obeying. "Oh, thank you, thank you," he 
said. "One doesn't really mind in the least. Do you--do you object to it? 
Shall I close the shutters?" 
"If you do," said Miss Howe delightedly, "we shall not be able to see." 
"Neither we should," he assented; "the others are closed already. Very 
badly built these Calcutta houses, aren't they? Have you been long in 
India, Miss--Captain Filbert?" 
"I served a year up-country, and then fell ill and had to go home on 
furlough. The native food didn't suit me. I am stationed in Calcutta now, 
but I have only just come." 
"Pleasant time of the year to arrive," Mr. Lindsay remarked. 
"Yes; but we are not particular about that. We love all the times and the 
seasons, since every one brings its appointed opportunity. Last year, in
Mugridabad, there were more souls saved in June than in any other 
month." 
"Really?" asked Mr. Lindsay; but he was not looking at her with those 
speculations. The light had come back upon her face. 
"I will say good-bye now," said Captain Filbert. "I have a meeting at 
half-past five. Shall we have a word of prayer before I go?" 
She plainly looked for immediate acquiescence; but Miss Howe said, 
"Another time, dear." 
"Oh, why not?" exclaimed Duff Lindsay. Hilda put the semblance of a 
rebuke into her glance at him, and said, "Certainly not." 
"Oh," Captain Filbert cried, "don't think you can escape that way! I will 
pray for you long and late to-night, and ask my lieutenant to do so too. 
Don't harden your heart, Miss Howe--the Lord is waiting to be 
compassionate." 
The two were silent, and Laura walked toward the door. Just where the 
sun slanted into the room and made leaf-patterns on the floor she turned 
and stood for an instant in the full tide of it; and it set all the loose 
tendrils of her pale yellow hair in a little flame, and gave the folds of 
the flesh-coloured sari that fell over her shoulder the texture of 
draperies so often depicted as celestial. The sun sought into her face, 
revealing nothing but great purity of line and a clear pallor except 
where below the wide light blue eyes two ethereal shadows brushed 
themselves. Under the intentness of their gaze she made as if she would 
pass out without speaking; and the tender curves of her limbs, as she 
wavered, could not have been matched out of mediaeval stained glass. 
But her courage, or her conviction, came back to her at the door, and 
she raised her hand and pointed at Hilda. 
"She's got a soul worth saving." 
Then the portiere fell behind her, and nothing was said in the room 
until the pad of her bare feet had ceased upon the stair.
"She came out in the Bengal with us," Hilda told him--this is not a 
special instance of it, but she could always gratify Duff Lindsay in 
advance--"and she was desperately seedy, poor girl. I looked after her a 
little, but it was mistaken kindness, for now she's got me on her mind. 
And as the two hundred and eighty million benighted souls of India are 
her continual concern, I seem a superfluity. To think of being the two 
hundred and eighty millionth and first oppresses one." 
Lindsay listened with a look of accustomed happiness. 
"You weren't at that end of the ship?" he demanded. 
"Of course I was--we all were. And some of us--little Miss Stace, for 
instance--thankful enough at the prospect of cold meat and sardines for 
tea every night for a whole month. And, after Suez, ices for dinner on 
Sundays. It was luxury." 
Lindsay was pulling an aggrieved moustache. "I don't call it fair or 
friendly," he said, "when you know how easily it could have been 
arranged. Your own sense of the fitness of things should have told you 
that the second-class saloon was no place for you. For YOU!" 
Plainly she did not intend to argue the point. She poised her chin in her 
hand and looked away over his head, and he could not help seeing, as 
he had seen before, that her eyes were beautiful. But this had been so 
long acknowledged between them that she could hardly have been 
conscious that she was insisting on it afresh. Then by the time he might 
have thought her launched upon a different meditation, her mind swept 
back to his protest, like a whimsical bird. 
"I didn't want to extract anything from the mercantile community of 
Calcutta in advance," she said. "It would be most unbusinesslike. 
Stanhope has been equal to bringing us out; but I quite see myself, as 
leading lady, taking round the hat before the end of the season. Then I 
think," she said with defiance, "that I shall    
    
		
	
	
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