The American Claimant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The American Claimant.

The American Claimant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The American Claimant.

“Oh no,” he said, simply, “they are given to me.  I don’t think I have any preference.”

“They are given to him,” she said to herself, and she felt a coldness toward that pink.  “I wonder who it is, and what she is like.”  The flower began to take up a good deal of room; it obtruded itself everywhere, it intercepted all views, and marred them; it was becoming exceedingly annoying and conspicuous for a little thing.  “I wonder if he cares for her.”  That thought gave her a quite definite pain.

CHAPTER XXI.

She had made everything comfortable for the artist; there was no further pretext for staying.  So she said she would go, now, and asked him to summon the servants in case he should need anything.  She went away unhappy; and she left unhappiness behind her; for she carried away all the sunshine.  The time dragged heavily for both, now.  He couldn’t paint for thinking of her; she couldn’t design or millinerize with any heart, for thinking of him.  Never before had painting seemed so empty to him, never before had millinerizing seemed so void of interest to her.  She had gone without repeating that dinner-invitation—­an almost unendurable disappointment to him.  On her part-well, she was suffering, too; for she had found she couldn’t invite him.  It was not hard yesterday, but it was impossible to-day.  A thousand innocent privileges seemed to have been filched from her unawares in the past twenty-four hours.  To-day she felt strangely hampered, restrained of her liberty.  To-day she couldn’t propose to herself to do anything or say anything concerning this young man without being instantly paralyzed into non-action by the fear that he might “suspect.”  Invite him to dinner to-day?  It made her shiver to think of it.

And so her afternoon was one long fret.  Broken at intervals.  Three times she had to go down stairs on errands—­that is, she thought she had to go down stairs on errands.  Thus, going and coming, she had six glimpses of him, in the aggregate, without seeming to look in his direction; and she tried to endure these electric ecstasies without showing any sign, but they fluttered her up a good deal, and she felt that the naturalness she was putting on was overdone and quite too frantically sober and hysterically calm to deceive.

The painter had his share of the rapture; he had his six glimpses, and they smote him with waves of pleasure that assaulted him, beat upon him, washed over him deliciously, and drowned out all consciousness of what he was doing with his brush.  So there were six places in his canvas which had to be done over again.

At last Gwendolen got some peace of mind by sending word to the Thompsons, in the neighborhood, that she was coming there to dinner.  She wouldn’t be reminded, at that table, that there was an absentee who ought to be a presentee—­a word which she meant to look out in the dictionary at a calmer time.

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The American Claimant from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.