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o him for intensity, so was Salvatore intense in a different way, but for a similar reason. They were walking in step without being aware of it. Or were they not rather racing neck to neck, like passionate opponents? There was little time. Then they must use what there was to the full. They must not let one single moment find them lazy, indifferent. [Illustration: "'I AM CONTENT WITHOUT ANYTHING, SIGNORINO,' SHE SAID"] Under the cover of the flood of talk Maurice turned to Maddalena. She was taking no part in it, but was eating her macaroni gently, as if it were a new and wonderful food. So Maurice thought as he looked at her. To-day there was something strange, almost pathetic, to him in Maddalena, a softness, an innocent refinement that made him imagine her in another life than hers, and with other companions, in a life as free but less hard, with companions as natural but less ruthless to women. "Maddalena," he said to her. "They all want to buy things at the auction." "Si, signore." "And you?" "I, signorino?" "Yes, don't you want to buy something?" He was testing her, testing her memory. She looked at him above her fork, from which the macaroni streamed down. "I am content without anything, signorino," she said. "Without the blue dress and the ear-rings, longer than that?" He measured imaginary ear-rings in the air. "Have you forgotten, Maddalena?" She blushed and bent over her plate. She had not forgotten. All the day since she rose at dawn she had been thinking of Maurice's old promise. But she did not know that he remembered it, and his remembrance of it came to her now as a lovely surprise. He bent his head down nearer to her. "When they are all at the auction, we will go to buy the blue dress and the ear-rings," he almost whispered. "We will go by ourselves. Shall we?" "Si, signore." Her voice was very small and her cheeks still held their flush. She glanced, with eyes that were unusually conscious, to right and left of her, to see if the neighbors had noticed their colloquy. And that look of consciousness made Maurice suddenly understand that this limit which he had put to his sinning--so he had called it with a sort of angry mental sincerity, summoned, perhaps, to match the tremendous sincerity of his wife which he was meeting with a lie to-day--his sinning against Hermione was also a limit to something else. Had he not sinned against Maddalena, sinned when he had kissed her,
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