The Heart - Page 133/151

It was six years and more since I had seen my half-brother, and I

should scarcely have known him, for time had worked great changes in

both his face and form. He was much stouter than I remembered him,

and wore a ruddy point of beard at his chin, and a great wig,

whereas I recalled him as smooth of face, with his own hair.

But he was a handsome man, as I saw even then, lying in so much pain

and weakness, and he came and stood over me, and looked at me more

kindly than I should have expected, and I could see something of our

common mother in his blue eyes. He reached down his hand and shook

the one of mine which I could muster strength to raise, and called

me brother, and hoped that I found myself better, and gave me very

many tender messages of our mother, and of his father likewise,

which puzzled me exceedingly, until matters were explained. Colonel

Chelmsford had parted with me when I left England with but scant

courtesy, and as for my poor mother, I had not seen her at all, she

being confined to her chamber with grief over my disgrace, and not

one word had I received from them since that time. So when John

Chelmsford said that our mother sent her dear love to her son Harry,

and that nothing save her delicate health had prevented her from

sailing to Virginia in the same ship to see the son from whom she

had been so long parted, I gasped, and felt my head reel, and I

called up my mother's face, and verily I felt the tears start in my

eyes, but I was very weak.

Then forth from her pocket Catherine drew a ring, and it flashed

green with a great emerald, and particoloured with brilliants,

before my eyes, and I was well-nigh overcome by the sight of that

and everything turned black before me, for it was my Lord Robert

Ealing's great ring of exceeding value, for the theft of which I had

been transported.

Straightway Catherine saw that it was too much for me, for she knelt

down beside me and called John to give her a flask of sweet waters

which stood on the table, and began bathing my forehead, the while

my brother looked on with something of a jealous frown.

"'Twas thoughtless of me, Harry," she whispered, "but they say joy

does not kill, and--and--dost thou know the ring?"

I nodded. It seemed to me that no jewels could ever be mined which I

would know as I knew that green star of emerald and those encircling

brilliants. That ring I knew to my cost.