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    Chapter 24 - Page 2

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    act on other grounds, to be
    put in, if need be, at the coroner's inquest. Good-night, my
    heart's darling. Your truly devoted and affectionate

    MOTHER.

    "Oh, Dolly, my Dolly, you never will know with what love I loved
    you."

    When she had finished that note, and folded it reverently with
    kisses and tears, she wrote the second one in a firm hand for the
    formal evidence. Then she put on a fresh white dress, as pure as her
    own soul, like the one she had worn on the night of her self-made
    bridal with Alan Merrick. In her bosom she fastened two innocent
    white roses from Walter Brydges's bouquet, arranging them with
    studious care very daintily before her mirror. She was always a
    woman. "Perhaps," she thought to herself, "for her lover's sake, my
    Dolly will kiss them. When she finds them lying on her dead mother's
    breast, my Dolly may kiss them." Then she cried a few minutes very
    softly to herself; for no one can die without some little regret,
    some consciousness of the unique solemnity of the occasion.

    At last she rose and moved over to her desk. Out of it she took a
    small glass-stoppered phial, that a scientific friend had given her
    long ago for use in case of extreme emergency. It contained
    prussic acid. She poured the contents into a glass and drank it
    off. Then she lay upon her bed and waited for the only friend she
    had left in the world, with hands folded on her breast, like some
    saint of the middle ages.

    Not for nothing does blind fate vouchsafe such martyrs to humanity.
    From their graves shall spring glorious the church of the future.

    When Dolores came in next morning to say good-by, she found her
    mother's body cold and stiff upon the bed, in a pure white dress,
    with two crushed white roses just peeping from her bodice.

    Herminia Barton's stainless soul had ceased to exist forever.

    THE END.
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