"The poor signora!" said Gaspare. "I saw her beginning to cry when the

train went away. She loves my country and cannot bear to leave it. She

ought to live here always, as I do."

"Courage, Gaspare!" said Maurice, putting his hand on the boy's shoulder.

"She'll come back very soon."

Gaspare lifted his hand to his eyes, then drew out a red-and-yellow

handkerchief with "Caro mio" embroidered on it and frankly wiped them.

"The poor signora!" he repeated. "She did not like to leave us."

"Let's think of her return," said Maurice.

He turned away suddenly from the terrace and went into the house.

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When he was there, looking at the pictures and books, at the open piano

with some music on it, at a piece of embroidery with a needle stuck

through the half-finished petal of a flower, he began to feel deserted.

The day was before him. What was he going to do? What was there for him

to do? For a moment he felt what he would have called "stranded." He was

immensely accustomed to Hermione, and her splendid vitality of mind and

body filled up the interstices of a day with such ease that one did not

notice that interstices existed, or think they could exist. Her physical

health and her ardent mind worked hand-in-hand to create around her an

atmosphere into which boredom could not come, yet from which bustle was

excluded. Maurice felt the silence within the house to be rather dreary

than peaceful. He touched the piano, endeavoring to play with one finger

the tune of "O sole mio!" He took up two or three books, pulled the

needle out of Hermione's embroidery, then stuck it in again. The feeling

of loss began to grow upon him. Oddly enough, he thought, he had not felt

it very strongly at the station when the train ran out. Nor had it been

with him upon the terrace. There he had been rather conscious of change

than of loss--of change that was not without excitement. But now--He

began to think of the days ahead of him with a faint apprehension.

"But I'll live out-of-doors," he said to himself. "It's only in the house

that I feel bad like this. I'll live out-of-doors and take lots of

exercise, and I shall be all right."

He had again taken up a book, almost without knowing it, and now, holding

it in his hand, he went to the head of the steps leading to the terrace

and looked out. Gaspare was sitting by the wall with a very dismal face.

He stared silently at his master for a minute. Then he said: "The signora should have taken us with her to Africa. It would have been

better."




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