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"A gold heart.... Just like mine!"
And as he said that he bent over and imprinted a kiss on the girl's neck.
Julia straightened herself up as though a pin had p.r.i.c.ked her, flushed deeply, and giving him a severe look, said in a m.u.f.fled voice:--
"I a.s.sure you that I do not wish you to do such a thing again!"
Saavedra looked at her with mischievous, mirth-provoking eyes, and not paying any attention to her anger, went on calmly talking to her. Julia, uncertain what course to take, replied gravely to his questions, and did not look at him. Finally his perfect calmness and confidence had their effect upon her, and in a little while she was as gay as ever.
Their relations continued on this friendly footing for a number of days, until suddenly Julia for some occult reason began to grow sober and melancholy. Some afternoons, instead of going to the parlor to talk with the visitor, she left him alone with her mother; if she met him in the corridor, she would give him a serious and furtive glance, and let him pa.s.s without a word; sometimes when he addressed her, she would not answer, pretending not to hear him; at other times, if she happened to go into the library, and found him there reading a newspaper, she would turn back in all haste.
All these signs of disregard or resentment, strange as it may seem, had no effect whatever on Don Alfonso, who, as though not noticing them, continued to show her the same gallantry as before, even more p.r.o.nounced if possible, and he did not in the least alter his habits, nor his hours of entering or leaving the house.
It must not be supposed that Julia was sad every day; there were some, when without the least apparent reason, she would appear extraordinarily gay, filling the whole house with her merry voice, rallying her mamma, her cousin, and every one who happened to be visiting them, and being far more audacious in her witticisms than usual.... But in the midst of this obstreperous gayety, she would suddenly stop for several moments, with her eyes set and ecstatic, and then her face would take on a very strange expression of pain.
On these merry days she would treat her cousin with unaccustomed amiability as though she were anxious to compensate him for the petty disdain that she had shown him in the days gone by.
Don Alfonso stole three or four more kisses, each time receiving an energetic protest on the girl's part, and finally the formal threat of telling her mother. Nevertheless, these were not the days when she was sad and down-spirited.
One evening Julia, Miguel, Maximina, and Don Alfonso formed a little group[19] in the _la brigadiera's_ library. Julia was very happy.
Suddenly Saavedra said:--
"See here, Julita, haven't you a sweetheart?"
The girl grew as red as a cherry; then pale. Miguel, seeing her embarra.s.sment, and being absolutely at sea as to the reason for it, hastened to her aid, saying:--
"Julia has not as yet decided upon any man; her character is too fickle...."
"What do you know about it!" interrupted the girl in a fury of pa.s.sion, casting a look of hatred upon him.
"My dear girl, I thought...."
"Please talk about what you know. You haven't the slightest idea what is going on in my mind," she rejoined, with a severe intonation; and turning to her cousin, and looking him straight in the face, she added:--
"And supposing I had, what of it?"
"Nothing," replied Don Alfonso, calmly. "How glad I should be if you had one worthy of you; but it seems to me that would not be very easy, considering what a nice girl you are, little coz!"
"Oh yes, I am an angel!" exclaimed the girl, in a sarcastic tone.
She remained a moment lost in thought, then, jumping up, left the room.
Miguel had been surprised by his sister's answer, not so much at the significance of her words as at the violent and scornful tone which till that time she had never used toward him. And stopping to think a moment, he was not slow to fathom what was pa.s.sing through the girl's mind.
She came back again after a few moments, with smiling face, the same as before, and began to enliven the _tertulia_ with her witticisms. She did not sit down, but kept moving about the room with the lithe grace and liveliness characteristic of her.
Miguel noticed, however, that there was too much excitement underneath her gayety: she went rapidly from one subject to another; she asked questions and answered them herself, and laughed boisterously at the slightest excuse. She sat down at the piano and began to play very loud; then she sang a romanza from an opera, and this she suddenly changed into a Spanish song, which she did not finish either. Then she quitted the piano to frolic with Maximina, whom she obliged to dance a polka whether she would or no; presently she accosted her brother and kissed him again and again, saying to Maximina:--
"You aren't jealous, are you now?"
Don Alfonso's eyes followed her in all these evolutions keenly and persistently, with a peculiar expression of gentle irony. Miguel noticed it, and made a slight gesture of dissatisfaction.
In the following days Julia's avoidance of her cousin increased, and was shown in a very unpleasant manner. He had only to come where she was for her immediately to leave the room: if he asked her to sing, or play the piano, she would give him a flat refusal; she did not address a single word to him, and if he asked her a question she would answer curtly and without looking at him. _La brigadiera_ noticed these shortcomings, and chided her severely, but without any effect. Don Alfonso pretended not to notice them, and continued imperturbably to treat her with his exquisite courtesy, and finding every opportunity to give her praise which, of course, she received with very bad grace.
One day at dinner time, while they were still at dessert, _la brigadiera_ was conversing socially with her nephew. Julita preserved an obstinate silence, making little b.a.l.l.s of bread and looking steadily at the table.
They were talking about a ball to be given by a certain duke, one of Saavedra's friends, where they were going to revive the ancient and cla.s.sic minuet. In fact, they had been practising it several days, and Saavedra had ordered an elegant costume of doublet and hose, the details of which he was carefully describing to his aunt.
Julita looked up, and giving him a saucy glance, said with peculiar malice ill-concealed:--
"It seems like a falsehood for you to engage in such things."
"Why, little coz?" asked Don Alfonso, smiling amiably.
"Because you are already an old man," rejoined the girl, with a scornful accent. A moment of silence followed that impudent thrust. It was _la brigadiera_ who broke it, and she was so furious that she could not complete her sentences:--
"You wicked girl! Insolent! Aren't you ashamed? How could you dare.... I feel as though I should sink through the floor!... (_standing up, in high dudgeon_). The idea!... Leave the room this very moment, you shameless creature!"
Don Alfonso, smiling with unchanged calmness, endeavored to pacify her, saying:--
"But what is the harm in her remark, senora? Julia has only told the truth. It is what I say to myself every morning when I brush my hair....
The worst of it is, that I am getting to be a boyish old man."
_La brigadiera_ would not listen to him, but pointed her daughter to the door, with extended arm; Julia, bursting into tears, but still with haughty and lofty face, left the room.
Don Alfonso went on trying to calm his aunt, who not having relieved her mind, as she usually did, in a more brutal fashion, in order to find compensation, heaped reproaches on her daughter. After she was somewhat relieved she got up and went to enjoy her _siesta_ for a little while.
Her guest likewise arose, with his cigar in his mouth, and with slow, lazy steps went to the sewing-room, hoping to find his cousin there. He was not disappointed; she was there, reading a book, with her head resting on one hand, and the other hanging over the back of the chair.
Don Alfonso halted at the threshold, and gazed at her for a while with an indefinable smile playing over his lips.
Julia sat motionless, rigid; the frown on her brow grew a trifle deeper.
Don Alfonso slowly approached her, and bending his head humbly, touched his lips to the girl's hand, at the same time saying:--
"Pardon!"
Julia gave a jump, knocking over the chair, and vanished like a vapor.
VII.
The life of Rivera and his wife had gradually come into regular channels; the house was now entirely furnished. Miguel arose early and went to his library to work. Maximina stayed some time longer in her room, making up for the trials which she had been obliged to undergo both at the convent and at her aunt's house. Her const.i.tution required much sleep, and she had never been able to satisfy this necessity. Once she had asked her aunt as a special favor:--
"Aunt, when will you let me sleep as long as I should like?"