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that he must take the patent leather from off his feet, for the

ground on which he stands is hallowed ground.
In the lonely hour of early afternoon, when the workers had gone

back to their work, and the loiterers were scarcely yet gathered
again, Francesca Bassington made her way restlessly along the

stretches of gravelled walk that bordered the ornamental water.
The overmastering unhappiness that filled her heart and stifled her

thinking powers found answering echo in her surroundings. There is
a sorrow that lingers in old parks and gardens that the busy

streets have no leisure to keep by them; the dead must bury their
dead in Whitehall or the Place de la Concorde, but there are

quieter spots where they may still keep tryst with the living and
intrude the memory of their bygone selves on generations that have

almost forgotten them. Even in tourist-trampled Versailles the
desolation of a tragedy that cannot die haunts the terraces and

fountains like a bloodstain that will not wash out; in the Saxon
Garden at Warsaw there broods the memory of long-dead things,

coeval with the stately trees that shade its walks, and with the
carp that swim to-day in its ponds as they doubtless swam there

when "Lieber Augustin" was a living person and not as yet an
immortal couplet. And St. James's Park, with its lawns and walks

and waterfowl, harbours still its associations with a bygone order
of men and women, whose happiness and sadness are woven into its

history, dim and grey as they were once bright and glowing, like
the faded pattern worked into the fabric of an old tapestry. It

was here that Francesca had made her way when the intolerable
inaction of waiting had driven her forth from her home. She was

waiting for that worst news of all, the news which does not kill
hope, because there has been none to kill, but merely ends

suspense. An early message had said that Comus was ill, which
might have meant much or little; then there had come that morning a

cablegram which only meant one thing; in a few hours she would get
a final message, of which this was the preparatory forerunner. She

already knew as much as that awaited message would tell her. She
knew that she would never see Comus again, and she knew now that

she loved him beyond all things that the world could hold for her.
It was no sudden rush of pity or compunction that clouded her

judgment or gilded her recollection of him; she saw him as he was,
the beautiful, wayward, laughing boy, with his naughtiness, his

exasperating selfishness, his insurmountable folly and
perverseness, his cruelty that spared not even himself, and as he

was, as he always had been, she knew that he was the one thing that
the Fates had willed that she should love. She did not stop to

accuse or excuse herself for having sent him forth to what was to
prove his death. It was, doubtless, right and reasonable that he

should have gone out there, as hundreds of other men went out, in
pursuit of careers; the terrible thing was that he would never come

back. The old cruel hopelessness that had always chequered her
pride and pleasure in his good looks and high spirits and fitfully

charming ways had dealt her a last crushing blow; he was dying
somewhere thousands of miles away without hope of recovery, without

a word of love to comfort him, and without hope or shred of
consolation she was waiting to hear of the end. The end; that last

dreadful piece of news which would write "nevermore" across his
life and hers.

The livelybustle in the streets had been a torture that she could
not bear. It wanted but two days to Christmas and the gaiety of

the season, forced or genuine, rang out everywhere. Christmas
shopping, with its anxious solicitude or self-centred absorption,

overspread the West End and made the pavements scarcely passable at
certain favoured points. Proud parents, parcel-laden and

surrounded by escorts of their young people, compared notes with
one another on the looks and qualities of their offspring and

exchanged loud hurried confidences on the difficulty or success
which each had experienced in getting the right presents for one

and all. Shouted directions where to find this or that article at
its best mingled with salvos of Christmas good wishes. To

Francesca, making her way frantically through the carnival of
happiness with that lonely deathbed in her eyes, it had seemed a

callous mockery of her pain; could not people remember that there
were crucifixions as well as joyous birthdays in the world? Every

mother that she passed happy in the company of a fresh-looking
clean-limbed schoolboy son sent a fresh stab at her heart, and the

very shops had their bitter memories. There was the tea-shop where
he and she had often taken tea together, or, in the days of their

estrangement, sat with their separate friends at separate tables.
There were other shops where extravagantly-incurred bills had

furnished material for those frequently recurring scenes of
recrimination, and the Colonial outfitters, where, as he had

phrased it in whimsical mockery, he had bought grave-clothes for
his burying-alive. The "oubliette!" She remembered the bitter

petulant name he had flung at his destined exile. There at least
he had been harder on himself than the Fates were pleased to will;

never, as long as Francesca lived and had a brain that served her,
would she be able to forget. That narcotic would never be given to

her. Unrelenting, unsparing memory would be with her always to
remind her of those last days of tragedy. Already her mind was

dwelling on the details of that ghastlyfarewell dinner-party and
recalling one by one the incidents of ill-omen that had marked it;

how they had sat down seven to table and how one liqueur glass in
the set of seven had been shivered into fragments; how her glass

had slipped from her hand as she raised it to her lips to wish
Comus a safe return; and the strange, quiet hopelessness of Lady

Veula's "good-bye"; she remembered now how it had chilled and
frightened her at the moment.

The park was filling again with its floating population of
loiterers, and Francesca's footsteps began to take a homeward

direction. Something seemed to tell her that the message for which
she waited had arrived and was lying there on the hall table. Her

brother, who had announced his intention of visiting her early in
the afternoon would have gone by now; he knew nothing of this

morning's bad news - the instinct of a wounded animal to creep away
by itself had prompted her to keep her sorrow from him as long as

possible. His visit did not necessitate her presence; he was
bringing an Austrian friend, who was compiling a work on the

Franco-Flemish school of painting, to inspect the Van der Meulen,
which Henry Greech hoped might perhaps figure as an illustration in

the book. They were due to arrive shortly after lunch, and
Francesca had left a note of apology, pleading an urgent engagement

elsewhere. As she turned to make her way across the Mall into the
Green Park a gentle voice hailed her from a carriage that was just

drawing up by the sidewalk. Lady Caroline Benaresq had been
favouring the Victoria Memorial with a long unfriendly stare.

"In primitive days," she remarked, "I believe it was the fashion
for great chiefs and rulers to have large numbers of their

relatives and dependents killed and buried with them; in these more
enlightened times we have invented quite another way of making a

great Sovereign universally regretted. My dear Francesca," she
broke off suddenly, catching the misery that had settled in the

other's eyes, "what is the matter? Have you had bad news from out
there?"

"I am waiting for very bad news," said Francesca, and Lady Caroline
knew what had happened.

"I wish I could say something; I can't." Lady Caroline spoke in a
harsh, grunting voice that few people had ever heard her use.

Francesca crossed the Mall and the carriage drove on.
"Heaven help that poor woman," said Lady Caroline; which was, for

her, startlingly like a prayer.
As Francesca entered the hall she gave a quick look at the table;

several packages, evidently an early batch of Christmas presents,
were there, and two or three letters. On a salver by itself was

the cablegram for which she had waited. A maid, who had evidently

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