A Spinner in the Sun eBook

Myrtle Reed
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about A Spinner in the Sun.

A Spinner in the Sun eBook

Myrtle Reed
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about A Spinner in the Sun.

Miss Evelina’s house was clean, now, and most of the necessary labour had been performed by her own frail hands.  The care of Araminta had been an added burden, which she had borne because it had been forced upon her.  Slowly, but surely, she had been compelled to take thought for others.

The promise of Spring had come to beautiful fulfilment, and the world was all abloom.  Faint mists of May were rising from the earth, and filmy clouds half veiled the moon.  The loneliness of the house was unbearable, so Miss Evelina went out into the garden, her veil fluttering, moth-like, about her head.

The old pain was still at her heart, yet, in a way, it was changed.  She had come again into the field of service.  Miss Mehitable had been kind to her, indeed, more than kind.  The Piper had made her a garden, and she had taken care of Araminta.  Doctor Ralph, meaning to be wholly kind, had offered to help her, if he could, and she had been on the point of doing a small service for him, when Fate, in the person of Miss Mehitable, intervened.  And over and above and beyond all, Anthony Dexter had come back, to offer her tardy reparation.

That hour was continually present with her.  She could not forget his tortured face when she had thrown back her veil.  What if she had taken him at his word, and gone with him, to be, as he said, a mother to his son?  Miss Evelina laughed bitterly.

The beauty of the night brought her no peace as she wandered about the garden.  Without knowing it, she longed for human companionship.  Piper Tom had finished his work.  Doctor Ralph would come no more, Araminta had gone, and Miss Mehitable offered little comfort.

She went to the gate and leaned upon it, looking down the road.  Thus she had watched for Anthony Dexter in years gone by.  Memories, mercilessly keen, returned to her.  As though it were yesterday, she remembered the moonlit night of their betrothal, felt his eager arms about her and his bearded cheek pressed close to hers.  She heard again the music of his voice as he whispered, passionately:  “I love you, oh, I love you—­for life, for death, for all eternity!”

The rose-bush had been carefully pruned and tied up, but it promised little, at best.  The cypress had grown steadily, and, at times, its long shadow reached through the door and into the house.  Heavily, too, upon her heart, the shadow of the cypress lay, for sorrow seems so much deeper than joy.

A figure came up the road, and she turned away, intending to go into the house.  Then she perceived that it was Piper Tom, and, drawing down her veil, turned back to wait for him.  He had never come at night before.

Even in the darkness, she noted a change in him; the atmosphere of youth was all gone.  He walked slowly, as though he had aged, and the red feather no longer bobbed in his hat.

He went past her silently, and sat down on the steps.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Spinner in the Sun from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.