Read Ebook: The Pines of Lory by Mitchell John Ames
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Ebook has 1381 lines and 41528 words, and 28 pages
"She is a friend of your sisters."
"Of course!"
"And she is going to your place now, on a visit."
"Good! I'll cut you out. Is she fond of bones?"
Mr. William Townsend did not answer, but he looked at his watch. "She ought to be here now. The boat sails at ten-thirty, doesn't it?"
"Yes."
"It's ten, now. I shall trot you up as soon as she arrives."
"Oh, no!"
"Then there are other--appreciators?"
"Yes."
Mr. Patrick Boyd, with a slight gesture toward two carefully attired gentlemen who were pacing the wharf, raised his eyebrows interrogatively.
His companion smiled. "Yes. She can also have either of them, and without the asking."
The attenuated man regarded the two gentlemen with interest. "That chap has a familiar face."
"Which? The one with the bouquet?"
"No; the one with the nose."
"That's Hamilton Goddard."
"To be sure! And I should know his friend was a lover. His anxious glances up the wharf, and those flowers give him away. Such roses are for no aunt or sister."
"Better for him if they were!"
"Why? No chance?"
"Well, that is not for me to say. But he is one of those fearfully earnest chaps, with a tragic soul, and a rebuff would be a dangerous thing for him."
"Poor devil!"
And the man of cheerful countenance slowly wagged his head, as he added, in a sympathetic voice, "This being in love seems a painful pleasure."
Mr. William Townsend regarded his friend with half-shut eyes, and asked, "Are you still the superior person who defies the--the malady?"
"Even so."
"You never had it?"
"Never."
"How old are you?"
"Thirty."
"Then it's a lie."
"It's the truth. Of course I have known very fine girls who caused the usual thrills, whose conservatory kisses I should never undervalue. But when it comes to the fatuous delirium--the celestial idiocy that queers the brain and impairs the vision--why, I have been unlucky, that's all."
"You are a liar, Pats. Just a liar."
"Mumps have been mine, and measles; and I have fooled with grape juice, but that other drunkenness has been denied me."
His companion's grunt of incredulity was followed by the exclamation:
"There she comes!"
The two men below had halted, wheeled about, and were watching an approaching carriage. Down the wharf with this equipage came an atmosphere of solidity and opulence, of luxury and perfect taste. On the box, in quiet livery, sat a driver and a footman. The driver, from his bearing and appearance, could easily have passed for the president of a college. As the carriage halted before the gang plank, the gentleman with the nose stepped forward and opened the door, while he of the roses stood by with a radiant visage, his hat in one hand, his offering in the other.
First, emerged an elderly gentleman, tall, slender, and acutely respectable. After him, a girl descended, also tall and slender. She was followed by a maid, and a Catholic priest. As the young lady stood for a moment conversing with the two admirers, her glance, in running over the little steamer, encountered Mr. Townsend, and she nodded pleasantly.
"Lovely! Enchanting!" murmured the man from Africa.
"Of course she is! Come down, and I'll present you."
"But, first, tell me something about her. What are the interesting facts?"
"Why, there's nothing to tell--that I can think of."
"Of course there is! There must be! Women like that don't bloom in every garden. What a patrician type! And all that black hair! She is unusual."
"The devil! And to whom?"
"To philanthropy; to societies for the advancement of woman; to hospitals and other bottomless pits. But above all to the Catholic Church."
"Too bad! She doesn't look so unintelligent."
"No: and she is not. Her mother and sister, all that remained of her family, were both drowned in the same accident, and the shock upset her for a time."
"And it was then the Church got in its work? That explains the Holy Roman Cherub who seems to be along."
"Yes; that's Father Burke. He is a part of the comedy."
"Comedy! It's a blood-curdling drama! Hasn't she a brother or some relative to reach out a hand and save her?"
"She doesn't care to be saved. She is one of those women with a conscience. A big one: the sort that becomes a disease unless taken in time."
"I know. She feels guilty if she's happy. But she doesn't look all that. She seems a trifle earnest, perhaps, but very human, and with real blood in her veins."
Mr. Townsend sighed--a long, deep sigh that seemed to come from below his waist. "Yes, she was mighty good company and rather jolly before the vultures closed in on her."
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