Sanine - Page 210/233

At the foot of the hill it was less dark. Moonlight lay on the river,

and a cool breeze from its broad surface fanned their cheeks.

Mysteriously the wood receded in the gloom, as though it had given them

into the river's charge.

"Where is your boat?"

"There it is."

The boat lay sharply defined against the bright, smooth surface of the

stream. While Sanine got the oars into position, Sina, balancing

herself with outstretched arms, took her place in the stern. All at

once the moonlight and the luminous reflections from the water gave a

fantastic radiance to her form. Pushing off the boat from land, Sanine

sprang into it. With a slight grating sound the keel slid over the sand

and cut the water, as the boat swam into the moonlight, leaving broad

ripples in its wake.

"Let me row," said Sina, suddenly endued with strange, overmastering

strength. "I love rowing."

"Very well, sit here, then," said Sanine, standing in the middle of the

boat.

Again her supple form brushed lightly past him and as, with his finger-

tips, she touched his proffered hand, he could glance downwards at her

shapely bosom....

Thus they floated down the stream. The moonlight, shining upon her pale

face with its dark eyebrows and gleaming eyes, gave a certain lustre to

her simple white dress. To Sanine it seemed as if they were entering a

land of faerie, far removed from all men, outside the pale of human law

and reason.

"What a lovely night!" exclaimed Sina.

"Lovely, isn't it?" replied Sanine in an undertone.

All at once, she burst out laughing.

"I don't know why, but I feel as if I should like to throw my hat into

the water, and let down my hair," she said, yielding to a sudden

impulse.

"Then do it, by all means," murmured Sanine.

But she grew ill at ease and was silent.

Under the stimulating influence of the calm, sultry, unfathomable

night, her thoughts again reverted to her recent experiences. It seemed

to her impossible that Sanine should not know of these, and it was just

this which made her joy the more intense. Unconsciously she longed to

make him aware that she was not always so gentle and modest, but that

she could also be something vastly different when she threw off the

mask. It was this secret longing that made her flushed and elated.

"You have known Yourii Nicolaijevitsch for a long while, haven't you?"

she asked in a faltering voice, irresistibly impelled to hover above an

abyss.