登陆注册
20042900000029

第29章 CHAPTER VI(2)

Count Anteoni looked at her rather swiftly and searchingly. His eyes were not large, but they were bright, and held none of the languor so often seen in the eyes of his countrymen. His face was expressive through its mobility rather than through its contours. The features were small and refined, not noble, but unmistakably aristocratic. The nose was sensitive, with wide nostrils. A long and straight moustache, turning slightly grey, did not hide the mouth, which had unusually pale lips. The ears were set very flat against the head, and were finely shaped. The chin was pointed. The general look of the whole face was tense, critical, conscious, but in the defiant rather than in the timid sense. Such an expression belongs to men who would always be aware of the thoughts and feelings of others concerning them, but who would throw those thoughts and feelings off as decisively and energetically as a dog shakes the waterdrops from its coat on emerging from a swim.

"And sending it forth, like Ishmael, to shift for itself in the desert," he said.

The odd remark sounded like neither statement nor question, merely like the sudden exclamation of a mind at work.

"Will you allow me to take you through the rest of the garden, Madame?" he added in a more formal voice.

"Thank you," said Domini, who had already got up, moved by the examining look cast at her.

There was nothing in it to resent, and she had not resented it, but it had recalled her to the consciousness that they were utter strangers to each other.

As they came out on the pale riband of sand which circled the little room Domini said:

"How wild and extraordinary that tune is!"

"Larbi's. I suppose it is, but no African music seems strange to me. I was born on my father's estate, near Tunis. He was a Sicilian; but came to North Africa each winter. I have always heard the tomtoms and the pipes, and I know nearly all the desert songs of the nomads."

"This is a love-song, isn't it?"

"Yes. Larbi is always in love, they tell me. Each new dancer catches him in her net. Happy Larbi!"

"Because he can love so easily?"

"Or unlove so easily. Look at him, Madame."

At a little distance, under a big banana tree, and half hidden by clumps of scarlet geraniums, Domini saw a huge and very ugly Arab, with an almost black skin, squatting on his heels, with a long yellow and red flute between his thick lips. His eyes were bent down, and he did not see them, but went on busily playing, drawing from his flute coquettish phrases with his big and bony fingers.

"And I pay him so much a week all the year round for doing that," the Count said.

His grating voice sounded kind and amused. They walked on, and Larbi's tune died gradually away.

"Somehow I can't be angry with the follies and vices of the Arabs," the Count continued. "I love them as they are; idle, absurdly amorous, quick to shed blood, gay as children, whimsical as--well, Madame, were I talking to a man I might dare to say pretty women."

"Why not?"

"I will, then. I glory in their ingrained contempt of civilisation.

But I like them to say their prayers five times in the day as it is commanded, and no Arab who touches alcohol in defiance of the Prophet's law sets foot in my garden."

There was a touch of harshness in his voice as he said the last words, the sound of the autocrat. Somehow Domini liked it. This man had convictions, and strong ones. That was certain. There was something oddly unconventional in him which something in her responded to. He was perfectly polite, and yet, she was quite sure, absolutely careless of opinion. Certainly he was very much a man.

"It is pleasant, too," he resumed, after a slight pause, "to be surrounded by absolutely thoughtless people with thoughtful faces and mysterious eyes--wells without truth at the bottom of them."

She laughed.

"No one must think here but you!"

"I prefer to keep all the folly to myself. Is not that a grand cocoanut?"

He pointed to a tree so tall that it seemed soaring to heaven.

"Yes, indeed. Like the one that presides over the purple dog."

"You have seen my fetish?"

"Smain showed him to me, with reverence."

"Oh, he is king here. The Arabs declare that on moonlight nights they have heard him joining in the chorus of the Kabyle dogs."

"You speak almost as if you believed it."

"Well, I believe more here than I believe anywhere else. That is partly why I come here."

"I can understand that--I mean believing much here."

"What! Already you feel the spell of Beni-Mora, the desert spell! Yes, there is enchantment here--and so I never stay too long."

"For fear of what?"

Count Anteoni was walking easily beside her. He walked from the hips, like many Sicilians, swaying very slightly, as if he liked to be aware how supple his body still was. As Domini spoke he stopped. They were now at a place where four paths joined, and could see four vistas of green and gold, of magical sunlight and shadow.

"I scarcely know; of being carried who knows where--in mind or heart.

Oh, there is danger in Beni-Mora, Madame, there is danger. This startling air is full of influences, of desert spirits."

He looked at her in a way she could not understand--but it made her think of the perfume-seller in his little dark room, and of the sudden sensation she had had that mystery coils, like a black serpent, in the shining heart of the East.

"And now, Madame, which path shall we take? This one leads to my drawing-room, that on the right to the Moorish bath."

"And that?"

"That one goes straight down to the wall that overlooks the Sahara."

"Please let us take it."

"The desert spirits are calling to you? But you are wise. What makes this garden remarkable is not its arrangement, the number and variety of its trees, but the fact that it lies flush with the Sahara--like a man's thoughts of truth with Truth, perhaps."

He turned up the tail of the sentence and his harsh voice gave a little grating crack.

"I don't believe they are so different from one another as the garden and the desert."

She looked at him directly.

"It would be too ironical."

"But nothing is," the Count said.

同类推荐
  • 刘蕺山集

    刘蕺山集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 礼佛仪式

    礼佛仪式

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 楚游日记(节选)

    楚游日记(节选)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 隆兴编年通论

    隆兴编年通论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说离睡经

    佛说离睡经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 隔仙

    隔仙

    大秦,始皇派练气士出海访仙,无意触动了仙人遗留的法器。于是,天人通道不再相隔。数百年后的后秦,一个以武为尊的王朝,书生齐天该如何存在?这个江湖,有负箧而歌的老乞丐,有一剑万里的长胡子老道,更有眉生三眼的英气少年。少年齐天一头闯入江湖,挨了许多刀,吃了许多亏,可他还是喃喃自语:“这样的江湖,岂不快哉?天上的人干什么来?”这是一群英雄隔仙的事迹,也是一个美好的回忆。请期待。
  • 永恒诀

    永恒诀

    星辰写了一本小说《永恒诀》,结果竟然穿越到一个七彩空间。那里圣人的宝贝随处可见,还有无数宇宙文明的超级科技,更有美女相伴修炼《永恒诀》。拥有即使天地毁灭,人,仙,神,圣死绝,也能使修炼者永恒长存的《永恒诀》,星辰重回过去,一步一步,走向世界巅峰!
  • 豪门不入,冷少不嫁

    豪门不入,冷少不嫁

    她是一名暗黑杀手,不平凡的人生经历让她瞧不上任何人,但是,外表的冷漠可以骗得了傻子,内心到底什么样只有最亲近的人才知道,叶子铭、南墨、还有她的儿子傅微阳,这一切都太突然,南墨的蹂躏,叶子铭的告白,小儿子的早熟,一切的一切把她变成了一个没有了爱的人,若不是还有儿子在,她是真的想去死。。
  • 尘缘祸世:殿下的小殿下

    尘缘祸世:殿下的小殿下

    神女入世,异象繁生,天境崩裂,强者涌入,灵气异变,大陆混乱,神女影无踪迹。她,天降大陆,灵魂觉醒,记忆混乱,阵法无边,咒法无敌,寻魂封,只想着快点找回自己的记忆,快点回家。只是,这位殿下自己是什么时候招惹上的?“不好意思,我有喜欢的人了。”“哦?我倒是不知从小养大的你还会喜欢上别人。”“……”完全被吃的死死的。
  • 霸道校草独宠花心公主

    霸道校草独宠花心公主

    她是亚洲财团排名第二的苏家小公主--苏苏。有爸妈爱,管家伯伯疼,最重要的是还有一个宇宙无敌帅气的哥哥把她宠上天。可是有一天,爸妈居然要她跟亚洲财团排名第一的东宫家联姻,她才十七岁啊!她的亲亲老哥也帮不了她,于是她在老哥苏昊的帮助下华丽出逃了。她来到g市的一所贵族学校读书,倒霉的是来学校的第一天就把那些花痴少女的校草扑倒在地,还把他给吻了!从此,她惹上了冷酷霸道的东宫珀,开始了她苦逼的高中生活。偶然的机会,苏苏住进东宫珀的家里,他才发现小白兔其实是名副其实的小野猫。
  • 阿狸

    阿狸

    谁家少年打马而过,谁断了古曲,断了爱恨情仇与牵挂?她是西山仙子时,他对她宠爱。她是小狐狸时,他对她倾心。她是狐族公主时,他对她中意。究竟,谁是谁的劫……
  • 武道逆行

    武道逆行

    犯二自恋的少年凭着很怕死的精神,在乱世的洪流中力争上游。梦想着妻妾成群,却不料遭遇到暴力师姐、爱财小妹等“极品”美女,受尽欺凌虐待。梦想着成为武林高手,却不料被扯进江湖纷争,沦为正魔两道的棋子,丧失自由和生死的选择权利。他到底能否揭开一个个扑朔迷离的谜团,摆脱强加于自身的命运,实现遥不可及的梦想。武侠世界、悱恻爱情和历史背景完美地结合在一起,描绘了一幅主角和众多有识之士出于对苍生的同情,为太平盛世而奋斗的感人画卷。
  • 重生之黑暗纪元

    重生之黑暗纪元

    人类与异界大军最后一战中萧楚离奇重生在末世爆发前一天。既然老天给了我一次重生的机会,这一世我必将改写人类命运!
  • 《人经》三部曲之《情感本经》

    《人经》三部曲之《情感本经》

    《人经》是一部引导人们重拾健康信仰,重拾美好心灵的文学作品,只有经由对抗,我们才有属于自己的思想,只有介于一种有益的、积极的紧张关系中,我们的精神世界才能会复苏正常,我们的思想才有可能生成,我们的心灵才能重生。《人经》拒绝不偏不倚和随顺妥协,拒绝公允妥洽和跟风趋时,她是“脱序人”的诺亚方舟,是恢复和重建我们的精神家园的接引者,她希望能博得有正确理解的读者的共识。将对一切邪恶、冷漠和无知用万钧之力击毁之。《人经》对美好的事物有一种深入的了解,并希望普遍于我们的心灵,唤醒我们的信仰,催生我们的理想,滋养我们的心灵。
  • 第二眼幸福(全本)

    第二眼幸福(全本)

    文艺版简介:爱情,有时候倾其所有也修不来一个满分,默默的付出,痴痴的等候,换来的却是遍体鳞伤,然而,上帝是公平的,总会将另一个人送到你身边,一点一滴的渗进来,一点一滴的将原来的那个人挤出去,他或许不是最早,但一定是最好……对章依安来说,她一生的幸福,就来自于那第二眼的爱情雷人版简介:她是个痴心又胆小的女人,总以为她会一辈子傻傻地躲在背后注视着他的身影,默默地暗恋着他,守着自己的秘密,孤单地走过风雨……他是个很花心的男人,原以为,他会一直这样游戏人间、流连花丛,可自从在电梯里被好友最喜欢的妹妹撞上之后,一切似乎都变了……他是天之骄子,先天的聪颖再加上后天的幸运,令他在情场所向披糜,如鱼得水;在尔虞我诈的商场里更是从容自若,游刃有余……她之于他是青梅竹马,是可以聊天谈心的知己,亦是足可托以重负的好友,更是愿意倾心呵护的邻家小妹……只是有一天,当他发现他的好友正狂热地追求着她的时候,心,却似乎隐隐的痛了……