[The Strolling Saint by Raphael Sabatini]@TWC D-Link bookThe Strolling Saint CHAPTER II 2/19
His death had made as little change in her apparel as in her general life.
It had been ever thus as far as my memory can travel; always had her raiment been the same, those trailing funereal draperies.
Again I see them, and that pallid face with its sunken eyes, around which there were great brown patches that seemed to intensify the depth at which they were set and the sombre lustre of them on the rare occasions when she raised them; those slim, wax-like hands, with a chaplet of beads entwined about the left wrist and hanging thence to a silver crucifix at the end. She moved almost silently, as a ghost; and where she passed she seemed to leave a trail of sorrow and sadness in her wake, just as a worldly woman leaves a trail of perfume. Thus looked she when she came upon us there that evening, and thus will she live for ever in my memory, for that was the first time that I knew rebellion against the yoke she was imposing upon me; the first time that our wills clashed, hers and mine; and as a consequence, maybe, was it the first time that I considered her with purpose and defined her to myself. The thing befell some three months after the coming of Falcone to Mondolfo. That the old man-at-arms should have exerted a strong attraction upon my young mind, you will readily understand.
His intimate connection with that dimly remembered father, who stood secretly in my imagination in the position that my mother would have had St.Augustine occupy, drew me to his equerry like metal to a lodestone. And this attraction was reciprocal.
Of his own accord old Falcone sought me out, lingering in my neighbourhood at first like a dog that looks for a kindly word.
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