Septimus eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Septimus.

Septimus eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Septimus.

One day Dasent came on her alone, and burst out wrathfully: 

“Why are you treating me like this?”

“Like what?”

“You are making a fool of me.  I’m not going to stand it.”

Then she realized that when the average man does not get what he wants exactly when he wants it he loses his temper.  She soothed him according to the better instincts of her sex, but resolved to play no more with elementary young Britons.  One-eyed geologists were safer companions.  The former pitched their hearts into her lap; the latter, like Pawkins, the geologist of the Pacific slope, gave her boxes of fossils.  She preferred the fossils.  You could do what you liked with them:  throw them overboard when the donor was not looking, or leave them behind in a railway carriage, or take them home and present them to the vicar who collected butterflies, beetles, ammonites, and tobacco stoppers.  But an odd assortment of hearts to a woman who does not want them is really a confounded nuisance.  Zora was very much relieved when Dasent, after eating an enormous breakfast, bade her a tragic farewell at Gibraltar.

* * * * *

It was a cloudless afternoon when she steamed into Marseilles.  The barren rock islands on the east rose blue-gray from a blue sea.  To the west lay the Isles of Frioul and the island of the Chateau d’If, with its prison lying grim and long on the crest; in front the busy port, the white noble city crowned by the church of Notre Dame de la Garde standing sentinel against the clear sky.

Zora stood on the crowded deck watching the scene, touched as she always was by natural beauty, but sad at heart.  Marseilles, within four-and-twenty hours of London, meant home.  Although she intended to continue her wanderings to Naples and Alexandria, she felt that she had come to the end of her journey.  It had been as profitless as the last.  Pawkins, by her side, pointed out the geological feature of the rocks.  She listened vaguely, and wondered whether she was to bring him home tied to her chariot as she had brought Septimus Dix and Clem Sypher.  The thought of Sypher drew her heart to Marseilles.

“I wish I were landing here like you, and going straight home,” she said, interrupting the flow of scientific information.  “I’ve already been to Naples, and I shall find nothing I want at Alexandria.”

“Geologically, it’s not very interesting,” said Pawkins.  “I’m afraid prehistoric antiquity doesn’t make my pulses beat faster.”

“That’s the advantage of it.”

“One might just as well be a fossil oneself.”

“Much better,” said Pawkins, who had read Schopenhauer.

“You are not exhilarating to a depressed woman,” said Zora with a laugh.

“I am sorry,” he replied stiffly.  “I was trying to entertain you.”

He regarded her severely out of his one eye and edged away, as if he repented having wasted his time over so futile an organism as a woman.  But her feminine magnetism drew him back.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Septimus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.