The Call of the Blood - Page 187/317

"Don't say that!" he said. "Don't call me that!"

He had almost hissed the words out. Salvatore started, and for an

instant, as they walked side by side, the two men looked at each other

with eyes that told the truth. Then Salvatore, without asking for any

explanation of Maurice's sudden outburst, said: "Va bene, signore, va bene! I thought for to-day we were all compares.

Scusi, scusi."

There was a bitterness of irony in his voice. As he finished he swept off

his soft hat and then replaced it more over his left ear than ever.

Maurice knew at once that he had done the unforgivable thing, that he had

stabbed a Sicilian's amour propre in the presence of witnesses of his own

blood. The fishermen from Catania had heard. He knew it from Salvatore's

manner, and an odd sensation came to him that Salvatore had passed

sentence upon him. In silence, and mechanically, he walked on to the end

of the street. He felt like one who, having done something swiftly,

thoughtlessly, is suddenly confronted with the irreparable, abruptly sees

the future spread out before him bathed in a flash of crude light, the

future transformed in a second by that act of his as a landscape is

transformed by an earthquake or a calm sea by a hurricane.

And when the watercourse came in sight, with its crowd, its voices, and

its multitude of beasts, he looked at it dully for a moment, hardly

realizing it.

In Sicily the animal fairs are often held in the great watercourses that

stretch down from the foot of the mountains to the sea, and that resemble

huge highroads in the making, roads upon which the stones have been

dumped ready for the steam-roller. In winter there is sometimes a torrent

of water rushing through them, but in summer they are dry, and look like

wounds gashed in the thickly growing lemon and orange groves. The

trampling feet of beasts can do no harm to the stones, and these

watercourses in the summer season are of no use to anybody. They are,

therefore, often utilized at fair time. Cattle, donkeys, mules are driven

down to them in squadrons. Painted Sicilian carts are ranged upon their

banks, with sets of harness, and the auctioneers, whose business it is to

sell miscellaneous articles, household furniture, stuffs, clocks,

ornaments, frequently descend into them, and mount a heap of stones to

gain command of their gaping audience of contadini and the shrewder

buyers from the towns.

The watercourse of San Felice was traversed at its mouth by the railway

line from Catania to Messina, which crossed it on a long bridge supported

by stone pillars and buttresses, the bridge which, as Gaspare had said,

had recently collapsed and was now nearly built up again. It was already

in use, but the trains were obliged to crawl over it at a snail's pace in

order not to shake the unfinished masonry, and men were stationed at each

end to signal to the driver whether he was to stop or whether he might

venture to go on. Beyond the watercourse, upon the side opposite to the

town of San Felice, was a series of dense lemon groves, gained by a

sloping bank of bare, crumbling earth, on the top of which, close to the

line and exactly where it came to the bridge, was a group of four old

olive-trees with gnarled, twisted trunks. These trees cast a patch of

pleasant shade, from which all the bustle of the fair was visible, but at

a distance, and as Maurice and his party came out of the village on the

opposite bank, he whispered to Maddalena: "Maddalena!"