The Clarion eBook

Samuel Hopkins Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 486 pages of information about The Clarion.

The Clarion eBook

Samuel Hopkins Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 486 pages of information about The Clarion.

For reasons connected with his new venture, Hal had come late.  He was standing near the doorway wondering by what path to attain to an unidentified hostess, when Miss Esme Elliot, at the moment engaged with that very hostess on some matter of feminine strategy with which we have no concern, spied him.

“Who is the young Greek godling, hopelessly lost in the impenetrable depths of your drawing-room?” she propounded suddenly.

“Who?  What?  Where?” queried Mrs. Willard, thus abruptly recalled to her duties.

“Yonder by the doorway, looking as if he didn’t know a soul.”

“It’s some stranger,” said the hostess, trying to peer around an intervening palm.  “I must go and speak to him.”

“Wait.  Festus has got him.”

For the host, a powerful, high-colored man in his early forties, with a slight limp, had noticed the newcomer and was now introducing himself.  Miss Elliot watched the process with interest.

“Jinny,” she announced presently, “I want that to play with.”

The stranger turned a little, so that his full face was shown.  “It’s Hal Surtaine!” exclaimed Mrs. Willard.

“I don’t care who it is.  It looks nice.  Please, mayn’t I have it to play with?”

“Will you promise not to break it?  It used to be a particular pet of mine.”

“When?”

“Oh, years ago.  When you were in your cradle.”

“Where?”

“On the St. Lawrence.  Several summers.  He was my boy-knight, and chaperon, and protector.  Such a dear, chivalrous boy!”

“Was he in love with you?” demanded Miss Elliot with lively interest.

“Of course he wasn’t.  He was a boy of fifteen, and I a mature young woman of twenty-one.”

“He was in love with you,” accused the girl, noting a brightness in her friend’s color.

“There was a sort of knightly devotion,” admitted the other demurely.  “There always is, isn’t there, in a boy of that age, for a woman years older?”

“And you didn’t know him at first?”

“It’s ten years since I’ve set eyes on him.  He doesn’t even know that I am the Mrs. Festus Willard who is giving this party.”

“Festus is looking around for you.  They’ll be over here in a minute.  No!  Don’t get up yet.  I want you to do something for me.”

“What is it, Norrie?”

“I’m not going to feel well, about supper-time.”

“Why not?”

“Would you feel well if you’d been in to dinner three times in the last week with Will Douglas, and then had to go in to supper with him, too?”

“But I thought you and Will—­”

“I’m tired of having people think,” said Miss Elliot plaintively.  “Too much Douglas!  Yes; I shall be quite indisposed, about one dance before supper.”

“I’ll send you home.”

“No, you won’t, Jinny, dear.  Because I shall suddenly recover, about two minutes before the oysters arrive.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Clarion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.