The Heart of Rome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Heart of Rome.

The Heart of Rome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Heart of Rome.

He touched her cheek in the same way, and it felt like ice.  It would surely be better to wake her, and make her move about a little.  He spoke to her, at first softly, and then quite loud, but she made no sign.  Perhaps she was not asleep, but had fainted from weariness and cold; he knelt beside her, and took her hand in both his own, chafing it between them, but still she gave no sign.  It was certainly a fainting fit, and he knew that if a woman was pale when she fainted, she should be laid down at full length, to make the blood return to her head.  Kneeling beside her, he lifted her carefully and placed her on her back beside the Aphrodite, smoothing out his waistcoat under her head, not for a pillow but for a little protection from the cold ground.

Then he hesitated, and remained some time kneeling beside her.  She needed warmth more than anything else; he knew that, and he knew that the best way to warm her a little was to hold her in his arms.  Yet he would try something else first.

He bent over her and undoing one of the buttons of the coat, he breathed into it again and again, long, warm breaths.  He did this for a long time, and then looked at her face, but it had not changed.  He felt the ground with his hand, and it was cold; as long as she lay there, she could never get warm.

He lifted her again, still quite unconscious, and sat with her in his arms, as he had done before, laying her head against the hollow of his shoulder, and pressing her gently, trying to instil into her some of his own strong life.

At last she gave a little sigh and moved her head, nestling herself to him, but it was long before she spoke.  He felt the consciousness coming back in her, and the inclination to move, rather than any real motion in her delicate frame; the more perceptible breathing, and then the little sigh came again, and at last the words.

“I thought we were dead,” she said, so low that he could barely hear.

“No, you fainted,” he answered.  “We are safe.  I have got the bar through the wall.”

She turned up her face feebly, without lifting her head.

“Really?  Have you done it?”

“Yes.  In another hour, or a little more, the hole will be wide enough for us to get through it.”

She hid her face again, and breathed quietly.

“You do not seem glad,” he said.

“It seemed so easy to die like this,” she answered.

But presently she moved in his arms, and looked up again, and smiled, though she did not try to speak again.  He himself, almost worn out by what he had done, was glad to sit still for a while.  His blood was not racing through him now, his head was not on fire.  It seemed quite natural that he should be sitting there, holding her close to him and warming her back to life with his own warmth.

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Project Gutenberg
The Heart of Rome from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.