She reached down and put a hand on his head, but he only looked from

one to the other of us, unhappy.

"Don't you love me, Helena?" I asked quietly, after a time. "For the

sake of my dog, can you not love me?"

She continued stroking the head of the agonized Partial.... And until,

somewhat inarticulately, I had choked or spoken, and had caught her

dark hair against my cheek and kissed her hair and stammered in her

ear, and turned her face and kissed her eyes and her cheek and her

lips many, many times, Partial held his peace and issued no

decision.... At least, I did not hear him....

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She was sobbing now, her head on my shoulder, as we sat on the locker

seat, and Partial's head was on the cushion beside us, and he was

silent and overjoyed, and tranquilly happy--seeing perhaps, that a

quiet home would in the event be his, and that he was going to live

happy ever after. And after I drew Helena's head closer to my face, I

kissed her hair.

"Do you love me, Helena?" I asked. "Only the truth now, in God's

name!"

"You know I do," she said, and I felt her arms about my neck.

"Have you, always?"

"I think so, yes. It seems always."

"We have been cruel to each other."

"Yes, are cruel now."

"How now?"

"You make me say I love you, and yet----"

"You will marry me--right away, soon, Helena--as I am, poor, ragged,

without a cent, only myself?"

"Not here," she smiled.

"At Edouard Manning's, at once, as soon as we get in?"

"It is duress! I am in the power of a ruffian band! Is it fair? Are

you sure I know my mind?"

"I am sure only that I know my own! Tell me, what was in that note I

carried, addressed to yon varlet Davidson?"

"Sealed orders!"

"And how does that affect me, Helena. Tell me--I know you love me, and

you know that all the rest is small, to that; but as to that wedding

part of it, Helena--what do you say?"

She hesitated for an instant. "You want me to--come--to come with

honor, as you do?"

"Yes. I'll take any risk that means with you."

"Will you take sealed orders, too?"

"Yes."

"Turn on the lights."

I reached the switch, and an instant later a dozen high candle-power

bulbs flooded the suite with light. With a little cry of dismay Helena

sprang away, and stood at my shaving-glass, arranging her hair. Now

and then she turned her face just enough to smile at me a little, her

eyes dark, languid, heavy lidded, a faint shadow of blue beneath. And

now and then her breast heaved, as though it were a sea late troubled

by a storm gone by.




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