She stopped short, then impulsively: "Truth will out, Mr. Marlow."

"Yes," I said.

She went on musingly.

"Sorrow and happiness were mingled at first like darkness and light. For

months I lived in a dusk of feelings. But it was quiet. It was warm

. . . "

Again she paused, then going back in her thoughts. "No! There was no

harm in that letter. It was simply foolish. What did I know of life

then? Nothing. But Mrs. Fyne ought to have known better. She wrote a

letter to her brother, a little later. Years afterwards Roderick allowed

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me to glance at it. I found in it this sentence: 'For years I tried to

make a friend of that girl; but I warn you once more that she has the

nature of a heartless adventuress . . . ' Adventuress!" repeated Flora

slowly. "So be it. I have had a fine adventure."

"It was fine, then," I said interested.

"The finest in the world! Only think! I loved and I was loved,

untroubled, at peace, without remorse, without fear. All the world, all

life were transformed for me. And how much I have seen! How good people

were to me! Roderick was so much liked everywhere. Yes, I have known

kindness and safety. The most familiar things appeared lighted up with a

new light, clothed with a loveliness I had never suspected. The sea

itself! . . . You are a sailor. You have lived your life on it. But do

you know how beautiful it is, how strong, how charming, how friendly, how

mighty . . . "

I listened amazed and touched. She was silent only a little while.

"It was too good to last. But nothing can rob me of it now . . . Don't

think that I repine. I am not even sad now. Yes, I have been happy. But

I remember also the time when I was unhappy beyond endurance, beyond

desperation. Yes. You remember that. And later on, too. There was a

time on board the Ferndale when the only moments of relief I knew were

when I made Mr. Powell talk to me a little on the poop. You like

him?--Don't you?"

"Excellent fellow," I said warmly. "You see him often?"

"Of course. I hardly know another soul in the world. I am alone. And

he has plenty of time on his hands. His aunt died a few years ago. He's

doing nothing, I believe."

"He is fond of the sea," I remarked. "He loves it."

"He seems to have given it up," she murmured.




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