XLI.

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The cottage is still the old familiar white cottage at the foot of the lane. The dog on the step is Helen's dog. The bed of sweet-williams is still tended by Braine. The same old desk sits in the corner, at which the same earnest, grave man works, but all else is different.

There is no longer the seductiveness of shining cleanliness alone, but there have been added the proper settings of the Helen of long ago.

The cottage is dainty within;—rich with soft carpets and heavy hangings. It impresses one as a little incongruous at first, on entering with the impression of simplicity gained outside; but the feeling quickly wears off, and one is satisfied with the charm.

All was done in a week's time. She did not have to wait.

She apparently has been unimpressed with the change. She has accepted the luxury as she did the apparent poverty. Braine has no way of knowing whether it pleases her or not; whether she has a desire that he may make himself happy by gratifying her or not.

She sits always in one place—on a luxuriously soft, roomy chair in the window, with the flower-bed just in front of her. She sits half reclining here, from morning till night.

Braine attends to every want. He dresses her as deftly as a woman, in the morning; at night he assists her again.

She requires no waiting on. He stands for moments beside her sometimes, longing to hear her signify a desire that he may fulfil it. She wants nothing.

Sometimes her presence drives him nearly mad. He sits at the desk hour after hour, feeling her dark, brooding eyes fixed upon him. He endures it until he feels his senses swimming, and then sometimes looks up with a smile, terrible in its effort and pathos. He looks up to meet the relentless gaze that follows him from morning till night. Never a word, never a motion. Silence, passivity always.

She looks at one other thing—the sweet-williams in front of the window. Her expression may not change; it may be the relief that he experiences, when he knows that her eyes are not upon him, but he fancies that the gaze is less terrible, less forbidding when she looks at the flowers. For this reason, he brings her a fragrant little bunch each morning, each evening. He lays them in her lap. He never sees her touch them, but she never rejects them. She accepts them as she does everything else, in utter silence, passively.

Those brought in the morning are withered at night, and those brought at night, faded by day—but he never throws them away. They have been near her. They have touched her gown—possibly she has touched them with her hands. It is possible she has touched them with her lips—those lips he never dares kiss. At any rate he keeps the withered flowers. He puts them away, each little faded bunch, in a drawer in the strange little desk.

Sometimes he raises his head from his writing to speak. He meets her glance, and is dumb. Sometimes he thinks she must be lonely, and reads to her,—reads until the fascination of her eyes draws his glance from the pages, and he looks up with the feeling of horror and oppression that now possesses him. Sometimes he longs for the sound of her voice. Indeed, sometimes the longing becomes so intense that he clenches his hands, and the perspiration stands in great beads upon his forehead.

Sometimes he sits in the twilight, the silent figure near, and thinks of the tones of a voice long ago. He tries to recall the intonation she gave to his name, and certain phrases she used. He wonders if the tones are just right in his memory.

At these times he thinks every moment:

"Will she speak? She is about to speak now. In a moment she will speak my name." And he sits breathlessly, with his head partly turned. There is never a word, never a sound, never a motion.

He is working in his flower-bed. He puts down his trowel and hurries in, suddenly possessed with the idea—"She may feel like speaking, and I not be there." Or while he is at work among the flowers he looks up to find her looking at him.

Her dog is at her feet. She never notices him, never touches him. Braine can no longer find a trace of Helen, his wife, in this woman. He tries in vain to recall her expression.

This evening he is standing at the little gate leading to the lane. He leans on it in the sweet silence, that the birds are emphasizing. He is looking off into the far-away, his white hair touched by the setting sun.

Is it the effect of the dying light, or is his face different? His dark eyes have grown dreamy with their absent look. There is a half smile on his firm, tender lips; an expression of resignation, which is not dogged but cheerful; an expression that impels the squirrel on the rail of the fence to stay where he is, and the dog to poke his black nose into his master's hand.

He turns toward the house, stooping over the sweet-williams to gather the accustomed bunch. He goes into the cottage with them in his hand, the same half-smile on his lips.

In the doorway he pauses. He stands gazing at the figure in the chair by the window. What has come over him? He brushes his hand slowly across his eyes. Helen sits by the window. Where is the terrible face that has haunted him all these months?

He goes nearer. She is asleep. The setting sun burnishes the gold of her hair until it is like the aureole of a saint. It frames the face not of the woman who has sat in silence so long, but of the woman who loved him in his youth. The same sweet mouth with its tender smile. The wife of his youth, of his love, of his happiness, of his poverty, of his eminence, of—

He is at her side. The sun has lowered a little, and the delicate flush on her face is going with it.

He bends near her till his lips touch her tender ones that seem to invite.

He leans heavily against her chair. He lays the sweet-williams gently in her dead hands, as the sun sets behind the hill.


Juggernaut has passed over his soul and Helen's.

The End.


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Works of Biography
PUBLISHED BY
FORDS, HOWARD, & HULBERT,
30 Lafayette Place, New York.

Sir Philip Sidney: His Life and Times. By Mrs. S. M. Henry Davis, Author of "Norway Nights and Russian Days." Steel portrait of Sidney.

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Abraham Lincoln: The True Story of a Great Life. By Wm. Osborne Stoddard, Secretary to President Lincoln.

"Graphic and entertaining ... as rich in incident as any romance, and sparkling with wise wit and racy anecdote. It comprises a large mass of valuable and judiciously epitomized information."—Harper's Monthly.

Henry Ward Beecher: His Personality, Career and Influence in Public Affairs. By John R. Howard. With portraits.

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Bismarck: His Authentic Biography. By George Hezekiel. Historical Introduction by Bayard Taylor. Profusely Illustrated: New Map, etc.

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Bryant and His Friends: A Memoir of Wm. Cullen Bryant, and Reminiscences of the best-known Knickerbocker Writers—Irving, Halleck, Paulding, Cooper, Dana, etc., etc. By James Grant Wilson. Illustrated with portraits and manuscript fac-similes.

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Life and Letters of John H. Raymond. Organizer and First President of Vassar College. Edited by Harriet Raymond Lloyd. Steel Portrait. Ex. cloth, beveled,

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FORDS, HOWARD, & HULBERT,
30 Lafayette Place, New York.

ANONYMOUS. A Palace-Prison; or, the Past and the Present. Sanity Amid the Insane.

HENRY WARD BEECHER. Norwood: a Tale of Village Life in New England.

ALEXANDRE BIDA. Aucassin and Nicolette: The Lovers of Provence. Song-Story, from French of XIIth Century, trans. by A. R. Macdonough. Illustrated by Bida.

HELEN CAMPBELL. Under Green Apple Boughs. Illustrated.

JULIUS CHAMBERS. On a Margin. A Novel of Wall Street and Washington.

CHAS. M. CLAY. The Modern Hagar. Southern View of the War.

ALICE C. HALL. Miss Leighton's Perplexities. A Love Story.

WM. J. HARSHA. Ploughed Under: The Story of an Indian Chief.

JULIAN HAWTHORNE. Dust. A Novel. With Portrait and Illustrations.

NATHAN C. KOUNS. Dorcas: A Tale of the Catacombs. Illustrated by Will Low.

ORPHEUS C. KERR (R. H. NEWELL). There Was Once a Man. (Inverted Darwinism.) Illustrated.

MRS. A. G. PADDOCK. The Fate of Madame La Tour. Mormonism in Utah.

BLANCHE ROOSEVELT. Stage-Struck: or, She Would be an Opera Singer.

ALBION W. TOURGEE. Murvale Eastman: Christian Socialist; Hot Plowshares; A Royal Gentleman; Figs and Thistles; A Fool's Errand; Bricks Without Straw. Illustrated. John Eax, and other Stories; Black Ice.

WM. A. WILKINS. The Cleverdale Mystery: The Political Machine and its Wheels.

GEO. F. WILLIAMS. Bullet and Shell: A Story of War as the Soldier Saw it. Illustrated by Edwin Forbes.


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Southern California: Its Valleys, Hills and Streams; its Animals, Birds and Fishes; its Gardens, Farms and Climate.

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The Still Hunter: A Popular Treatise on Deer Stalking.

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Millionaires of a Day: An Inside History of the Great Southern California Boom.

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Rifle, Rod and Gun in California: A Sporting Romance.

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