"It is all right. He is sleeping. Go to bed."

Lucrezia turned to go.

"And never mind getting up early to make the padrone's coffee," Gaspare

added. "I will do it. I am not sleepy. I shall take the gun and go out

after the birds."

Lucrezia looked surprised. Gaspare was not in the habit of relieving her

of her duties. On the contrary, he was a strict taskmaster. But she was

tired and preoccupied. So she made no remark and went off to her room

behind the house, walking heavily and untying the handkerchief that was

round her head.

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When she had gone, Gaspare stood by the table, thinking deeply. He had

lied to Lucrezia. The padrone was not asleep. His bed had not been slept

in. Where had he gone? Where was he now?

The Sicilian servant, if he cares for his padrone, feels as if he had a

proprietor's interest in him. He belongs to his padrone and his padrone

belongs to him. He will allow nobody to interfere with his possession. He

is intensely jealous of any one who seeks to disturb the intimacy between

his padrone and himself, or to enter into his padrone's life without

frankly letting him know it and the reason for it. The departure of

Hermione had given an additional impetus to Gaspare's always lively sense

of proprietorship in Maurice. He felt as if he had been left in charge of

his padrone, and had an almost sacred responsibility to deliver him up to

Hermione happy and safe when she returned. This absence, therefore,

startled and perturbed him--more--made him feel guilty of a lapse from

his duty. Perhaps he should not have gone to the festa. True, he had

asked the padrone to accompany him. But still-He went out onto the terrace and looked around him. The dawn was faint

and pale. Wreaths of mist, like smoke trails, hung below him, obscuring

the sea. The ghostly cone of Etna loomed into the sky, extricating itself

from swaddling bands of clouds which shrouded its lower flanks. The air

was chilly upon this height, and the aspect of things was gray and

desolate, without temptation, without enchantment, to lure men out from

their dwellings.

What could have kept the padrone from his sleep till this hour?

Gaspare shivered a little as he stared over the wall. He was

thinking--thinking furiously. Although scarcely educated at all, he was

exceedingly sharp-witted, and could read character almost as swiftly and

surely as an Arab. At this moment he was busily recalling the book he had

been reading for many weeks in Sicily, the book of his padrone's

character, written out for him in words, in glances, in gestures, in

likes and dislikes, most clearly in actions. Mentally he turned the

leaves until he came to the night of the fishing, to the waning of the

night, to the journey to the caves, to the dawn when he woke upon the

sand and found that the padrone was not beside him. His brown hand

tightened on the stick he held, his brown eyes stared with the glittering

acuteness of a great bird's at the cloud trails hiding the sea below

him--hiding the sea, and all that lay beside the sea.




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