The effect was weird. Captain Ascott's
fingers trembled, and he paused for an instant and looked down upon the
dead, then out sorrowfully to the waiting sea, before he spoke the words,
"We therefore commit their bodies to the deep." But, the moment they were
uttered, the bier was lifted, there was a swift plunge, and only the flag
and the empty boards were left. The sobbing of women now seemed almost
unnatural; for around us was the bright sunlight, the gay dresses of the
lascars, the sound of the bell striking the hours, and children playing
on the deck. The ship moved on.
And Mrs. Falchion? As the burial service was read, she had stood, and
looked, not at the bier, but straight out to sea, calm and apparently
unsympathetic, though, as she thought, her husband was being buried.
When, however, the weighted body divided the water with a swingeing
sound, her face suddenly suffused, as though shame had touched her or
some humiliating idea had come. But she turned to Justine almost
immediately, and soon after said calmly: "Bring a play of Moliere, and
read to me, Justine."
I had the packet her supposed dead husband had left for her in my pocket.
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