"Is
there anything that I can do--"
The next words were suspended on his lips. It was impossible to
realize such a state of things; but the strange impression that she
had already produced on him was now confirmed. If he could believe
his senses, her face did certainly tell him that he was invisible
and inaudible to the woman whom he had just addressed! She moved
slowly away with a heavy sigh, like a person disappointed and
distressed. Following her with his eyes, he saw the dog once
more--a little smooth-coated terrier of the ordinary English breed.
The dog showed none of the restless activity of his race. With his
head down and his tail depressed, he crouched like a creature
paralyzed by fear. His mistress roused him by a call. He followed
her listlessly as she turned away.
After walking a few paces only, she suddenly stood still.
Mr. Rayburn heard her talking to herself.
"Did I feel it again?" she said, as if perplexed by
some doubt that awed or grieved her. After a while her arms rose
slowly, and opened with a gentle caressing action--an embrace
strangely offered to the empty air! "No," she said to
herself, sadly, after waiting a moment. "More perhaps when
to-morrow comes--no more to-day." She looked up at the clear
blue sky. "The beautiful sunlight! the merciful
sunlight!" she murmured. "I should have died if it had
happened in the dark."
Once more she called to the dog; and once more she walked slowly
away.
"Is she going home, papa?' the child asked.
"We will try and find out," the father answered.
He was by this time convinced that the poor creature was in no
condition to be permitted to go out without some one to take care
of her. From motives of humanity, he was resolved on making the
attempt to communicate with her friends.
III.
THE lady left the Gardens by the nearest gate; stopping to lower
her veil before she turned into the busy thoroughfare which leads
to Kensington. Advancing a little way along the High Street, she
entered a house of respectable appearance, with a card in one of
the windows which announced that apartments were to let.
Mr. Rayburn waited a minute--then knocked at the door, and asked
if he could see the mistress of the house. The servant showed him
into a room on the ground floor, neatly but scantily furnished. One
little white object varied the grim brown monotony of the empty
table. It was a visiting-card.
With a child's unceremonious curiosity Lucy pounced on the
card, and spelled the name, letter by letter: "Z, A, N,
T," she repeated. "What does that mean ?"
Her father looked at the card, as he took it away from her, and
put it back on the table. The name was printed, and the address was
added in pencil: "Mr. John Zant, Purley's Hotel."
The mistress made her appearance. Mr. Rayburn heartily wishe d
himself out of the house again, the moment he saw her. The ways in
which it is possible to cultivate the social virtues are more
numerous and more varied than is generally supposed. This
lady's way had apparently accustomed her to meet her
fellow-creatures on the hard ground of justice without mercy.
Something in her eyes, when she looked at Lucy, said: "I
wonder whether that child gets punished when she deserves
it?"
"Do you wish to see the rooms which I have to let?"
she began.
Mr. Rayburn at once stated the object of his visit--as clearly,
as civilly, and as concisely as a man could do it. He was conscious
(he added) that he had been guilty perhaps of an act of
intrusion.
The manner of the mistress of the house showed that she entirely
agreed with him. He suggested, however, that his motive might
excuse him. The mistress's manner changed, and asserted a
difference of opinion.
"I only know the lady whom you mention," she said,
"as a person of the highest respectability, in delicate
health. She has taken my first- floor apartments, with excellent
references; and she gives remarkably little trouble.
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