The guests of Hercules

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remembering my father, what he wrote about himself, and my mother." For a moment she was silent. There was no need to explain, for Peter knew all about the terrible letter that had come from India with the news of Major Grant's death. It had arrived before Mary resolved to take vows, while she was still a fellow schoolgirl of Peter's, older than most of the girls, looked up to and adored, and probably it had done more than anything else to decide her that she had a "vocation." Mary had told about the letter at the time, with stormy tears: how her father in dying wrote down the story of the past, as a warning to his daughter, whom he had not loved; told the girl that her mother had run away with one of his brother officers; that he, springing from a family of reckless gamblers, had himself become a gambler; that he had thrown away most of his money; and that his last words to Mary were, "You have wild blood in your veins. Be careful: don't let it ruin your life, as two other lives have been ruined before you." "Then," Mary went on, while Peter waited, "for a few weeks, or a few days, I would be more peaceful. But the restlessness always came again. And, after the end of the first year, it grew worse. I was never happy for more than a few hours together. Still I meant to fight till the end. I never thought seriously of giving it up." "Until after I came?" Peter broke in. "Oh, I was happier for a while after you came. You took my mind off myself." "And turned it to myself, or, rather, to the world I lived in. I'm glad, yes, I'm glad, I was in time, and yet--oh, Mary, you won't go to Monte Carlo, will you?" Mary stopped short in her walk, and turned to face Peter. "Why do you say that?" she asked, sharply. "What can make you think of Monte Carlo?" "Only, you seemed so interested in hearing me tell about staying with father at Stellamare, my cousin's house. You asked me such a lot of questions about it and about the Casino, more than about any other place, even Rome. And you looked excited when I told you. Your cheeks grew red. I noticed then, but it didn't matter, because you were going to live here always, and be a nun. Now----" "Now what does it matter?" the novice asked, almost defiantly. "Why should it occur to me to go to Monte Carlo?" "Only because you were interested, and perhaps I may have made the Riviera seem even more beautiful and amusing than it really is. And besides--if it should be true, what your father was afraid of----" "What?" "That you inherit his love of gambling. Oh, I couldn't bear it, darling, to think I had sent you to Monte Carlo." "He didn't know enough about me to know whether I inherited anything from him or not. I hardly understand what gambling means, except what you've told me. It's only a word like a bird of ill omen. And what you said about the play at the Casino didn't interest me as other things did. It didn't sound attractive at all."

A. M. (Alice Muriel) Williamson and C. N. (Charles Norris) Williamson

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