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PAGE 30

Reka Dom
by [?]

At last the conversation came to an end, and Mrs. Overtheway came upstairs.

She kissed Ida very tenderly, and inquired after her health; but though she seemed more affectionate than usual, Ida felt persuaded that something was the matter. She drew a chair to the fire, and the old lady sat down, saying–

“May I stay a little with you, my dear?”

“Oh, thank you?” said Ida, and put a footstool for the old lady’s feet.

Mrs. Overtheway stroked her head tenderly for some time in silence, and then said, in a gentle voice–

“I have something to tell you, my dear.”

“Another story?” Ida asked. “Oh, thank you, if it is another story.”

The old lady was silent, but at last she said, as if to herself–

“Perhaps best so,” and added: “yes, my love, I will tell you a story.”

Ida thanked her warmly, and another pause ensued.

“I hardly know where to begin, or what to tell you of this story,” said the little old lady at last, seeming to falter for the first time in her Scharazad-like powers of narration.

“Let it be about a Home, please; if you can,” said Ida.

“A home!” said the old lady, and strangely enough, she seemed more agitated than when she had spoken of Reka Dom–“It should have begun with a broken home, but it shall not. It should end with a united home, God willing. A home! I must begin with a far-away one, a strange one, on the summit of high cliffs, the home of fearless, powerful creatures, white-winged like angels.”

“It’s a fairy tale,” said Ida.

“No, my child, it is true.”

“It sounds like a fairy tale,” Ida said.

“It shall be a tale of that description, if you like,” said the old lady, after a pause, “but, as I said, the main incidents are true.”

“And the white-winged creatures?” Ida asked. “Were they fairies?”

“No, my love; birds. But if to see snowy albatrosses with their huge white wings wheeling in circles about a vessel sailing in mid ocean be anything like what I have read of and heard described, fairyland could hardly show anything more beautiful and impressive.”

“Do they fly near ships, then?” Ida asked.

“Yes, my child. I remember my husband describing them to me as he had once seen them in southern seas. He said that when he saw them, great, white, and majestic, holding no intercourse with anyone on board the ship, and yet spreading their wings above her day and night for hundreds of miles over the ocean, with folded feet, the huge white pinions, except for an occasional flap, outstretched in steady sail, never resting, and seemingly never weary, they looked like guardian angels keeping watch over the crew.”

“I wonder if they are sorry for the ships that go down?” said Ida, thoughtfully.

Mrs. Overtheway took her hand.

“Do you think it unkind in me to talk of ships, my love?” she asked.

“No, no, no!” Ida exclaimed, “I don’t mind your talking about it. I wish I could talk to the birds that saw papa’s ship go down, if there were any, and ask them how it was, and if he minded it much, and if he remembered me. I used to wish I had been with him, and one night I dreamed about it; but when the water touched me, I was frightened, and screamed, and woke; and then I was glad I hadn’t been there, for perhaps he wouldn’t have loved me so much if he had seen that I wasn’t brave.”

The little old lady kissed her tenderly.