The Enchanted April eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Enchanted April.

The Enchanted April eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Enchanted April.

Lotty, for her part, looked on with round eyes.  She had expected Mellersh to take at least two days before he got to this stage, but the San Salvatore spell had worked instantly.  It was not only that he was pleasant at dinner, for she had always seen him pleasant at dinners with other people, but he had been pleasant all day privately—­so pleasant that he had complimented her on her looks while she was brushing out her hair, and kissed her.  Kissed her!  And it was neither good-morning nor good-night.

Well, this being so, she would put off telling him the truth about her nest-egg, and about Rose not being his hostess after all, till next day.  Pity to spoil things.  She had been going to blurt it out as soon as he had had a rest, but it did seem a pity to disturb such a very beautiful frame of mind as that of Mellersh this first day.  Let him too get more firmly fixed in heaven.  Once fixed he wouldn’t mind anything.

Her face sparkled with delight at the instantaneous effect of San Salvatore.  Even the catastrophe of the bath, of which she had been told when she came in from the garden, had not shaken him.  Of course all that he had needed was a holiday.  What a brute she had been to him when he wanted to take her himself to Italy.  But this arrangement, as it happened, was ever so much better, though not through any merit of hers.  She talked and laughed gaily, not a shred of fear of him left in her, and even when she said, struck by his spotlessness, that he looked so clean that one could eat one’s dinner off him, and Scrap laughed, Mellersh laughed too.  He would have minded that at home, supposing that at home she had had the spirit to say it.

It was a successful evening.  Scrap, whenever she looked at Mr. Wilkins, saw him in his towel, dripping water, and felt indulgent.  Mrs. Fisher was delighted with him.  Rose was a dignified hostess in Mr. Wilkins’s eyes, quiet and dignified, and he admired the way she waived her right to preside at the head of the table—­as a graceful compliment, of course, to Mrs. Fisher’s age.  Mrs. Arbuthnot was, opined Mr. Wilkins, naturally retiring.  She was the most retiring of the three ladies.  He had met her before dinner alone for a moment in the drawing-room, and had expressed in appropriate language his sense of her kindness in wishing him to join her party, and she had been retiring.  Was she shy?  Probably.  She had blushed, and murmured as if in deprecation, and then the others had come in.  At dinner she talked least.  He would, of course, become better acquainted with her during the next few days, and it would be a pleasure, he was sure.

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The Enchanted April from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.