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"Oh! Mr. Helbeck--come at once--Mrs. Fountain----"
Augustina still sat propped in her large chair by the fire.
But a nurse looked up with a scared face as they entered.
"Oh come--_come_--Mr. Helbeck! She is just going."
Laura threw herself on her knees beside her stepmother. Helbeck gave one look at his sister, then also kneeling he took her cold and helpless hand, and said in a steady voice--
"Receive thy servant, O Lord, into the place of salvation, which she hopes from Thy mercy."
The two nurses, sobbing, said the "Amen."
"Deliver, O Lord, the soul of Thy servant from all the perils of h.e.l.l, from pains and all tribulations."
"Amen."
Mrs. Fountain's head fell gently back upon the cushions. The eyes withdrew themselves in the manner that only death knows, the lids dropped partially.
"Augustina--dear Augustina--give me one look!" cried Laura in despair.
She wrapped her arms round her stepmother and laid her head on the poor wasted bosom.
But Helbeck possessed himself of one of the girl's hands, and with his own right he made the sign of the Cross upon his sister's brow.
"Depart, O Christian soul, from this world, in the name of G.o.d the Father Almighty, who created thee; in the name of Jesus Christ, the son of the living G.o.d, who suffered for thee; in the name of the Holy Ghost, who has been poured out upon thee; in the name of the angels and archangels; in the name of the thrones and dominations; in the name of the princ.i.p.alities and powers; in the name of the cherubim and seraphim; in the name of the patriarchs and prophets; in the name of the holy apostles and evangelists; in the name of the holy martyrs and confessors; in the name of the holy monks and hermits; in the name of the holy virgins, and of all the saints of G.o.d; let thy place be this day in peace, and thy abode in the Holy Sion; through Christ our Lord. Amen."
There was silence, broken only by Laura's sobs and the nurses' weeping.
Helbeck alone was quite composed. He gazed at his sister, not with grief--rather with a deep, mysterious joy. When he rose, still looking down upon Augustina, he questioned the nurses in low tones.
There had been hardly any warning. Suddenly a stifled cry--a gurgling in the throat--a spasm. Sister Rosa thought she had distinguished the words "Jesus!--" "Alan--" but there had been no time for any message, any farewell. The doctors had once warned the brother that it was possible, though not likely, that the illness would end in this way.
"Father Bowles gave her Communion this morning?" said Helbeck, with a grave exactness, like one informing himself of all necessary things.
"This morning and yesterday," said Sister Rosa eagerly; "and dear Mrs.
Fountain confessed on Sat.u.r.day."
Laura rose from her knees and wrung her hands.
"Oh! I can't bear it!" she said to Helbeck. "If I had been there--if we could just have told her! Oh, how strange--how _strange_ it is!"
And she looked wildly about her, seized by an emotion, a misery, that Helbeck could not altogether understand. He tried to soothe her, regardless of the presence of the nurses. Laura, too, did not think of them. But when he put his arm round her, she withdrew herself in a restlessness that would not be controlled.
"How strange--_how strange_!" she repeated, as she looked down on the little blanched and stiffening face.
Helbeck stooped and kissed the brow of the dead woman.
"If I had only loved her better!" he said with emotion.
Laura stared at him. His words brought back to her a rush of memories--Augustina's old fear of him--those twelve years in which no member of the Fountain household had ever seen Mrs. Fountain's brother.
So long as Augustina had been Stephen Fountain's wife, she had been no less dead for Helbeck, her only brother, than she was now.
The girl shuddered. She looked pitifully at the others.
"Please--please--leave me alone with her a little! She was my father's wife--my dear father's wife!"
And again she sank on her knees, hiding her face against the dead. The nurses hesitated, but Helbeck thought it best to let her have her way.
"We will go for half an hour," he said, stooping to her. Then, in a whisper that only she could hear--"My Laura--you are mine now--let me soon come back and comfort you!"
When they returned they found Laura sitting on a stool beside her stepmother. One hand grasped that of Augustina, while the other dropped listlessly in front of her. Her brow under its weight of curly hair hung forward. The rest of the little face almost disappeared behind the fixed and sombre intensity of the eyes.
She took no notice when they came in, and it was Helbeck alone who could rouse her. He persuaded her to go, on a promise that the nurses would soon recall her.
When all was ready she returned. Augustina was lying in a white pomp of candles and flowers; the picture of the Virgin, the statue of St. Joseph, her little praying table, were all garlanded with light; every trace of the long physical struggle had been removed; the great bed, with its meek, sleeping form and its white draperies, rose solitary amid its lights--an altar of death in the void of the great panelled room.
Laura stood opposite to Helbeck, her hands clasped, as white and motionless from head to foot as Augustina herself. Once amid the prayers and litanies he was reciting with the Sisters, he lifted his head and found that she was looking at him and not at Augustina. Her expression was so forlorn and difficult to read, that he felt a vague uneasiness.
But his Catholic sense of the deep awe of what he was doing made him try to concentrate himself upon it, and when he raised his eyes again Laura was gone.
At four o'clock, in the dawn, he went himself to rest awhile, a little surprised, perhaps, that Laura had not come back to share the vigils of the night, but thankful, nevertheless, that she had been prudent enough to spare herself.
Some little time before he went, while it was yet dark, Sister Rosa had gone to lie down for a while. Her room was just beyond Laura's. As she pa.s.sed Miss Fountain's door she saw that there was a light within, and for some time after the tired nurse had thrown herself on her bed, she was disturbed by sounds from the next room. Miss Fountain seemed to be walking up and down. Once or twice she broke out into sobs, then again there were periods of quiet, and once a sharp sound that might have been made by tearing a letter. But Sister Rosa did not listen long. It was natural that Miss Fountain should sorrow and watch, and the nurse's fatigue soon brought her sleep.
She had rejoined her companion, however, and Mr Helbeck had been in his room about half an hour, when the door of the death chamber opened softly, and Miss Fountain appeared.
The morning light was already full, though still rosily clear and cold, and it fell upon the strangest and haggardest figure. Miss Fountain was in a black dress, covered with a long black cloak. Her dress and cloak were bedraggled with mud and wet. Her hat and hair were both in a drenched confusion, and the wind had laid a pa.s.sing flush, like a mask, upon the pallor of her face. In her arms she held some boughs of wild cherry, and a ma.s.s of wild clematis, gathered from a tree upon the house wall, for which Augustina had cherished a particular affection.
She paused just inside the door, and looked at the nurses uncertainly, like one who hardly knew what she was doing.
Sister Rosa went to her.
"They are so wet," she whispered with a troubled look, "and I went to the most sheltered places. But I should like to put them by her. She loved the cherry blossom--and this clematis."
The nurse took her into the next room, and between them they dried and shook the beautiful tufted branches. As Laura was about to take them back to the bed, Sister Rosa asked if she would not take off her wet cloak.
"Oh no!" said the girl, as though with a sudden entreaty. "No! I am going out again. It shan't touch anything."
And daintily holding it to one side, she returned with the flowers in a basket. She took them out one by one, and laid them beside Augustina, till the bed was a vision of spring, starred and wreathed from end to end, save for that waxen face and hands in the centre.
"There is no room for more," said the nurse gently, beside her.
Laura started.
"No--but----"
She looked vaguely round the walls, saw a pair of old Delft vases still empty, and said eagerly, pointing, "I will bring some for those. There is a tree--a cherry tree," the nurse remembered afterwards that she had spoken with a remarkable slowness and clearness, "just above the otter cliff. You don't know where that is. But Mr. Helbeck knows."