"George, I can't bear it!" she said at length.
"It is very sad," answered George. "But he had a happy life, I don't doubt, up to—to—"
"What does that matter now? It is all a horrible farce.—To begin so fair and lovely, and end so stormy and cold and miserable!"
George did not like to say what he thought, namely, that it was Leopold's own doing. He did not see that therein lay the deepest depth of the misery—the thing that of all things needed help: all else might be borne; the less that COULD be borne the better.
"It IS horrible," he said. "But what can be done? What's done is done, and nobody can help it."
"There should be somebody to help it," said Helen.
"Ah! Should be!" said George. "—Well, it's a comfort it will soon be over!"
"Is it?" returned Helen almost sharply. "—But he's not your brother, and you don't know what it is to lose him! Oh, how desolate the world will be without my darling!"
And again her tears found way.
"All that I can do to make up for the loss, dearest Helen," said
George,—