It
had taken me three days to cross the white
plains
which lay at the end of the distant Carpathians. A drover carried me
the last miles to the door of the old ducal palace. Rooks cawed
incessantly and a dung fire sent up a wavering line of blue smoke.
'It
is far from your land,' said the drover. 'Perhaps he will not be in.'
The
Dukedom of Vrigişti has its origins in the thirteenth century, when
the Crusaders annexed an area of land in the name of Honorius III,
creating a sovereign principality which lasted three hundred years
before being absorbed into the Ottoman Empire and reduced in status
to a Dukedom. The eleventh Duke of Vrigişti, the man I hoped to
visit, was sixty-five years old and had no heirs.
'Perhaps
not,' I said.
The
drover removed his hat at the palace gate. A kumquat seller joined us, pushing his two-wheeled barrow with the familiar, loping, gait of a Hutsul. A metal bell, shaped like
a mendicant's bowl, hung beside a rusting crucifix. I rang it and an
old woman, her
face as
lined as a dry river-bed, came to admit me.
The kumquat seller followed me into the courtyard. There, fig trees grew and two men sat in the shade, playing
dominoes. The building was formed in the style of the old palace at
Artukulu; its shutters were closed and faded. The air smelled of dust
and smoke and figs. The woman led me up a worn flight of stairs to a
piano
nobile.
'He
is tired,' she said. 'But he will see you.'
I
found myself in a great, empty room, its
cracked stone
floor
inlaid with Topaz. An elderly man was in the centre of the room, reclining on a velvet cushion. A bulbul began to call outside.
The walls were lined with pier-glasses and Iznik tiles. At last, the
man looked up at me.
'It
is kind of you to come. I am very poor company, that you should come
so far. Would you care for wine? We may drink it within the palace
walls. Please, sit.'
I
thanked him and sat, cross-legged, on the floor. He turned and
produced two glasses and a bottle of red wine from within a jadeite
box. A plate of figs was brought in by the old woman.
'Since
the Communists, it has been difficult.' The Duke's voice was soft and
musical. 'Winston Churchill told my father once in Tangier that they
would leave, one day, but that when they left, nothing would remain.'
He unscrewed the cap from the bottle. 'I can only offer you this. It
is a wine from Italy. I remember being driven along the corniche to
Ventimiglia, before the War. It is a Nero D'Avola.'
He
told me that once, he left the palace to travel. His brother, to
curry favour with the ruling elite, had stripped the palace of all
its possessions, including a table which once belonged to the
Princesse Eugénie
and a Chinese sarcophagus from the Tang Dynasty.
He gave
them to the local Party Secretary. Torches burned through the night
as the building was ransacked. On the Duke's return, the people of the
village made him a bed of fig wood to sleep on. Later, some of
the items were returned, including the jadeite box.
'They
say this is the WInemakers' Selection. But who are the Winemakers?
Once, I drank a wine called Taste the Difference. I could not taste
the difference.'
Outside,
the kumquat seller had joined the two men playing dominoes.
'Is
there anyone else in the palace?' I asked. He said, no, there were
only him and the old lady and the men playing dominoes. The palace
had sixty-six rooms, some with shreds of damask still clinging to the
walls, but most of the rooms were uninhabitable. The villagers came
in to work, but their own lives were hard.
Later,
I went to the village, where I found a room overlooking a grove of
lemon trees. A dog scratched at a verbena bush. I read a book about
Konstantin Melnikov. A storm was gathering and I went to play cards
at the local inn.
I
said, 'The Duke is very poor.'
One
of the card players said, 'He is not a duke. He is a farmer. The Duke
died two years ago. But he is a good man. When he dies, we will carry
his body through the streets of the village and carve a fine
headstone.'
The
first drops of rain began to fall.
CJ
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