She tottered backward from the
table, and lifted her hands wildly, as if to grasp at something
which might support her. Mr. Rayburn hurried to her before she
fell--lifted her in his arms--and carried her out of the room.
One of the servants met them in the hall. He sent her for a
carriage. In a quarter of an hour more, Mrs. Zant was safe under
his care at the hotel.
XIII.
THAT night a note, written by the housekeeper, was delivered to
Mrs. Zant.
"The doctors give little hope. The paralytic stroke is
spreading upward to his face. If death spares him, he will live a
helpless man. I shall take care of him to the last. As for
you--forget him."
Mrs. Zant gave the note to Mr. Rayburn.
"Read it, and destroy it," she said. "It is
written in ignorance of the terrible truth."
He obeyed--and looked at her in silence, waiting to hear more.
She hid her face. The few words she had addressed to him, after a
struggle with herself, fell slowly and reluctantly from her
lips.
She said: "No mortal hand held the hands of John Zant. The
guardian spirit was with me. The promised protection was with me. I
know it. I wish to know no more."
Having spoken, she rose to retire. He opened the door for her,
seeing that she needed rest in her own room.
Left by himself, he began to consider the prospect that was
before him in the future. How was he to regard the woman who had
just left him? As a poor creature weakened by disease, the victim
of her own nervous delusion? or as the chosen object of a
supernatural revelation--unparalleled by any similar revelation
that he had heard of, or had found recorded in books? His first
discovery of the place that she really held in his estimation
dawned on his mind, when he felt himself recoiling from the
conclusion which presented her to his pity, and yielding to the
nobler conviction which felt with her faith, and raised her to a
place apart among other women.
XIV.
THEY left St. Sallins the next day.
Arrived at the end of the journey, Lucy held fast by Mrs.
Zant's hand. Tears were rising in the child's eyes.
"Are we to bid her good-by?" she said sadly to her
father.
He seemed to be unwilling to trust himself to speak; he only
said:
"My dear, ask her yourself."
But the result justified him. Lucy was happy again.
MISS MORRIS AND THE STRANGER.
I.
WHEN I first saw him, he was lost in one of the Dead Cities of
England--situated on the South Coast, and called Sandwich.
Shall I describe Sandwich? I think not. Let us own the truth;
descriptions of places, however nicely they may be written, are
always more or less dull. Being a woman, I naturally hate dullness.
Perhaps some description of Sandwich may drop out, as it were, from
my report of our conversation when we first met as strangers in the
street.
He began irritably. "I've lost myself," he
said.
"People who don't know the town often do that," I
remarked.
He went on: "Which is my way to the Fleur de Lys
Inn?"
His way was, in the first place, to retrace his steps. Then to
turn to the left. Then to go on until he found two streets meeting.
Then to take the street on the right. Then to look out for the
second turning on the left.
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