th his second glance
at her. An emotion never before conceived in his heart and brain
gripped him.
Somehow she fitted the day and fitted, too, his mood. The very spirit
of April seemed incarnated in her, so springy her step, so lissom the
swaying of her young body, so warm and pink the color in her cheeks.
Her dress, of some light gray material, had a dash of color lent to it
by the bunch of violets at her waist. Her figure was slender and
slightly above the middle height. A distracting dimple dented the
velvet of her right cheek, and above her small mouth and perfectly
formed nose a pair of hazel eyes looked frankly out upon the world.
Her oval face was surmounted by a dainty toque, from under which a
vagrant tendril of hair had escaped. This blew about her ears,
glistening like gold in the sunshine.
Drew saw beautiful women every day of his life. He could not fail to
do so in a city where they abound. But aside from the day and his
mood, there was much about this slip of a girl that stirred him
mightily and set his pulse to galloping.
He had lunched heartily, if not sumptuously, at one of the queer little
restaurants that seem to have struck their roots into Fulton Market and
endured for generations. There were no shaded candles on the table,
and finger bowls would have evoked a puzzled stare or a frown from most
patrons of the place. But the food was abundant and well cooked, and
at twenty-two, with a keen appetite and the digestion of an ostrich,
one asks for little more.
Drew paid his check and stepped out into the crooked side street that
led to the East River, only a block distant. From force of habit, his
steps turned in the direction of the chandlery shop where he was
employed. On reaching South Street, he remembered a commission that
had been given him to execute; so, turning to the right, he walked
briskly toward the Battery.
It was a glorious day in early April. A sudden shower, vanishing
almost as quickly as it had come, had washed the rough pavement of the
old street to a semblance of cleanliness. In a very real sense it had
also washed the air until it shimmered with the translucence of a
pearl. A soft wind blew up from the south and the streets were
drenched with sunshine.
It was a day that might have prompted a hermit to leave his cave, a
philosopher to renounce his books, a miser to give a penny to a beggar.
It spoke of youth and love and growing things, of nest building in
|