It was tight clinched. I
tried to unclasp the fingers, and succeeded after a little time.
Something dark fell out of the palm of her hand as I straightened
it.
I picked the thing up, and smoothed it out, and saw that it was
an end of a man's cravat.
A very old, rotten, dingy strip of black silk, with thin lilac
lines, all blurred and deadened with dirt, running across and
across the stuff in a sort of trellis-work pattern. The small end
of the cravat was hemmed in the usual way, but the other end was
all jagged, as if the morsel then in my hands had been torn off
violently from the rest of the stuff. A chill ran all over me as
I looked at it; for that poor, stained, crumpled end of a cravat
seemed to be saying to me, as though it had been in plain words:
"If she dies, she has come to her death by foul means, and I am
the witness of it."
I had been frightened enough before, lest she should die suddenly
and quietly without my knowing it, while we were alone together;
but I got into a perfect agony now, for fear this last worst
affliction should take me by surprise. I don't suppose five
minutes passed all that woful night through without my getting up
and putting my cheek close to her mouth, to feel if the faint
breaths still fluttered out of it.
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