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"If you like. There is no necessity. Perhaps it will be disagreeable to you."
But Cecilia had already approached the bed and put the lint, ointment, and scissors in order. She cut a fresh piece of lint and carefully spread the ointment upon it. Gonzalo watched her somewhat shyly. She kept silent in her heroic efforts to overcome the confusion which nearly overwhelmed her. She was indeed repenting her suggestion, and she spent some minutes pa.s.sing the knife numberless times over the lint, with downcast looks, feigning engrossing attention to the task. At last, with a supreme effort she took up the lint, and, raising her eyes to her brother-in-law, she said, with a.s.sumed indifference:
"Are you ready?"
Gonzalo with a hesitating hand pushed back the bedclothes, and proceeded to unfasten his night-s.h.i.+rt slowly and shyly, until he had uncovered his muscular chest.
"Nice sight before dinner!" he exclaimed shamefacedly, repeating the remark expressed by his wife.
Cecilia did not reply, but proceeded to examine the wound still half covered with the blister that Ventura did not finish removing. Then she took the scissors, and with a firm hand she snipped away what remained of it.
"Do I hurt you?" she asked.
"Not at all."
When the wound was laid bare, as large as the palm of one's hand, she gently laid the lint upon it, pa.s.sed her hand several times over it to adjust it, put some linen over the lint, and without leaving off the pressure with her left hand, she took a band from the little table to keep the plaster in its place.
Then it was necessary to get the bandage round his back so as to tie it in front.
"Can't you do it?" he said, laughing nervously.
She did not reply, for she wished by her gravity to overcome the confusion to which she was a prey. She only betrayed her emotion by the slight trembling of her lips. Her eyes, half closed, shone under her long lashes with a real intense pleasure which the grave and quiet expression of her face could not conceal.
Gonzalo tried to cross the strings behind him, but it was impossible, and Cecilia came to his a.s.sistance. Her hand slightly trembled as it touched the young man's form, but she did not shrink from the performance of her task.
"A fine chest, eh?" he said with affected unconcern, to hide the embarra.s.sment from which they were both suffering.
"It is rather," returned Cecilia.
"Don't think it is quite natural. I got these arms and chest by rowing on the Thames."
"Rowing?"
"Yes, rowing. The richest youths there don a sailor's vest or s.h.i.+rt, and indeed it is considered fas.h.i.+onable to do so on the water. What trips we had down that river! Then every now and then there was a regatta, and the people flocked thither as they do to a bull-fight in Madrid. Fine races were held; it is a delicious amus.e.m.e.nt. What an excitement there was among us for days beforehand!"
He was quite elated at the recollection of those pleasant hours of health and strength, when neither love nor any domestic cares disturbed his merry life as a rich young athlete. Then seeing Cecilia's attention, he gave minute descriptions of little incidents in his athletic career.
He told her of the races he won, those that he lost, and all the particulars relating to them. He recounted his experiences before and after the events, the kind of diet which he had to adopt to gain strength and to lose fat; he described the costume that he wore, even to the shape of the boots, and he dilated on the cries of the crowd on the banks of the river.
"There were none there stronger than you," she said, her eyes eloquent with admiration.
"Oh, yes, there were none bigger than I, but there were some stronger,"
he modestly replied.
The shyness of both had now vanished, and the old, pleasant sense of familiarity had rea.s.serted itself. As he lay upon the bed, with his arms stretched out on the counterpane, he said that when he was quite himself again he would go to Tejada, for he would have to change his mode of life to avoid another illness; he thought of going in seriously for sport, he would set up a gymnasium near the house--in short, he made up his mind to be a different man altogether. Cecilia applauded his plans, and promised to accompany him sometimes. She liked Tejada much better than Sarrio; she was born for a country life, but her brother-in-law derided these remarks.
"You don't know what it is going shooting down there. I daresay I should have to carry you in my arms as I did Ventura."
"No fear; I am stronger than I look."
When the girl at last was leaving the room Gonzalo said timidly:
"Couldn't you read to me a little?"
Cecilia had thought of the idea herself, but as the young man had complained of his wife not doing so, she thought it would put Ventura in a bad position if she offered to do so.
"What would you like me to read?"
"Anything, as long as it is not one of those horrible novels that my wife is so fond of."
"All right, I will read you 'The Christian Year.'"
"Oh, come!" he exclaimed, laughing.
So Cecilia then took from the shelf a volume of poems and began to read, seated near the foot of the bed. In a quarter of an hour Gonzalo fell into a delicious sleep as tranquil as a child. The girl stopped reading and looked at him attentively, or rather fixed her loving eyes on him for a long time.
Then, thinking she heard steps in the pa.s.sage, and not wis.h.i.+ng to be found in that att.i.tude, she jumped up quickly from her chair and left the room on tiptoe. When Gonzalo was convalescent he carried out his wish of going to Tejada, and all the family accompanied him with the exception of Don Rosendo. It was the month of October, and instead of the yellow foliage of other estates, Don Rosendo's place, full of firs, presented a gloomy appearance not at all pleasing to the eye. The young man carried out his program of a hygienic life. He rose early, took his gun, called his dogs, and struck across the country, returning most days with a few partridges in his bag, and as hungry as a cannibal. When his expeditions were shorter Cecilia accompanied him, according to her promise. Although on these occasions few partridges were shot, Gonzalo enjoyed the society of such a sympathetic, agreeable companion. The girl would never confess to being tired, but he always guessed it by her faltering step, and made her sit down until she was rested, when the time pa.s.sed quickly in joking and talking.
But she had to struggle between her delight in these expeditions and the promises she had made her sister to work at the wardrobe for the child.
When the time had come to think about it, Ventura was about to order it from Madrid, but Cecilia said to her:
"If I have the patterns I will undertake to make the things as well as if they came from the city."
Ventura demurred a little at first, but seeing that her sister was set upon the task, she soon gave in, and Cecilia commenced the work with such enthusiasm that she hardly gave herself time to eat and sleep.
Sometimes, when her brother-in-law wanted her to go out, she would say:
"No, you must let me work to-day; I have hardly done anything the last three days."
And when he insisted and made light of her labors, she gave in, saying:
"Very well, it will be all the worse for you when you find that the child has nothing to wear when it arrives."
"Don't trouble about that, dear," he returned, laughing. "I have sufficient s.h.i.+rts for him and myself too, particularly if he is likely to have a predilection for low collars."
By the end of the month the open air and sun had made Cecilia very much stronger, and Gonzalo declared that she looked like a boy, a sailor boy, so sunburnt was her face.
CHAPTER XIX
VANITIES OF VENTURA
In the meanwhile Ventura led her sultana-like life, which was now more excusable. She hardly ever left the house. The minute care of her appearance took up a great deal of her time, and the rest of it was spent in the perusal of light novels. She grew more beautiful every day, and the incessant care of her person contributed not a little to increase her charms. She was like an artist in the indefatigable manner in which she touched and retouched her work in attending to her hair, her skin, her teeth, and her hands. Marriage had added to her beauty by giving an additional fulness and womanliness to her figure, and changing her springtide prettiness into a more developed loveliness. Even her state of health was no draw-back to her beauty, for it only seemed to give a greater dignity to her appearance. Then the wonderful taste, or better said, art, with which she knew how to adapt the color and form of her dress to her figure brought out all the charms of her lovely person.
And so the whole house was at Ventura's feet. All the human figures on those Chinese towers were swayed by her will, as if she were some feared and adored G.o.ddess. Even Dona Paula, who had been somewhat cool to her during the first months of her married life, succ.u.mbed to the sway.