A Spirit in Prison by Robert Smythe Hichens
page 29 of 862 (03%)
page 29 of 862 (03%)
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"The rest of me is. Are you all Sicilian?"
"Signorina, my mother is Sicilian." "And your father, too?" "Signorina, my father is dead," he said, in a changed voice. "Now I live with my mother and my step-father. He--Patrigno--he is Neapolitan." There was a movement in the boat. The boy looked round. "I must go back to the boat, Signorina," he said. "Oh, must you?" Vere said. "What a pity! But look, they are really still asleep." "I must go back, Signorina," he protested. "You want to sleep, too, perhaps?" He seized the excuse. "Si, Signorina. Being under the sea so much--it tires the head and the eyes. I want to sleep, too." His face, full of life, denied his words, but Vere only said: "Here are the cigarettes." |
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