FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   >>  
certain pleasure in mystifying me. In saying things in a matter-of-fact way that are quite astounding. That's the new generation, of course. They talk a different language from mine. It will be a comfort," she concluded, rather pathetically, as they mounted the high steps to her brother's door, "to talk the matter over quietly with some one to whom my ideas and standards are still intelligible." But this comfort was, for the present, to be denied her. Mary had spent the morning in her room writing notes and was coming down the stairs when the church-goers came in. She negotiated what were left of the steps in a single swoop, gave her visitor both hands along with the "Wallace! How nice!" that welcomed him, and then, drawing back with a gesture which invited his scrutiny, said, "Well? What do you think?--Oh, but thanks for your note, first. I've just answered it." Radiant was the word. There couldn't be any doubt of that. And younger. There was a twinkle of mischief that he had to go back-five years, anyhow, to remember the like of. He had none of Lucile's feeling that decency required one's joy over an event of this sort to be of the chastened variety and he brightened in instantaneous response to the girl's mood, but the mere impact of her left him for a moment wordless. "You needn't try to make me a speech," she said. "I know you're pleased. Not as pleased as you would be if you knew all about it, but ..." "As pleased as possible, anyhow," he said. On that, amicably arm in arm, they followed Miss Wollaston into the drawing-room. "I don't believe we've seen each other," she said, "since the night we had dinner together at the Saddle and Cycle, weeks and weeks ago." "No," he said. "I remember very well that we haven't." Miss Wollaston had drifted away from them (occupied, as she so often was when there were no persons present in the formal status of guests, in making minute readjustments of pillows and things as a sort of standing protest against the demon of disorder), and having noted this fact he went on: "I didn't come for the picnic tea you invited me to the other day. If I'd known how the land lay, I shouldn't have sent a substitute. I'm afraid, perhaps, that was rather--tactless of me." He saw the queerest look come into her face,--enough in itself to startle him rather though it wasn't without a gleam of humor. "I was just wondering," she explained, "whether if you had come that particu
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   >>  



Top keywords:

pleased

 
Wollaston
 
invited
 

drawing

 
present
 
things
 

matter

 

comfort

 

remember

 

amicably


Saddle

 

wordless

 
speech
 

dinner

 
standing
 

substitute

 

afraid

 
tactless
 

shouldn

 

queerest


wondering

 

explained

 

particu

 

startle

 

formal

 
persons
 

status

 

guests

 
minute
 

making


occupied

 

readjustments

 

pillows

 

picnic

 
protest
 

moment

 

disorder

 

drifted

 

twinkle

 
denied

morning
 
writing
 

intelligible

 

standards

 

coming

 

negotiated

 

single

 

stairs

 
church
 

quietly