“Hermione!”
A feeble whisper, a sigh faintly breathed, but at the sound she had crossed the wide chamber on feet swift and noiseless, had sunk upon her knees beside the low bed to lean above him all murmurous love and sighing tenderness, while she stole a timid hand to touch the hair that curled upon his pallid brow; then, for all his helplessness, she flushed beneath his look.
“How beautiful—you are!” he said faintly, “and I—weak as—confounded rat! Hermione—love, they tell me I—must die. But first I want you for—my very own if only for—a little while!”
“Oh, my dear,” she whispered, soft mouth against his pale cheek, “I always was yours—yours from the very first; I always shall be.”
“Then you’ll—marry me?”
“Yes, dear.”
“Now?”
“Yes, dear.”
“I—hoped you would, so—I arranged—minister’s waiting now. Will you—ring?” And he motioned feebly toward an electric bell-push that stood upon a small table beside the bed.
And now once again as one in a dream she obeyed, and was presently aware of soft-treading figures about her in the dim chamber—among them the Old Un whose shoes for once creaked not at all. As one in a dream she made the responses, felt the feeble clasp of that hand whose strength and masterful power had thrilled her, heard the faint echo of that loved voice that had wooed her so passionately once, yet wooed in vain, while now—
She was alone again, alone with him who lay so very still and pale with eyes closed wearily; from him she glanced to that which gleamed so bright and new upon her finger and bending her head she pressed the wedding ring to her lips.
“Wife!” he whispered; the weary eyes were open, and his look drew her. So she knelt beside the bed again, stooping above him low and lower until her head lay beside his upon the pillow. Slowly, slowly his feeble hand crept up to her glowing cheek, to the soft waves of her hair, and to the little curl that wantoned above her eyebrow.
“Hermione—wife—kiss me!”
Tenderly her arms enfolded him, and with a soft little cry that was half a sob she kissed him, his brow, his hair, his lips, kissed him even while she wetted him with her falling tears.
“Beloved,” he murmured, “my glorious—scrubwoman—if I must—leave you—these dear hands need never—never slave again. Never—any—more, my Hermione.”
Long after he had fallen to sleep she knelt there, cradling his weakness in her arms, looking down on him with eyes bright with love.
After this were days and nights when the soul of him wandered in dark places filled with chaotic dreams and wild fancies; but there was ever one beside him whose gentle voice reached him in the darkness, and whose tender hand hushed his delirium and soothed his woes and troubles.
CHAPTER XXXV
HOW GEOFFREY RAVENSLEE CAME OUT OF THE DARK
She was knitting; and opening sleepy eyes he watched drowsily and wondered what it might be and was minded to enquire, but sighed instead and fell asleep again.
She was knitting; knitting something in red wool, and opening his eyes again, he lay watching awhile and pondered dreamily as to what it could be she wrought at so busily, for the wool was so very red and so extremely woolly.
Her chin was set at an angle somewhat grim, she was sitting very upright in her chair and, though scrupulously hidden from sight, her elbows—truly how portentous were the undisguisable points of those elbows! And she was knitting fiercely in wool that was remarkably red and woolly.
“Pray what is it, Mrs. Trapes?” A feeble whisper, but, at the sound, faint though it was, Mrs. Trapes started, half rose from her chair, sank down again heavily and letting fall her knitting, stared at the invalid.
“Land sakes, alive!” she gasped.
“Now you’ve dropped it!” said Ravenslee, his voice a little stronger.
“Oh, dear beloved land o’ my fathers—it’s come!” she exclaimed, clasping her hands, “the Lord be praised for evermore, it’s come!”
“What has?”
“The turn! And you’ve took it! Doctor Dennison says last night as you’d take it soon one way or t’ other. But all night long while they waited and watched here, you’ve laid so pale an’ still as a corp’. An’ now, while I’m a-settin’ here, you go an’ take th’ turn so sudden as fair takes my breath away, Lord be praised! I mean—I mean—oh, I guess I’ll go wake the doctor.”
“But you haven’t told me what it is,” said Ravenslee drowsily.
“What what is?”
“That very peculiar—woolly thing.”
“This?” said Mrs. Trapes, picking up the object in question, “this is my knittin’. Doctor said t’ call him th’ moment th’ turn came—” Her voice seemed to sink to a slumberous murmur as, having smoothed his pillow, she crossed the room and very softly closed the door behind her; wherefore Ravenslee blinked sleepily at the door until its panels seemed slowly to become confused and merge one into another, changing gradually to a cloud, soft, billowy, and ever growing until it had engulfed him altogether, and he sank down and down into unknown deeps of forgetfulness and blessed quietude.
She was knitting; knitting a shapeless something in red wool, and Ravenslee thought he had never known her elbows more threatening of aspect nor seen wool quite so red and woolly; wherefore he presently spoke, and his voice was no longer a feeble croak.
“Pray what is it, Mrs. Trapes?”
Mrs. Trapes jumped.
“Well, for th’ love o’ heaven!” she exclaimed, and down fell her knitting.
“Now you’ve dropped it!” said Ravenslee a little petulantly.
“Your very—identical—words!” said Mrs. Trapes in awed tones. “Nacher sure ‘moves in a mysterious way her wonders to perform’!”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean as them was the identical words as you addressed to me when you took th’ turn two days ago!”
“Two days!” exclaimed Ravenslee, staring.
“Ever since you did take the turn two days ago, you’ve laid there so quiet an’ peaceful—no more dreams an’ ravin’—you’ve jest laid there ‘wrapped in infant slumbers pure an’ light’, Mr. Geoffrey—Ravenslee, I mean.”
“Why then, it’s about time I got up. If you’ll kindly—er—retire and send Patterson, I’ll get dressed.”
“Dressed?” echoed Mrs. Trapes, hollow-voiced and grim. “Get up? Lord, Mr. Geoffrey!”
“Certainly. Why not?”
“What, you—you as is only jest out o’ the valley o’ th’ shadder! You as we’ve all give up for dead over an’ over! You get up? Lord, Mr. Geoffrey—I mean Ravenslee!”
“Oh,” said Ravenslee, knitting his dark brows thoughtfully, “have I been sick long?”
“Four weeks.”
“Weeks!” he exclaimed, staring incredulously.
“Four weeks an’ a bit! For four weary, woeful weeks you’ve been layin’ here with death hoverin’ over you, Mr. Geoffrey. For four long weeks we’ve been waitin’ for ye t’ draw your las’ breath, Mr. Ravenslee. For four ‘eart-rendin’ weeks your servants has been carryin’ on below stairs an’ robbin’ you somethin’ shameful.”
“My servants? Oh, yes, they generally do. But tell me—”
“The amount o’ food as they consoom constant! The waste! The extravagance! Th’ beer an’ wine an’ sperrits they swaller! Them is sure the thirstiest menials ever I heard tell of! An’ the butler—such airs, such a appetite! An’ sherry an’ bitters t’ make it worse! Lord, Mr. Geoffrey, your servants sure is a ravenin’ horde!”
“Don’t be too hard on ‘em, Mrs. Trapes,” he answered gravely, “I’m afraid I’ve neglected them quite a good deal. But it’s a woman’s hand they need over them.”
“It’s a pleeceman’s club they need on ‘em—frequent! I’d learn ‘em different, I guess—”
“So you shall, Mrs. Trapes, if you will. You are precisely the kind of housekeeper I need.”
“What—me?”
“You, Mrs. Trapes. A lonely bachelor needs some one to—er take care of his servants for him, to see they don’t overeat themselves too often; or—er—strain themselves spring-cleaning out of season—or—”
“But you got a wife t’ do all that for you. I guess Hermy’ll know how to manage.”
“Hermione!” said Ravenslee, starting, “wife? Am I really—married?”
“Sure! Didn’t she go an’ let you wed her when we all thought you was dyin’?”
“Oh, did she?” said he very gently. “Why then, it—it wasn’t all a dream?”
“Mr. Geoffrey, Hermy’s been Mrs. Ravenslee, your lawful wedded wife, just exactly four weeks.”
Ravenslee stared up at the ceiling, dreamy-eyed.
“Good heavens!” he murmured. “I thought I’d only dreamed it.”
“Hermy’s watched over you night an’ day a’most—like th’ guardian angel she is—prayin’ f’ you, workin’ f’ you, fightin’ death away from you. Oh, I guess it’s her fault as you’re alive this day! Anyway, her an’ you’s man an’ wife till death do you part.”
“But death—hasn’t, you see.”
“An’ death sure ain’t goin’ to—yet.”
“No, I’m—I’m very much alive still, it seems.”
“You sure are, glory be t’ th’ Lord of Hosts to who I have also petitioned frequent on your behoof. An’ now I’ll call th’ doctor.”
“No, no—not Dennison; let me see her first. Can’t I speak to Hermione first, Mrs. Trapes?”
“She was up with you all las’ night, sweet lamb! It’d be a shame to wake her—”
“So it would—don’t disturb her.”
“But I guess she’d never forgive me if I didn’t wake her. So if you’ll promise t’ be good—”
“I will!”
“An’ not go gettin’ all worked up an’ excited?”
“I will not!”
“Why then, perhaps ten minutes wouldn’t hurt.”
“God bless you, Mrs. Trapes!”
Left alone, he tried to sit up, and finding this strangely difficult, examined his hands and arms, scowling to find himself so weak. Then he clapped hand to bony jaw and was shocked to feel thereon a growth of ragged beard, and then—she was before him. Fresh from her slumbers she came, wrapped in a scanty kimono whose thin, clinging folds revealed more of her shapely beauty than he had ever seen as she hurried across the wide chamber.
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