"Christian souls!" cried Nannina, "what's the meaning of this? A bath? What, water."
"Full to the brim with water, on the faith of a Catholic. Of course, if this continues I must die."
"Oh, sicuro, sicurissimo!" she agreed. "This is very serious, Ippolita. Eh, let me feel you. Are you ever dry, my poor child?"
"Dry to the touch, Nannina, dry to the touch. But it is within my body I fear it. I must be sodden, dearest."
"Send for a priest, Ippolita, that is the only chance. But, remember, when they have washed you, they put clothes upon you like these. Ah, but it is worth a girl's while to have silk upon her, and these chains, and these pearls. Corpaccio! there is no Madonna in Padua with such stones as these, nor any bishop either, upon my faith!"
Ippolita shook her beautiful head. "They are not worth the price of all that smelling water," she complained. "Try it, Nannina, before you speak. Seriously, I am very unhappy. Let me tell you something."
"Well?"
"No—come nearer. I'll whisper."
The two heads were very close together. Nannina's eyes became a study—attention, suspicion, justified prophecy, hopefulness; then saucerfuls of sheer surprise to smother every other emotion.
"Ma! Impossibile! And they have never—?"
"Never so much as a finger."
"But what? Are they—? Don't they—?"