The Call of the Blood - Page 108/317

He had been invited to the festa and he had refused to go--almost eagerly

he had refused. Why? There had been something secret in his mind which

had prompted him. He had said--and even to himself--that he did not go

lest his presence might bring a disturbing element into the peasants'

gayety. But was that his reason?

Leaning over the wall he looked down upon the sea. The star that seemed

caught in the sea smiled at him, summoned him. Its gold was like the

gold, the little feathers of gold in the dark hair of a Sicilian girl

singing the song of the May beside the sea: "Maju torna, maju veni

Cu li belli soi ciureri--"

He tried to hum the tune, but it had left his memory. He longed to hear

it once more under the olive-trees of the Sirens' Isle.

Again his thought went to Hermione. Very soon she would be out there, far

out on the silver of the sea. Had she wanted him to go with her? He knew

that she had. Yet she had not asked him to go, had not hinted at his

going. Even she had refused to let him go. And he had not pressed it.

Something had held him back from insisting, something secret, and

something secret had kept her from accepting his suggestion. She was

going to her greatest friend, to the man she had known intimately, long

before she had known him--Delarey--and he was left alone. In England he

had never had a passing moment of jealousy of Artois; but now, to-night,

mingled with his creeping resentment against the joys of the peasants, of

those not far from him under the moon of Sicily, there was a sensation of

jealousy which came from the knowledge that his wife was travelling to

her friend. That friend might be dead, or she might nurse him back to

life. Delarey thought of her by his bedside, ministering to him,

performing the intimate offices of the attendant on a sick man, raising

him up on his pillows, putting a cool hand on his burning forehead,

sitting by him at night in the silence of a shadowy room, and quite

alone.

He thought of all this, and the Sicilian that was in him grew suddenly

hot with a burning sense of anger, a burning desire for action,

preventive or revengeful. It was quite unreasonable, as unreasonable as

the vagrant impulse of a child, but it was strong as the full-grown

determination of a man. Hermione had belonged to him. She was his. And

the old Sicilian blood in him protested against that which would be if

Artois were still alive when she reached Africa.