d, and with him Orion and herself, a
shrill blast swept past them, and then the current and the waves, the
roaring of the whirlpool, the howling of the storm--all at once and
together, as with one voice, louder than all else and filling her ears,
shouted: "Thou!"--Only Orion remained speechless. An eddy caught the
horse and sucked him under, a wave carried her away from him, she was
sinking, sinking, and stretched out her arms with longing.--A cold
dew stood on her brow as she slept, and the nurse, waking her from her
uneasy dream, shook her head as she said:
"Why, child? What ails you? You have been calling Orion again and again,
at first in terror and then so tenderly.--Yes, believe me, tenderly."
CHAPTER XX.
In the neat rooms which Rufinus' wife had made ready for her sick guests
perfect peace reigned, and it was noon. A soft twilight fell through the
thick green curtains which mitigated the sunshine, and the nurses had
lately cleared away after the morning meal. Paula was moistening the
bandage on the Masdakite's head, and Pulcheria was busy in the adjoining
room with Mandane, who obeyed the physician's instructions with
intelligent submission and showed no signs of insanity.
Paula was still spellbound by her past dream. She was possessed by such
unrest that, quite against her wont, she could not long remain quiet,
and when Pulcheria came to her to tell her this or that, she listened
with so little attention and sympathy that the humble-minded girl,
fearing to disturb her, withdrew to her patient's bed-side and waited
quietly till her new divinity called her.
In fact, it was not without reason that Paula gave herself up to a
certain anxiety; for, if she was not mistaken, Orion must necessarily
present himself to hand over to her the remainder of her fortune; and
though even yesterday, on her way from the cemetery, she had said to
herself that she must and would refuse to meet him, the excitement
produced by Katharina's story and her subsequent dream had confirmed her
in her determination.
Perpetua awaited Orion's visit on the ground-floor, charged to announce
him to Rufinus and not to her mistress. The old man had willingly
undertaken to receive the money as her representative; for Philippus had
not concealed from her that he had acquainted him with the circumstances
under which Paula had quitted the governor's house, describing Orion as
a man whom she had good reason for desiring to avoid.
By a
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