The Call of the Blood - Page 137/317

"Bambina mia!" he said.

"I am not a bambina," she said, turning towards him again.

"Yes you are."

"Then you are a bambino."

"Why not? I feel like a boy to-night, like a naughty little boy."

"Naughty, signorino?"

"Yes, because I want to do something that I ought not to do."

"What is it?"

"This, Maddalena."

And he kissed her. It was the first time he had kissed her in darkness,

for on his second visit to the sirens' house he had only taken her hand

and held it, and that was nothing. The kiss in the dawn had been light,

gay, a sort of laughing good-bye to a kind hostess who was of a class

that, he supposed, thought little of kisses. But this kiss in the night,

on the sea, was different. Only when he had given it did he understand

how different it was, how much more it meant to him. For Maddalena

returned it gently with her warm young lips, and her response stirred

something at his heart that was surely the very essence of the life

within him.

He held her hands.

"Maddalena!" he said, and there was in his voice a startled sound.

"Maddalena!"

Again Hermione had risen up before him in the night, almost as one who

walked upon the sea. He was conscious of wrong-doing. The innocence of

his relation with Maddalena seemed suddenly to be tarnished, and the

happiness of the starry night to be clouded. He felt like one who, in

summer, becomes aware of a heaviness creeping into the atmosphere, the

message of a coming tempest that will presently transform the face of

nature. Surely there was a mist before the faces of the stars.

She said nothing, only looked at him as if she wanted to know many things

which only he could tell her, which he had begun to tell her. That was

her fascination for his leaping youth, his wild heart of youth--this

ignorance and this desire to know. He had sat in spirit at the feet of

Hermione and loved her with a sort of boyish humbleness. Now one sat at

his feet. And the attitude woke up in him a desire that was fierce in its

intensity--the desire to teach Maddalena the great realities of love.

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

Faintly there came to them a cry across the sea.

"Gaspare!" Maurice said.

He turned his head. In the darkness, high up, he saw a light, descending,

ascending, then describing a wild circle.