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fell into the habit of walking towards the sea whenever they went |
out-of-doors, and spent many afternoon hours on the dunes. During these |
hours Dorothy had many confidential and lively conversations with her |
new-found friend. Indeed, confidence and gaiety were so bewilderingly |
mingled that Dorothy did not always understand her companion. |
One afternoon, three days after the departure of Percy Roden, when Von |
Holzen was buried, and the authorities had expressed themselves content |
with the verdict that he had come accidentally by his death, Marguerite |
took occasion to congratulate herself, and all concerned, in the fact |
that what she vaguely called “things” were beginning to straighten |
themselves out. |
“We are round the corner,” she said decisively. “And now papa and I |
shall go home again, and Miss Williams will come back. Miss |
Williams--oh, lord! She is one of those women who have a stick inside |
them instead of a heart. And papa will trot out his young men--likely |
young men from the city. Papa married the bank, you know. And he wants |
me to marry another bank and live gorgeously ever afterwards. Poor old |
dear!” |
“I think he would rather you were happy than gorgeous,” said Dorothy, |
with a laugh, who had seen some of the honest banker's perplexity with |
regard to this most delicate financial affair. |
“Perhaps he would. At all events, he does his best--his very best. He |
has tried at least fifty of these gentle swains since I came back from |
Dresden--red hair and a temper, black hair and an excellent opinion of |
one's self, fair hair and stupidity. But they wouldn't do--they |
wouldn't do, Dorothy!” |
Marguerite paused, and made a series of holes in the sand with her |
walking-stick. |
“There was only one,” she said quietly, at length. “I suppose there is |
always--only one--eh, Dorothy?” |
“I suppose so,” answered Dorothy, looking straight in front of her. |
Marguerite was silent for a while, looking out to sea with a queer |
little twist of the lips that made her look older--almost a woman. One |
could imagine what she would be like when she was middle-aged, or quite |
old, perhaps. |
“He would have done,” she said. “Quite easily. He was a million times |
cleverer than the rest--a million times--well, he was quite different, |
I don't know how. But he was paternal. He thought he was much too old, |
so he didn't try----” |
She broke off with a light laugh, and her confidential manner was gone |
in a flash. She stuck her stick firmly into the ground, and threw |
herself back on the soft sand. |
“So,” she cried gaily. _“Vogue la galère_. It's all for the best. That |
is the right thing to say when it cannot be helped, and it obviously |
isn't for the best. But everybody says it, and it is always wise to |
pass in with the crowd, and be conventional--if you swing for it.” |
She broke off suddenly, looking at her companion's face. A few boats |
had been leisurely making for the shore all the afternoon before a |
light wind, and Dorothy had been watching them. They were coming closer |
now. |
“Dorothy, do you see the _Three Brothers_?” |
“That is the _Three Brothers_,” answered Dorothy, pointing with her |
walking-stick. |
For a time they were silent, until, indeed, the boat with the patched |
sail had taken the ground gently, a few yards from the shore. A number |
of men landed from her, some of them carrying baskets of fish. One, |
walking apart, made for the dunes, in the direction of the New |
Scheveningen Road. |
“And that is Tony,” said Marguerite. “I should know his walk--if I saw |
him coming out of the Ark, which, by the way, must have been rather |
like the _Three Brothers_ to look at. He has taken your brother safely |
away, and now he is coming--to take you.” |
“He may remember that I am Percy's sister,” suggested Dorothy. |
“It doesn't matter whose sister you are,” was the decisive reply. |
“Nothing matters”--Marguerite rose slowly, and shook the sand from her |
dress--“nothing matters, except one thing, and that appears to be a |
matter of absolute chance.” |
She climbed slowly to the summit of the dune under which they had been |
sitting, and there, pausing, she looked back. She nodded gaily down at |
Dorothy. Then suddenly, she held out her hands before her, and Cornish, |
looking up, saw her slim young form poised against the sky in a mock |
attitude of benediction. |
“Bless you, my dears,” she cried, and with a short laugh turned and |
walked towards the Villa des Dunes. |
THE END |
The Widow O'Callaghan's Boys |
BY GULIELMA ZOLLINGER |
(1904, 10th edition) |
[Illustration: "CAN'T I DIPIND ON YE B'YS?"] |
ILLUSTRATIONS |
Can't I depind on ye, b'ys? |
It's your father's ways you have |
For every one carried something |
"Cheer up, Andy!" he said |
Mrs. Brady looked at the tall, slender boy |
Pat donned his apron |
"I've good news for you, Fannie," said the General |
The General makes the gravy |
Pat doing the marketing |
Pat and Mike building the kitchen |
Up on the roof sat Mike with his knife |
Barney and Tommie a-takin' care of the geese |
The merchant turned to the girl clerk |