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<h2> XXIV. </h2>
<p>"We were just going sending a lil yawl after you, Dempster, when we were
seeing you a bit overside the head yonder coming back. 'He's drifting home
on the flowing tide,' says I, and so you were. Must have been a middling
stiff pull for all. We were thinking you were lost one while there."</p>
<p>"I <i>was</i> almost lost, but I'm here again, thank God," said Philip.</p>
<p>He spoke cheerily, and went away with a light step. It was now full night;
the town was lit up, and the musicians of the pavement were twanging their
banjos and harps. Philip felt a sort of physical regeneration, a renewal
of youth, a new birth of heart and hope. He was like a man coming out of
some hideous Gehenna of delirious illness; he though he had never been so
light, so buoyant, so happy in his life before. The future was vague. He
did not yet know what he would do. It would be something radical,
something that would go down to the heart of his condition. Oh, he would
be strong, he would be resolute, he would pay the uttermost farthing, he
would not wait to count the cost. And she—she would be with him. He
could do nothing without her. The partner of his fault would share his
redemption also. God bless her!</p>
<p>He let himself into the house and shut the door firmly behind him. The
lights were still burning in the hall, so it was not very late. He mounted
the stairs with a loud step and swung into his room. The lamp was on the
table, and within the circle cast by its blue shade a letter was lying. He
took it up with dismay. It was in Kate's handwriting:—</p>
<p>"Forgive me! I am going away. It is all my fault. I have broken the heart
of one man, and I am destroying the soul of another. If I stay here any
longer you will be ruined and lost. I am only a millstone about your neck.
I see it, I feel it. And yet I have loved you so, and wished to be so
proud of you. Your heart is brave enough, though I have sunk it down so
low. You will live to be strong and good and true, though that can never
be while I am with you. I have been far below you from the first. All
along I have only been thinking how much I loved you, but you have had so
many other things to consider. My life seems to have been one long battle
for love. I think it has been a cruel battle too. Anyway, I am beaten, and
oh! so tired.</p>
<p>"Do not follow me. I pray of you do not try to find me. It is my last
request. Think of me as on a long journey. I may be—the Great God of
heaven knows.</p>
<p>"I am taking the little cracked medallion from the bottom of the oak box.
It is the only picture I can find, and it will remind me of some one else
as well—my little Katherine, my motherless baby.</p>
<p>"I have nothing to leave with you but this (<i>it was a lock of her hair</i>).
At first I thought of the wedding-ring that you gave me when I came here,
but it would not come off, and besides, I could not part with it.</p>
<p>"Good-bye! I ought to have done this long ago. But you will not hate me
now? We could never be happy together again. Good-bye!"</p>
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<h2> PART VI. MAN AND GOD. </h2>
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