Then Malory stopped smiling. He had assumed that the ball, the apple, was attached discreetly to another piece of stone or supported by a thin piece of iron or suspended by a filament from the ceiling or the outstretched hands of one or the other of the apple-tossers. But as Malory ran one hand and then another above, below, to the sides and then around the apple, like a Christmas magician at the Cambridge Corn Market, he could find no support, no suspension. The apple was floating in mid-air.
“Settimio.”
“Sí,” Settimio offered with his usual gentle guidance. “It is quite remarkable, is it not? Molto particolare.”
Molto particolare was not what Malory was thinking.
“I am hardly an expert,” Settimio said. “I understand that you are an aficionado of Signor Newton and the world of physics in general.”
“This is, well …” Malory hesitated at his own certainty in either observation or judgement. “This is, impossible.” Malory walked around the statue, knelt down below the apple, and peered up.
“And yet, mio Principe,” Settimio suggested, “the stars remain suspended in the heavens. The Moon itself moves in perfect balance around the Earth, which revolves in its turn around the Sun — all without the aid of supporting wires. From what I understand, Newton himself …”
“Yes, yes …” Malory’s mind was moving with impatience. He knew the astronomy and the physics of the motion of planets. He knew that the Sun drew the Earth towards its center and the Earth drew the Sun towards its own, and that the balance between the two depended on the size of each and the distance between the two, not to mention the speed of the Earth’s journey in orbit around the Sun. And he knew that the Moon and the Earth danced a similar tango and that even the Sun flirted with the Moon as it did with millions of hotter Milky Way companions on a somewhat larger dance floor. And he knew that everything was guided by the laws of attraction at a distance between bodies. And he knew, as Einstein and generations of physicists and historians and schoolchildren and BBC commentators, not to mention Anna Ford, knew, that Newton searched his whole life for a simple rule by which the motions of the heavenly bodies of the planetary system could be completely calculated, if one knew where they all were at one time.
And Malory also knew that theoretically — a word that was tossed around colloquia and High Tables like custard and claret—theoretically every body had its own gravitational pull. Every body was a magnet. Not just the Moon, but chunky asteroids, Apollo 13, Mount Everest, Moby Dick. Even a man the size of, say, Aldo Moro or Settimio — who was thankfully a few hairs shorter than Malory — had his own power of attraction. But it didn’t take too many experiments, with a shard of toothpick or even tissue, to realize that the gravitational pull of the Earth would yank any apple — McIntosh or marble — with a far greater force than a statue, even one carved by the great Gian Lorenzo Bernini, who could carve fingers clutching thighs out of marble and make you believe they were clasping flesh.
“May I?” Malory turned to Settimio, pointing at the apple.
“Everything in this villa is yours, my lord,” Settimio answered simply. “But there may be consequences.”
And sure enough, as Malory reached out to take the apple, he felt a tug from either side, as if the statue of Newton on the left and the statue of the woman on the right were fighting him — as surely as the Earth — for the piece of fruit. It wasn’t that the apple was so heavy or magnetic or sticky or golden. The figures tottered as Malory pulled, and Settimio stood by with widened eyes. It felt to Malory that just a little more effort … But no, he just could not move it. Malory let go. Newton and the marble woman and Settimio seemed to take a breath of relief and tottered no more, secure once again in a mutual attraction that had withstood more than three hundred years of dustings and earthquakes and other attempts, since Malory could not imagine he was the first to try to steal the apple.
Malory leaned back on the table and then slid down into one of the Tiberian chairs that Settimio quickly shifted beneath him. He took a fresh cup of tea from Settimio and chewed on the rest of his scone, all the while fixing his gaze on the marble apple.
“Settimio,” he said. “I’m ready. Please explain — what is this place you call my home?”
2/2
IO PRINCIPE,” SETTIMIO SAID, “YOU ASKED ME THAT QUESTION last night. I told you the story of Yehoshua the butcher who delivered Narbonne to the Franks. Of Charlemagne’s promise to give a kingdom to Yehoshua and his Jews. How Charlemagne sent a request to the Caliph of Baghdad to send him a Jewish prince from the line of David and Solomon to take the throne as the first King of Septimania.”
“You mean,” Malory asked, “that wasn’t just a bedtime story?”
“The statue that attracts you so strongly,” Settimio answered, “is it just a statue? This dining room — the chairs of Tiberian oak, the table of Jerusalem cedar — is not only the room where I hope to serve you many meals as my ancestors served a long line of kings before you, but also tells its own story of Septimania, bedtime stories stretching back to King Solomon, King David, and beyond.”
Malory’s nostrils opened to the barely perceptible but gently hallucinatory honey and clover, balsam and loam.
“The vestibule”—Settimio led Malory back to the Canova and the Michelangelo, Giotto, della Robbia, and half a dozen other Renaissance Italians—“is a poetic reminder that your ancestor Charlemagne was crowned Holy Roman Emperor, the way you were yesterday evening by the new pope.”
“I was?” Malory asked, less to Settimio than to the Santa Marta that reminded him so strongly of his mother and the Venus that had his grandmother’s hair — and only that, he hoped — and wondered why those two women hadn’t given him a little hint while they were alive that they, and therefore he, were descended from Charlemagne and King David.
“Holy Roman Emperor and King of the Jews.” Settimio walked out of an opening at the far end of the hub. “But the true genius of Yehoshua and Charlemagne was to befriend the Caliph of Baghdad. The friendship of Haroun al Rashid and the first King of Septimania is said to have been very great, almost biblical in proportion.”
“The Caliph of Baghdad?” Malory followed through an arch topped by a blackened medallion of another familial Virgin. Could she be Mexican?
“Welcome to the majlis, mio Principe.”
The long summers Malory had spent with his mother in the countryside outside Narbonne had been filled with illustrated books — the complete Morte d’Arthur of Thomas Malory with Aubrey Beardsley’s rose-crowned drawings; Richard Halliburton’s Book of Wonders with engravings of the Library of Alexandria, the Colossus at Rhodes, and other long-gone miracles of an ancient human race. And of course he had spent days, weeks, months in the inky harems and casbahs of Richard Burton’s One Thousand and One Nights. But to enter the majlis, as Settimio called it, was to abandon whatever reality his bath and tea and scone had provided him and give himself over to the storybook kingdom that Settimio insisted on calling his home. The walls were tiled, the ceiling honeycombed in a stone crocheted by a sweatshop of djinns. In the center of the room, a fountain of seven bronze lions gargled water into a stone basin.