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.

“I’m afraid I’m early,” he said in his quick voice.

“Not a bit.  Calvin, place a chair for Mr. Dalton.”

There were fruit and nuts and raisins in a great silver Pegeen, with fat cupids making love among garlands.  There was coffee in Severus cups.

Back among the shadows twinkled a priceless mirror; shutting off Calvin’s serving table was a painted screen worth its weight in gold.  It was a far cry from the catsup bottles and squalid service of George’s early days.  The Bannisters of Huntersfield wore their poverty like a plume!

The Judge carried Dalton off presently to the Bird Boom.  George went with reluctance.  This was not what he had come for.  Becky, slim and small, with her hair peaked up to a topknot, Becky in pale blue, Becky as fair as her string of imitation pearls, Becky in the golden haze of the softly illumined room, Becky, Becky Bannister—­the name chimed in his ears.

Dalton had had some difficulty in getting away from Hamilton Hill.

“It’s my last night,” Madge had said; “shall we go out in the garden and watch the moon rise?”

“Sorry,” George had told her, “but I’ve promised Flora to take a fourth hand at bridge.”

“And after that?” asked Madge softly.

“What do you mean?”

“Who is the new—­little girl?”

It was useless to pretend.  “She’s a beauty, rather, isn’t she?”

“Oh, Georgie-Porgie, I wish you wouldn’t.”

“Wouldn’t what?”

“Kiss the girls—­and make them—­cry——­”

“You’ve never cried——­”

She laughed at that.  “If I haven’t it is because I know that afterwards you always—­run away.”

He admitted it.  “One can’t marry them all.”

“I wonder if you are ever serious,” she told him, her chin in her hand.

“I am always serious.  That’s what makes it—­interesting——­”

“But the poor little—­hearts?”

“Some one has to teach, them,” said George, “that it’s a pretty game——­”

“Will it be always a game—­to you—­Georgie?”

“Who knows?” he said.  “So far I’ve held trumps——­”

“Your conceit is colossal, but somehow you seem to get away with it.”  She smiled and stood up.  “I’m going to bed early.  I have been losing my beauty sleep lately, Georgie.”

He chose to be gallant.  “You are not losing your beauty, if that’s what you mean.”

Her dinner gown was of the same shade of mauve that she had worn in the afternoon.  But it was of a material so sheer that the gold of her skin seemed to shine through.

“Good-night, Golden Girl,” said Dalton, and kissed the tips of her fingers as she stood on the stairs.  Then he went off to join the others.

Madge did not go to bed.  She went out alone and watched the moon rise.  Oscar Waterman’s house was on a hill which gave a view of the whole valley.  Gradually under the moon the houses of Charlottesville showed the outlines of the University, and far beyond the shadowy sweep of the Blue Ridge.  What a world it had been in the old days—­great men had ridden over these red roads in swaying carriages, Jefferson, Lafayette, Washington himself.

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