"I think every one who knew the signore at all grew to be very fond of him," said Artois, quietly. "He was greatly beloved here by every one."
His manner to the Pretore was very civil, even respectful. Evidently it had its effect upon that personage. Every one here seemed to be a.s.sured that this death was merely an accident, could only have been an accident.
He did not know what more to do.
"Va bene!" he said at last, with some reluctance. "We shall see what the doctors say when the autopsy is concluded. Let us hope that nothing will be discovered. I do not wish to distress the poor signora. At the same time I must do my duty. That is evident."
"It seems to me you have done it with admirable thoroughness," said Artois.
"Grazie, Signor Barone, grazie!"
"Grazie, grazie, Signor Barone!" added the Cancelliere.
"Grazie, Signor Barone!" said the deep voice of the Maresciallo.
The authorities now slowly prepared to take their departure.
"You are coming with us, Signor Barone?" said the Pretore.
Artois was about to say yes, when he saw pa.s.s across the aperture of the doorway of the cottage the figure of a girl with bent head. It disappeared immediately.
"That must be Maddalena!" he thought.
"Scusi, signore," he said, "but I have been seriously ill. The ride down here has tired me, and I should be glad to rest for a few minutes longer, if--" He looked at Salvatore.
"I will fetch a chair for the signore!" said the fisherman, quickly.
He did not know what this stranger wanted, but he felt instinctively that it was nothing that would be harmful to him.
The Pretore and his companions, after polite inquiries as to the illness of Artois, took their leave with many salutations. Only Gaspare remained on the edge of the plateau staring at the sea. As Salvatore went to fetch the chair Artois went over to the boy.
"Gaspare!" he said.
"Si!" said the boy.
"I want you to go up with the Pretore. Go to the signora. Tell her the inquiry is finished. It will relieve her to know."
"You will come with me, signore?"
"No."
The boy turned and looked him full in the face.
"Why do you stay?"
For a moment Artois did not speak. He was considering rapidly what to say, how to treat Gaspare. He was now sure that there had been a tragedy, with which the people of the sirens" house were, somehow, connected. He was sure that Gaspare either knew or suspected what had happened, yet meant to conceal his knowledge despite his obvious hatred for the fisherman. Was the boy"s reason for this strange caution, this strange secretiveness, akin to his--Artois"s--desire? Was the boy trying to protect his padrona or the memory of his padrone? Artois wondered. Then he said:
"Gaspare, I shall only stay a few minutes. We must have no gossip that can get to the padrona"s ears. We understand each other, I think, you and I. We want the same thing. Men can keep silence, but girls talk. I wish to see Maddalena for a minute."
"Ma--"
Gaspare stared at him almost fiercely. But something in the face of Artois inspired him with confidence. Suddenly his reserve disappeared. He put his hand on Artois"s arm.
"Tell Maddalena to be silent and not to go on crying, signore," he said, violently. "Tell her that if she does not stop crying I will come down here in the night and kill her."
"Go, Gaspare! The Pretore is wondering--go!"
Gaspare went down over the edge of the land and disappeared towards the sea.
"Ecco, signore!"
Salvatore reappeared from the cottage carrying a chair which he set down under an olive-tree, the same tree by which Maddalena had stood when Maurice first saw her in the dawn.
"Grazie."
Artois sat down. He was very tired, but he scarcely knew it. The fisherman stood by him, looking at him with a sort of shifty expectation, and Artois, as he noticed the hard Arab type of the man"s face, the glitter of the small, cunning eyes, the nervous alertness of the thin, sensitive hands, understood a great deal about Salvatore. He knew Arabs well. He had slept under their tents, had seen them in joy and in anger, had witnessed scenes displaying fully their innate carelessness of human life. This fisherman was almost as much Arab as Sicilian. The blend scarcely made for gentleness. If such a man were wronged, he would be quick and subtle in revenge. Nothing would stay him. But had Maurice wronged him? Artois meant to a.s.sume knowledge and to act upon his a.s.sumption. His instinct advised him that in doing so he would be doing the best thing possible for the protection of Hermione.
"Can you make much money here?" he said, sharply yet carelessly.
The fisherman moved as if startled.
"Signore!"
"They tell me Sicily"s a poor land for the poor. Isn"t that so?"
Salvatore recovered himself.
"Si, signore, si, signore, one earns nothing. It is a hard life, Per Dio!"
He stopped and stared hard at the stranger with his hands on his hips.
His eyes, his whole expression and att.i.tude said, "What are you up to?"
"America is the country for a sharp-witted man to make his fortune in,"
said Artois, returning his gaze.
"Si, signore. Many go from here. I know many who are working in America.
But one must have money to pay the ticket."
"Yes. This terreno belongs to you?"
"Only the bit where the house stands, signore. And it is all rocks. It is no use to any one. And in winter the winds come over it. Why, it would take years of work to turn it into anything. And I am not a contadino.
Once I had a wine-shop, but I am a man of the sea."
"But you are a man with sharp wits. I should think you would do well in America. Others do, and why not you?"
They looked at each other hard for a full minute. Then Salvatore said, slowly:
"Signore, I will tell you the truth. It is the truth. I would swear it with sea-water on my lips. If I had the money I would go to America. I would take the first ship."
"And your daughter, Maddalena? You couldn"t leave her behind you?"