There were four rails around the ship's sides, the three lower
ones of iron and the one on top of wood, and as he looked between
them from the canvas cot he recognized them as the prison-bars
which held him in. Outside his prison lay a stretch of blinding
blue water which ended in a line of breakers and a yellow coast
with ragged palms. Beyond that again rose a range of mountain-
peaks, and, stuck upon the loftiest peak of all, a tiny block-
house. It rested on the brow of the mountain against the naked
sky as impudently as a cracker-box set upon the dome of a great
cathedral.
As the transport rode on her anchor-chains, the iron bars around
her sides rose and sank and divided the landscape with parallel
lines. From his cot the officer followed this phenomenon with
severe, painstaking interest. Sometimes the wooden rail swept up
to the very block-house itself, and for a second of time
blotted it from sight. And again it sank to the level of the
line of breakers, and wiped them out of the picture as though
they were a line of chalk.
The soldier on the cot promised himself that the next swell of
the sea would send the lowest rail climbing to the very top of
the palm-trees or, even higher, to the base of the mountains; and
when it failed to reach even the palm-trees he felt a distinct
sense of ill use, of having been wronged by some one. There was
no other reason for submitting to this existence, save these
tricks upon the wearisome, glaring landscape; and, now, whoever
it was who was working them did not seem to be making this effort
to entertain him with any heartiness.
It was most cruel. Indeed, he decided hotly, it was not to be
endured; he would bear it no longer, he would make his escape.
But he knew that this move, which could be conceived in a
moment's desperation, could only be carried to success with great
strategy, secrecy, and careful cunning. So he fell back upon his
pillow and closed his eyes, as though he were asleep, and
then opening them again, turned cautiously, and spied upon his
keeper. As usual, his keeper sat at the foot of the cot turning
the pages of a huge paper filled with pictures of the war printed
in daubs of tawdry colors. His keeper was a hard-faced boy
without human pity or consideration, a very devil of obstinacy
and fiendish cruelty. To make it worse, the fiend was a person
without a collar, in a suit of soiled khaki, with a curious red
cross bound by a safety-pin to his left arm. He was intent upon
the paper in his hands; he was holding it between his eyes and
his prisoner. His vigilance had relaxed, and the moment seemed
propitious. With a sudden plunge of arms and legs, the prisoner
swept the bed sheet from him, and sprang at the wooden rail and
grasped the iron stanchion beside it. He had his knee pressed
against the top bar and his bare toes on the iron rail beneath
it. Below him the blue water waited for him. It was cool and
dark and gentle and deep. It would certainly put out the fire in
his bones, he thought; it might even shut out the glare of the
sun which scorched his eyeballs.
But as he balanced for the leap, a swift weakness and nausea
swept over him, a weight seized upon his body and limbs. He
could not lift the lower foot from the iron rail, and he swayed
dizzily and trembled. He trembled. He who had raced his men and
beaten them up the hot hill to the trenches of San Juan. But now
he was a baby in the hands of a giant, who caught him by the
wrist and with an iron arm clasped him around his waist and
pulled him down, and shouted, brutally, "Help, some of you'se,
quick; he's at it again. I can't hold him."
More giants grasped him by the arms and by the legs. One of them
took the hand that clung to the stanchion in both of his, and
pulled back the fingers one by one, saying, "Easy now,
Lieutenant--easy."
The ragged palms and the sea and block-house were swallowed up in
a black fog, and his body touched the canvas cot again with a
sense of home-coming and relief and rest. He wondered how he
could have cared to escape from it. He found it so good to be
back again that for a long time he wept quite happily, until the
fiery pillow was moist and cool.
The world outside of the iron bars was like a scene in a theatre
set for some great event, but the actors were never ready. He
remembered confusedly a play he had once witnessed before that
same scene. Indeed, he believed he had played some small part in
it; but he remembered it dimly, and all trace of the men who had
appeared with him in it was gone. He had reasoned it out that
they were up there behind the range of mountains, because great
heavy wagons and ambulances and cannon were emptied from the
ships at the wharf above and were drawn away in long lines behind
the ragged palms, moving always toward the passes between the
peaks. At times he was disturbed by the thought that he should
be up and after them, that some tradition of duty made his
presence with them imperative. There was much to be done back of
the mountains. Some event of momentous import was being carried
forward there, in which he held a part; but the doubt soon passed
from him, and he was content to lie and watch the iron bars
rising and falling between the block-house and the white
surf.
If they had been only humanely kind, his lot would have been
bearable, but they starved him and held him down when he wished
to rise; and they would not put out the fire in the pillow, which
they might easily have done by the simple expedient of throwing
it over the ship's side into the sea. He himself had done this
twice, but the keeper had immediately brought a fresh pillow
already heated for the torture and forced it under his head.
His pleasures were very simple, and so few that he could not
understand why they robbed him of them so jealously. One was to
watch a green cluster of bananas that hung above him from the
awning twirling on a string. He could count as many of them as
five before the bunch turned and swung lazily back again, when he
could count as high as twelve; sometimes when the ship rolled
heavily he could count to twenty. It was a most fascinating
game, and contented him for many hours. But when they found this
out they sent for the cook to come and cut them down, and the
cook carried them away to his galley.
Then, one day, a man came out from the shore, swimming through
the blue water with great splashes. He was a most charming man,
who spluttered and dove and twisted and lay on his back and
kicked his legs in an excess of content and delight. It was a
real pleasure to watch him; not for days had anything so amusing
appeared on the other side of the prison-bars. But as soon as
the keeper saw that the man in the water was amusing his
prisoner, he leaned over the ship's side and shouted, "Sa-ay,
you, don't you know there's sharks in there?"
And the swimming man said, "The h--ll there is!" and raced back
to the shore like a porpoise with great lashing of the water, and
ran up the beach half-way to the palms before he was satisfied to
stop. Then the prisoner wept again. It was so disappointing.
Life was robbed of everything now. He remembered that in a
previous existence soldiers who cried were laughed at and mocked.
But that was so far away and it was such an absurd superstition
that he had no patience with it. For what could be more
comforting to a man when he is treated cruelly than to cry.
It was so obvious an exercise, and when one is so feeble that one
cannot vault a four-railed barrier it is something to feel that
at least one is strong enough to cry.
He escaped occasionally, traversing space with marvellous
rapidity and to great distances, but never to any successful
purpose; and his flight inevitably ended in ignominious recapture
and a sudden awakening in bed. At these moments the familiar and
hated palms, the peaks and the block-house were more hideous in
their reality than the most terrifying of his nightmares.
These excursions afield were always predatory; he went forth
always to seek food. With all the beautiful world from which to
elect and choose, he sought out only those places where eating
was studied and elevated to an art. These visits were much more
vivid in their detail than any he had ever before made to these
same resorts. They invariably began in a carriage, which carried
him swiftly over smooth asphalt. One route brought him across a
great and beautiful square, radiating with rows and rows of
flickering lights; two fountains splashed in the centre of the
square, and six women of stone guarded its approaches. One of
the women was hung with wreaths of mourning. Ahead of him the
late twilight darkened behind a great arch, which seemed to rise
on the horizon of the world, a great window into the heavens
beyond. At either side strings of white and colored globes hung
among the trees, and the sound of music came joyfully from
theatres in the open air. He knew the restaurant under the trees
to which he was now hastening, and the fountain beside it, and
the very sparrows balancing on the fountain's edge; he knew every
waiter at each of the tables, he felt again the gravel crunching
under his feet, he saw the maitre d'hotel coming forward
smiling to receive his command, and the waiter in the green apron
bowing at his elbow, deferential and important, presenting the
list of wines. But his adventure never passed that point, for he
was captured again and once more bound to his cot with a close
burning sheet.
Or else, he drove more sedately through the London streets in
the late evening twilight, leaning expectantly across the doors
of the hansom and pulling carefully at his white gloves. Other
hansoms flashed past him, the occupant of each with his mind
fixed on one idea--dinner. He was one of a million of people who
were about to dine, or who had dined, or who were deep in dining.
He was so famished, so weak for food of any quality, that the
galloping horse in the hansom seemed to crawl. The lights of the
Embankment passed like the lamps of a railroad station as seen
from the window of an express; and while his mind was still torn
between the choice of a thin or thick soup or an immediate attack
upon cold beef, he was at the door, and the chasseur touched
his cap, and the little chasseur put the wicker guard over the
hansom's wheel. As he jumped out he said, "Give him half-a-
crown," and the driver called after him, "Thank you, sir."
It was a beautiful world, this world outside of the iron bars.
Every one in it contributed to his pleasure and to his comfort.
In this world he was not starved nor manhandled. He thought
of this joyfully as he leaped up the stairs, where young men with
grave faces and with their hands held negligently behind their
backs bowed to him in polite surprise at his speed. But they had
not been starved on condensed milk. He threw his coat and hat at
one of them, and came down the hall fearfully and quite weak with
dread lest it should not be real. His voice was shaking when he
asked Ellis if he had reserved a table. The place was all so
real, it must be true this time. The way Ellis turned and ran
his finger down the list showed it was real, because Ellis always
did that, even when he knew there would not be an empty table for
an hour. The room was crowded with beautiful women; under the
light of the red shades they looked kind and approachable, and
there was food on every table, and iced drinks in silver buckets.
It was with the joy of great relief that he heard Ellis say to
his underling, "Numero cinq, sur la terrace, un couvert." It was
real at last. Outside, the Thames lay a great gray shadow. The
lights of the Embankment flashed and twinkled across it, the
tower of the House of Commons rose against the sky, and here,
inside, the waiter was hurrying toward him carrying a smoking
plate of rich soup with a pungent intoxicating odor.
And then the ragged palms, the glaring sun, the immovable peaks,
and the white surf stood again before him. The iron rails swept
up and sank again, the fever sucked at his bones, and the pillow
scorched his cheek.
One morning for a brief moment he came back to real life again
and lay quite still, seeing everything about him with clear eyes
and for the first time, as though he had but just that instant
been lifted over the ship's side. His keeper, glancing up, found
the prisoner's eyes considering him curiously, and recognized the
change. The instinct of discipline brought him to his feet with
his fingers at his sides.
"Is the Lieutenant feeling better?"
The Lieutenant surveyed him gravely.
"You are one of our hospital stewards."
"Yes, Lieutenant."
"Why ar'n't you with the regiment?"
"I was wounded, too, sir. I got it same time you did,
Lieutenant."
"Am I wounded? Of course, I remember. Is this a hospital ship?"
The steward shrugged his shoulders. "She's one of the
transports. They have turned her over to the fever cases."
The Lieutenant opened his lips to ask another question; but his
own body answered that one, and for a moment he lay silent.
"Do they know up North that I--that I'm all right?"
"Oh, yes, the papers had it in--there was pictures of the
Lieutenant in some of them."
"Then I've been ill some time?"
"Oh, about eight days."
The soldier moved uneasily, and the nurse in him became
uppermost.
"I guess the Lieutenant hadn't better talk any more," he said.
It was his voice now which held authority.
The Lieutenant looked out at the palms and the silent gloomy
mountains and the empty coast-line, where the same wave was
rising and falling with weary persistence.
"Eight days," he said. His eyes shut quickly, as though with a
sudden touch of pain. He turned his head and sought for the
figure at the foot of the cot. Already the figure had grown
faint and was receding and swaying.
"Has any one written or cabled?" the Lieutenant spoke, hurriedly.
He was fearful lest the figure should disappear altogether before
he could obtain his answer. "Has any one come?"
"Why, they couldn't get here, Lieutenant, not yet."
The voice came very faintly. "You go to sleep now, and I'll run
and fetch some letters and telegrams. When you wake up, may be
I'll have a lot for you."
But the Lieutenant caught the nurse by the wrist, and crushed his
hand in his own thin fingers. They were hot, and left the
steward's skin wet with perspiration. The Lieutenant laughed
gayly.
"You see, Doctor," he said, briskly, "that you can't kill me. I
can't die. I've got to live, you understand. Because, sir, she
said she would come. She said if I was wounded, or if I was ill,
she would come to me. She didn't care what people thought. She
would come any way and nurse me--well, she will come.
"So, Doctor--old man--" He plucked at the steward's sleeve, and
stroked his hand eagerly, "old man--" he began again,
beseechingly, "you'll not let me die until she comes, will you?
What? No, I know I won't die. Nothing made by man can kill me.
No, not until she comes. Then, after that--eight days, she'll be
here soon, any moment? What? You think so, too? Don't you?
Surely, yes, any moment. Yes, I'll go to sleep now, and when you
see her rowing out from shore you wake me. You'll know her; you
can't make a mistake. She is like--no, there is no one like
her--but you can't make a mistake."
That day strange figures began to mount the sides of the ship,
and to occupy its every turn and angle of space. Some of them
fell on their knees and slapped the bare deck with their hands,
and laughed and cried out, "Thank God, I'll see God's country
again!" Some of them were regulars, bound in bandages; some were
volunteers, dirty and hollow-eyed, with long beards on boys'
faces. Some came on crutches; others with their arms around
the shoulders of their comrades, staring ahead of them with a
fixed smile, their lips drawn back and their teeth protruding.
At every second step they stumbled, and the face of each was
swept by swift ripples of pain.
They lay on cots so close together that the nurses could not walk
between them. They lay on the wet decks, in the scuppers, and
along the transoms and hatches. They were like shipwrecked
mariners clinging to a raft, and they asked nothing more than
that the ship's bow be turned toward home. Once satisfied as to
that, they relaxed into a state of self-pity and miserable
oblivion to their environment, from which hunger nor nausea nor
aching bones could shake them.
The hospital steward touched the Lieutenant lightly on the
shoulder.
"We are going North, sir," he said. "The transport's ordered
North to New York, with these volunteers and the sick and
wounded. Do you hear me, sir?"
The Lieutenant opened his eyes. "Has she come?" he asked.
"Gee!" exclaimed the hospital steward. He glanced impatiently at
the blue mountains and the yellow coast, from which the transport
was drawing rapidly away.
"Well, I can't see her coming just now," he said. "But she
will," he added.
"You let me know at once when she comes."
"Why, cert'nly, of course," said the steward.
Three trained nurses came over the side just before the transport
started North. One was a large, motherly-looking woman, with a
German accent. She had been a trained nurse, first in Berlin,
and later in the London Hospital in Whitechapel, and at Bellevue.
The nurse was dressed in white, and wore a little silver medal at
her throat; and she was strong enough to lift a volunteer out of
his cot and hold him easily in her arms, while one of the
convalescents pulled his cot out of the rain. Some of the men
called her "nurse;" others, who wore scapulars around their
necks, called her "Sister;" and the officers of the medical staff
addressed her as Miss Bergen.
Miss Bergen halted beside the cot of the Lieutenant and
asked, "Is this the fever case you spoke about, Doctor--the one
you want moved to the officers' ward?" She slipped her hand up
under his sleeve and felt his wrist.
"His pulse is very high," she said to the steward. "When did you
take his temperature?" She drew a little morocco case from her
pocket and from that took a clinical thermometer, which she shook
up and down, eying the patient meanwhile with a calm, impersonal
scrutiny. The Lieutenant raised his head and stared up at the
white figure beside his cot. His eyes opened and then shut
quickly, with a startled look, in which doubt struggled with
wonderful happiness. His hand stole out fearfully and warily
until it touched her apron, and then, finding it was real, he
clutched it desperately, and twisting his face and body toward
her, pulled her down, clasping her hands in both of his, and
pressing them close to his face and eyes and lips. He put them
from him for an instant, and looked at her through his tears.
"Sweetheart," he whispered, "sweetheart, I knew you'd come."
As the nurse knelt on the deck beside him, her thermometer
slipped from her fingers and broke, and she gave an exclamation
of annoyance. The young Doctor picked up the pieces and tossed
them overboard. Neither of them spoke, but they smiled
appreciatively. The Lieutenant was looking at the nurse with the
wonder and hope and hunger of soul in his eyes with which a dying
man looks at the cross the priest holds up before him. What he
saw where the German nurse was kneeling was a tall, fair girl
with great bands and masses of hair, with a head rising like a
lily from a firm, white throat, set on broad shoulders above a
straight back and sloping breast--a tall, beautiful creature,
half-girl, half-woman, who looked back at him shyly, but
steadily.
"Listen," he said.
The voice of the sick man was so sure and so sane that the young
Doctor started, and moved nearer to the head of the cot.
"Listen, dearest," the Lieutenant whispered. "I wanted to tell
you before I came South. But I did not dare; and then I was
afraid something might happen to me, and I could never tell you,
and you would never know. So I wrote it to you in the will I
made at Baiquiri, the night before the landing. If you hadn't
come now, you would have learned it in that way. You would have
read there that there never was any one but you; the rest were
all dream people, foolish, silly--mad. There is no one else in
the world but you; you have been the only thing in life that has
counted. I thought I might do something down here that would
make you care. But I got shot going up a hill, and after that I
wasn't able to do anything. It was very hot, and the hills were
on fire; and they took me prisoner, and kept me tied down here,
burning on these coals. I can't live much longer, but now that I
have told you I can have peace. They tried to kill me before you
came; but they didn't know I loved you, they didn't know that men
who love you can't die. They tried to starve my love for you, to
burn it out of me; they tried to reach it with their knives. But
my love for you is my soul, and they can't kill a man's soul.
Dear heart, I have lived because you lived. Now that you
know--now that you understand--what does it matter?"
Miss Bergen shook her head with great vigor. "Nonsense," she
said, cheerfully. "You are not going to die. As soon as we move
you out of this rain, and some food cook--"
"Good God!" cried the young Doctor, savagely. "Do you want to
kill him?"
When she spoke the patient had thrown his arms heavily across his
face, and had fallen back, lying rigid on the pillow.
The Doctor led the way across the prostrate bodies, apologizing
as he went. "I am sorry I spoke so quickly," he said, "but he
thought you were real. I mean he thought you were some one he
really knew--"
"He was just delirious," said the German nurse, calmly.
The Doctor mixed himself a Scotch and soda and drank it with a
single gesture.
"Ugh!" he said to the ward-room. "I feel as though I'd been
opening another man's letters."
The transport drove through the empty seas with heavy, clumsy
upheavals, rolling like a buoy. Having been originally
intended for the freight-carrying trade, she had no sympathy
with hearts that beat for a sight of their native land, or for
lives that counted their remaining minutes by the throbbing of
her engines. Occasionally, without apparent reason, she was
thrown violently from her course: but it was invariably the case
that when her stern went to starboard, something splashed in the
water on her port side and drifted past her, until, when it had
cleared the blades of her propeller, a voice cried out, and she
was swung back on her home-bound track again.
The Lieutenant missed the familiar palms and the tiny block-
house; and seeing nothing beyond the iron rails but great wastes
of gray water, he decided he was on board a prison-ship, or that
he had been strapped to a raft and cast adrift. People came for
hours at a time and stood at the foot of his cot, and talked with
him and he to them--people he had loved and people he had long
forgotten, some of whom he had thought were dead. One of them he
could have sworn he had seen buried in a deep trench, and covered
with branches of palmetto. He had heard the bugler, with
tears choking him, sound "taps;" and with his own hand he had
placed the dead man's campaign hat on the mound of fresh earth
above the grave. Yet here he was still alive, and he came with
other men of his troop to speak to him; but when he reached out
to them they were gone--the real and the unreal, the dead and the
living--and even She disappeared whenever he tried to take her
hand, and sometimes the hospital steward drove her away.
"Did that young lady say when she was coming back again?" he
asked the steward.
"The young lady! What young lady?" asked the steward, wearily.
"The one who has been sitting there," he answered. He pointed
with his gaunt hand at the man in the next cot.
"Oh, that young lady. Yes, she's coming back. She's just gone
below to fetch you some hard-tack."
The young volunteer in the next cot whined grievously.
"That crazy man gives me the creeps," he groaned. "He's always
waking me up, and looking at me as though he was going to eat
me."
"Shut your head," said the steward. "He's a better man crazy
than you'll ever be with the little sense you've got. And he has
two Mauser holes in him. Crazy, eh? It's a damned good thing
for you that there was about four thousand of us regulars just as
crazy as him, or you'd never seen the top of the hill."
One morning there was a great commotion on deck, and all the
convalescents balanced themselves on the rail, shivering in their
pajamas, and pointed one way. The transport was moving swiftly
and smoothly through water as flat as a lake, and making a great
noise with her steam-whistle. The noise was echoed by many more
steam-whistles; and the ghosts of out-bound ships and tugs and
excursion steamers ran past her out of the mist and disappeared,
saluting joyously. All of the excursion steamers had a heavy
list to the side nearest the transport, and the ghosts on them
crowded to that rail and waved handkerchiefs and cheered. The
fog lifted suddenly, and between the iron rails the
Lieutenant saw high green hills on either side of a great harbor.
Houses and trees and thousands of masts swept past like a
panorama; and beyond was a mirage of three cities, with curling
smoke-wreaths and sky-reaching buildings, and a great swinging
bridge, and a giant statue of a woman waving a welcome home.
The Lieutenant surveyed the spectacle with cynical disbelief. He
was far too wise and far too cunning to be bewitched by it. In
his heart he pitied the men about him, who laughed wildly, and
shouted, and climbed recklessly to the rails and ratlines. He
had been deceived too often not to know that it was not real. He
knew from cruel experience that in a few moments the tall
buildings would crumble away, the thousands of columns of white
smoke that flashed like snow in the sun, the busy, shrieking tug-
boats, and the great statue would vanish into the sea, leaving it
gray and bare. He closed his eyes and shut the vision out. It
was so beautiful that it tempted him; but he would not be mocked,
and he buried his face in his hands. They were carrying the
farce too far, he thought. It was really too absurd; for now
they were at a wharf which was so real that, had he not known by
previous suffering, he would have been utterly deceived by it.
And there were great crowds of smiling, cheering people, and a
waiting guard of honor in fresh uniforms, and rows of police
pushing the people this way and that; and these men about him
were taking it all quite seriously, and making ready to
disembark, carrying their blanket-rolls and rifles with them.
A band was playing joyously, and the man in the next cot, who was
being lifted to a stretcher, said, "There's the Governor and his
staff; that's him in the high hat." It was really very well
done. The Custom-house and the Elevated Railroad and Castle
Garden were as like to life as a photograph, and the crowd was as
well handled as a mob in a play. His heart ached for it so that
he could not bear the pain, and he turned his back on it. It was
cruel to keep it up so long. His keeper lifted him in his arms,
and pulled him into a dirty uniform which had belonged,
apparently, to a much larger man--a man who had been killed
probably, for there were dark-brown marks of blood on the
tunic and breeches. When he tried to stand on his feet, Castle
Garden and the Battery disappeared in a black cloud of night,
just as he knew they would; but when he opened his eyes from the
stretcher, they had returned again. It was a most remarkably
vivid vision. They kept it up so well. Now the young Doctor and
the hospital steward were pretending to carry him down a gang-
plank and into an open space; and he saw quite close to him a
long line of policemen, and behind them thousands of faces, some
of them women's faces--women who pointed at him and then shook
their heads and cried, and pressed their hands to their cheeks,
still looking at him. He wondered why they cried. He did not
know them, nor did they know him. No one knew him; these people
were only ghosts.
There was a quick parting in the crowd. A man he had once known
shoved two of the policemen to one side, and he heard a girl's
voice speaking his name, like a sob; and She came running out
across the open space and fell on her knees beside the
stretcher, and bent down over him, and he was clasped in two
young, firm arms.
"Of course it is not real, of course it is not She," he assured
himself. "Because She would not do such a thing. Before all
these people She would not do it."
But he trembled and his heart throbbed so cruelly that he could
not bear the pain.
She was pretending to cry.
"They wired us you had started for Tampa on the hospital ship,"
She was saying, "and Aunt and I went all the way there before we
heard you had been sent North. We have been on the cars a week.
That is why I missed you. Do you understand? It was not my
fault. I tried to come. Indeed, I tried to come."
She turned her head and looked up fearfully at the young Doctor.
"Tell me, why does he look at me like that?" she asked. "He
doesn't know me. Is he very ill? Tell me the truth." She drew
in her breath quickly. "Of course you will tell me the truth."
When she asked the question he felt her arms draw tight about his
shoulders. It was as though she was holding him to herself,
and from some one who had reached out for him. In his trouble he
turned to his old friend and keeper. His voice was hoarse and
very low.
"Is this the same young lady who was on the transport--the one
you used to drive away?"
In his embarrassment, the hospital steward blushed under his tan,
and stammered.
"Of course it's the same young lady," the Doctor answered
briskly. "And I won't let them drive her away." He turned to
her, smiling gravely. "I think his condition has ceased to be
dangerous, madam," he said.
People who in a former existence had been his friends, and Her
brother, gathered about his stretcher and bore him through the
crowd and lifted him into a carriage filled with cushions, among
which he sank lower and lower. Then She sat beside him, and he
heard Her brother say to the coachman, "Home, and drive slowly
and keep on the asphalt."
The carriage moved forward, and She put her arm about him and his
head fell on her shoulder, and neither of them spoke. The
vision had lasted so long now that he was torn with the joy that
after all it might be real. But he could not bear the awakening
if it were not, so he raised his head fearfully and looked up
into the beautiful eyes above him. His brows were knit, and he
struggled with a great doubt and an awful joy.
"Dearest," he said, "is it real?"
"Is it real?" she repeated.
Even as a dream, it was so wonderfully beautiful that he was
satisfied if it could only continue so, if but for a little
while.
"Do you think," he begged again, trembling, "that it is going to
last much longer?"
She smiled, and, bending her head slowly, kissed him.
"It is going to last--always," she said.