"What eyes!" said Hermione. "Did you ever see anything so expressive?"

Maurice did not answer. He was watching Gaspare, fascinated, completely

under the spell of the dance. The blood was beginning to boil in his

veins, warm blood of the south that he had never before felt in his body.

Artois had spoken to Hermione of "the call of the blood." Maurice began

to hear it now, to long to obey it.

Gaspare clapped his hands alternately in front of him and behind him,

leaping from side to side, with a step in which one foot crossed over the

other, and holding his body slightly curved inward. And all the time he

kept his eyes on Delarey, and the wily, merry invitation grew stronger in

them.

"Venga!" he whispered, always dancing. "Venga, signorino, venga--venga!"

He spun round, clapped his hands furiously, snapped his fingers, and

jumped back. Then he held out his hands to Delarey, with a gay authority

that was irresistible.

"Venga, venga, signorino! Venga, venga!"

All the blood in Delarey responded, chasing away something--was it a

shyness, a self-consciousness of love--that till now had held him back

from the gratification of his desire? He sprang up and he danced the

tarantella, danced it almost as if he had danced it all his life, with a

natural grace, a frolicsome abandon that no pure-blooded Englishman could

ever achieve, danced it as perhaps once the Sicilian grandmother had

danced it under the shadow of Etna. Whatever Gaspare did he imitated,

with a swiftness and a certainty that were amazing, and Gaspare,

intoxicated by having such a pupil, outdid himself in countless changing

activities. It was like a game and like a duel, for Gaspare presently

began almost to fight for supremacy as he watched Delarey's startling

aptitude in the tarantella, which, till this moment, he had considered

the possession of those born in Sicily and of Sicilian blood. He seemed

to feel that this pupil might in time become the master, and to be put

upon his mettle, and he put forth all his cunning to be too much for

Delarey.

And Hermione was left alone, watching, for Lucrezia had disappeared,

suddenly mindful of some household duty.

When Delarey sprang up she felt a thrill of responsive excitement, and

when she watched his first steps, and noted the look of youth in him, the

supple southern grace that rivalled the boyish grace of Gaspare, she was

filled with that warm, that almost yearning admiration which is the

child of love. But another feeling followed--a feeling of melancholy. As

she watched him dancing with the four boys, a gulf seemed to yawn between

her and them. She was alone on her side of this gulf, quite alone. They

were remote from her. She suddenly realized that Delarey belonged to the

south, and that she did not. Despite all her understanding of the beauty

of the south, all her sympathy for the spirit of the south, all her

passionate love of the south, she was not of it. She came to it as a

guest. But Delarey was of it. She had never realized that absolutely till

this moment. Despite his English parentage and upbringing, the southern

strain in his ancestry had been revived in him. The drop of southern

blood in his veins was his master. She had not married an Englishman.




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