Part 23 (2/2)

”You needn't be afraid,” said Staniford. ”It's only more beautiful than anything you can imagine.”

”Yes--yes; I know,” Lydia answered.

”And do you really dread getting there?”

”Yes, I dread it,” she said.

”Why,” returned Staniford lightly, ”so do I; but it's for a different reason, I'm afraid. I should like such a voyage as this to go on forever. Now and then I think it will; it seems always to have gone on.

Can you remember when it began?”

”A great while ago,” she answered, humoring his fantasy, ”but I can remember.” She paused a long while. ”I don't know,” she said at last, ”whether I can make you understand just how I feel. But it seems to me as if I had died, and this long voyage was a kind of dream that I was going to wake up from in another world. I often used to think, when I was a little girl, that when I got to heaven it would be lonesome--I don't know whether I can express it. You say that Italy--that Venice--is so beautiful; but if I don't know any one there--” She stopped, as if she had gone too far.

”But you do know somebody there,” said Staniford. ”Your aunt--”

”Yes,” said the girl, and looked away.

”But the people in this long dream,--you're going to let some of them appear to you there,” he suggested.

”Oh, yes,” she said, reflecting his lighter humor, ”I shall want to see them, or I shall not know I am the same person, and I must be sure of myself, at least.”

”And you wouldn't like to go back to earth--to South Bradfield again?”

he asked presently.

”No,” she answered. ”All that seems over forever. I couldn't go back there and be what I was. I could have stayed there, but I couldn't go back.”

Staniford laughed. ”I see that it isn't the other world that's got hold of you! It's _this_ world! I don't believe you'll be unhappy in Italy.

But it's pleasant to think you've been so contented on the Aroostook that you hate to leave it. I don't believe there's a man on the s.h.i.+p that wouldn't feel personally flattered to know that you liked being here. Even that poor fellow who parted from us at Messina was anxious that you should think as kindly of him as you could. He knew that he had behaved in a way to shock you, and he was very sorry. He left a message with me for you. He thought you would like to know that he was ashamed of himself.”

”I pitied him,” said Lydia succinctly. It was the first time that she had referred to Hicks, and Staniford found it in character for her to limit herself to this spa.r.s.e comment. Evidently, her compa.s.sion was a religious duty. Staniford's generosity came easy to him.

”I feel bound to say that Hicks was not a bad fellow. I disliked him immensely, and I ought to do him justice, now he's gone. He deserved all your pity. He's a doomed man; his vice is irreparable; he can't resist it.” Lydia did not say anything: women do not generalize in these matters; perhaps they cannot pity the faults of those they do not love.

Staniford only forgave Hicks the more. ”I can't say that up to the last moment I thought him anything but a poor, common little creature; and yet I certainly did feel a greater kindness for him after--what I--after what had happened. He left something more than a message for you, Miss Blood; he left his steamer chair yonder, for you.”

”For me?” demanded Lydia. Staniford felt her thrill and grow rigid upon his arm, with refusal. ”I will not have it. He had no right to do so.

He--he--was dreadful! I will give it to you!” she said, suddenly. ”He ought to have given it to you. You did everything for him; you saved his life.”

It was clear that she did not sentimentalize Hicks's case; and Staniford had some doubt as to the value she set upon what he had done, even now she had recognized it.

He said, ”I think you overestimate my service to him, possibly. I dare say the boat could have picked him up in good time.”

”Yes, that's what the captain and Mr. Watterson and Mr. Mason all said,”

a.s.sented Lydia.

Staniford was nettled. He would have preferred a devoted belief that but for him Hicks must have perished. Besides, what she said still gave no clew to her feeling in regard to himself. He was obliged to go on, but he went on as indifferently as he could. ”However, it was hardly a question for me at the time whether he could have been got out without my help. If I had thought about it at all--which I didn't--I suppose I should have thought that it wouldn't do to take any chances.”

”Oh, no,” said Lydia, simply, ”you couldn't have done anything less than you did.”

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