The Militants eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about The Militants.

The Militants eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about The Militants.

“Only Madge and Eleanor.  They’re here with their cousins, the Vails, summers.  Two or three died between those two, I believe.  Lucky, perhaps, for the family has been awfully hard up.  Lived on in their big old place, in Maryland, with no money at all.  I’ve an idea Madge’s mother wasn’t so sorry to die—­had a hard life of it with the fascinating Colonel.”  The Bishop’s hand dropped from the boy’s shoulder, and shut tightly.  “But that has nothing to do with my marrying Madge,” Dick went on.

“No,” said the Bishop, shortly.

“And you see,” said Dick, slipping to another tangent, “it’s not the money I’m keenest about, though of course I want that too, but it’s father.  You believe I think more of my father than of his money, don’t you?  We’ve been good friends all my life, and he’s such a crackerjack old fellow.  I’d hate to get along without him.”  Dick sighed, from his boots up—­almost six feet.  “Couldn’t you give him a dressing down, Bishop?  Make him see reason?” He looked anxiously up the three inches that the Bishop towered above him.

At ten o’clock the next morning Richard Fielding, owner of the great Fielding Foundries, strolled out on his wide piazza, which, luxurious in deep wicker chairs and Japanese rugs and light, cool furniture, looked under scarlet and white awnings, across long boxes of geraniums and vines, out to the sparkling Atlantic.  The Bishop, a friendly light coming into his thoughtful eyes, took his cigar from his lips and glanced up at his friend.  Mr. Fielding kicked a hassock aside, moved a table between them, and settled himself in another chair, and with the scratch of a match, but without a word spoken, they entered into the companionship which had been a life-long joy to both.

“Father and the Bishop are having a song and dance without words,” Dick was pleased sometimes to say, and felt that he hit it off.  The breeze carried the scent of the tobacco in intermittent waves of fragrance, and on the air floated delicately that subtle message of peace, prosperity, and leisure which is part of the mission of a good cigar.  The pleasantness of the wide, cool piazza, with its flowers and vines and gay awnings; the charm of the summer morning, not yet dulled by wear and tear of the day; the steady, deliberate dash of the waves on the beach below; the play and shimmer of the big, quiet water, stretching out to the edge of the world; all this filled their minds, rested their souls.  There was no need for words.  The Bishop sighed comfortably as he pushed his great shoulders back against the cool wicker of the chair and swung one long leg across the other.  Fielding, chin up and lips rounded to let out a cloud of smoke, rested his hand, cigar between the fingers, on the table, and gazed at him satisfied.  This was the man, after Dick, dearest to him in the world.  Into which peaceful Eden stole at this point the serpent, and, as is usual, in the shape of woman.  Little Eleanor, long-legged, slim, fresh as a flower in her

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The Militants from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.