The Land of Promise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about The Land of Promise.

The Land of Promise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about The Land of Promise.

From time to time she stole furtive glances at him as he sat at her side; and once, when he had put his head back against the seat and pulled his broad-brimmed hat over his eyes and was seemingly asleep, she turned her head and gave him a long appraising look.

How big and strong and self-reliant he was.  He was just the type of man who would go out into the wilderness and conquer it.  And, although she had scoffed at his statement when he made it, she knew that he had brains.  Yes, although his lack of education and refinement must often touch her on the raw, he was a man whom any woman could respect in her heart.

And when they clashed, as clash they must until she had tamed him a little, she would need every weapon in her woman’s arsenal to save her from utter route; she realized that.  But then, these big, rough men were always the first to respond to any appeal to their natural chivalry.  If she found herself being worsted, there was always that to fall back upon.

If from some other world Miss Wickham could see her, how she must be smiling!  Nora, herself, smiled at the thought.  And at the thought of Agnes Pringle’s outraged astonishment if she were to meet her husband now, before she had toned him down, as she meant to do.  She recalled the chill finality of her friend’s tone when in animadverting on the doctor’s unfortunate assistant she had said:  “But, my dear, of course it would be impossible to marry anyone who wasn’t a gentleman.”

If by some Arabian Night’s trick she could suddenly transport herself and the sleeping Frank to Miss Pringle’s side, she felt that that excellent lady’s astonishment at seeing her descend from the Magic Carpet would be as nothing in comparison to her astonishment in being presented to Nora’s husband.

Her mind had grown accustomed already to thinking of him as her husband; not, as yet, to thinking of herself as his wife.

At supper time they went into a car ahead, where Frank ate with his accustomed appetite and Nora pecked daintily at the cold chicken.

And now they were at Prentice.  For some minutes before arriving, Frank, who had asked her a few moments before to change places with him, had been looking anxiously out of the window, his nose flattened against the glass.  As they drew up to the station platform, he gave a shout.

“Good!  There’s old man Sharp.  Luckily I remembered it was the day he generally drove over and wired him.”

“What for?”

“So that he could drive us home.  He’s a near neighbor; lives only about a mile beyond us.  He’s married, too.  So you won’t be entirely without a woman to complain to about me.”

“I should hardly be likely to do that,” said Nora stiffly.

“Bless your heart!  I know you wouldn’t:  you’re not that sort.”

“I hope she’s not much like Gertie.”

“Gosh, no!  A different breed of cats altogether.”

“Well, that’s something to be thankful for.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Land of Promise from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.