A second pistol-shot rang out sharply.

"Go down and meet him, Lucrezia."

"May I--may I, really, signora?"

"Yes; go quickly."

Lucrezia bent down and kissed her padrona's hand.

"Bacio la mano, bacio la mano a Lei!"

Then, bareheaded, she went out from the awning into the glare of the

sunshine, passed through the ruined archway, and disappeared among the

rocks. She had gone to her music. Hermione stayed to listen to hers, the

crack of the pistol up there near the blue sky.

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Sebastiano was playing the tune she loved, the "Pastorale," but to-day

she did not heed it. Indeed, now that she was left alone she was not

conscious that she heard it. Her heart was on the hill-top near the blue.

Again and again the shots rang out. It seemed to Hermione that she knew

which were fired by Maurice and which by Gaspare, and she whispered to

herself "That's Maurice!" when she fancied one was his. Presently she was

aware of some slight change and wondered what it was. Something had

ceased, and its cessation recalled her mind to her surroundings. She

looked round her, then down to the ravine, and then at once she

understood. There was no more music from the ceramella. Lucrezia had met

Sebastiano under the olives. That was certain. Hermione smiled. Her

woman's imagination pictured easily enough why the player had stopped.

She hoped Lucrezia was happy. Her first words, still more her manner, had

shown Hermione the depth of her heart. There was fire there, fire that

burned before a shrine when she prayed to the Madonna della Rocca. She

was ready even to be badly treated if only she might have Sebastiano. It

seemed to be all one to her. She had no illusions, but her heart knew

what it needed.

Crack went the pistol up on the mountain-top.

"That's not Maurice!" Hermione thought.

There was another report, then another.

"That last one was Maurice!"

Lucrezia did not seem even to expect a man to be true and faithful.

Perhaps she knew the Sicilian character too well. Hermione lifted her

face up and looked towards the mountain. Her mind had gone once more to

the Thames Embankment. As once she had mentally put Gaspare beside

Artois, so now she mentally put Lucrezia. Lucrezia distrusted the south,

and she was of it. Men must be as God had made them, she said, and

evidently she thought that God had made them to run wild, careless of

woman's feelings, careless of everything save their own vagrant desires.

The tarantella--that was the dance of the soil here, the dance of the

blood. And in the tarantella each of the dancers seemed governed by his

own sweet will, possessed by a merry, mad devil, whose promptings he

followed with a sort of gracious and charming violence, giving himself up

joyously, eagerly, utterly--to what? To his whim. Was the tarantella an

allegory of life here? How strangely well Maurice had danced it on that

first day of their arrival. She felt again that sense of separation which

brought with it a faint and creeping melancholy.




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