The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

A delicate night-gust charged with the scent of some plant came in at the open window and deranged ever so slightly a glistening lock on her forehead.  G.J., peering at her, saw the masculinity melt from her face.  He saw the mysterious resurrection of the girl in her, and felt in himself the sudden exciting outflow from her of that temperamental fluid whose springs had been dried up since the day when she learnt of her widowhood.  She flushed.  He looked away into the dark water, as though he had profanely witnessed that which ought not to be witnessed.  Earlier in the interview she had inspired him with shyness.  He was now stirred, agitated, thrilled—­overwhelmed by the effect on her of his own words and his own voice.  He was afraid of his power, as a prophet might be afraid of his power.  He had worked a miracle—­a miracle infinitely more convincing than anything that had led up to it.  The miracle had brought back the reign of reality.

“Very well,” she quivered.

And there was a movement and she was gone.  He glanced quickly behind him, but the room lay black....  A transient pallor on the blackness, and the door banged.  He sat a long time, solemn, gazing at the serrated silhouette of the town against a sky that obstinately held the wraith of daylight, and listening to the everlasting murmur of the invisible weir.  Not a sound came from the town, not the least sound.  When at length he stumbled out, he saw the figure of the landlord smoking the pipe of philosophy, and waiting with a landlord’s fatalism for the last guest to go to bed.  And they talked of the weather.

Chapter 41

THE ENVOY

The next night G.J., having been hailed by an acquaintance, was talking at the top of the steps beneath the portal of a club in Piccadilly.  It was after ten by the clocks, and nearly, but not quite, dark.  A warm, rather heavy, evening shower had ceased.  This was the beginning of the great macintosh epoch, by-product of the war, when the paucity of the means of vehicular locomotion had rendered macintoshes permissible, even for women with pretensions to smartness; and at intervals stylish girls on their way home from unaccustomed overtime, passed the doors in transparent macintoshes of pink, yellow or green, as scornful as military officers of the effeminate umbrella, whose use was being confined to clubmen and old dowdies.

The acquaintance sought advice from G.J. about the shutting up of households for Belgian refugees.  G.J. answered absently, not concealing that he was in a hurry.  He had, in fact, been held up within three minutes of the scene of his secret idyll, and was anxious to arrive there.  He had promised himself this surprise visit to Christine as some sort of recompense and narcotic for the immense disturbance of spirit which he had suffered at Wrikton.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.