She wondered if Gaspare knew that she was hating him.
He was alive and, therefore, to be hated. For surely we cannot hate the dust!
CHAPTER x.x.xVIII
Gaspare did not offer to help Hermione out of the boat when they reached the island. He glanced at her face, met her eyes, looked away again immediately, and stood holding the boat while she got out. Even when she stumbled slightly he made no movement; but he turned and gazed after her as she went up the steps towards the house, and as he gazed his face worked, his lips muttered words, and his eyes, become almost ferocious in their tragic gloom, were clouded with moisture. Angrily he fastened the boat, angrily he laid by the oars. In everything he did there was violence. He put up his hands to his eyes to rub the moisture that clouded them away. But it came again. And he swore under his breath. He looked once more towards the Casa del Mare. The figure of his Padrona had disappeared, but he remembered just how it had gone up the steps--leaning forward, moving very slowly. It had made him think of an early morning long ago, when he and his Padrona had followed a coffin down the narrow street of Marechiaro, and over the mountain-path to the Campo Santo above the Ionian Sea. He shook his head, murmuring to himself. He was not swearing now. He shook his head again and again.
Then he went away, and sat down under the shadow of the cliff, and let his hands drop down between his knees.
The look he had seen in his Padrona"s eyes had made him feel terrible.
His violent, faithful heart was tormented. He did not a.n.a.lyze--he only knew, he only felt. And he suffered horribly. How had his Padrona been able to look at him like that?
The moisture came thickly to his eyes now, and he no longer attempted to rub it away. He no longer thought of it.
Never had he imagined that his Padrona could look at him like that.
Strong man though he was, he felt as a child might who is suddenly abandoned by its mother. He began to think now. He thought over all he had done to be faithful to his dead Padrone and to be faithful to the Padrona. During many, many years he had done all he could to be faithful to these two, the dead and the living. And at the end of this long service he received as a reward this glance of hatred.
Tears rolled down his sunburnt cheeks.
The injustice of it was like a barbed and poisoned arrow in his heart.
He was not able to understand what his Padrona was feeling, how, by what emotional pilgrimage, she had reached that look of hatred which she had cast upon him. If she had not returned, if she had done some deed of violence in the house of Maddalena, he could perhaps have comprehended it. But that she should come back, that she should smile, make him sit facing her, talk about Maddalena as she had talked, and then--then look at him like that!
His _amour-propre_, his long fidelity, his deep affection--all were outraged.
Vere came down the steps and found him there.
"Gaspare!"
He got up instantly when he heard her voice, rubbed his eyes, and yawned.
"I was asleep, Signorina."
She looked at him intently, and he saw tears in her eyes.
"Gaspare, what is the matter with Madre?"
"Signorina?"
"Oh, what is the matter?" She came a step nearer to him. "Gaspare, I"m frightened! I"m frightened!"
She laid her hand on his arm.
"Why, Signorina? Have you seen the Padrona?"
"No. But--but--I"ve heard--What is it? What has happened? Where has Madre been all this time? Has she been in Naples?"
"Signorina, I don"t think so."
"Where has she been?"
"I believe the Signora has been to Mergellina."
Vere began to tremble.
"What can have happened there? What can have happened?"
She trembled in every limb. Her face had become white.
"Signorina, Signorina! Are you ill?"
"No--I don"t know what to do--what I ought to do. I"m afraid to speak to the servants--they are making the siesta. Gaspare, come with me, and tell me what we ought to do. But--never say to any one--never say--if you hear!"
"Signorina!"
He had caught her terror. His huge eyes looked awestruck.
"Come with me, Gaspare!"
Making an obvious and great effort, she controlled her body, turned and went before him to the house. She walked softly, and he imitated her.
They almost crept up-stairs till they reached the landing outside Hermione"s bedroom door. There they stood for two or three minutes, listening.
"Come away, Gaspare!"
Vere had whispered with lips that scarcely moved.
When they were in Hermione"s sitting-room she caught hold of both his hands. She was a mere child now, a child craving for help.
"Oh, Gaspare, what are we to do? Oh--I"m--I"m frightened! I can"t bear it!"
The door of the room was open.
"Shut it!" she said. "Shut it, then we sha"n"t--"
He shut it.
"What can it be? What can it be?"
She looked at him, followed his eyes. He had stared towards the writing-table, then at the floor near it. On the table lay a quant.i.ty of fragments of broken gla.s.s, and a silver photograph-frame bent, almost broken. On the floor was scattered a litter of card-board.
"She came in here! Madre was in here--"
She bent down to the carpet, picked up some of the bits of card-board, turned them over, looked at them. Then she began to tremble again.
"It"s father"s photograph!"
She was now utterly terrified.
"Oh, Gaspare! Oh, Gaspare!"