As he drew near to the cottage he walked carefully, though still swiftly,

but when he reached it he paused, bent forward his head, and listened.

He was in the tangle of coarse grass that grew right up to the north wall

of the cottage, and close to the angle which hid from him the sea-side

and the cottage door. At first he heard nothing except the faint murmur

of the sea upon the rocks. His stillness now was as complete as had been

his previous activity, and in the one he was as assured as in the other.

Some five minutes passed. Again and again, with a measured monotony, came

to him the regular lisp of the waves. The grass rustled against his legs

as the little wind of morning pushed its way through it gently, and a

bird chirped above his head in the olive-trees and was answered by

another bird. And just then, as if in reply to the voices of the birds,

he heard the sound of human voices. They were distant and faint almost as

the lisp of the sea, and were surely coming towards him from the sea.

When Gaspare realized that the speakers were not in the cottage he crept

round the angle of the wall, slipped across the open space that fronted

the cottage door, and, gaining the trees, stood still in almost exactly

the place where Maurice had stood when he watched Maddalena in the dawn.

The voices sounded again and nearer. There was a little laugh in a girl's

voice, then the dry twang of the plucked strings of a guitar, then

silence. After a minute the guitar strings twanged again, and a girl's

voice began to sing a peasant song, "Zampagnaro."

At the end of the verse there was an imitation of the ceramella by the

voice, humming, or rather whining, bouche fermée. As it ceased a man's

voice said: "Ancora! Ancora!"

The girl's voice began the imitation again, and the man's voice joined in

grotesquely, exaggerating the imitation farcically and closing it with a

boyish shout.

In response, standing under the trees, Gaspare shouted. He had meant to

keep silence; but the twang of the guitar, with its suggestion of a

festa, the singing voices, the youthful laughter, and the final

exclamation ringing out in the dawn, overcame the angry and suspicious

spirit that had hitherto dominated him. The boy's imp of fun was up and

dancing within him. He could not drive it out or lay it to rest.

"Hi--yi--yi--yi--yi!"

His voice died away, and was answered by a silence that seemed like a

startled thing holding its breath.




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