<h2 class='c009'>CHAPTER X</h2></div>
<p class='c006' ><span class='sc'>Sybert</span> presently returned and dropped into the seat
opposite Marcia; the guard slammed the door and the
train pulled slowly out into the Campagna. They were
both occupied with their own thoughts, and as neither
found much pleasure in talking to the other, and both knew
it, they made little pretence at conversation.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia’s excited mood had passed, and she leaned forward
with her chin in her hand, watching rather pensively
the soft Roman twilight as it crept over the Campagna.
What she really saw, however, was the sunlit cloister of St.
Paul Without the Walls and Paul Dessart’s face as he talked
to her. Was she really in love with him, she asked herself,
or was it just—Italy? She did not know and she did
not want to think. It was so much pleasanter merely
to drift, and so very difficult to make up one’s mind.
Everything had been so care-free before, why must he
bring the question to an issue? It was a question she did
not wish to decide for a long, long time. Would he be
willing to wait—to wait for an indefinite future that in
the end might never come? Patience was not Paul’s
way. Suppose he refused to drift; suppose he insisted
on his answer now—did she wish to give him up? No;
quite frankly, she did not. She pictured him as he stood
there in the cloister, with the warm sunlight and shadow
playing about him, with his laughing, boyish face for the
instant sober, his eager, insistent eyes bent upon her, his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_88' id='Page_88'>88</SPAN></span>
words for once stammering and halting. He was very
attractive, very convincing; and yet she sighed. Life for
her was still in the future. The world was new and full
and varied, and experience was beckoning. There were
many things to see and do, and she wanted to be free.</p>
<p class='c007' >The short southern twilight faded quickly and a full
moon took its place in a cloudless turquoise sky. The light
flooded the dim compartment with a shimmering brilliancy,
and outside it was almost dazzling in its glowing
whiteness. Marcia leaned against the window, gazing out
at the rolling plain. The tall arches of Aqua Felice were
silhouetted darkly against the sky, and in the distance
the horizon was broken by the misty outline of the Sabine
hills. Now and then they passed a lonely group of farm-buildings
set in a cluster of eucalyptus trees, planted
against the fever; but for the most part the scene was
barren and desolate, with scarcely a suggestion of actual,
breathing human light. On the Appian Way were visible
the gaunt outlines of Latin tombs, and occasionally the
ruined remains of a mediaeval watch-tower. The picture
was almost too perfect in its beauty; it was like the painted
back drop for a spectacular play. Scarcely real, and yet
one of the oldest things in the world—the rolling Campagna,
the arches of the aqueducts, Rome behind and the
Sabines before. So it had been for centuries; thousands
of human lives were wrapped up in it. That was its
charm. The picture was not inanimate, but pathetically
human. As she looked far off across the plain so mournfully
beautiful in its desolation, a sudden rush of feeling
swept over her, a rush of that insane love of Italy which
has engulfed so many foreigners in the waters of Lethe.
She knew now how Paul felt. Italy! Italy! She loved
it too.</p>
<p class='c007' >A half-sob rose in her throat and her eyes filled with
tears. She caught herself quickly and shrank back in the
corner, with a glance at the man across to see if he were
watching her. He was not. He sat rigid, looking out at
the Campagna under half-shut eyelids. One hand was
plunged deep in his pocket and the other lay on the dog’s
head to keep him quiet. Marcia noticed in surprise that
while he appeared so calm, his fingers opened and shut nervously.
She glanced up into his face again. He was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_89' id='Page_89'>89</SPAN></span>
staring at the picture before him as impassively as at a
blank wall; but his eyes seemed more deep-set than usual
and the under shadows darker. She half abstractedly
fell to studying his face, wondering what was behind those
eyes; what he could be thinking of.</p>
<p class='c007' >He suddenly looked up and caught her gaze.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I beg your pardon?’ he asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I didn’t say anything.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You looked as if you did,’ he said with a slight laugh,
and turned away from the light. And now Marcia had
the uncomfortable feeling that from under his drooping
lids he was watching her. She turned back to the window
again and tried to centre her attention on the shifting
scene outside, but she was oppressively conscious of her
silent companion. His face was in the shadow and she
could not tell whether his eyes were open or shut. She
tried to think of something to talk about, but no relevant
subject presented itself. She experienced a nervous
sense of relief when the train finally stopped at Palestrina.</p>
<p class='c007' >The station-man, after some delay, found them a carriage
with a reasonably rested-looking horse. As Sybert helped
Marcia in he asked if she would object to letting a poor
fellow with an unbeautifully large bundle sit on the front
seat with the driver.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘We won’t meet any one at this time of night,’ he
added. ‘He’s going to Castel Vivalanti and it’s a long walk.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Certainly he may ride,’ Marcia returned. ‘It makes
no difference to me whether we meet any one or not.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, I beg your pardon,’ Sybert smiled. ‘I didn’t
mean to be disagreeable. Some ladies would object, you
know. Tarquinio,’ he called as the Italian with the bed-quilt
shuffled past. ‘The signorina invites you to ride,
since we are going the same way.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Tarquinio thanked the signorina with Italian courtesy,
boosted up his bundle, and climbed up after it. Marcellus
stretched himself comfortably in the bottom of the carriage,
and with a canine sigh of content went peaceably to
sleep. They set out between moonlit olive orchards and
vineyards with the familiar daytime details of farm-buildings
and ruins softened into a romantic beauty.
Behind them stretched the outline of the Alban mountains,
the moonlight catching the white walls of two twin
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_90' id='Page_90'>90</SPAN></span>
villages which crowned the heights; and before them rose
the more desolate Sabines, standing fold upon fold against
the sky. It was for the most part a silent drive. Sybert
at first, aware that he was more silent than politeness
permitted, made a few casual attempts at conversation,
and then with an apparently easy conscience folded his
arms and returned to his thoughts. Marcia, too, had her
thoughts, and the romance of the flower-scented moonlit
night gave them their direction. Had Paul been there to
urge his case anew, Italy would have helped in the pleading.
But Paul had made a tiny mistake that day—he had
taken her at her word and let her go alone—and the tiniest
of mistakes is often big with consequences.</p>
<p class='c007' >Once Sybert shifted his position and his hand accidentally
touched Marcia’s on the seat between them. ‘Pardon
me,’ he murmured, and folded his arms again. She looked
up at him quickly. The touch had run through her like
an electric shock. Who was this man? she asked herself
suddenly. What was he underneath? He seemed to
be burning up inside; and she had always considered him
apathetic, indifferent. She looked at him wide-eyed;
she had never seen him like this. He reminded her of a
suppressed volcano that would burst out some day with a
sudden explosion. She again set herself covertly to studying
his face. His character seemed an anomaly; it contradicted
itself. Was it good or bad, simple or complex?
Marcia did not have the key. She put together all the
things she knew of him, all the things she had heard—the
result was largely negative; the different pieces of evil
cancelled each other. She knew him in society—he was
several different persons there, but what was he when not
in society? In his off hours? This afternoon, for example.
Why should he be so at home by the Theatre of Marcellus?
It was a long distance from the Embassy. And
the man on the front seat, who was he? She suddenly
interrupted the silence with a question. Sybert started at
if he had forgotten she were there.</p>
<p class='c007' >She repeated it: ‘Is that man on the front seat Tarquinio
Paterno who keeps a little <i>trattoria</i> in Rome?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Yes,’ he returned, bringing a somewhat surprised gaze
to rest upon her. ‘How do you come to know his name?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, I just guessed. I know Domenico Paterno, the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_91' id='Page_91'>91</SPAN></span>
Castel Vivalanti baker, and he told me about his son, Tarquinio.
It’s not such a very common name; so when
you said this man was going to the village, and when I
heard you call him Tarquinio, I thought—why were you
surprised?’ she broke off. ‘Is there anything more to
know about him?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘You seem to have his family history pretty straight,’
Sybert shrugged.</p>
<p class='c007' >They lapsed into silence again, and Marcia did not attempt
to break it a second time.</p>
<p class='c007' >When they came to the turning where the steep road to
Castel Vivalanti branches off from the highway, the driver
halted to let Tarquinio get out. But Marcia remonstrated,
that the bundle was too heavy for him to carry up the hill,
and she told the man to drive on up to the gates of the town.</p>
<p class='c007' >They jogged on up the winding ascent between orchards
of olive and almond trees fringed with the airy leafage of
spring. Above them the clustering houses of the village
clung to the hilltop, tier above tier, the jagged sky-line of
roofs and towers cut out clearly against the light.</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia had never visited Castel Vivalanti except in the
unequivocal glare of day, which shows the dilapidated
little town in all its dilapidation. But the moonlight
changes all. The grey stone walls stretched above them
now like some grim fortress city of the middle ages. And
the old round tower, with its ruined drawbridge, looked
as if it had seen dark deeds and kept the secret. It was
just such a stronghold as the Cenci was murdered in.</p>
<p class='c007' >They came to a stand before the tall arch of the Porta
della Luna. While Tarquinio was climbing down and
hoisting the bundle to his shoulder, Marcia’s attention
was momentarily attracted to a group of boys quarrelling
over a game of morro in the gateway.</p>
<p class='c007' >Suddenly, in the midst of Tarquinio’s expressions of
thanks to the signorina for helping a poor man on his
journey, a frightened shriek rang out in a child’s high voice,
followed by a succession of long-drawn screams. The
morro-players stopped their game and looked at each other
with startled eyes; and then, after a moment of hesitation,
went on with the play. At the first cry Sybert had leaped
from the carriage, and seizing one of the boys by the shoulder,
he demanded the cause.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_92' id='Page_92'>92</SPAN></span>
The boy wriggled himself free with a gesture of unconcern.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Gervasio Delano’s mother is beating him. He always
makes a great fuss because he is afraid.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What is it?’ Marcia cried as she sprang from the carriage
and ran up to Sybert.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Some child’s mother is beating him.’</p>
<p class='c007' >The two, without waiting for any further explanations,
turned in under the gate and hurried along the narrow
way to the left, in the direction of the sounds. People
had gathered in little groups in the doorways, and were
shaking their heads and talking excitedly. One woman, as
she caught sight of Marcia and Sybert, called out reassuringly
that Teresa wasn’t hurting the boy; he always cried
harder than he was struck.</p>
<p class='c007' >By the time they had reached the low doorway whence
the sounds issued, the screams had died down to hysterical
sobs. They plunged into the room which opened from
the street, and then paused. It was so dark that for a
moment they could not see anything. The only light
came from a flickering oil-lamp burning before an image
of the Madonna. But as their eyes became accustomed
to the darkness they made out a stoutly built peasant
woman standing at one end of the room and grasping in her
hand an ox-goad such as the herdsmen on the Campagna
use. For a moment they thought she was the only person
there, until a low sob proclaimed the presence of a child
who was crouching in the farthest corner.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What do you want?’ the woman asked, scowling
angrily at the intruders.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Have you been striking the child with that goad?’
Sybert demanded.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I strike the child with what I please,’ the woman retorted.
‘He is a lazy good-for-nothing and he stole the
soup.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia drew the little fellow from the corner where he
was sobbing steadily with long catches in his breath. His
tears had gained such a momentum that he could not stop,
but he clung to her convulsively, realizing that a deliverer
of some sort was at hand. She turned him to the light and
revealed a great red welt across his cheek where one of the
blows had chanced to fall.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_93' id='Page_93'>93</SPAN></span>
‘It’s outrageous! The woman ought to be arrested!’
said Marcia, angrily.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert took the lamp from the wall and bent over to look
at him.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Poor little devil! He looks as if he needed soup,’ he
muttered.</p>
<p class='c007' >The woman broke in shrilly again to say that he was
eleven years old and never brought in a single soldo. She
slaved night and day to keep him fed, and she had children
enough of her own to give to.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Whose child is he?’ Sybert demanded.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He was my husband’s,’ the woman returned; ‘and that
husband is dead and I have a new one. The boy is in the
way. I can’t be expected to support him forever. It is
time he was earning something for himself.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Marcia sat down on a low stool and drew the boy to her.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘What can we do?’ she asked, looking helplessly at
Sybert. ‘It won’t do to leave him here. She would
simply beat him to death as soon as our backs are turned.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I’m afraid she would,’ he acknowledged. ‘Of course
I can threaten her with the police, but I don’t believe it
will do much good.’ He was thinking that she might
better adopt the boy than the dog, but he did not care to
put his thoughts into words.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I know!’ she exclaimed as if in answer to his unspoken
suggestion; ‘I’ll take him home for an errand-boy. He
will be very useful about the place. Tell the woman,
please, that I’m going to keep him, and make her understand
that she has nothing to do with him any more.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Would Mrs. Copley like to have him at the villa?’
Sybert inquired doubtfully. ‘It’s hardly fair——’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, yes. She won’t mind if I insist—and I shall insist.
Tell the woman, please.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert told the woman rather curtly that she need not
be at the expense of feeding the boy any longer, the signorina
would take him home to run errands.</p>
<p class='c007' >The woman quickly changed her manner at this, and
refused to part with him. Since she had cared for him
when he was little, it was time for him to repay the debt
now that she was growing old.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert succinctly explained that she had forfeited all
right to the child, and that if she made any trouble he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_94' id='Page_94'>94</SPAN></span>
would tell the police, who, he added parenthetically, were
his dearest friends. Without further parleying, he picked
up the boy and they walked out of the house, followed
on the woman’s part by angry prayers that ‘apoplexies’
might fall upon them and their descendants.</p>
<p class='c007' >Curious groups of people had gathered outside the
house, and they separated silently to let them pass. At the
gateway the morro-players stopped their game to crowd
around the carriage with shrill inquiries as to what was
going to be done with Gervasio. The driver leaned from
his seat and stared in stupid bewilderment at this rapid
change of fares. But he whipped up his horse and started
with dispatch, apparently moved by the belief that if he
gave them time enough they would invite all Castel Vivalanti
to drive.</p>
<p class='c007' >As they rattled down the hill Sybert broke out into an
amused laugh. ‘I fear your aunt won’t thank us, Miss
Marcia, for turning Villa Vivalanti into a foundling-asylum.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘She won’t care when we tell her about it,’ said Marcia,
comfortably. She glanced down at the thin little face
resting on Sybert’s shoulder. ‘Poor little fellow! He
looks hungrier than Marcellus. The woman said he was
eleven, and he’s scarcely bigger than Gerald.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert closed his fingers around Gervasio’s tiny brown
wrist. ‘He’s pretty thin,’ he remarked; ‘but that can
soon be remedied. These peasant children are hardy little
things when they have half a chance.’ He looked down
at the boy, who was watching their faces with wide-open,
excited eyes, half frightened at the strange language.
‘You mustn’t be afraid, Gervasio,’ he reassured him in
Italian. ‘The signorina is taking you home with her to
Villa Vivalanti, where you won’t be whipped any more
and will have all you want to eat. You must be a good
boy and do everything she tells you.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio’s eyes opened still wider. ‘Will the signorina
give me chocolate?’ he asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He’s one of the children I gave chocolate to, and he
remembers it!’ Marcia said delightedly. ‘I thought his
face was familiar. Yes, Gervasio,’ she added in her very
careful Italian. ‘I will give you chocolate if you always
do what you are told, but not every day, because chocolate
is not good for little boys. You must eat bread and meat
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_95' id='Page_95'>95</SPAN></span>
and soup, and grow big and strong like—like Signor Siberti
here.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Sybert laughed and Marcia joined him.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I begin to appreciate Aunt Katherine’s anxiety for
Gerald—do you suppose there is any danger of malaria at
Villa Vivalanti?’</p>
<p class='c007' >For the rest of the drive they chatted quite gaily over
the adventure. Sybert for the time dismissed whatever
he had on his mind; and as for Marcia—St. Paul’s cloisters
were behind in Rome. As they turned into the avenue
the lights of the villa gleamed brightly through the trees.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘See, Gervasio,’ said Sybert. ‘That is where you are
going to live.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio nodded, too awed to speak. Presently he
whispered, ‘Shall I see the little <i>principino</i>?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The little <i>principino</i>? what does he mean?’ Marcia
asked.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The little principino with yellow hair,’ Gervasio repeated.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Gerald!’ Sybert laughed. ‘The ‘<i>principino</i>’ is good
for a free-born American. Ah—and here is the old prince,’
he added, as the carriage wheels grated on the gravel before
the loggia and Copley stepped out from the hall to see who
had come.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Hello! is that you, Sybert?’ he called out in surprise.
‘And, Marcia! I thought you had decided to stay in town—what
in the deuce have you brought with you?’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘A boy and a dog, O Prince,’ said Sybert, as he set
Gervasio on his feet. ‘Miss Marcia must plead guilty
to the dog, but I will take half the blame for the boy.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio and Marcellus were conveyed into the hall,
and it would be difficult to say which was the more frightened
of the two. Marcellus slunk under a chair and
whined at the lights, and Gervasio looked after him as if
he were tempted to follow. Mrs. Copley, attracted by the
disturbance, appeared from the salon, and a medley of
questions and explanations ensued. Gervasio, meanwhile,
sat up very straight and very scared, clutching the arms of
the big carved chair in which Sybert had placed him.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘We thought he might be useful to run errands,’ Sybert
suggested as they finished the account of the boy’s maltreatment.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Poor child!’ said Mrs. Copley. ‘We can find something
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_96' id='Page_96'>96</SPAN></span>
for him to do. He is small, but he looks intelligent.
I have always intended to have a little page—or he might
even do as a tiger for Gerald’s pony-cart.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘No, Aunt Katherine,’ expostulated Marcia. ‘I shan’t
have him dressed in livery. I don’t think it’s right to turn
him into a servant before he’s old enough to choose.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘The position of a trained servant is a much higher
one than he would ever fill if left to himself. He is only a
peasant child, my dear.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He is a psychological problem,’ she declared. ‘I am
going to prove that environment is everything and heredity’s
nothing, and I shan’t have him dressed in livery. I
found him, and he’s mine—at least half mine.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She glanced across at Sybert and he nodded approval.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I will turn my share of the authority over to you,
Miss Marcia, since it appears to be in such good hands.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Marcia shall have her way,’ said Mr. Copley. ‘We’ll
let Gervasio be an unofficial page and postpone the question
of livery for the present.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘He can play with Gerald,’ she suggested. ‘We were
wishing the other night that he had some one to play with,
and Gervasio will be just the person; it will be good for
his Italian.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I suspect that Gervasio’s Italian may not be useful for
drawing-room purposes,’ her uncle laughed.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘I shall send him to college,’ she added, her mind running
ahead of present difficulties, ‘and prove that peasants are
really as bright as princes, if they have the same chance.
He’ll turn out a genius like—like Crispi.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Heaven forbid!’ exclaimed Sybert, but he examined
Marcia with a new interest in his eyes.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘We can decide on the young man’s career later,’
Copley suggested. ‘He seems to be embarrassed by these
personalities.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio, with all these august eyes upon him, was on
the point of breaking out into one of his old-time wails when
Mrs. Copley fortunately diverted the attention by inquiring
if they had dined.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Neither Mr. Sybert nor I have had any dinner,’ Marcia
returned, ‘and I shouldn’t be surprised if Gervasio has
missed several. But Marcellus, under the chair there,
has had his,’ she added.</p>
<p class='c007' >
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_97' id='Page_97'>97</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Copley recalling her duties as hostess, a jangling
of bells ensued. Pietro appeared, and stared at Gervasio
with as much astonishment as is compatible with the office
of butler. Mrs. Copley ordered dinner for two in the dining-room
and for one in the kitchen, and turned the boy
over to Pietro’s care.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Oh, let’s have him eat with us, just for to-night.’
Marcia pleaded. ‘You don’t mind, do you, Mr. Sybert?
He’s so hungry; I love to watch hungry little boys eat.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Marcia!’ expostulated her aunt in disgust. ‘How
can you say such things? The child is barefooted.’</p>
<p class='c007' >‘Since my own son and heir is banished from the dinner-table,
I object to an unwashed alien’s taking his place,’
Copley put in. ‘Gervasio will dine with the cook.’</p>
<p class='c007' >To Gervasio’s infinite relief, he was led off to the kitchen
and consigned to the care of François, who later in the
evening confided to Pietro that he didn’t believe the boy
had ever eaten before. Marcia’s and Sybert’s dinner that
night was an erratic affair and quite upset the traditions
of the Copley ménage. To Pietro’s scandalization, the
two followed him into the kitchen between every course to
see how their protégé was progressing.</p>
<p class='c007' >Gervasio sat perched on a three-legged stool before the
long kitchen table, his little bare feet dangling in space,
an ample towel about his neck, while an interested scullery-maid
plied him with viands. He would have none of the
strange dishes that were set before him, but with an expression
of settled purpose on his face was steadily eating
his way through a bowl of macaroni. It was with a sigh
that he had finally to acknowledge himself beaten by the
Copley larder. Marcia called Bianca (Marietta’s successor)
and bade her give Gervasio a bath and a bed. Bianca had
known the boy in his pre-villa days, and, if anything,
was more wide-eyed than Pietro on his sudden promotion.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c007' >As Marcia was starting upstairs that night, Sybert
strolled across the hall toward her and held out his hand.</p>
<p class='c007' >‘How would it be if we declared an amnesty,’ he inquired—‘at
least until Gervasio is fairly started in his
career?’</p>
<p class='c007' >She glanced up in his face a second, surprised, and then
shook her head with an air of scepticism.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_98' id='Page_98'>98</SPAN></span>
‘We can try,’ she smiled, ‘but I am afraid we were
meant to be enemies.’</p>
<p class='c007' >Her room was flooded with moonlight; she undressed
without lighting her candle, and slipping on a light woollen
kimono, sat down on a cushion beside the open window.
She was too excited and restless to sleep. She leaned her
chin on her hand, with her elbow resting on the low window-sill,
and let the cool breeze fan her face.</p>
<p class='c007' >After a time she heard some one strike a match on the
loggia, and her uncle and Sybert came out to the terrace
and paced back and forth, talking in low tones. She
could hear the rise and fall of their voices, and every now
and then the breeze wafted in the smell of their cigars.
She grew wider and wider awake, and followed them with
her eyes as they passed and repassed in their tireless tramp.
At the end of the terrace their voices sank to a low murmur,
and then by the loggia they rose again until she could hear
broken sentences. Sybert’s voice sounded angry, excited,
almost fierce, she thought; her uncle’s, low, decisive, half
contemptuous.</p>
<p class='c007' >Once, as they passed under the window, she heard her
uncle say sharply: ‘Don’t be a fool, Sybert. It will
make a nasty story if it gets out—and nothing’s gained.’</p>
<p class='c007' >She did not hear Sybert’s reply, but she saw his angry
gesture as he flung away the end of his cigar. The men
paused by the farther end of the terrace and stood for
several minutes arguing in lowered tones. Then, to Marcia’s
amazement, Sybert leaped the low parapet by the ilex
grove and struck out across the fields, while her uncle came
back across the terrace alone, entered the house, and closed
the door. She sat up straight with a quickly beating heart.
What was the matter? Could they have quarrelled?
Was Sybert going to the station? Surely he would not
walk. She leaned out of the window and looked after
him, a black speck in the moonlit wheat-field. No, he was
going toward Castel Vivalanti. Why Castel Vivalanti
at this time of the night? Had it anything to do with
Gervasio?—or perhaps Tarquinio, the baker’s son? She
recalled her uncle’s words: ‘Don’t be a fool. It will make
a nasty story if it gets out.’ Perhaps people’s suspicions
against him were true, after all. She thought of his look
that night in the train. What was behind it? And then
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_99' id='Page_99'>99</SPAN></span>
she thought of the picture of him in the carriage with the
little boy in his arms. A man who was so kind to children
could not be bad at heart. And yet, if he were all that her
uncle had thought him, why did he have so many enemies—and
so many doubtful friends?</p>
<p class='c007' >The breeze had grown cold, and she rose with a quick
shiver and went to bed. She lay a long time with wide-open
eyes watching the muslin curtains sway in the wind.
She thought again of Paul Dessart’s words in the warm,
sleepy, sunlit cloister; of the little crowd of ragamuffins
chasing the dog; of her long, silent ride with Sybert; of
the moonlit gateway of Castel Vivalanti, with the dark,
high walls towering above. Her thoughts were growing
hazy and she was almost asleep when, mingled with a half-waking
dream, she heard footsteps cross the terrace and
the hall door open softly.</p>
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