The Call of the Blood - Page 234/317

And as he spoke he was thinking, "Have I been this man's enemy?"

"Oh no. Why?"

"I deprived you of your wife. You've been all alone here."

"I made friends of the Sicilians."

Maurice spoke lightly, but through his mind ran the thought, "What an

enemy this man has been to me, without knowing it!"

"They are easy to get on with," said Artois. "When I was in Sicily I

learned to love them."

"Oh, love!" said Maurice, hastily.

He checked himself.

"That's rather a strong word, but I like them. They're a delightful

race."

"Have you found out their faults?"

Both men were trying to hide themselves in their words.

"What are their faults, do you think?" Maurice said.

He looked over the wall and saw, far off on the path by the ravine, a

black speck moving.

"Treachery when they do not trust; sensuality, violence, if they think

themselves wronged."

"Are--are those faults? I understand them. They seem almost to belong to

the sun."

Artois had not been looking at Maurice. The sound of Maurice's voice now

made him aware that the speaker had turned away from him. He glanced up

and saw his companion staring over the wall across the ravine. What was

he gazing at? Artois wondered.

"Yes, the sun is perhaps partly responsible for them. Then you have

become such a sun-worshipper that----"

"No, no, I don't say that," Maurice interrupted.

He looked round and met Artois's observant eyes. He had dreaded having

those eyes fixed upon him.

"But I think--I think things done in such a place, such an island as

this, shouldn't be judged too severely, shouldn't be judged, I mean,

quite as we might judge them, say, in England."

He looked embarrassed as he ended, and shifted his gaze from his

companion.

"I agree with you," Artois said.

Maurice looked at him again, almost eagerly. An odd feeling came to him

that this man, who unwittingly had done him a deadly harm, would be able

to understand what perhaps no woman could ever understand, the tyranny of

the senses in a man, their fierce tyranny in the sunlit lands. Had he

been so wicked? Would Artois think so? And the punishment that was

perhaps coming--did he deserve that it should be terrible? He wondered,

almost like a boy. But Hermione was not with them. When she was there he

did not wonder. He felt that he deserved lashes unnumbered.