“How do you know it?”
“Because he told me so.”
“HE told you? Montanelli? Gemma, what do you mean?”
She pushed the hair back from her forehead and turned towards him. They were standing still again, he leaning on the balustrade and she slowly drawing lines on the pavement with the point of her umbrella.
“Cesare, you and I have been friends for all these years, and I have never told you what really happened about Arthur.”
“There is no need to tell me, dear,” he broke in hastily; “I know all about it already.”
“Giovanni told you?”
“Yes, when he was dying. He told me about it one night when I was sitting up with him. He said—— Gemma, dear, I had better tell you the truth, now we have begun talking about it—he said that you were always brooding over that wretched story, and he begged me to be as good a friend to you as I could and try to keep you from thinking of it. And I have tried to, dear, though I may not have succeeded—I have, indeed.”
“I know you have,” she answered softly, raising her eyes for a moment; “I should have been badly off without your friendship. But—Giovanni did not tell you about Monsignor Montanelli, then?”
“No, I didn't know that he had anything to do with it. What he told me was about—all that affair with the spy, and about——”