Hidden Creek eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about Hidden Creek.

Hidden Creek eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about Hidden Creek.

Up the steps of the porch Mrs. Hudson mounted grimly, followed by Babe.  Sylvester stayed to tinker with the car, and Sheila, after a doubtful, tremulous moment, went slowly up the icy path after the two women.

She stumbled a little on the lowest step and, in recovering herself, she happened to turn her head.  And so, between two slender aspen trees that grew side by side like white, captive nymphs in Hudson’s yard, she saw a mountain-top.  The sun had set.  There was a crystal, turquoise translucency behind the exquisite snowy peak, which seemed to stand there facing God, forgetful of the world behind it, remote and reverent and most serene in the light of His glory.  And just above where the turquoise faded to pure pale green, a big white star trembled.  Sheila’s heart stopped in her breast.  She stood on the step and drew breath, throwing back her veil.  A flush crept up into her face.  She felt that she had been traveling all her life toward her meeting with this mountain and this star.  She felt radiant and comforted.

“How beautiful!” she whispered.

Sylvester had joined her.

“Finest city in the world!” he said.

CHAPTER IV

MOONSHINE

Dickie Hudson pushed from him to the full length of his arm the ledger of The Aura Hotel, tilted his chair back from the desk, and, leaning far over to one side, set the needle on a phonograph record, pressed the starter, and absorbed himself in rolling and lighting a cigarette.  This accomplished, he put his hands behind his head and, wreathed in aromatic, bluish smoke, gave himself up to complete enjoyment of the music.

It was a song from some popular light opera.  A very high soprano and a musical tenor duet, sentimental, humoresque: 

“There, dry your eyes,
I sympathize
Just as a mother would—­
Give me your hand,
I understand, we’re off to slumber land
Like a father, like a mother, like a sister, like a brother.”

Listening to this melody, Dickie Hudson’s face under the gaslight expressed a rapt and spiritual delight, tender, romantic, melancholy.

He was a slight, undersized youth, very pale, very fair, with the face of a delicate boy.  He had large, near-sighted blue eyes in which lurked a wistful, deprecatory smile, a small chin running from wide cheek-bones to a point.  His lips were sensitive and undecided, his nose unformed, his hair soft and easily ruffled.  There were hard blue marks under the long-lashed eyes, an unhealthy pallor to his cheeks, a slight unsteadiness of his fingers.

Dickie held a position of minor importance in the hotel, and his pale, innocent face was almost as familiar to its patrons as to those of the saloon next door—­more familiar to both than it was to Hudson’s “residence.”  Sometimes for weeks Dickie did not strain the scant welcome of his “folks.”  To-night, however, he was resolved to tempt it.  After listening to the record, he strolled over to the saloon.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Hidden Creek from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.