Left alone at last with Heliobas and Father Paul, I, kneeling at the side of my darling Zara, looked into their faces for comfort, but found none. The dry-eyed despair on the countenance of Heliobas pierced me to the heart; the pitying, solemn expression of the venerable priest touched me as with icy cold. The lovely, marble- like whiteness and stillness of the figure before me filled me with a vague terror. Making a strong effort to control my voice, I called, in a low, clear tone: "Zara! Zara!"
No sign--not the faintest flicker of an eyelash! Only the sound of the falling rain and the moaning wind--the thunder had long ago ceased. Suddenly a something attracted my gaze, which first surprised and then horrified me. The jewel--the electric stone on Zara's bosom no longer shone! It was like a piece of dull unpolished pebble. Grasping at the meaning of this, with overwhelming instinctive rapidity, I sprang up and caught the arm of Heliobas.
"You--you!" I whispered hurriedly. "YOU can restore her! Do as you did with Prince Ivan; you can--you must! That stone she wears--the light has gone out of it. If that means--and I am sure it does--that life has for a little while gone out of HER, YOU can bring it back. Quick--Quick! You have the power!"
He looked at me with burning grief-haunted eyes; and a sigh that was almost a groan escaped his lips.
"I have NO power," he said. "Not over her. I told you she was dominated by a higher force than mine. What can I do? Nothing-- worse than nothing--I am utterly helpless."
I stared at him in a kind of desperate horror.
"Do you mean to tell me," I said slowly, "that she is dead--really dead?"
He was about to answer, when one of the watching servants announced in a low tone: "Dr. Morini."
The new-comer was a wiry, keen-eyed little Italian; his movements were quick, decisive, and all to the point of action. The first thing he did was to scatter the little group of servants right and left, and send them about their business. The next, to close the doors of the room against all intrusion. He then came straight up to Heliobas, and pressing his hand in a friendly manner, said briefly: "How and when did this happen?"
Heliobas told him in as few words as possible. Dr. Morini then bent over Zara's lifeless form, and examined her features attentively. He laid his car against her heart and listened. Finally, he caught sight of the round, lustreless pebble hanging at her neck suspended by its strings of pearls. Very gently he moved this aside; looked, and beckoned us to come and look also. Exactly on the spot where the electric stone had rested, a small circular mark, like a black bruise, tainted the fair soft skin--a mark no larger than a small finger-ring.