Page:Zodiac stories by Blanche Mary Channing.pdf/164

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Cancer, the Crab
147

They were sitting there when the great clock struck six—warning them that the time to say "good-by" had come.

Paul stood up and began to pull off the paper wrappings of a little parcel.

It was nothing less than a bottle of sea water, at the bottom of which lay the hermit-crab.

"I—I thought—perhaps—you 'd like it for a keepsake—after I 'm gone," said Paul.

He had meant to speak quietly, but he choked on the last words, thrust the bottle into Sir John's hand, and flung himself down among the sweet-peas in a passion of tears.

When Paul was fast asleep that evening at Beach House, Sir John and Dr. May were holding a consultation together. The Baronet had made the doctor an offer,—namely, to take Paul for his own adopted son and heir, he being without a relative in all the wide world.