Five Nights eBook

Annie Sophie Cory
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Five Nights.

Five Nights eBook

Annie Sophie Cory
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Five Nights.

The last touch of beauty, if any were needed, was added by the earrings of turquoise-blue stone that swung against the ivory-tinted softness of the full young throat.

Those blue stones against the creamy neck!  For years afterwards how I could see them again in the darkness that lies behind closed lids!  How often I was back in the crimson darkness of the tiny chamber with the sea song of the Alaskan waves coming through the painted rushes above my head!

She was very simply dressed, yet so fitly to her own beauty.

A straight pale blue jacket covered her shoulders and opened on the breast over a white muslin vest.  Her skirts hung like the full trousers of Persian women, and were a deep yellow in colour.  Her feet were bare, and shone white on the red floor.

“How do you do, Suzee?” said Morley.

“How do you do, Mister Morlee,” returned the girl lightly, smiling and showing pretty little teeth as she did so.

“You two gentlemen want some tea?  Very good.  I make it.”

She glided to the curtains and disappeared as rapidly and noiselessly as she had entered.

I turned to Morley with enthusiasm.

“She’s lovely, perfect.”

“Isn’t she just?  I knew you’d say so.  But she’s married, old man, so don’t you think you can go playing any tricks with her.”

“Married?” I gasped incredulously, “that child?  Impossible!  You’re joking.”

“I’m not, ’pon my honour.  She has a great roaring brute of a baby, too.”

“How horrible!” I exclaimed.  “Yes, horrible.  You’ve spoiled it all.  It seems a sacrilege.”

“Fiddlesticks,” returned my practical friend.  “That’s the sort that does these things, isn’t it?  Would you expect her to turn into an old maid?”

“No, but so young!” I faltered.  In reality it was a shock to me.  To have such an exquisite sight float before one for a moment, and then to be roughly dragged down to earth from the exaltation it had caused, hurt and bruised me.

The next moment she was back again, bearing a tray in her hands which she set on our table, and deftly arranged the steaming teapot and tiny cups before us.

As she bent near us over the little table a strange sensation of delight came over me, a faint scent of roses reached me from the little buds behind her ear.  The blue stones in the long gold earrings swung against her neck of cream as she set out the tea things.

“How is your boy, Suzee?” asked Morley with a tone of mischief in his voice.

“He is very well, thank you, Mister Morlee.”

“I should like to see him.  Will you bring him in?” he continued, commencing to pour out the tea.

“Yes; he is asleep now, but I will wake him up,” she returned nonchalantly, and, in spite of a protestation from me, she went out to do so.

After a minute we heard loud screams from across the passage and presently Suzee reappeared dragging (I can use no other phrase) in her arms an enormous baby.  Its face was red, and it was roaring lustily.  The girl-mother did not seem disturbed in the least by its cries, but staggered slowly over to us, clasping the child awkwardly round the waist and holding it flat against her own body.

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Project Gutenberg
Five Nights from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.