After a Shadow and Other Stories eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about After a Shadow and Other Stories.

After a Shadow and Other Stories eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about After a Shadow and Other Stories.

When Alice entered the drawing-room, where the company were assembling her eyes were almost dazzled with the glitter of jewelry and the splendor of colors.  Most of the ladies present seemed ambitious of display, emulous of ornament.  She felt out of place, in her grave and simple costume, and moved to a part of the room where she would be away from observation.  But her eyes were soon wandering about, scanning forms and faces, not from simple curiosity, but with an interest that was visible in her countenance.  She looked for the presence of one who had been, of late, much in her thoughts:  of one for whose eyes, more than for the eyes of any other, she apparelled herself with that studied effect which received so little approval from her aunt Helen.  Alice felt sober.  If she entertained doubts touching her change of dress they were gone now.  Plainly, to her convictions, aunt Helen was wrong and she had been wrong in yielding her own best judgement of the case.

Alice had been seated only for a little while, when she saw the young man to whom we have just referred.  He was standing at the extreme end of the room, talking in a lively manner with a gayly-dressed girl, who seemed particularly pleased with his attentions.  Beside her Alice would have seemed almost Quaker-like in plainness.  And Alice felt this with something like a pang.  Soon they passed across the room, approaching very near, and stood within a few feet of her for several minutes.  Then they moved away, and sit down together not far off, still chatting in the lively manner at first observed.  Once or twice the young man appeared to look directly at Alice, but no sign of recognition was visible on his face.

After the first emotions of disappointment in not being recognized had subsided, the thoughts of Alice began to lift her out of the state in much she bad been resting.

“If fine feathers make the fine bird,” she said to herself, “let him have the gay plumage.  As for me, I ask a higher estimate.  So I will be content.”

With the help of pride she rose above the weakness that was depressing her.  A lady friend joined her at the moment, and she was soon interested in conversation.

“Excuse me for a personal reference, Alice,” said this friend in a familiar way, “and particularly for speaking of dress.  But the fact is, you shame at least one half of us girls by your perfect subordination of everything to good taste.  I never saw you so faultlessly attired in my life.”

“The merit, if there is any,” replied Alice, “is not mine.  I was coming like a butterfly, but my aunt Helen, who is making us a visit, objected so strongly that I took off my party dress and head-dress, made for the occasion, and, in a fit of half-don’t-care desperation, got myself up after this modest fashion that you are pleased to call in such good taste.”

“Make your aunt Helen my compliments, and say to her that I wish she were multiplied a thousands times.  You will be the belle to-night, if there are many sensible man present.  Ah, there comes Mr. Benton!” At this name the heart of Alice leaped.  “He has spied you out already.  You are the attraction, of course, not me.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
After a Shadow and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.