The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

The Portier below was polishing floors, right foot, left foot, any foot at all.  And as he polished he sang in a throaty tenor.

“Kennst du das Land wo die Citronen bluhen,” he sang at the top of his voice, and coughed, a bit of floor wax having got into the air.  The antlers of the deer from the wild-game shop hung now in his bedroom.  When the wildgame seller came over for coffee there would be a discussion probably.  But were not the antlers of all deer similar?

The Portier’s wife came to the doorway with a cooking fork in her hand.

“A cab,” she announced, “with a devil’s imp on the box.  Perhaps it is that American dancer.  Run and pretty thyself!”

It was too late for more than an upward twist of a mustache.  Harmony was at the door, but not the sad-eyed Harmony of a week before or the undecided and troubled girl of before that.  A radiant Harmony, this, who stood in the doorway, who wished them good-morning, and ran up the old staircase with glowing eyes and a heart that leaped and throbbed.  A woman now, this Harmony, one who had looked on life and learned; one who had chosen her fate and was running to meet it; one who feared only death, not life or anything that life could offer.

The door was not locked.  Perhaps Peter was not up—­not dressed.  What did that matter?  What did anything matter but Peter himself?

Peter, sorting out lectures on McBurney’s Point, had come across a bit of paper that did not belong there, and was sitting by his open trunk, staring blindly at it:—­

“You are very kind to me.  Yes, indeed.

“H.  W.”

Quite the end now, with Harmony running across the room and dropping down on her knees among a riot of garments—­down on her knees, with one arm round Peter’s neck, drawing his tired head lower until she could kiss him.

“Oh, Peter, Peter, dear!” she cried.  “I’ll love you all my life if only you’ll love me, and never, never let me go!”

Peter was dazed at first.  He put his arms about her rather unsteadily, because he had given her up and had expected to go through the rest of life empty of arm and heart.  And when one has one’s arms set, as one may say, for loneliness and relinquishment it is rather difficult—­Ah, but Peter got the way of it swiftly.

“Always,” he said incoherently; “forever the two of us.  Whatever comes, Harmony?”

“Whatever comes.”

“And you’ll not be sorry?”

“Not if you love me.”

Peter kissed her on the eyes very solemnly.

“God helping me, I’ll be good to you always.  And I’ll always love you.”

He tried to hold her away from him for a moment after that, to tell her what she was doing, what she was giving up.  She would not be reasoned with.

“I love you,” was her answer to every line.  And it was no divided allegiance she promised him.  “Career?  I shall have a career.  Yours!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Street of Seven Stars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.