Ethelyn's Mistake - Page 191/218

"Nothing," was the reply, and the voice, heard distinctly in the

stillness of the night, was so faint and sad that Ethie hid her face in

her pillow and sobbed bitterly, while the intense longing to see him

grew so strong within her that by morning the resolution was taken to

risk everything for the sake of looking upon him again.

He did not require an attendant at night--he preferred being alone, she

had ascertained; and she knew that his door was constantly left open for

the admission of fresh air. The watchman only came into the hall once an

hour or thereabouts, and while Richard slept it would be comparatively

easy for her to steal into his room. Fortune seemed to favor her, for

when at nine the doctor, as usual, came up to pay his round visits, she

heard him say, "I will leave you something which never fails to make one

sleep," and after two hours had passed she knew by the regular breathing

which, standing on the threshold of her room, she could distinctly hear,

that Richard was sleeping soundly. The watchman had just made the tour

of that hall, and the faint glimmer of his lantern was disappearing down

the stairs. It would be an hour before he came back again, and now, if

ever, was her time. There was a great throb of fear at her heart, a

trembling of every joint, a choking sensation in her throat, a shrinking

back from what might probably be the result of that midnight visit; and

then, nerving herself for the effort, she stepped out into the hall and

listened. Everything was quiet, and every room was darkened, save by the

moon, which, at its full, was pouring a flood of light through the

southern window at the end of the hall and seemed to beckon her on. She

was standing now at Richard's door, opened wide enough to admit her, and

so she made no noise as she stepped cautiously across the threshold and

stood within the chamber. The window faced the east, and the inside

blinds were opened wide, making Ethelyn remember how annoyed she used to

be at that propensity of Richard's to roll up every curtain and open

every shutter so as to make the room light and airy. It was light now

almost as day, for the moonlight lay upon the floor in a great sheet of

silver, and showed her plainly the form and features of the sick man

upon the bed. She knew he was asleep, and with a beating heart she drew

near to him, and stood for a moment looking down upon the face she had

not seen since that wintry morning five years before, when in the dim

twilight, it had bent wistfully over her, as if the lips would fain have

asked forgiveness for the angry words and deeds of the previous night.

That face was pale now, and thin, and the soft brown hair was streaked

with gray, making Richard look older than he was. He had suffered, and

the suffering had left its marks upon him so indisputably that Ethie

could have cried out with pain to see how changed he was.