Norman Lock
After Alberto Casella
Corrado tightens his gloved hands on the wheel as the  Voison leans toward the escarpment that falls precipitously to the  ocean.  A man who does not allow fear in himself, he knows that if he  should let his eyes leave the road an instant for his face in the mirror  he will see something resembling it.  A disquiet.  Later at the villa,  as he studies with the secret enjoyment of a connoisseur the light  caught in the depths of his whiskey, he recalls the sensation in the  nearly uncontrollable automobile, when gravity seemed in adjournment and  the earth careless of its burden.  It was not fear—he tells himself—but  an emotion like fear, as if he were possessed suddenly by love.  And by  love, he means the tender prelude to desire—the exquisite regard he has  for Grazia, whose body he cannot imagine abandoned to himself or any  other lover.  By an effort of his seigneurial will, Corrado has  refused the insinuations of carnality, quelled the blood’s riot, and  made of his finely strung nerves an instrument to hymn her ethereal  beauty.  He is unhappy.
 He has been visiting a brothel with a regularity that  threatens to become habitual.  Not a house favored by those of his  class, but an ancient hotel near the wharves, in whose rooms the  transient and the disreputable lie down by the half-hour.  He wonders  whether he will be able to abjure the rough pleasure he takes there, in a  bed doused with scent beneath which he searches, with his finely shaped  Roman nose, for the odor of other men’s sweat.    
 He turns to Baron Cesarea and attempts to describe again  the shadow that appeared out of nothing, as the motor-car swung into the  final turning in the road before the villa’s gates: “It was like  smoke.  Black.  Like soot.  But odorless and tasted—if of anything—of  almonds.  It was like oil, although it was not at all oily.  It clung to  the road and to the Voison and to us—especially to Grazia.  I did not  see it cover her; nevertheless, I know that it did.  I saw nothing.  It  covered us only a moment.  The time it took for the Voison to slip into  the turning and for me to feel the outer tires lift up, then fall.  For  Father’s Ferrari behind us to send the flower-cart flying into the  ditch.  It tasted and smelled of almond paste, if of anything at all—the  shadow, although it was something more than a shadow.  It enveloped  us.  I could do nothing.  I wanted to do nothing.  I felt the tires  lift, then fall back down onto the road.  It could not have been any  more than a few seconds.  I felt cold—a damp chill.  It was more mist  than shadow, if a mist could be black.”
 “It was nothing,” says the Baron.  “Merely the uncertain  hour between the evening and the coming of night.  It was a trick of  light.  I tell you it was nothing.”
  “None of us was hurt in the least.  Not even the man on the  flower-cart, although he flew through the air and landed in the road.   His eyes were shut—we thought he must be dead.  But he opened them after  a moment, and we saw that he wasn’t in the least hurt.  Not even his  mule.  Father gave him money.”   
 “The Duke is always gracious.”
 The Baron puts out his hand to steady himself against one  of the marble columns that decorate the villa’s reception room.  The  whiskey slips up the side of his glass but does not spill.
 Corrado cocks his head as if hearing a tragic overture in  the distance.
 “It was nothing,” says the Baron, whose face has paled.   “Suddenly, I felt as if the earth had swung free of its orbit.  I seemed  to hear in the thaw of the whiskey’s ice the foundation give way.”  
 The Baron said this, or perhaps not.  Perhaps it was  Corrado, who thought it, mistaking the thought for the Baron’s voice.   Or perhaps another spoke in the sepulchral space of the Villa Felicitá.   Death, whose voice entered the room through the French window, ajar in  the warm October evening, saying: “Suddenly, you felt as if the  earth had swung free of its orbit.  You seemed to hear in the thaw of  your whiskey’s ice the foundation give way.”  
 Corrado is listening intently, his eyes searching a shadow  that might have been cast by one of the moon’s mountains as readily as  an Etruscan vase.
 “Grazia is in the conservatory,” the Baron says.  “She  plays beautifully.”
 “Yes!” Corrado agrees; for it was music that he  heard while Cesarea put out his hand—piano music and, at the threshold  of audition, the soft crackle of ice as it suffered annihilation in the  Baron’s glass.  Those and nothing else.
 Corrado forgets the voice (if he has heard it at all).  He  thinks only of Grazia.  The Baron has no such distraction.  If he heard  Death’s apostrophe from the garden, where it hides among the lengthening  shadows, he pretends otherwise.  He concentrates on the music Grazia is  playing.
 “She plays beautifully.”
 “Yes!”
 The Baron turns to the window, which is now black—night  having approached the villa from the sea.  He shivers and goes to close  the window. 
  “It makes me sad,” Corrado says of the music.  
  “It is always so,” Cesarea answers, thinking of the hour—the hour of tristesse,  when the light is extinguished and the warm Adriatic air turns damp.   He would have wept, had he been alone.  He looks into the whiskey,  watered with vanished ice; but its amber light is out.  Its little sun.   Baron Cesarea finishes the drink, for he cannot go to Grazia and take  her in his arms.
 “I wish I were a young man,” he says, turning to Corrado  after both have been silent.  But Corrado is looking elsewhere, into the  darkness among the columns, which rise archaically from the room’s  marbled floor.  Night has entered unnoticed through the window powerless  to keep it out.
 “Like a ruin,” thinks Corrado and feels access of hatred for  his father.  Or is it for Grazia?
 “Fedele!” the Baron shouts.  “Fedele!”
 The Duke’s man enters from an anteroom, where he has been  waiting in another obscurity to perform his role.  “Baron?”
 “Why have you left us in the dark, Fedele?” 
 They cannot see each other: Corrado, Cesarea, the Duke’s  man.  They are voices in a dark, dimensionless space.  The columns are  engulfed.
 Unrelenting, Grazia plays Pavane pour une infante  défunte.  In her hands, the notes have all turned to lead, to ash.   To dead leaves that the wind sweeps—rustling—away.
 A wind has risen in the garden, rattles the sash, bends the  cypress trees that crowd against the villa’s outer walls.  Accompanying  its mournful music, Death descants: “This melancholy you feel at the  coming of night—a  sorrow blown by the flying darkness into the Duke’s  magnificent rooms—you have felt it many times before—at this hour, the  hour of tristesse, when the day is unmade like a bed on which  you fear to lie down, in case it should prove to be your last.  The bed  in which you were born and those spent in ten-thousand nights of sleep  and dream, sickness and love.  The sheet stinking of birth, of blood, of  sweat, of love wound about you at last.  But none of this crosses your  mind.  Only the unaccountable sadness of the hour, which makes you  irritable and afraid.  So you call for the lights to be lit.  You  hurriedly dress for dinner and rush out to be among other people, to  laugh, to drink, to hear music.”
 “Where is Duke Lambert?” Cesarea asks peevishly because he  is afraid.
 “In the library,” Fedele answers.  “Someone arrived a  little while ago, wishing to speak to him.”
 “Who?”
 “A stranger.”
 Corrado goes to the conservatory to be with Grazia.  She is  sitting in the dark.  For a moment, he thinks that she is weeping, but  it is the music—its tragic current.  Corrado stands in the doorway,  transfixed by absence: his lover seems to have vanished, leaving only  rueful notes to mark her place.  Not lover—beloved.  He has yet  to measure the length of his body against hers.  Their kisses are  chaste.  He wonders briefly if the unappeased desire aroused in him  would be diminished by her surrender—would be erased as completely as  her image by the darkness.  He shakes his head to rid his mind of an  unworthy thought.  Hatred steals into his heart, and he turns it on  himself like a knife.  
 “Grazia!”
 “I’m here, Corrado.”
 “Why are you sitting in the dark?”
 “It’s pleasant to play without seeing.”
 The wind, which was blowing from the sea, moves on its  great hinge, turning against the conservatory at the opposite side of  the villa and scattering the sheet music.  It brushes Corrado’s face  like a papery wing, so that he cries out.
 “The wind is strong tonight,” she says, indifferently.
 “Strong enough to strip trees of leaves and the sky of all  its stars,” says Death in a low voice hidden beneath Corrado’s footsteps  as he rushes to the window.
 He shuts the window, but Grazia has stopped playing and  does not resume.  She hears Corrado spin the flint-wheel of his lighter,  smells the fluid’s astringency.
 “Don’t!” she tells him.  “My head ached so in the light.”
 “Did you hurt yourself in the accident?”  
 He almost touches her face.
 “No, it’s only a headache.” 
 “I behaved stupidly.”
 “No, it was wonderful, Corrado!  To drive so fast—wonderful  !  I felt–”
 “–as if I had been sleeping.  A princess in a story—asleep for a  hundred years behind thorns, behind glass.  Waiting without knowing it.   Dreaming of a door through which one day someone will walk.  Not a  door—a hole in the air—a black emptiness in the gray air, without a  particle of light or sound—a rustling of cloth or wings or a murmuring.   You drove faster and faster until I felt something tear—an organ, my  heart, a gland whose function has been forgotten, ripped out, ripped.   Then blackness and the stinging behind the eyes, and a sickness like  rapture.”
 “The shadow—it seemed to cling to you,” says Corrado, who  has been listening to Grazia's voice, or Death's, in the darkness of the  conservatory.
 “It seemed to come from inside me,” the voice continues; “and  when the tires left the road, I was happy.  I wanted only to die.”
 Corrado lights his lighter.  Its flame trembles in his  hand, leafs Grazia’s forehead and cheeks with gold, illuminates the line  of her jaw in which an aristocratic nature is wholly revealed.  Her  eyes are closed.  Corrado shakes her more roughly than even his dread  can explain.  For an instant, he wants to humiliate her; to throw her to  the floor and defile her.  Grazia has fallen asleep in spite of  Corrado’s shouting: “Why do you keep me always at a distance?  When will  you marry me?  Why won’t you let me close to you?”  I hate you, Grazia  for what you make me suffer!  I would like to destroy you—your virtue,  which is an insult to me, filling me with rage.  Why do you make me  ashamed?  “Wake up, Grazia!”
 We had an almost fatal accident, he thinks.  I was driving  too fast and could not hold the road when we went into the turning.  It  has made her hysterical.  The effect of encountering, perhaps for the  first time, a force she cannot command.  Powerlessness before an  uncontrollable event.  I may also be hysterical.  Because of how close  we came to it.  Death.  It is only natural that tonight we should not be  ourselves.  Tomorrow, we will be restored.  After we have slept.   Grazia can’t keep her eyes open.  Mine, too, want to close.  I thought  it was the whiskey.  The Baron is right: it was nothing—the shadow.  A  trick of light.  
 Grazia’s arm falls across the piano keys, sounding a  discordant finale to Corrado’s meditation—her lovely, white arm on which  she rests her head.
 Fedele enters the conservatory, obedient to the will of  others.  It is the will of Duke Lambert that Grazia and Corrado come at  once to the reception room.  Prince Sirki has arrived, the Duke’s  friend.  Fedele turns on the lights.  (Why didn’t Corrado, who knows the  location of the light switch in this, his father’s house and his?)   Gently, Corrado lays his hand on Grazia’s bare shoulder.  Despite  himself, he hears desire whisper its insinuations.  Grazia shrugs into  consciousness.  She lifts her face; a strand of hair falls, and she  pushes it away.  She lifts her arm from the piano, and a second confused  chord rumbles.  Corrado helps her stand.  Neither of them knows that  Grazia was dead—had gone a little way into Death’s kingdom.  It clings  to her now the way salt does a swimmer who has set out into the sea only  to repent and return to shore.  If Corrado looked into her eyes, he  would know that she has just returned from an immense journey.  But he  does not look.  This man, whose eyes seldom leave Grazia when she is  near, does not look at her at all.  He is looking at nothing or, rather,  at a seam of darkness lying somberly within the fold of a drape or the  peculiar vacancy of the window, which, in its utter blackness, neither  reveals anything of the outside nor reflects anything inside the lighted  room.  Could glass be said to have died, this glass is dead.  Corrado  does not remark on these uncanny effects.  He does not even consider  them as effects (which would lead him to ask himself, of what?); he does  not notice them.  His eyes are ravished by darkness.
 He leads Grazia into the salon and to Prince Sirki.  The  Prince, Duke Lambert, and his guests would wonder at the young man’s  haste if they saw him enter, but they do not see him.  They form a  tableau: Prince Sirki, standing by the French window, with the darkness  of the garden at his back; the others facing him—Lambert in front, the  apex of a triangle of bodies in postures of obeisance.  Princess Maria,  Grazia’s mother, indicates a curtsey: she is Sirki’s titular equal and  need do no more.  Alda, la Contessa de Parma, is seen in an attitude of  homage, which would strike Corrado as charming rather than abject.  But  he sees only Prince Sirki.  The Prince is dressed in the white dress  uniform of his Balkan country.  The jacket blossoms with rosettes and  decorations.  His black hair gleams with the light of the chandelier.   Although he is aware of Corrado standing at the entrance, he has not  acknowledged him—pleased by the scene of welcome before him.  Corrado  takes a step into the room, drawing behind him Grazia, who seems to be  sleepwalking.  Sirki now turns—not to Corrado, whose eyes are transfixed  by the glint of light cast by the Prince’s monocle, but to Grazia in  whose eyes he sees a languor irresistible to him.  He walks toward her  in his high, polished boots—dispersing Lambert and the others.  The  Prince smiles.  He is handsome and only a little awkward.  Corrado is  swept aside by his indifference.  Sirki marches on Grazia as if she is a  town to be taken.  He stops in front of her, hesitates, does not take  her hand to kiss.  Having cast off sleep and the remnant of whatever it  was she dreamed there, she begins to fold like a flower at the coming of  night.  But the Prince prevents her from completing this gesture of  submission, which he has allowed—accepted as his right—from the  others.   
 “It is I who should bow to you,” he says, and does.  “Your  beauty.”
 He is—there is no one word to tell what Sirki is or why he  has moved Grazia.  He is neither charming nor courtly, for they require  insouciance he lacks, nor does he have the equanimity of a Don Juan.  He  is, however, possessed of an absolute authority and behaves as one used  to obedience.  Yet he wishes to be liked in spite of the militancy with  which he confronts the Duke, his wife, Stephanie, and their guests.   His severity of dress and manner distances him from them.  He wants to  be admired—no, received as one of them.  But they cannot  receive him.  He is cold: his presence in the room chills them.  Lambert  almost calls Fedele to close the windows, but the windows are closed;  and besides, the night is not unpleasant.  It is a warm autumn night;  and while the summer blooms are past, the grass and leaves are green.   But the chill inside the villa is undeniable, and Princess Maria  shivers.  Or is it that Prince Sirki is looking at her daughter with  such intensity and she, having raised her head, is looking at him with  equal interest?  Interest scarcely describes the quality of her gaze,  which, perhaps, alarms the Princess.  She is not the only one who  registers disturbing sensations.  Each of them is disconcerted by the  Prince, although none could tell, if asked, what it is about Sirki that  dismays them.  For dismay, more than any other word, most aptly  describes the emotion predominate in the room.  Except for Corrado, who  is angry because of the way the Prince is looking at Grazia.  She  returns his gaze without blushing—or flinching; for there is something  painful in that gaze.  To suffer it is almost to die.  Aware of the  young man’s hostility, the Prince turns to him.  Sirki’s eyes having  left Grazia’s, she is like one who has wakened suddenly: she starts and  nearly cries out.  She shuts her eyes and opens them—her pale eyes no  longer in thrall.  She watches Corrado fall back before the Prince’s  stare.  The young man has the look of someone about to be destroyed.   Now it is Grazia’s turn to shiver—with cold or fear.  She saves Corrado  without knowing it.
 “Corrado, I’m cold; please get my shawl.  I left it in the  conservatory.”
 Prince Sirki lowers his eyes from Corrado’s, permits him to  leave the room in order to bring Grazia her shawl.  The young man goes  without a word.  Perhaps he knows how close he came to his death.   Perhaps not.  Lambert’s guests are reminded that they, too, are cold and  ask the Duke if a fire cannot be made up in the great hearth.  Duke  Lambert pulls a sash; and a bell rings in a distant room in the villa,  summoning Fedele, who arrives within moments—his face a mask showing  neither irritation nor servility.  
 “Make up the fire, Fedele,” the Duke says with the air of  one who asks the impossible because he alone understands that the room  is not cold; or if it is, no fire can warm it.  
 Fedele bows and does as he is bidden.
Released, Grazia goes to her mother.  They withdraw to a corner of the  salon that puts them at the farthest remove from Sirki.  The others also  seek—consciously or not—to separate themselves from the Prince, who  stands isolated and forlorn.  He is like a boy abandoned by his friends,  who go off by themselves—heads together in conspiracies of mirth.   Sirki is offended.  Only the Duke understands their danger—how cruel the  Prince’s rage is likely to be.  (Even Lambert cannot know the extent of  it.  How—with a single terrible look—the Prince can stop the heart of  each, stop light from entering their eyes and sensations from knitting  themselves into thoughts in the mind’s dark mill.)  The Duke herds—like a  shepherd his scattered flock—his wife and guests to the center of the  room, dogging them with whispered reminders of their obligation to make  welcome his eminent guest.  They assemble once more in a tableau of  respect.  Lambert implores the Prince with his eyes not to give way to  rage.  Sirki glares in answer, reminding him with a magisterial look of  their agreement and the consequences of its violation.  The Duke lowers  his head as if to ask that the Prince’s wrath fall on his alone.  The  others are silent, sensing in the atmosphere between them a crisis that  concerns them all profoundly.  (All but Fedele, who has fallen asleep  with the fire-tongs in his hand.  He has been neither more nor less  reserved toward the Prince than toward the other guests.)  It is the  moment when the executioner’s ax is gathering to itself the weight of  finality.  The air between the blade and the neck of the condemned  becomes electric with an insuperable attraction.  No one dares enter its  dangerous current.  The moment is being swiftly drained of potential.   In seconds, actuality will succeed inevitability; and the ax will begin a  descent that neither a king’s pardon nor the executioner’s remorse can  stop.  Corrado enters with Grazia’s shawl.  The interruption is  sufficient.  The accumulating charge dissipates; the ax is lowered  harmlessly.  Prince Sirki relents.  Grazia smiles.  Duke Lambert takes  out his cigarette case.  Fedele wakes.  The guests move about the room  as if nothing has happened.  
 “Thank you,” says Grazia after Corrado wraps her white  shoulders.
 “Come with me into the garden!” he begs.  “The moon is  blood-red tonight, and nothing seems to sleep.  The larks and the  nightingales are singing in the trees.”
 She looks toward the windows, but they are still dead,  revealing nothing outside, reflecting nothing within.  She shivers and  closes herself within the shawl.  
 “I am very tired, Corrado.  I must go home to bed.”
 “But, Grazia–”
 “She had a fright this afternoon in the automobile,” says  the Baron, who has been drawn irresistibly to the young woman because of  her beauty or for another reason he himself does not know.  “It’s tired  her.”
 “We must be leaving now,” says Princess Maria, who senses  that her daughter has stepped, without knowing it, into a current  against which she is too weak to swim.  Maria only senses it; for the  dread with which she beholds her daughter standing inside the shadow of  Prince Sirki remains a nameless one.
 The Prince’s anger overtakes them like an early frost.   “They are leaving?”  He looks to Lambert for an explanation.
  “They did not plan to stay, your grace.”
 Only Lambert knows the cost to them all, should the Prince  be made to feel that he is other than what he seems.  
 “Believe me, your Grace—they did not mean to stay!”  Lambert  pleads; and in his pleading, his son perceives an abjectness, which  rankles him.  Shame for his father’s humiliation and for his own before  Grazia incites Corrado to act.  He moves against Sirki, intending to  fling an insult and a challenge at him, then halts.  There is an  inviolable zone around a monarch none may enter upon pain of sovereign  displeasure.  It is a realm in miniature whose borders are secured  against trespass.  That surrounding the Prince is mined with  destruction.  Duke Lambert seizes his son’s arm, roughly.  
 “Prince Sirki is my guest!” the Duke adjures him.
 “He insults us by his presence!” Corrado shouts—his voice  tremulous with indignation and fear.  “I demand that he leave at once!”
 “What is this insolence, Lambert?”  Sirki’s voice tolls a  warning.
 “Forgive him, Prince—his youth!”  The Duke pulls his son  from the brink.  “He doesn’t know what he is saying.  Forgive a young  man his folly!”
 Corrado allows himself to be led from the room.  He does not  admit his terror, telling himself that he withdraws in deference to his  father’s wishes.  Could Lambert see him, he would be struck by a face  emptied of blood.  If he looked closely, he would note a wildness in his  son’s eyes and a twitch in one eyelid.  But the corridor leading to the  conservatory is dimly lit.  
 “You must not provoke him, Corrado!  He is more dangerous  than you suppose.”
 Feeling himself safe, the young man answers with bravado:  “You should have let me slap his face for the insults he has given you.”
 “It would have been the last thing you ever did on earth,”  Lambert says with a solemnity that stops Corrado in midstep.
 “I thought he was your friend,” he says.
 “I met him for the first time tonight.”
 “Then he is not Prince Sirki?”
 The Duke does not reply.
 “Who is he, Father?  I demand to know!”
 “It is enough for you to know that he is a most powerful  prince who can, if he pleases, bring your life—all our lives—to an end.”
 “One man–!”
 “He can strike us without raising a hand.”
 Corrado shivers as if the cold emanating from Sirki has  pursued him.  “What does he want?”
 “To study us.”
 Corrado is bewildered.
 “Our fear.”
 “I don’t understand you.”
 “For all our sakes, Corrado, don’t meddle in this!  And  unless you want to bring catastrophe to this house, treat Prince Sirki  as you would any man.”
 “For how long?”
 “Until tomorrow night.  Now I must see to the others.  Your  room is the safest place for you.”
 “I’m not afraid.”
 “Be afraid, Corrado; be very much afraid.”
 Duke Lambert returns to the salon.  His wife and guests are  as he left them.  They stand with heads bowed before the Prince, who  also has not moved.  They are not, as Fedele appeared to be, asleep.   Seeing them now so immobile, Lambert imagines that it is he and not  Prince Sirki, who directs the action; his consciousness, which contains  them all.  They are like characters in a play, whose parts having been  performed, go backstage to smoke a cigarette, embrace, or read the  newspaper while their fictional lives are in suspension.  Their most  dramatic selves.  Are Stephanie, Alda, Rhoda, Eric, Cesarea—even the  Prince waiting for him to set them going again?  A pretty delusion!   Sirki turns to Lambert, and the others are immediately disenthralled.   The Duke quails as Sirki faces him.  But the Prince is smiling and so,  too, are the others.  
 “I have had a most enjoyable evening,” he says.  
 Lambert staggers, as if felled.  
 “I look forward to tomorrow,” Sirki continues with the savoir-faire of a courtier, which he has acquired during Corrado’s retreat.
 “Where are Grazia and Princess Maria?” the Duke asks.
 “Gone home to their beds,” Sirki replies.  
 Lambert’s face registers minutely his relief.  It does not  escape the Prince, who says: “They will be back tomorrow night for my  farewell party.   Grazia will be unable to resist.”
 The guests are laughing.  The bond, which joined them with a  force stronger than their wills, is dissolved.  Each is free to move  about the room with another whose interest is, for the moment, mutual.   Baron Cesarea and Eric stand by the hearth, smoking cigars.  Alda and  Rhoda sit on a banquette, vying in their fascination for the Prince—all  fear of him forgotten.  Stephanie goes to her husband to ask what has  happened to Corrado.  Fedele enters with a tray of brandies.  As if the  house were his, Prince Sirki proposes: “To the pleasant dreams of my  guests.”  His toast strikes all but Duke Lambert as presumptuous.  Even  so, they drink to those dreams, which are theirs—having felt, perhaps,  misgivings about the coming night, when they would each leave the shore  and drift out onto the black ocean alone.  
 Already, Grazia is drifting.  She and Princess Maria travel  in reverse the road that brought them earlier from Ravenna to the Villa  Felicitá; but they are not menaced by shadow, and the sedan presses  against the curves in the road almost amorously.  Maria watches as the  sea (the Adriatic, not the figurative one on which Grazia has set out)  approaches and recedes according to the road’s caprice.  Entranced by  the wind’s mussing the water silver, she thinks of nothing, nor does she  wish to ask her daughter how she has answered Corrado’s proposal of  marriage nor what she thinks of the irascible Prince.  She herself does  not wish to think of him at all.  His impertinent gaze disturbed her—how  it bore into one!  After the driver has brought the automobile to a  stop in front of the palazzo, Princess Maria nearly orders him to drive  on though the night, the next day and night, until he has traveled the  length of Italy, to Otranto, where she and her daughter can board a ship  to Africa, to China, to someplace far from the Villa Felicitá and the  Prince.  But she does not give the order, and the driver is now opening  the door for her.  Maria shakes Grazia awake, gently; for she is not yet  so far from shore that she cannot return.  
 Prince Sirki rests—he who is never tired; wills himself to  sleep, who has never slept.  To understand men, he must know the life  they lead asleep.  He has visited them so often in their beds, but never  slept.  He has entered their final dreams as easily as one might put a  hand through a pane of water and has watched their enactments of human  desire and fear—fear of Death, fear of him.  Desire, too, for him.  But  he has never dreamed.  He has listened to the cries of passion and  distress, the shouts, whispers, riddling speeches concealing so much of  interest to occultists and psychiatrists but not to him.  Until today,  when curiosity for once overcame him—curiosity concerning men: why they  should claim to fear him and yet do so much in his service.  For his  approval and—who knows?—love.    
 In the Great War, men showed a genius for the invention of  new forms of extermination.  No longer indifferent, Death hastened from  muddy ditch, to the garlands of twisted wire, to flaming oil spreading  mortally on the waves, to the burning cages in which men were hurtled,  like angels, from the heavens to a blasted, unlovely earth.  On earth,  in air, water, and in fire—there was not an element in which men did not  bring forth some novelty to enliven the history of slaughter.  He was  astounded by the eagerness of their complicity and enraptured by the  sight of so many caught in attitudes of submission.  For him, a death  has no moral quality, although it does possess an aesthetic one.   Sensuality is his only human aspect.  It has enabled him to make of  Grazia an object of desire.  Her beauty, however, is not a sufficient  explanation for his fascination.  If beauty were enough, Sirki would be  attracted to Countess Alda or the American girl, Rhoda.  No, Grazia must  possess a fatality—must be in love with Death without knowing it.   Perhaps this adoration compels her each morning to pray to the  Virgin—not to be delivered from it, as she believes, but unto it; for who among women is more qualified to be Death’s intercessor than  she who gave birth to man’s deliverance from it?  Her lassitude, her  remoteness—what are they but warrants of Grazia’s willingness to be  taken?  In dreams from which she wakes at once troubled and exultant,  like a wife remembering a lover’s embrace—she is ravished by Death.  
 In her bedroom in the palazzo, she is dreaming of the  Prince.  She sees him as the Medieval allegorists painted Death:  faceless, cloaked in darkness, carrying a scythe and an hourglass.  She  knows, in her dream, that Prince Sirki and Death are one and the same.   She is afraid of neither.  He comes to her where she lies beneath an  azure canopy embroidered in gold thread with astrological signs.  She  does not find him ridiculous; she does not feel revulsion at his touch.   He puts aside the scythe and the glass, removes his cloak as a lover  would and lies beside her.  He is a void.  An emptiness.  Nothing.  And  like nothing, immensely potent.  He ravishes her.  She need not part her  lips or open her legs to let in her death: it enters as easily as a man  does water.  Only it is Grazia who drowns.  Prince Sirki sleeps—he who  has never slept—and dreams this while Grazia rests in his dream, smiles  in its sway to be possessed by Death.  To be loved by him.  To be  adored.  In the morning, she dresses like a bride and returns to the  Villa Felicitá—unable to resist.
