[Halcyone by Elinor Glyn]@TWC D-Link bookHalcyone CHAPTER XXIII 1/10
Meanwhile, John Derringham lay betwixt life and death and was watched over by the kind eye of Arabella Clinker.
She had gathered quite a number of facts in the night, while she had listened to his feverish ravings--he was light-headed for several hours before the nurses came--then the fever had decreased and though extremely weak he was silent. Arabella knew now that he loved Halcyone--that wood nymph they had seen during their Easter Sunday walk--and that he had been going to meet her when the accident had happened.
The rest was a jumble of incoherent phrases all giving the impression of intense desire and anxiety for some special event.
It was: "Then we shall be happy, my sweet," or "Halcyone, you will not think me a brute, then, will you, my darling," and there were more just detached words about an oak tree, and a goddess and such like vaporings. But Arabella felt that, no doubt the moment he would be fully conscious, he would wish to send some message--for during the two following days whenever she went in to see him there was a hungering demand in his haggard eyes. So Miss Clinker took it upon herself to stop at the Professor's house on one of her walks, meaning to beard Cheiron in his den, and find out how--should it be necessary--she could communicate with Halcyone.
And then she was informed by Mrs.Porrit that her master would be away for a fortnight, and that Miss Halcyone La Sarthe had been taken off by her stepmother--she did not know where--and that the two old ladies had actually gone that day, with Hester and old William, to some place on the Welsh coast they had known when they were children, for a change to the sea! La Sarthe Chase was shut up.
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