“Oh, I do not think that your ladyship would recollect it,” said Teresa, eagerly.
“And do you then regret his loss?”
“I cannot tell; I only know that if I were to become his wife instead of Gaetano’s, I should be obliged to work for my living; and that would be a laborious task for me, after leading so easy and pleasant a life under madame la comtesse.”
“And yet, Teresa, is it not true that people accuse me of pride and violence?” asked the countess.
“Madame is very good to me, that is all I can say,” replied Teresa.
“The nobles of Palermo say so, because the Counts of Castel Nuovo were ennobled by Charles the Fifth, while the Ventimillas and the Partanas descend, as they pretend, from Tancred and Rogero: but that is not the reason the women hate me; they conceal their hatred under the cloak of disdain, and they neglect me because Rodolpho loves me, and they are jealous of the viceroy’s love; they do all they can to seduce him from me; but they will never succeed, for my beauty is greater than theirs—Carini tells me so every day, and so do you, story-teller.”
“You have here a greater flatterer than either his excellency or myself,” said Teresa, archly.
“Who is that?” asked the countess.
“The countess’s mirror.”
“Foolish girl!” said the countess, with a gratified smile. “There, go and light the tapers of the Psyche.” The attendant obeyed her mistress’s orders. “Now shut that window, and leave me; there will be sufficient air from the garden.”