"I meant nothing else," laughed the statue in the water, the moon shining into his eyes and on his noble white throat as he swam. "Now, Miss Destrey, show me exactly how you stood when you dropped your bag, and I think I can promise that you shall have it again in a few minutes."
"If I'd dreamed of this I wouldn't have let you do it," I said.
"Why not? I'm awfully happy, and the water feels like warm silk. Is this where you dropped it? Look out for a little splash, please. I'm going down."
With that he disappeared under the canal, and stayed down so long that I began to be frightened. It seemed impossible that any human being could hold his breath for so many minutes; but just as my anxiety reached boiling point, up he came, dripping, laughing, his short hair in wet rings on his forehead, and in his hand, triumphantly held up, the gold bag.
"I knew where to grope for it, and I felt it almost the first thing," he said. "Please forgive my wet fingers."
"Why, there's something red on the gold. It's blood!" I stammered, forgetting to thank him.
"Is there? What a bore! But it's nothing. I grazed the skin of my hands a little, grubbing about among the stones down there, that's all."
"It's a great deal," I said. "I can't bear to think you've been hurt for me."
"Why, I don't even feel it," said the Chauffeulier. "It's the bag that suffers. But you can have it washed."
Yes, I could have it washed. Yet, somehow, it would seem almost sacrilegious. I made up my mind without saying a word, that I would not have the bag washed. I would keep it exactly as it was, put sacredly away in some box, in memory of this night.