Bennington de Laney found himself lying comfortably in bed, listening

with closed eyes to a number of sounds. Of these there most impressed

him two. They were a certain rhythmical muffled beat, punctuated at

intervals by a slight rustling of paper; and a series of metallic

clicks, softened somewhat by distance. After a time it occurred to him

to open his eyes. At once he noticed two things more--that he had some

way acquired fresh white sheets for his bed, and that on a little table

near the foot of his bunk stood a vase of flowers. These two new

impressions satisfied him for some time. He brooded over them slowly,

for his brain was weak. Then he allowed his gaze to wander to the

window.

From above its upper sash depended two long white curtains of

some lacelike material, freshly starched and with deep edges, ruffled

slightly in a pleasing fashion. They stirred slowly in the warm air

from the window. Bennington watched them lazily, breathing with

pleasure the balmy smell of pine, and listening to the sounds. The

clinking noises came through the open window. He knew now that they

meant the impact of sledge on drill. Some one was drilling somewhere.

His glance roved on, and rested without surprise on a girl in a rocking

chair swaying softly to and fro, and reading a book, the turning of

whose leaves had caused the rustling of paper which he had noticed

first.

For a long time he lay silent and contented. Her fine brown hair had

been drawn back smoothly away from her forehead into a loose knot. She

was dressed in a simple gown of white--soft, and resting on the curves

of her slender figure as lightly as down on the surface of the warm

meadows. From beneath the full skirt peeped a little slippered foot,

which tapped the floor rhythmically as the chair rocked to and fro.

Finally she glanced up and discovered him locking at her. She arose and

came to the bedside, her finger on her lips.

"You mustn't talk," she said sweetly, a great joy in her eyes. "I'm so

glad you're better."

She left the room, and returned in a little time with a bowl of chicken

broth, which she fed him with a spoon. It tasted very good to him, and

he felt the stronger for it, but as yet his voice seemed a long

distance away. When she turned to leave the room, however, he murmured

inarticulately and attempted to stir. She came back to the bed at once.

"I'll be back in a minute," she said gently, but seeing some look of

pleading in his eyes, she put the empty bowl and spoon on the little

table and sat down on the floor near the bed. He smiled, and then,

closing his eyes, fell asleep--outside the borders of the land of

visions, and with the music of a woman's voice haunting the last

moments of his consciousness.




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