As he turned to adjust his transom, something white thrust under the door caught his eye, and he walked over and drew it across the sill. It was a sealed note. He opened it, reading it as he walked back to the drop-light burning beside his bed: "Did you not mean to say good-bye? Because it is to be good-bye for a long, long time--for all our lives--as long as we live--as long as the world lasts, and longer. … Good-bye--unless you care to say it to me."
He stood studying the note for a while; presently, lighting a match, he set fire to it and carried it blazing to the grate and flung it in, watching the blackened ashes curl up, glow, whiten, and fall in flakes to the hearth. Then he went out into the corridor, and traversed the hall to the passage which led to the bay-window. There was nobody there. The stars looked in on him, twinkling with a frosty light; beneath, the shadowy fronds of palms traced a pale pattern on the glass roof of the swimming pool. He waited a moment, turned, retraced his steps to his own door and stood listening. Then, moving swiftly, he walked the length of the corridor, and, halting at her door, knocked once.
After a moment the door swung open. He stepped forward into the room, closing the door behind him, and confronted the tall girl standing there silhouetted against the lamp behind her.
"You are insane to do this!" she whispered. "I let you in for fear you'd knock again!"
"I went to the bay-window," he said.
"You went too late. I was there an hour ago. I waited. Do you know what time it is?"
"Come to the bay-window," he said, "if you fear me here."
"Do you know it is nearly three o'clock?" she repeated. "And you leave at six.
"Shall we say good-bye here?" he asked coolly.
"Certainly. I dare not go out. And you--do you know the chances we are running? You must be perfectly mad to come to my room. Do you think anybody could have seen--heard you--"
"No. Good night." He offered his hand; she laid both of hers in it. He could scarcely distinguish her features where she stood dark against the brilliant light behind her.
"Good-bye," he whispered, kissing her hands where they lay in his.
"Good-bye." Her fingers closed convulsively, retaining his hands. "I hope--I think that--you--" Her head was drooping; she could not control her voice.
"Good-bye, Sylvia," he said again.
It was quite useless, she could not speak; and when he took her in his arms she clung to him, quivering; and he kissed the wet lashes, and the hot, trembling lips, and the smooth little hands crushed to his breast.