ly, on
tiptoe, to look with ill-concealed awe at the child, and to whisper
hopes to Marie which displayed a ludicrous, if lamentable, ignorance of
what he was talking about.
"Little chap's better," he said; "I'm sure of it. See, Marie, his eyes
are brighter. Devilish hot, though, isn't he--poor little soul?"
Then he stood about, awkwardly sympathetic.
"Anything I can do for you, Jocelyn?" he asked, and then departed, only
too pleased to get away from the impending calamity.
Marie was not emotional. She seemed to have left all emotion behind, in
some other phase of her life which was shut off from the present by a
thick curtain. She was patient and calm, but she was not so clever with
the child as was Jocelyn. Perhaps her greater experience acted as a
handicap in her execution of those small offices to the sick which may
be rendered useless at any moment. Perhaps she knew that Nestorius was
wanted elsewhere. Or it may only have been that Jocelyn was able to
soothe him sooner, because there is an unwritten law that those who love
us best are not always the best nurses for us.
When, at last, sleep came to the child, it was in Jocelyn's arms that
he lay with that utter abandonment of pose which makes a sleeping infant
and a sleeping kitten more graceful than any living thing. Marie leant
over Nestorius until her dusky cheek almost touched Jocelyn's fair
English one.
"He is asleep," she whispered.
And her great dark eyes probed Jocelyn's face as if wondering whether
her arms, bearing that burden, told her that this was the last sleep.
Jocelyn nodded gravely, and continued the gentle swaying motion affected
by women under such circumstances.
Nestorius continued to sleep, and at last Marie, overcome by sleep
herself, lay down on her bed.
Thus it came about that the dawn found Jocelyn moving softly in the
room, with Nestorius asleep in her arms. A pink light came creeping
through the trees, presently turning to a golden yellow, and, behold!
it was light. It was a little cooler, for the sea-breeze had set in. The
cool air from the surface of the water was rushing inland to supply the
place of the heated atmosphere rising towards the sun. With the breeze
came the increased murmur of the distant surf. The dull continuous sound
seemed to live amidst the summits of the trees far above the low-built
house. It rose and fell with a long-drawn, rhythmic swing. Already the
sounds of life were mingling with it--the l
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