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As We Sweep Through The Deep Part 4

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The surgeon went slowly away, nor turned to look again.

"Poor Jack! poor Jack!" cried Tom; "and on his birthday too!"

He bent over the hardly breathing form, and tears welled through his fingers. He had never known till now how much he loved his s.h.i.+pmate.

Would Jack die? His wounds were very grievous. "He is in G.o.d's good hands," the doctor had said.

Tom Fairlie was a thorough English sailor--no better and no worse than the average. He attended church on Sunday, and was always on the quarter-deck when the bell rang for prayers; but the actual praying, I fear, he usually left to the parson himself. If asked, Tom would have told you that it was the parson's duty to make it all right with the Great Commander above in behalf of himself and s.h.i.+pmates; but now it occurred to Tom that he might himself personally address the Being in whose hands poor Jack lay. G.o.d was good. Dr. M'Hearty had said so, and the doctor knew almost everything. He hesitated for a few moments, though. It seemed like taking the parson's duty out of his hands. Was it impertinence? He looked at Jack's poor, white, still face--looked just once, then knelt and prayed--prayed a simple sailor's prayer that isn't to be found anywhere in a book, but may be none the less effectual on that account.

When Tom rose from his knees Jack's eyes were open.

"I've been sort of praying for you, Jack. I feel relieved. Seems to me the Great Commander is going to throw you a rope and pull you through the surf."

Jack's lips were moving as if in feeble reply. But his mind was wandering.

"The blue flower, Gerty--cull that. Oh, not the other! How dark it is!

Gerty, I cannot find you. Dark, dark, dark!"

And poor Jack relapsed once more into insensibility.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "_I've been sort of praying for you, Jack._"

Page 43.]

CHAPTER V.

"NOW THIS GOOD BLADE SHALL BE MY BRIDE."

"The bosom in anguish will often be wrung That trusts to the words of a fair lady's tongue; But true are the tones of my own gallant steel-- They never betray, and they never conceal.

I'll trust thee, my loved sword, wherever we be, For the clang of my sabre is music to me."

QUARTER-MASTER ANDERSON.

It was not until Sir Digby Auld had quite gone that Gerty came to her senses, and realized the position she had placed herself in. The comical side of the situation struck her at the same time, and for a few moments right merrily did she join the laugh with her old friend, Mr. Richards.

But she grew suddenly serious next minute.

"What have I done?" she cried; "and how _can_ I tell father?"

"You droll, provoking little puss!" said Richards. "Come and sit on my knee here, as you always have done since you were a weary wee hop-of-my-thumb."

"And will you tell me a story?" Gerty was smiling once more. "Then it will just seem like old, old times, you know."

"Yes, of course. Once upon a time, then--oh, ever so long ago, because no such things as I am going to tell you about could happen in our day--once upon a time there lived, in a lonely house by the side of a deep, dark forest, a lonely man, to whom the fairies had once given a magic feather, plucked from the wing of a fairy goose; and whenever he touched paper with this quill, lo, the paper was turned into gold! So he ama.s.sed great wealth; but no one loved him when he went abroad, because, though he had gold, he had no t.i.tles and he was sharp of speech. Only he had one beautiful daughter, more fair than a houri of paradise; and she loved her father very much--more even than she loved the roses in June, or the wild birds that sang in the forest, or the stars that shone so brightly on still, clear nights in winter.

"And this daughter was beloved by a youth who was surpa.s.singly fair and brave and comely; but, ah me! he was poor, and so the father despised him.

"But one day there came from out of the dark depths of the forest a prince in a splendid chariot, with six milk-white steeds, and the sound of many trumpets blowing. This prince was stiff and somewhat old, yet he said to the father: 'Give unto me your daughter, that I may wed her, and she shall be my queen; then shall you be loved and honoured too, for you shall have t.i.tles as well as wealth.'

"But the daughter loathed the elderly suitor. Nevertheless, that she might see her father happy and t.i.tled, she gave the prince her hand, and her father dowered her munificently, and--"

"Go on, Mr. Richards."

"Well, of course they lived happy ever afterwards."

"No, no, no, Mr. Richards; that isn't quite the end."

"Well, if I must tell you, I must. For a time, then, there was no one more loved and honoured than Sylvina (for that was her pretty name), and her father, too, was invited to the court of the prince. But the fame of Sylvina's beauty and charms spread far and near, and hundreds visited the prince who had never before been seen at his castle. Especially did there come gay young sparks, with downy moustachelets to twirl, and swords that tinkled at their heels; and so attentive were these crowds of gallants that Sylvina never had time even to think, else her thoughts might have gone back to her true lover, whom she had forsaken in his poverty and sorrow, and whose white, distracted face often even yet haunted her dreams at night, just as she had seen it for a moment that day as she walked to the altar with the prince.

"But to the prince the young sparks were beyond measure attentive. They seemed delighted of an evening to see him snug in his high-backed chair by the fire; and one would run and bring his slippers and warm them, another pulled off his shoes, while a third brought his wine, and a fourth his hubble-bubble. Then they sang lullabies to him and patted his shoulder till he fell asleep; then--

"But the prince awoke at last in every sense of the word. 'No longer,'

he cried, 'will I keep an open house that young sparks may pay attentions to my wife. I will issue no more invitations, give no more parties; Sylvina's father must return to his lonely house by the forest.

I and my bride will live but for each other.'

"He spoke thus because the green demon Jealousy had aroused him.

"So the prince dismissed nearly all his servants; and in his house by the forest Sylvina's father was more lonesome now than ever. Sylvina had been a dutiful daughter, and she tried hard to be a dutiful wife; but nothing that she did was properly construed by her old husband. If she laughed and was gay, he called her giddy; if she seemed sad, he told her she was pining for her 'pauper lover;' if she showed him marked affection, he thought she was but cajoling to deceive him. Ah dear, ah dear, how miserable she was! for her ways were not his ways, because his age was not hers."

Richards paused again.

"And the poor lover whom Sylvina deserted?" said Gerty. "Tell me about him. Did he pine and die?"

"Oh no. But here comes Flora. I'll finish the story another day, Gerty."

"Why, this _is_ a pleasure!" cried Flora. "Who could have thought of finding you here? I say, Gerty, let us keep Mr. Richards to ourselves alone for the rest of the evening. My work is all complete, and father is busy in his room. Supper in the boudoir here!--Not a word, Mr.

Richards; you have no say in the matter at all." Then Flora rang the bell.

And a long delightful three hours the girls and their friend spent too.

It is almost needless to say that the chief subject of conversation was Jack, or that Sir Digby Auld was not spoken of or thought of even once.

"Heigh-ho!" said Richards, as he stood in his room that night, "heigh-ho! and I have come down to break bad tidings to Flora and her father. How ever can I do it! A lawyer ought to have no heart, but I have one. Worse luck! worse luck!"

The party next day at the Hall was a very gay affair, and never did General Grant Mackenzie seem in better spirits, nor Gerty and Flora look more bewitching or feel more happy. Mr. Keane, too, unbent himself, and was far less crisp and frigid than any one had ever seen him. Keane did not perhaps look a bit more happy than he felt, though he would not have told his thoughts to any one, as he wandered to and fro in the grand old beautifully-lighted rooms or out into the s.p.a.cious gardens and flower-laden conservatories. Everything had of late years conspired to play into his hands. He had ama.s.sed money; he had spent but little.

Gerty was good, _so_ good, for she had promised to marry Sir Digby--promised her father, that is; the other promise would come. Then this splendid hall was _his_--Keane's--unless in a short time the easy-minded, happy-go-lucky general managed to clear his feet. "Clear his feet, indeed!" thought Keane; "how could he? No; the place would be his. Then he could hold up his head in the county. And as for Sir Digby, why, he could be easily managed after marriage. He was a trifle wild, he had been told, but he believed he was wealthy, and he would--some day--be a lord."

Every one loved the general and his beautiful but una.s.suming daughter.

There was no word of her being engaged to any one as yet, though such an engagement might take place at any time. She was indeed a queenly girl.

Now suitors are usually a little afraid of queenly girls--not that there are very many about, but though they may dispense their favours in kind words and smiles, they do not flirt, and though warm-hearted deep down in their soul-depths, there is no surface love to squander or to be ruffled with every breath that blows. Such girls as Flora Grant Mackenzie love but once, and that love is real and true. Flora's prince would doubtless come. _She_ was in no hurry.

But the girl was very happy on this her brother's birthday, and after all the guests had gone she spent the usual quiet half-hour with her father in his room in loving chat and converse, just as she had done every night since, long, long ago, her mother had died.

"Good-night, dear," he said as he kissed her. "Affairs are not quite so flouris.h.i.+ng with me as I would like; but we'll trust in Providence, won't we? Things are sure to take a turn."

"Yes, dear father. Good-night: G.o.d bless you!"

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