Phyllis of Philistia eBook

Frank Frankfort Moore
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 330 pages of information about Phyllis of Philistia.

Phyllis of Philistia eBook

Frank Frankfort Moore
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 330 pages of information about Phyllis of Philistia.

Then it suddenly occurred to her to ask herself why, after all, should she be condemned to a contemplative evening?  What was there to hinder her taking a train to town after she had dined?  Once in town she knew that all prospect of contemplation would be at an end.

She rang her bell and told her maid that she had changed her mind in regard to staying another night at The Mooring; she would leave after dinner; wasn’t there a train about nine from Maidenhead?

It was when she was about to go down to dinner that she heard the sound of wheels upon the gravel walk.  Was it possible that her newly made plans might also be deranged?  Was this a fresh visitor arriving by a fly from Maidenhead—­she saw that the vehicle was a fly.

There was no one in the room to hear the cry of delight that she gave when she saw Herbert at the porch of the house, the driver having deposited his portmanteau and Gladstone bag at his feet.

He had returned to her—­he, whom she fancied to be far away; he who had forsaken her, as she thought, as she feared, as she (at times) hoped, forever.  He had returned to her.  There was no one now to stand between them.  He was all her own.

She flung off the dress which she was wearing,—­it was her plainest evening gown,—­and had actually got on another, a lovely one that she had never yet worn, before her maid arrived at her dressing room.

“Louise,” she said, “send a message downstairs to show Mr. Courtland to his room, and mention that he will dine with me.  Come back at once.  I have got so far in my dressing without you; I can’t go much further, however.”

In a quarter of an hour she was surveying herself in her mirror just as Phyllis had been doing an hour sooner; only on her face was a very different expression from that which Phyllis had worn.  Her eyes were brilliant as they never had been before, except once; her face was not pale, but full of soft color, as if she were standing beneath the shadow of a mighty rose-leaf with the sunlight above.  Her neck and arms were of the same delicate tinge.  Her smile she gave as she surveyed herself was a smile of triumph, very different from the expression on poor Phyllis’ features as she flung her hat across the room.

“Mine, mine, mine!” she whispered, nodding with a smile at the lovely thing so full of warm life that faced her with a smile.  “He is mine—­he has come back to me, I will keep him.  I shall be able to keep him, I think.”

She had scarcely entered the drawing room before he was beside her, and he had scarcely entered before a servant announced that dinner was served.  They were seated at the dinner table before they had exchanged half a dozen words—­before she had time to ask him why he had returned.

And at the table, with a servant at each end, what could they say?

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Phyllis of Philistia from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.