The Broad Highway - Page 178/374

"Quite!" said she; "is there anything will serve as a bandage?"

"There is the towel!" I suggested.

"Not to be thought of!"

"Then you might tear a strip off the sheet," said I, nodding

towards the bed.

"Ridiculous!" said she, and proceeded to draw a handkerchief from

the bosom of her dress, and having folded it with great nicety

and moistened it in the bowl, she tied it about my temples.

Now, to do this, she had, perforce, to pass her, arms about my

neck, and this brought her so near that I could feel her breath

upon my lips, and there stole to me, out of her hair, or out of

her bosom, a perfume very sweet, that was like the fragrance of

violets at evening. But her hands were all too dexterous, and,

quicker than it takes to write, the bandage was tied, and she was

standing before me, straight and tall.

"There--that is more comfortable, isn't it?" she inquired, and

with the words she bestowed a final little pat to the bandage, a

touch so light--so ineffably gentle that it might almost have

been the hand of that long-dead mother whom I had never known.

"That is better, isn't it?" she demanded.

"Thank you--yes, very comfortable!" said I. But, as the word

left me, my glance, by accident, encountered the pistol near by,

and at sight of it a sudden anger came upon me, for I remembered

that, but for my intervention, this girl was a murderess;

wherefore, I would fain have destroyed the vile thing, and

reached for it impulsively, but she was before me, and snatching

up the weapon, hid it behind her as she had done once before.

"Give it to me," said I, frowning, "it is an accursed thing!"

"Yet it has been my friend to-night," she answered.

"Give it to me!" I repeated. She threw up her head, and regarded

me with a disdainful air, for my tone had been imperative.

"Come," said I, and held out my hand. So, for a while, we looked

into each other's eyes, then, all at once, she dropped the weapon

on the table, before me and turned her back to me.

"I think--" she began, speaking with her back still turned to me.

"Well?" said I.

"--that you have--"

"Yes?" said I.

"--very unpleasant--eyes!"

"I am very sorry for that," said I, dropping the weapon out of

sight behind my row of books, having done which, I drew both

chairs nearer the fire, and invited her to sit down.