The Rim of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 474 pages of information about The Rim of the Desert.

The Rim of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 474 pages of information about The Rim of the Desert.

“Look back.  See how often I tried to tell you!  My courage failed.  Believe in me.  I am not the monster you thought.”

And always the one response:  “The facts are all against you.”

Duwamish Head had dropped from sight; Magnolia Bluff fell far astern, and the Aquila steamed out into the long, broad reach of Puget Sound; but though the tide had turned, there was still no wind.  The late sun touched the glassy swells with the changing effect of a prism.  The prow of the craft shattered this mirror, and her wake stretched in a ragged and widening crack.  But under the awnings Frederic Morganstein’s guests found it delightfully cool.  Only Jimmie Daniels, huddled on a stool in the glare, outside the lowered curtain that cut him off from the breeze created by the motion of the yacht, felt uncomfortably warm.

The representative of the Press had arrived on board in time to see Tisdale come down the pier and had discreetly availed himself of the secluded place that the financier had previously put to his disposal.  He had heard it told at the newspaper office that Tisdale, whose golden statements were to furnish his little scoop, Hollis Tisdale of Alaska and the Geographical Survey, who knew more about the coal situation than any other man, was also the most silent, baffling sphinx on record when it came to an interview.

At the moment the Aquila came into the open, the Japanese boy placed a bowl of punch, with, pleasant clinking of ice, on the wicker table before Mrs. Feversham, who began to serve it.  Like Elizabeth’s, the emblems on her nautical white costume were embroidered in scarlet, and a red silk handkerchief was knotted loosely on her full, boyish chest.  She was not less striking, and indeed she believed this meeting on the deck of the yacht, where formalities were quickly abridged, would appeal to the out-of-doors man and pave the way to a closer acquaintance in Washington.  But Tisdale’s glance involuntarily moved beyond to the woman seated by the rail.  Her head was turned so that he caught the finely chiseled profile, the outward sweep of black lashes, the adorable curve of the oval chin to meet the throat.  She too wore the conventional sailor suit, but without color, and this effect of purity, the inscrutable delicacy of her, seemed to set her apart from these dark, materialistic sisters as though she had strayed like a lost vestal into the wrong atmosphere.  His brows relaxed.  For a moment the censor that had come to hold dominion in his heart was off guard.  He felt the magnetism of her personality drawing him once more; he desired to cross the deck to her, drop a word into those deep places he had discovered, and see her emotions stir and overflow.  Then suddenly the enthusiasm, for which during that drive through the mountains he had learned to watch, broke in her face.  “Look!” she exclaimed softly.  “See Rainier!”

Every one responded, but Tisdale started from his chair, and went over and stood beside her.  There, southward, through golden haze, with the dark and wooded bluffs of Vashon Island flanking the deep foreground of opal sea, the dome lifted like a phantom peak.  “It doesn’t seem to belong to our world,” she said, and her voice held its soft minor note, “but a vision of some higher, better country.”

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The Rim of the Desert from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.