A vessel lay along-side of the wharf ready to sail.
The child led me on board the vessel and paused again, hovering over me in the smoky air.
I looked up.
The child looked back at me with its radiant smile, and pointed eastward down the river toward the distant sea.
While my eyes were still fixed on the softly glowing figure, I saw it fade away upward and upward into the higher light, as the lark vanishes upward and upward in the morning sky.
I was alone again with my earthly fellow-beings—left with no clew to guide me but the remembrance of the child's hand pointing eastward to the distant sea.
A sailor was near me coiling the loosened mooring-rope on the deck.
I asked him to what port the vessel was bound.
The man looked at me in surly amazement, and answered:
"To Rotterdam."
CHAPTER XXXIV. BY LAND AND SEA.
IT mattered little to me to what port the vessel was bound.
Go where I might, I knew that I was on my way to Mrs. Van Brandt.
She had need of me again; she had claimed me again.
Where the visionary hand of the child had pointed, thither I was destined to go.
Abroad or at home, it mattered nothing: when I next set my foot on the land, I should be further directed on the journey which lay before me.
I believed this as firmly as I believed that I had been guided, thus far, by the vision of the child.
For two nights I had not slept—my weariness overpowered me.
I descended to the cabin, and found an unoccupied corner in which I could lie down to rest.
When I awoke, it was night already, and the vessel was at sea.
I went on deck to breathe the fresh air.
Before long the sensation of drowsiness returned; I slept again for hours together.
My friend, the physician, would no doubt have attributed this prolonged need of repose to the exhausted condition of my brain, previously excited by delusions which had lasted uninterruptedly for many hours together.
Let the cause be what it might, during the greater part of the voyage I was awake at intervals only.
The rest of the time I lay like a weary animal, lost in sleep.
When I stepped on shore at Rotterdam, my first proceeding was to ask my way to the English Consulate.
I had but a small sum of money with me; and, for all I knew to the contrary, it might be well, before I did anything else, to take the necessary measures for replenishing my purse.
I had my traveling-bag with me.
On the journey to Greenwater Broad I had left it at the inn in the market-town, and the waiter had placed it in the carriage when I started on my return to London.
The bag contained my checkbook, and certain letters which assisted me in proving my identity to the consul.
He kindly gave me the necessary introduction to the correspondents at Rotterdam of my bankers in London.
Having obtained my money, and having purchased certain necessaries of which I stood in need, I walked slowly along the street, knowing nothing of what my next proceeding was to be, and waiting confidently for the event which was to guide me.
I had not walked a hundred yards before I noticed the name of
"Van Brandt" inscribed on the window-blinds of a house which appeared to be devoted to mercantile purposes.
The street door stood open.
A second door, on one side of the passage, led into the office.
I entered the room and inquired for Mr. Van Brandt.
A clerk who spoke English was sent for to communicate with me.
He told me there were three partners of that name in the business, and inquired which of them I wished to see.
I remembered Van Brandt's Christian name, and mentioned it.
No such person as
"Mr. Ernest Van Brandt" was known at the office.
"We are only the branch house of the firm of Van Brandt here," the clerk explained.
"The head office is at Amsterdam.
They may know where Mr. Ernest Van Brandt is to be found, if you inquire there."
It mattered nothing to me where I went, so long as I was on my way to Mrs. Van Brandt.
It was too late to travel that day; I slept at a hotel.
The night passed quietly and uneventfully.
The next morning I set forth by the public conveyance for Amsterdam.
Repeating my inquiries at the head office on my arrival, I was referred to one of the partners in the firm.