randy in your throat and that will rouse you. I
will carry you now to that pallet over yonder, a poor place, no doubt,
and hard as a board."
He strode across the floor and laid the girl gently on the bed,
smoothing the pillow, and covering her lightly with the blanket. Kaya
opened her eyes again, and put out her hands as if seeking someone.
"I was falling," she said, "Why did you bring me back?"
The Kapellmeister sat down by the edge of the bed and began to whistle
softly; he whistled a theme once, and then he repeated it a semi-tone
higher. "I suspected as much," he said, "Was it because you had no
money?"
Kaya turned her face away.
"Were you starving?--Tschut! You needn't answer. Your eyes show it.
I might have seen for myself this morning, if I had not been in a
temper with the chorus, and my mind absorbed in other matters. Be
still now, here is the miller--the dotard!"
The Kapellmeister went over to the door, and took from the old man a
small flask and a newspaper wrapping some rolls. "So," he said grimly,
"Now go, and keep the rest of the gulden for yourself. No thanks!
Pischt--be off! Go back to your doorway and finish your beer, do you
hear me? I will look after the Fraeulein; she is conscious now, and I
have business with her." He motioned the old man back from the door
and closed it behind him; then he returned to the pallet. "I'm not
much of a nurse," he said, "You will have to put up with some
awkwardness, child; but there--raise your head a little, so--and lean
on my shoulder! Now drink!"
Kaya swallowed a few drops of the brandy. "That is enough," she said
faintly.
"No.--Drink!"
He held the glass to her lips, and she obeyed him, for his hands were
strong and his eyes compelled her. Then he broke the roll, and dipped
it into the brandy, and fed her piece by piece. When she tried to
resist him, he said "Eat, child--eat! Do as I tell you--eat!" and held
it to her mouth until she yielded.
She thought of Velasco and how he had fed her in the studio, and the
pulse in her wrist beat quicker. When she had finished the roll, he
put down the glass and the newspaper, and she felt his eyes searching
hers, keen and sharp, two daggers, as if they would pierce through her
secret.
"Don't speak," he said curtly, "Listen to me and answer my questions:
Why were you discouraged? I told you this morning you would hear from
me; why didn't you wait?"
The tears rose slowly into Kaya's
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