all, she sat looking upward until his step on som
ing with delicate limbs parallel, arms extended, palms outward. The head was lift
el?" she aske
other." And he placed on a table the second figure, a smooth, youthful, sensuou
she inquire
t two sketches, done without a model,
t him, not c
hese," he stammered. "Didn't you un
read. She turned, laid one small hand on the back of
ee beside her. "I am so sorry. Try to reason a little. You-you must know I meant no offense-that I never could wish to offend you. Look
er face sti
d?" he pleaded, "tha
. Let
u forgi
-y
cannot-
e broke down, sobbing in the chair,
o chance for him in the world, no hope of all he had dared to believe in, no future. Watching her he felt his own c
for the moment f
. You know I did not mean to hurt you; I know tha
," she
oor devil of a sculptor, carried away by the glamour of a chance for better fortune that seem
wet eyed, ch
t of myself; and you don't understand! Do you think I w
oward the door. She crossed the threshold, turned a
that night, and, after that, da
east; for in the long hours, lying amid the fragments of her shattered dreams, t
d try to forget. But she could not; she could not leave, she could not forget, she
g, her body nothing, that the cost was nothing, compared to the terrible importance of his necessi
the aid she withheld. Sometimes she passed hours on her knees, tearless, wordless; sometimes sheer
l remained clear; their terrible beauty haunted her. Night after night, rigid on her bed's edge, she stretched her bared,
silence of the house, of her room, the
fulness which fled before her like her shadow. And at the edge of noon she found herself-where she k
d, smiling sometimes, but always very gentle; the girl flus
t be executed in sections, then set together limb by limb, for there were
pain," said the gir
t, another thing; it
y, and a little more." S
hen could she come for th
s read
e figure stood like this," and, after a pause, "the other this way.... If
lptor
, trembling in every nerv
vacation during the summer. Now her vacation, which she requested for December, lasted ten days; and at the end of it h
knelt, crying, be
s Eve, she knelt, crying, before two pedestals fr
ding-sheets-unstained cerements, sealing beneath their folds her dead pride, dead hope-all
ready; her small account settled. With strangely weak and
r with a silent little inclination of her head. But, although she had had no speech with him, she had learned tha
o the snowy darkness, drawing on her gloves and but
tor came to
mas Eve"-taking the coin irresolutely,
ed, fumbling in the pocket
es ye f'r to know that he do be lavin' the house"-the old man moistened his lips in an effort to remember wit
shook h
k. Say-from me-God bless him.... Will y
ll, M
handkerchief hastily, and he
t is all," s
e janitor was holdin
nt f'r to see Misther Landon, I
a shiver pa
e re?ntered her room, held the envelope a moment clos
ffer you a little gift at Christmastide-not in reparation, for I meant no injury-bu
t and soul crying out for him. Then the memory of what was awaiting him in his studio cho
too early for him; it must be the expressman for
but Landon had seen his letter in her
ng him, too, as he laid his gift on the ba
n a colorless voice; but she c
y Christmas," he w
peak, lifted her slim hand to stay him.
tween her world and his she heard his voice bridging it: "I love you-I love you dearly.... Once more I am the beggar-a begga
his eyes; his hands
love me?"
d the fragrant mouth assent
her own, from very far away, her
ave dreamed so long-so
both hands against his coat a
hisp
ess of you, too! I could not put it from me; I knew that night that I loved you-and to-day
hat of my gift-my twin gifts-there, in your
are
er it had been for me to die than to
Williams," I
y revery, mentally repolishing the carefully consi
lli
ha
e living i
ho
hat girl, dammit!
se. Children-bunches
lli
ha
he so
. "Don't bother me now; I've g