After this little speech, Sophie became very silent, being, in truth,

too weak and worn out to speak or move, save at long, and ever longer,

intervals. All that night, Professor Valeyon carried an aching and

mistrustful heart; but Cornelia had a red spot in either cheek, never

fading nor shifting. Sophie appeared to wander several times, murmuring

something about darkness, and snow, and deadly weariness. A snow-storm

had set in toward evening, and lasted until daybreak, a circumstance

which seemed to cause Sophie considerable anxiety.

By ten o'clock all the preparations were made according to Sophie's

wish, and there was nothing to do but to wait. Cornelia sat brooding

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with folded arms, and the feverish spots on her cheeks. Occasionally she

restlessly varied her position, seldom allowing her eyes to stray around

the room, however, save that once in a while they sought Sophie's

colorless, ethereal face, as a thirsty soul the water. The professor

stood much at the window, and once or twice he imagined he caught a

glimpse, somewhere down the road, of a darkly-clad woman's figure; but

she never came nearer, and he decided it must be a hallucination of his

fading eyes.

Eleven o'clock struck from the little ormolu timepiece. A few moments

afterward Sophie stirred slightly as she lay, and the professor and

Cornelia listened breathlessly for what she would say.

She lifted her heavy lids, and turned her eyes, a little dimmer now than

heretofore, but steady and confident, first on her father, then on her

sister.

"Till noon--remember!" said she.

Nothing more was heard, after that, but the hasty ticking of the little

ormolu clock, as its hands traveled steadily around the circle.




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