Chapter XVI-1

2000 Words

Chapter XVI The blackamoors had left the platform at the end of the hall. The curtains looped up at either side had slid down, cutting it off from the rest of the room—“making two worlds,” Gumbril elegantly and allusively put it, “where only one grew before—and one of them a better world,” he added too philosophically, “because unreal.” There was the theatrical silence, the suspense. The curtains parted again. On a narrow bed—on a bier perhaps—the corpse of a woman. The husband kneels beside it. At the foot stands the doctor, putting away his instruments. In a beribboned pink cradle reposes a monstrous baby. The Husband: Margaret! Margaret! The Doctor: She is dead. The Husband: Margaret! The Doctor: Of septicæmia, I tell you. The Husband: I wish that I too were dead! The Doctor: Bu

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