your house, sir, unless you tell him so yourself."
Thus did Greeba place herself under the same roof with Michael
Sunlocks, and baffle discovery by the cunning of love. Two purposes
were to be served by her artifice. First she was to be constantly by
the side of her husband, to nurse him and tend him, to succor him,
and to watch over him. Next, she was to be near him for her own sake,
and for love's sake, to win him back to her some day by means more
dear than those that had won him for her at the first. She had
decided not to reveal herself to him in the meantime, for he had lost
faith in her affection. He had charged her with marrying him for
pride's sake, but he should see that she had married him for himself
alone. The heart of his love was dead, but day by day, unknown,
unseen, unheard, she would breathe upon it, until the fire in its
ashes lived again. Such was the design with which Greeba took the
place of a menial in the house where her husband lived as a prisoner,
and little did she count the cost of it.
Six months passed, and she kept her promise to the priest to live as
an Iceland servant in the house of an Iceland master. She was never
seen, and never heard, and what personal service was called for was
done by the snappish old man-servant. But she filled the old house,
once so muggy and dark, with all the cheer and comfort of life. She
knew that Michael Sunlocks felt the change, for one day she heard him
say to the priest, as he lifted his blind face and seemed to look
around, "One would think that this place must be full of sunshine."
"Why, and so it is," said the priest, "and that's my good
housekeeper's doing."
"I have heard her step," said Michael Sunlocks. "Who is she?"
"A poor young woman that has lately lost her husband," said the
priest.
"Young, you say?" said Sunlocks.
"Why, yes, young as I go," said the priest.
"Poor soul!" said Sunlocks.
It cost Greeba many a pang not to fling herself at her husband's feet
at hearing that word so sadly spoken. But she remembered her promise
and was silent. Not long afterwards she heard Michael Sunlocks ask
the priest if he had never thought of marriage. And the priest
answered yes, that he was to have married at Reykjavik about the time
he was sent to Grimsey, but the lady had looked shy at his banishment
and declined to share it.
"So I have never looked at a woman again," said the priest.
"And I daresay you have your tender thoughts of h
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