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MacGrath, Harold, 1871-1932

"The Goose Girl"

Never more the beautiful gardens, the music, the
galloping of soldiers who drew their sabers whenever they passed her.
Never more any of these things.
"Can I be of any assistance?" he said, in an undertone.
"No," sadly.
The days, more or less monotonous, went past. Sometimes he saw her alone
on deck, but only for a little while. Her father was slowly improving,
but with this improvement came the natural desire for seclusion; so he
came on deck only at night.
The night on which the vessel bore into the moist, warm air of the Gulf
Stream was full of moonshine, of smooth, phosphorescent billows.
Herbeck had gone below. The girl leaned over the rail, alone and lonely.
And Carmichael, seeing her, could no longer still the desire in his
heart. He came up to her.
"See!" she exclaimed, pointing to the little eddies of foam speeding
along the hull. "Do you know what they remind me of? Mermaids' fingers,
grasping and clutching at the boat as if to drag it down below."
How beautiful she was with the frost of moonlight on her hair!
"You must not talk like that," he admonished.
"I am very unhappy."
"And when you say that you make me so, too."
"Why?" She had spoken the word at last.
"Do you remember the night you dropped your fan?" leaning so closely
toward her that his arm pressed against hers.


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