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irst. And twice a week he gave her a music lesson. "She has a splendid organ!" he would say. "Vous croyez?" fluted Madame Petrucci with the vilest accent and the most aggravating smile imaginable. It was the one hobby of the signorino's that she regarded with disrespect. Goneril, too, was a little bored by the music lesson; but, on the other hand, the walks delighted her. One day Goneril was out with her friend. "Are the peasants very much afraid of you, signore?" she asked. "Am I such a tyrant?" counter-questioned the signorino. "No; but they are always begging me to ask you things. Angiolino wants to know if he may go for three days to see his uncle at Fiesole." "Of course" "But why, then, don't they ask you themselves? Is it they think me so cheeky?" "Perhaps they think I can refuse you nothing." "Che! In that case they would ask Madame Petrucci." Goneril ran on to pick some china roses. The signorino stopped confounded. "It is impossible!" he cried; "she cannot think I am in love with Giulia! She cannot think I am so old as that!" The idea seemed horrible to him. He walked on very quickly till he came to Goneril, who was busy plucking roses in a hedge. "For whom are those flowers?" he asked. "Some are for you, and some are for Madame Petrucci." "She is a charming woman, Madame Petrucci." "A dear old lady," murmured Goneril, much interested in her posy. "Old do you call her?" said the signorino rather anxiously. "I should scarcely call her that, though of course she is a good deal older than either of us." "Either of us!" Goneril looked up astounded. Could the signorino have suddenly gone mad? He blushed a little under his brown skin, that had reminded her of a coffee-bean. "She is a good ten years older than I am," he explained. "Ah well, ten years isn't much." "You don't think so?" he cried delighted. Who knows, she might not think even thirty too much. "Not at that age," said Goneril blandly. Signor Graziano could think of no reply. But from that day one might have dated a certain assumption of youthfulness in his manners. At cards it was always the signorino and Goneril against the two elder ladies; in his conversation, too, it was to the young girl that he constantly appealed, as if she were his natural companion--she, and not his friends of thirty years. Madame Petrucci, always serene and kind, took no notice of these little changes, but they wer
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