The Trumpeter Swan eBook

Temple Bailey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 323 pages of information about The Trumpeter Swan.

The Trumpeter Swan eBook

Temple Bailey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 323 pages of information about The Trumpeter Swan.

She dabbed her eyes with a futile handkerchief.  The tears dripped.  “I must stop,” she kept saying, “I shall look like a fright for dinner——­”

But at dinner she showed no signs of her agitation.  She had used powder and rouge with deft touches.  She had followed Becky’s example and wore white, a crisp organdie, with a high blue sash.  With her bobbed hair and pink cheeks she was not unlike a painted doll.  She carried a little blue fan with lacquered sticks, and she tapped the table as she talked to Major Prime.  The tapping was the only sign of her inner agitation.

The Admiral’s table that night seemed to Becky a circle of sinister meaning.  There was Archibald, condemned to die—­while youth still beat in his veins——­ There was Louise, who must go on without him.  There was the Admiral—­the last of a vanished company; there was the Major, whose life for four years had held—­horrors.  There was Madge, radiant to-night in the love of her husband, as she had perhaps once been radiant for Dalton.

Georgie-Porgie!

It was a horrid name. “There were always so many girls to be kissed—­and it was so easy to run away——­”

She had always hated the nursery rhyme.  But now it seemed to sing itself in her brain.

"Georgie-Porgie, Pudding and pie, Kissed the girls, And made them cry——­“

Cope was at Becky’s right.  “Aren’t you going to talk to me?  You haven’t said a word since the soup.”

“Well, everybody else is talking.”

“What do I care for anybody else?”

Becky wondered how Archibald did it.  How he kept that light manner for a world which he was not long to know.  And there was Louise with rouge and powder on her cheeks to cover her tears——­ That was courage——­ She thought suddenly of “The Trumpeter Swan.”

She spoke out of her thoughts.  “Randy has sold his story.”

He wanted to know all about it, and she repeated what Madge had said. 
Yet even as she talked that hateful rhyme persisted,

"When the girls Came out to play, Georgie-Porgie Ran away——­“

After dinner they went into the drawing-room so that Louise could play for them.  A great mirror which hung at the end of the room reflected Louise on the piano bench in her baby frock.  It reflected Madge, slim and gold, with a huge fan of lilac feathers.  It reflected Becky—­in a rose-colored damask chair, it reflected the three men in black.  Years ago there had been other men and women—­the Admiral’s wife in red velvet and the same pearls that were now on Becky’s neck——­ She shuddered.

As they drove home that night, the Major spoke to his wife of Becky.  “The child looks unhappy.”

“She will be unhappy until some day her heart rests in her husband, as mine does in you.  Shall I spoil you, Mark, if I talk like this?”

When they reached their hotel there were letters.  One was from Flora:  “You asked about George.  He is not with us.  He has gone to Nantucket to visit some friends of his—­the Merediths.  He will be back next week.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Trumpeter Swan from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.