But she did not let her voice change in the least asshe finished the story, and added, shutting the book,and speaking the last words as if she had made themup herself, looking into James’s eyes: ‘And there theyare living still at this very time.’
‘And that’s the end,’ she said, and she saw in hiseyes, as the interest of the story died away in them,something else take its place; something wondering,pale, like the reflection of a light, which at once madehim gaze and marvel. Turning, she looked across thebay, and there, sure enough, coming regularly acrossthe waves, first two quick strokes and then one longsteady stroke, was the light of the Lighthouse. It hadbeen lit.
In a moment he would ask her, ‘Are we going tothe Lighthouse?' And she would have to say, ‘No: notto-morrow; your father says not.’ Happily, Mildredcame in to fetch them, and the bustle distracted them.But he kept looking back over his shoulder as Mildredcarried him out, and she was certain that he was think-ing, we are not going to the Lighthouse to-morrow;and she thought, he will remember that all his life.74