The Hermit of Far End
y of a lost soul. The eerie sound of it served in some indefinable way to emphasise the cosy warmth and security of the room wh
e its pages, unconscious of the keen blue eyes that
er, and now, as he sat quietly watching the slender figure on the opposite side of the hearth, it wore a c
he laid aside the newspaper he had been readin
r fences as yo
ed up abs
ything?" she as
his shoulders
id, and, as I've never been in favour of postponing a thing
ara's attention
ked quickly. "You ha
le crossed
alk with Dr. McPherson yesterday, and the upshot of it is that I may be requ
no effort to "break the news," or soften it in any way. He had always been pr
me weeks-for, though silent on the matter, she had not failed to observe his appearance of increasing frail
mea
s legs, cloaked beneath the inevitable rug. "After all," he continued, "life-and death-are both fearfull
o . . . without you
" He broke off short, his blue eyes dreaming. Presently he gave his shoulders the characteristic little sha
So, since the fiat has gone forth-McPherson's a sound man and knows his job-let's face it t
, her face
w. I shan't
you'll find, when the time comes. Unfortunately, however, there's no getting rou
rd?" asked Sara listlessly. "Aren
old Timothy Durward left him his property on condition that he adopted
e to live with you," observed Sara thoughtfull
his wife-she was a Miss Eden-were stationed in India so many years, I rather lost touch with them. They came home when the Durward pr
ara's eyes lift
e always remained a bache
gh there were plenty of men who did." He regarded Sara with an odd
l me
ok his
ow soon enough
e seemed to pull himself up short, forcing himself back
t. It's entailed, and the income with it. But I've a clear four hundred a year,
rst out Sara passionately. "It's ha
a little touched by youth
rom wrecking your life as she wrecked hers. And money-a secure little income of her own-is a very good sort of shield for a women. Four hundred's not enough to satisfy a mercenary individual, but it's enough to enable a woman to
that troubled on her lips, or, if he did, had no m
only wanted you to know that, whatever happens, you will
s all I should care about!
ss nor deep grief suffice to deaden for very long the pinpricks of material discomfort. But the worldly-wise old man possessed a broad tolera
handing out the usual platitudes, and holding forth on the example of Christian fortitude exhibited by a very wealthy lady in the neighbourhood, who had also been recently widowed. 'That's all very well,
rily alert and cheerful-so alive that Sara began to hope Dr. McPherson had been mistaken in his opinion, and that
d one day, driven by the very human instinct to hear her optimism e
shook
ound, I've found life a very good sort of thing-although"-reflectively-"I've missed the best it
, to meet death with the same cheerful, half-humorou
special den with a gay little joke on her lips and a great bunch of mistlet
uld see the back of Patrick's head with its thick crop of grizzle
. . Uncle!" Her voice shrilled on to a sharp s
a clock and the loud beating of her own heart. The two seemed to merge into one gigantic pu
e throbbing ceased, and she was only conscious of a solitude so
piness and content, as though he had just found something for which he had been searching. He had looked like that a thousand times, when, seeking for her, he had come upon her, at last,
ts dreadful passivity stinging her into realization of the truth. Patrick was dead. And, judgi
r any more-not quite like this, Patrick sitting in his accustomed place, wearing his beloved old tweeds, with an immacula
he voice-Patrick's voice-seemed to sound in h
d to her throat, and stood silen
uiet moments, alone for the last time with Patrick Lovell, Sara tried to gather strength and courage from her memories