Here's a misunderstanding for you! Flora de Barral, who felt the shame

but did not believe in the guilt of her father, retorted fiercely,

"Nevertheless I am as honourable as you are." And then the German woman

nearly went into a fit from rage. "I shall have you thrown out into the

street."

Flora was not exactly thrown out into the street, I believe, but she was

bundled bag and baggage on board a steamer for London. Did I tell you

these people lived in Hamburg? Well yes--sent to the docks late on a

rainy winter evening in charge of some sneering lackey or other who

behaved to her insolently and left her on deck burning with indignation,

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her hair half down, shaking with excitement and, truth to say, scared as

near as possible into hysterics. If it had not been for the stewardess

who, without asking questions, good soul, took charge of her quietly in

the ladies' saloon (luckily it was empty) it is by no means certain she

would ever have reached England. I can't tell if a straw ever saved a

drowning man, but I know that a mere glance is enough to make despair

pause. For in truth we who are creatures of impulse are not creatures of

despair. Suicide, I suspect, is very often the outcome of mere mental

weariness--not an act of savage energy but the final symptom of complete

collapse. The quiet, matter-of-fact attentions of a ship's stewardess,

who did not seem aware of other human agonies than sea-sickness, who

talked of the probable weather of the passage--it would be a rough night,

she thought--and who insisted in a professionally busy manner, "Let me

make you comfortable down below at once, miss," as though she were

thinking of nothing else but her tip--was enough to dissipate the shades

of death gathering round the mortal weariness of bewildered thinking

which makes the idea of non-existence welcome so often to the young.

Flora de Barral did lie down, and it may be presumed she slept. At any

rate she survived the voyage across the North Sea and told Mrs. Fyne all

about it, concealing nothing and receiving no rebuke--for Mrs. Fyne's

opinions had a large freedom in their pedantry. She held, I suppose,

that a woman holds an absolute right--or possesses a perfect excuse--to

escape in her own way from a man-mismanaged world.

* * * * *

What is to be noted is that even in London, having had time to take a

reflective view, poor Flora was far from being certain as to the true

inwardness of her violent dismissal. She felt the humiliation of it with

an almost maddened resentment.




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