The Port of Adventure eBook

Alice Muriel Williamson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about The Port of Adventure.

The Port of Adventure eBook

Alice Muriel Williamson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about The Port of Adventure.

He did not say “Will you let me come?” but “When.”  She thought if she did not answer soon he would come all the same.  It seemed wonderful, unbelievable, that now there was no wrong, no cruelty, no terrible unwisdom in having him near her.  But there was none.  Even she could see none.  So she telegraphed, not the immediate summons he hoped for and she was tempted to send him, but the message of her second thought.  “Come; not yet, but on the day I have a home of my own to welcome you in.  Till then, let me be alone with my thoughts of you.”

* * * * *

The architect thought Mrs. May’s impatience to get into her new house, and to have even the garden finished, a charming whim.  As she seemed not to care how much money was spent, relays of men, many men, were put on to work night as well as day.  Angela chose furniture in San Francisco, all made of beautiful California woods.  “We shall have two homes,” she thought.  It was heavenly to say “we” again.

“You can have Christmas dinner at your own place,” said the architect.

“Oh, but I want Christmas Eve there!” Angela exclaimed.  “Of all things, I want Christmas Eve!”

“Very well, I promise you Christmas Eve,” the architect answered, almost as if she were a child.

But she was not a child.  She was a woman loving and longing.  Always she had wanted to have a happy Christmas Eve, and she had never had one since Franklin Merriam died.

At last she wrote:  “I am going to have a house-warming at Christmas-time:  only five guests, and you, Nick, are the principal one.  The others, are Mrs. Harland, Mr. Falconer and his bride, and little Miss Wilkins, your school-teacher at Lucky Star.  Some day I’ll tell you how we renewed our acquaintance.”

Nick did not care to know.  He wanted to be the only guest:  yet somehow he felt that she did not mean to disappoint him.  She meant him to be happy that day—­the day of Christmas Eve, when she asked him to come to her—­at last.  But how could she contrive, with other guests, not to let it be a disappointment?

She contrived it by letting him arrive first at the beautiful new house, which was as like as possible, in miniature, to the Mission Inn where they had once “made-believe.”  They did not speak when they met.  Their hearts were too full.  There was no question, “Will you marry me?” No answer, “Yes, I am free to love you now.”  But when the others came, Angela said: 

“Congratulate me.  I am engaged to the best and dearest man on earth, and I—­am the happiest woman.”

THE END

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Port of Adventure from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.