"How does this lady of whom you speak believe in it differently from

some others?"

"In this, that it means what it says on the subject of divorce."

"Oh, I understand. You think that if she were to marry again it

would be in the face of conscientious scruples?"

"I do."

Mr. Emerson was about asking another question when one of the party

to which he belonged joined him, and so the strange interview

closed. He bowed to the man with whom he had been conversing, and

then passed to another part of the boat.

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With slow steps, that were unsteady from sudden weakness, Irene

moved along the road that led to her home. After reaching the

grounds of Ivy Cliff she turned aside into a small summer-house, and

sat down at one of the windows that looked out upon the river as it

stretched upward in its gleaming way. The boat she bad just left was

already far distant, but it fixed her eyes, and they saw no other

object until it passed from view around a wooded point of land. And

still she sat motionless, looking at the spot where it had vanished

from her sight.

"Miss Irene!" exclaimed Margaret, the faithful old domestic, who

still bore rule at the homestead, breaking in upon her reverie,

"what in the world are you doing here? I expected you up to-day, and

when the boat stopped at the landing and you didn't come, I was

uneasy and couldn't rest. Why child, what is the matter? You're

sick!"

"Oh no, Margaret, I'm well enough," said Irene, trying to smile

indifferently. And she arose and left the summer-house.

Kind, observant old Margaret was far from being satisfied, however.

She saw that Irene was not as when she departed for the city a week

before. If she were not sick in body, she was troubled in her mind,

for her countenance was so changed that she could not look upon it

without feeling a pang in her heart.

"I'm sure you're sick, Miss Irene," she said as they entered the

house. "Now, what is the matter? What can I do or get for you? Let

me send over for Dr. Edmondson?"

"No, no, my good Margaret, don't think of such a thing," replied

Irene. "I'm not sick."

"Something's the matter with you, child," persisted Margaret.

"Nothing that won't cure itself," said Irene, trying to speak

cheerfully. "I'll go up to my room for a little while."

And she turned away from her kind-hearted domestic. On entering her

chamber Irene locked the door in order to be safe from intrusion,

for she knew that Margaret would not let half an hour pass without

coming up to ask how she was. Sitting down by the window, she looked

out upon the river, along whose smooth surface had passed the vessel

in which, a little while before, she met the man once called by the

name of husband--met him and looked into his face for the first time

in ten long years! The meeting had disturbed her profoundly. In the

cabin of that vessel she had seen him by the side of a fair young

girl in earnest conversation; and she had watched with a strange,

fluttering interest the play of his features. What was he saying to

that fair young girl that she listened with such a breathless,

waiting air? Suddenly he turned toward her, their eyes met and were

spell-bound for moments. What did she read in his eyes in those

brief moments? What did he read in hers? Both questions pressed

themselves upon her thoughts as she retreated among the crowd of

passengers, and then hid herself from the chance of another meeting

until the boat reached the landing at Ivy Cliff. Why did she pause

on the shore, and turn to look upon the crowded decks? She knew not.

The act was involuntary. Again their eyes met--met and held each

other until the receding vessel placed dim distance between them.