The Knave of Diamonds eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 461 pages of information about The Knave of Diamonds.

The Knave of Diamonds eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 461 pages of information about The Knave of Diamonds.

“Let me take him,” Anne said.

She stooped to lift the boy, who held out his arms to her with a crow of pleasure.  Nap looked up at her, and for an instant only their eyes met; but in that instant understanding dawned upon Nap’s face, and with it a strangely tender smile that made it almost gentle.

Dot declared afterwards that the birthday-party had been all she could have desired.  Everyone had been nice to everyone, and the baby hadn’t been rude to his uncle, a calamity she had greatly feared.  Also Nap was improved, hugely improved.  Didn’t Bertie think so?  He seemed to have got so much more human.  She couldn’t realise there had ever been a time when she had actually disliked him.

“P’r’aps we’re more human ourselves,” suggested Bertie; a notion which hadn’t occurred to Dot but which she admitted might have something in it.

Anyway, she was sure Nap had improved, and she longed to know if Anne thought so too.

Anne’s thoughts upon that subject, however, were known to none, perhaps not even to herself.  All she knew was an overwhelming desire for solitude, but when this was hers at last it was not in the consideration of this question that she spent it.

It was in kneeling by her open window with her face to the sky, and in her heart a rapture of gladness that all the birds of June could not utter.

She scarcely slept at all that night, yet when she rose some of the bloom of youth had come back to her, some of its summer splendour was shining in her eyes.  Anne Carfax was more nearly a beautiful woman that day than she had ever been before.

Dimsdale looked at her benignly.  Would her ladyship breakfast out-of-doors?  She smiled and gave her assent, and while he was preparing she plucked a spray of rose acacia and pinned it at her throat.

“Dimsdale,” she said, and her cheeks flushed to the soft tint of the blossom as she spoke, “Mr. Errol is coming over this morning.  I expect him to luncheon.”

“Mr. Errol, my lady?”

“Mr. Nap Errol,” said Anne, still intent upon the acacia.  “Show him into the garden when he comes.  He is sure to find me somewhere.”

Dimsdale’s eyes opened very wide, but he managed his customary “Very good, my lady,” as he continued his preparations.  And so Anne breakfasted amid the tumult of rejoicing June, all the world laughing around her, all the world offering abundant thanksgiving because of the sunshine that flooded it.

When breakfast was over she sat with closed eyes, seeming to hear the very heart of creation throbbing in every sound, yet listening, listening intently for something more.  For a long time she sat thus, absorbed in the great orchestra, waiting as it were to take her part in the mighty symphony that swept its perfect harmonies around her.

It was a very little thing at last that told her her turn had come, so small a thing, and yet it sent the blood tingling through every vein, racing and pulsing with headlong impetus like a locked stream suddenly set free.  It was no more than the flight of a startled bird from the tree above her.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Knave of Diamonds from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.