Part 29 (1/2)

Hilda Sara Jeannette Duncan 30160K 2022-07-22

”Jewelry!” said Markin. ”Real or imitation?”

”So far as that goes, they are good. Mr. Lindsay gave them to me. But what have I to do with jewels, the very emblem of the folly of the world, the desire that itches in palms that crucify Him afresh daily, the price of sin?” She leaned against the masthead as she spoke. The wind blew her hair and her skirt out toward the following seas. With that look in her eyes she seemed a creature who had alighted on the s.h.i.+p but who could not stay.

Colonel Markin held the pearls up in the moonlight.

”They must have cost something to buy,” he said.

Laura was silent.

”And so they're a trouble to you. Have you taken them to the Lord in prayer?”

”Oh, many times.”

”Couldn't seem to hear any answer?”

”The only answer I could hear was, 'So long as you have them I will not speak with you.'”

”That seems pretty plain and clear. And yet,” said the Colonel, fondling the turquoises, ”n.o.body can say there's any harm in such things, especially if you don't, wear them.”

”Colonel, they are my great temptation. I don't know that I wouldn't wear them. And when I wear them I can think of nothing sacred, nothing holy. When they were given to me I used--I used to get up in the night to look at them.”

”Shall I lay it before the Almighty? That bracelet's got a remarkably good clasp.”

”Oh no--no! I must part with them. To-night I can do it, to-night----”

”There's n.o.body on this s.h.i.+p that will give you any price for them.”

”I would not think of selling them. It would be sending them from my hands to do harm to some other poor creature, weaker than I!”

”You can't return them to-night.”

”I wouldn't return them. That would be the same as keeping them.”

”Then what--oh, I see--” exclaimed Markin. ”You want to give them to the Army! Well, in my capacity, on behalf of General Booth----”

”No,” cried Laura, with sudden excitement, ”not that either. I will give them to n.o.body. But this is what I will do!” She seized the bracelet and flung it far out into the opaline track of the vessel, and the smaller objects, before her companion could stop her, followed it. Then he caught her wrist.

”Stop!” he cried. ”You've gone off your head--you've got fever. You're acting wicked with that jewelry. Stop and let us reason it out together.”

She already had the turquoises, and with a jerk of her left hand she freed it and threw them after the rest. The necklace caught the handrail as it fell, and Markin made a vain spring to save it. He turned and stared at Laura, who stood fighting the greatest puissance of feeling she had known, looking at the pearls. As he stared, she kissed them twice, and then, leaning over the s.h.i.+p's side, let them slowly slide out of her fingers and fall, into the waves below. The moonlight gave them a divine gleam as they fell. She turned to Markin with tears in her eyes.

”Now,” she faltered, ”I can be happy again. But not to-night.”

CHAPTER XXVIII.

While the _Coromandel_ was throbbing out her regulation number of knots toward Colombo, October was pa.s.sing over Bengal. It went with lethargy, the rains were too close on its heels; but at the end of the long hot days, when the resplendent sun struck down on the glossy trees and the over-lush Maidan, there often stole through Calcutta a breath of the coming respite of December. The blue smoke of the people's cooking fires began to hang again in the streets, the pungent smell of it was pleasant in the still air. The south wind turned back at the Sunder-bunds; instead of it, one met around corners a sudden crispness that stayed just long enough to be recognised and melted damply away. A week might have two or three of such promises and foretastes.

Hilda Howe, approaching the end of her probation at the Baker Inst.i.tution, threw the dormitory window wide to them, went out to seek them. They brought her a new stirring of vitality, something deep within her leaped up responding to the voucher the evenings brought that presently they would bring something new and different. She vibrated to an irrepressible pulse of accord with that: it made her hand strong and her brain clear for the unimportant matters that remained within the scope of the monotonous moment. Her spirits gained an enviable lightness, she began again to see beautiful, touching things in the life that carried her on with it. She explained to Stephen Arnold that she was immensely happy at having pa.s.sed the last of her nursing examinations.