"Hearing this, it struck me as barely possible that the portrait in the locket might be the portrait of the absent person.
I sent her nurse out of the room, and took her hand in mine.
Trusting partly to her own admirable courage and strength of mind, and partly to the confidence which I knew she placed in me as an old friend and adviser, I adverted to the words which had fallen from her in the feverish state. And then I said,
'You know that any secret of yours is safe in my keeping.
Tell me, do you expect to receive any little keepsake or memorial from 'George'?
"It was a risk to run.
The black veil which she always wears was over her face.
I had nothing to tell me of the effect which I was producing on her, except the changing temperature, or the partial movement, of her hand, as it lay in mine, just under the silk coverlet of the bed.
"She said nothing at first.
Her hand turned suddenly from cold to hot, and closed with a quick pressure on mine.
Her breathing became oppressed.
When she spoke, it was with difficulty.
She told me nothing; she only put a question:
"'Is he here?' she asked.
"I said, 'Nobody is here but myself.'
"'Is there a letter?' "I said
'No.'
"She was silent for a while.
Her hand turned cold; the grasp of her fingers loosened.
She spoke again:
'Be quick, doctor!
Whatever it is, give it to me, before I die.'
"I risked the experiment; I opened the locket, and put it into her hand.
"So far as I could discover, she refrained from looking at it at first.
She said,
'Turn me in the bed, with my face to the wall.'
I obeyed her.
With her back turned toward me she lifted her veil; and then (as I suppose) she looked at the portrait.
A long, low cry—not of sorrow or pain: a cry of rapture and delight—burst from her.
I heard her kiss the portrait.
Accustomed as I am in my profession to piteous sights and sounds, I never remember so completely losing my self-control as I lost it at that moment.
I was obliged to turn away to the window.
"Hardly a minute can have passed before I was back again at the bedside.
In that brief interval she had changed.
Her voice had sunk again; it was so weak that I could only hear what she said by leaning over her and placing my ear close to her lips.
"'Put it round my neck,' she whispered.
"I clasped the chain of the locket round her neck.
She tried to lift her hand to it, but her strength failed her.
"'Help me to hide it,' she said.
"I guided her hand.
She hid the locket in her bosom, under the white dressing-gown which she wore that day.
The oppression in her breathing increased.
I raised her on the pillow.
The pillow was not high enough.
I rested her head on my shoulder, and partially opened her veil.
She was able to speak once more, feeling a momentary relief.
"'Promise,' she said, 'that no stranger's hand shall touch me.
Promise to bury me as I am now.'
"I gave her my promise.
"Her failing breath quickened.