At that moment a burst of music rose on the air, proceeding from the water beneath the balcony. Donna Violetta started back, abashed; and as she held her breath in wonder, and haply with that delight which open admiration is apt to excite in a youthful female bosom, the color mounted to her temples.
"There passeth a band," calmly observed the Donna Florinda.
"No, it is a cavalier! There are gondoliers, servitors in his colors."
"This is as hardy as it may be gallant," returned the monk, who listened to the air with an evident and grave displeasure.
There was no longer any doubt but that a serenade was meant. Though the custom was of much use, it was the first time that a similar honor had been paid beneath the window of Donna Violetta. The studied privacy of her life, her known destiny, and the jealousy of the despotic state, and perhaps the deep respect which encircled a maiden of her tender years and high condition, had, until that moment, kept the aspiring, the vain, and the interested, equally in awe.
"It is for me!" whispered the trembling, the distressed, the delighted Violetta.
"It is for one of us, indeed," answered the cautious friend.
"Be it for whom it may, it is bold," rejoined the monk.
Donna Violetta shrank from observation behind the drapery of the window, but she raised a hand in pleasure as the rich strains rolled through the wide apartments.
"What a taste rules the band!" she half-whispered, afraid to trust her voice lest a sound should escape her ears. "They touch an air of Petrarch's sonatas! How indiscreet, and yet how noble!"