The Call of the Blood - Page 268/317

"Who would come?"

"I should be frightened."

She thought she saw him look at her incredulously in the dark, but was

not sure.

"Be kind to me to-night, Gaspare!" she said.

She felt a sudden passionate need of gentleness, of support, a woman's

need of sympathy.

"Won't you?" she added.

"Signora!" he said.

His voice sounded shocked, she thought; but in a moment, when they came

to an awkward bit of the path, he put his hand under her arm, and very

carefully, almost tenderly, helped her over it. Tears rushed into her

eyes. For such a small thing she was crying! She turned her head so that

Gaspare should not see, and tried to control her emotion. That terrible

question kept on returning to her heart.

"Was I praying for myself when I prayed at the shrine of the Madonna

della Rocca?"

Hermione was gifted, or cursed, with imagination, and as she never made

use of her imaginative faculty in any of the arts, it was, perhaps, too

much at the service of her own life. In happiness it was a beautiful

handmaid, helping her to greater joy, but in unhappy, or in only anxious

moments, it was, as it usually is, a cursed thing. It stood at her elbow,

then, like a demon full of suggestions that were terrible. With an

inventiveness that was diabolic it brought vividly before her scenes to

shake the stoutest courage. It painted the future black. It showed her

the world as a void. And in that void she was as something falling,

falling, yet reaching nothing.

Now it was with her in the ravine, and as she asked questions, terrible

questions, it gave her terrible answers. And it reminded her of other

omens--it told her these facts were really omens--which till now she had

not thought of.

Why had both she and Maurice been led to think and to speak of death

to-day?

Upon the mountain-top the thought of death had come to her when she

looked at the glory of the dawn. She had said to Maurice, "'The mountains

will endure'--but we!" Of course it was a truism, such a thing as she

might say at any time when she was confronted by the profound stability

of nature. Thousands of people had said much the same thing on thousands

of occasions. Yet now the demon at her elbow whispered to her that the

remark had had a peculiar significance. She had even said, "What is it

makes one think most of death when--when life, new life, is very near?"