He knew she would; she was just as loving and unselfish as that, and

he wound his arms around her and drew her down close to him while he

whispered, "My poor, little Lucy; I don't deserve this from you."

She did not know what he meant, and she only answered him with

kisses, while her little hands moved caressingly across his forehead

just as they had done years ago in Rome, when she soothed the pain

away. There certainly was a mesmeric influence emanating from those

hands, and Arthur felt its power, growing very quiet and at last

falling away to sleep, while the soft passes went on, and Lucy held

her breath lest she would waken him.

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"She was a famous nurse," the physician said when he came,

constituting her his coadjutor and making her tread wild with joy and

importance when he gave his patient's medicine into her hands.

"It was hardly proper for her niece to stay," Mrs. Hetherton

thought, but Lucy was one who could trample down proprieties, and it

was finally arranged that Fanny should stay with her. So, while Fanny

went to bed and slept, Lucy sat all night in the sick room with Mrs.

Brown, and when the next morning came she was looking very pale and

languid, but very beautiful withal. At least, such was the mental

compliment paid her by Thornton Hastings, who was passing through

Hanover and had stopped over one train to see his old college friend

and, perhaps, tell him what he began to feel it was his duty to tell

him in spite of his promise to Anna. She was nearly well now and had

driven with him twice to the park, but he could not be insensible to

what she suffered, or how she shrank from having the projected wedding

discussed, and, in his intense pity for her, he had half resolved to

break his word and tell Arthur what he knew. But he changed his mind

when he had been in Hanover a few hours and watched the little fairy

who, like some ministering angel, glided about the sick room, showing

herself every whit a woman, and making him repent that he had ever

called her frivolous or silly. She was not either, he said, and, with

a magnanimity for which he thought himself entitled to a good deal of

praise, he even felt that it was very possible for Arthur to love the

gentle little girl who smoothed his pillows so tenderly and whose

fingers threaded so lovingly the damp, brown locks when she thought

he, Thornton, was not looking on. She was very coy of him and very

distant towards him, too, for she had not forgotten his sin, and she

treated him at first with a reserve for which he could not account.

But, as the days went on, and Arthur grew so sick that his

parishioners began to tremble for their young minister's life, and to

think it perfectly right for Lucy to stay with him, even if she was

assisted in her labor of love by the stranger from New York, the

reserve disappeared and on the most perfect terms of amity she and

Thornton Hastings watched together by Arthur's side. Thornton Hastings

learned more lessons than one in that sick room where Arthur's faith

in God triumphed over the terrors of the grave, which, at one time,

seemed so near, while the timid Lucy, whom he had only known as a gay

butterfly of fashion, dared before him to pray that God would spare

her promised husband or give her grace to say, "Thy will be done."




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