanti were reacquainted, she would take her to La
Magdalena personally, so she was not in need of an escort.
It wasn’t long before Costanza and Giovanna were firm friends.
Like Costanza, Giovanna was timid and uncertain. She had none of
her sister’s confidence nor her brother’s charm. Floriana hung around
them, but she soon grew bored of their games. She longed for Dante to
walk through the trees, but he had gone, and she didn’t know when he’d
be coming back. So, Floriana played with Good-Night. The dog was
the little bit of Dante she could hold on to. She taught him to retrieve, to sit when he was commanded, and to follow her as she weaved in and
out of the trees. They played hide-and-seek and endless other games
she devised for him, and sometimes she’d put on shows for Giovanna
and Costanza, who would sit together in their fancy dresses and clap
prettily as if they were at the theater.
Damiana was delighted to see Floriana again and mothered her as
she had done the summer before. She let her retrieve balls when she
played tennis with her girlfriends and invited her up to her bedroom
to help her choose which dresses to wear. But Floriana’s heart longed
for Dante, and in spite of all the attention, Villa La Magdalena seemed empty without him.
If it hadn’t been for Signora Bonfanti, Costanza’s mother would
have made sure Floriana stayed at home. But this fey, dreamy woman
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with the delicate beauty of a sylph fell in love with
l’orfanella
in the same way that her two elder children had. She had heard her tragic
story from Dante and resolved to embrace the child with all her ma-
ternal love, which she had in abundance, having longed for many more
children than three.
On her initial visit, she took the little girl by the hand and led her
into her mermaid garden, where Floriana had sat with Dante the first
time she had entered the grounds of La Magdalena. There they had re-
mained for the entire afternoon, watching the fountain, listening to the birds, and sharing thoughts and ideas. Signora Bonfanti found in Floriana a child who shared her love of nature and her insatiable curiosity about the world. Floriana found in Signora Bonfanti a gentle mother
who threaded flowers in her hair and read her poetry and stories. A
mother who took trouble with her the way her own mother never had.
Little by little Floriana had become a permanent fixture at La Mag-
dalena. As permanent as the stray dogs and cats that Dante had ad-
opted. And like the stray dogs and cats, she was patted and teased with affection by everyone, except Contessa Aldorisio, who resented her
presence there, as if it threatened her secret ambitions for her daughter.
She need not have worried, for Giovanna grew to consider Costanza
a sister and they remained in contact during the winter months when
Giovanna was back at school in Milan. Floriana visited La Magda-
lena every day, although the family had long since departed, and took
Good-Night off into town to chase pigeons in Piazza Laconda. The
dog became her constant companion and her greatest pleasure. Un-
like Costanza, who was too grand to talk to staff, Floriana had made
friends with the locals who worked at La Magdalena, and when she
wasn’t in school or at Mass, she often hung around the gardens, playing with the animals and talking to the gardeners.
Alone again, Costanza sought the company of her old friend, and
Floriana was happy to be welcomed back. But now they had to meet in
town, or on the beach, for Costanza’s mother was doing everything in
her power to separate them. Costanza was thirteen now and resented
being told what to do and who to be friends with, and she felt a strong loyalty to Floriana. But Contessa Aldorisio was confident that one way
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or another the two girls would eventually grow apart. It was inevitable, considering their lives and the stark differences of their class. If it didn’t happen naturally, she would give it a little helping hand.
Another summer blossomed, the second since Dante’s departure,
and Floriana felt his absence more acutely than ever. Long, languid
days at La Magdalena ensued, full of beautiful people, large lunch par-
ties, and afternoons in the mermaid garden, reading poetry. Signora
Bonfanti invited Floriana to help make a picture mosaic, and they
spent hours in the conservatory cutting out small squares of paper and
sticking them onto canvas. Floriana loved being close to her, while
Good-Night lay snoozing by her side. There were pictures of Dante all
over the house, and sometimes she would glean bits of news as Signora
Bonfanti processed her thoughts out loud in rambling soliloquies. It
seemed that Dante was doing exceedingly well in America but that his
future lay here in Italy, where he was expected to rise to great heights in his father’s company.
Floriana did not like Signor Beppe. He had none of his son’s charm
or benevolence. His face was handsome in a hard way, his frown low
over dark, shrewish eyes, and his neck was thick like a bull’s. His
mouth was twisted in repose, cruel in mirth, and when he laughed,
it seemed superficial, as if he did it for affect and not out of joy. His mind seemed constantly occupied by work, and he was always being
called to the telephone, or in his study talking to men in black suits, smoking cigars that reeked into the marble hall. Signora Bruno said
that Beppe Bonfanti was part of the local Mafia and had actually had
people killed, but even though his eyes were remarkably cold, Flori-
ana dismissed the old woman’s gossiping as rumor. She couldn’t believe
that Dante’s father was a murderer. That he was fearsome was without
doubt.
He was shadowed constantly by Zazzetta, a wiry, sinister little man
with a bald head and aquiline nose who whispered in his ear and wrote
things down in a black notebook. Signor Beppe listened to him more
than anyone else, and he seemed to have the power to grab his atten-
tion with as little as a raised eyebrow. Signor Beppe relied on him for everything, calling him his
braccio destro
—his right-hand man. Floriana didn’t like Zazzetta, either.
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Signora Bonfanti kept out of her husband’s way, and he never sought
her out. He barely noticed Floriana, in the same way that he never no-
ticed the stray animals who hung around the terrace at lunchtime, but
he did notice Costanza. He seemed to enjoy his youngest daughter’s
flowering friendship and asked Costanza endless questions about her-
self and her family. Constanza told Floriana that Beppe had invited her parents to dinner and that they were now close friends. Floriana didn’t see the significance of this. She cared only for Dante, his mother, and his dog.
Five long years had passed since Floriana first met Dante and now
summer was here again. But this time it would be better than any other
because he was coming home. She had heard from Costanza, who had
heard from Giovanna, and there was to be a big party to celebrate his
homecoming. Floriana lay on the sand and felt a shiver of excitement
ripple across her skin. Dante was finally coming home. They would be
reunited at last. It never occurred to her that he might have fallen in love with someone else, or that he wouldn’t fall in love with her, because she had lit a candle every single day for almost five years and sent her wish up to Jesus. With such constant badgering it was inconceivable
that He would have the heart to ignore her.
“So? Which do you think? The blue or the white?” Costanza asked
the following afternoon, laying the dresses on her bed. They had taken
care to sneak into the house while the countess was out, and their mis-
chief gave them a heightened sense of excitement.
Floriana sat back against the pillows and took a good long look at
both. “Well, the blue is pretty; the white is a little bridal, don’t you think?”
“So, the blue?”
“Put it on.”
Costanza didn’t need further encouragement. She hurriedly slipped
it on and stood before the long mirror that leaned against the wall.
She was curvier now, her breasts large, her hips wide above short, por-
cine legs and small trotterlike feet. She loved her food and ate copi-
ous quantities of bread and pasta for comfort while she lamented her
clumsy body.
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“Do I look fat in this?” she asked, biting her bottom lip and pulling
her stomach in.
“Of course you don’t,” Floriana lied. “You look voluptuous. Italian