“Yes,” she said, with eager pitifulness. “It will be better now.”
The little mother lifted her wet face, still clinging to Baird’s arm as she looked up at him.
“And I have it to remember,” she sobbed, “that you—you were his friend, and that for years you made him happier than he had ever been. He said you gave him a reason for living.”
Baird was ashen pale. She stooped and softly kissed the back of his hand.
“Somehow,” she said, “you seemed even to comfort him for Margery. He seemed to bear it better after he knew you. I shall not feel as if they were quite gone away from me while I can talk to you about them. You will spare an hour now and then to come and sit with me?” She looked round the plain, respectable little room with a quiet finality. “I am too old and tired to live long,” she added.
It was Baird who kissed her hand now, with a fervour almost passion. Miss Amory started at sight of his action, and at the sound of the voice in which he spoke.
“Talk to me as you would have talked to him,” he said. “Think of me as you would have thought of him. Let me—in God’s name, let me do what there is left me!”
Miss Amory’s carriage had waited before the gate, and when she went out to it Baird went with her.
After he had put her into it he stood a moment on the pavement and looked at her.