Unleavened Bread eBook

Robert Grant (novelist)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Unleavened Bread.

Unleavened Bread eBook

Robert Grant (novelist)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Unleavened Bread.
never have a better opportunity than this, and it had been his preconceived intention to take advantage of it if all went well.  All had gone well and he was going to try.  She had been kind coming over; and had seemed to listen with interest as he told her about himself:  and somehow he had felt less distant from her.  He was not sure what she would say, for he realized that she was above him.  That was one reason why he admired her so.  She symbolized for him refinement, poetry, art, the things of the spirit—­things from which in the same whirligig of time he had hitherto been cut off by the vicissitudes of the varnish business; but the value of which he was not blind to.  How proud he would be of such a wife!  How he would strive and labor for her!  His heart was in his mouth and trembled on his lip as he thought of the possibility.  What a joy to be sitting side by side with her under this splendid moon!  He would speak and know his fate.

“Isn’t it a lovely night?” murmured Selma appreciatively.  “There they go,” she added, indicating the disappearance over the brow of a hill of the last of the line of vehicles of the rest of the party, whose songs had come back fainter and fainter.

“I don’t care.  Do you?” He snuggled toward her a very little.

“I guess they won’t think I’m lost,” she said, with a low laugh.

“What d’you suppose your folks would say if you were lost?  I mean if I were to run away with you and didn’t bring you back?” There was a nervous ring in the guffaw which concluded his question.

“My friends wouldn’t miss me much; at least they’d soon get over the shock; but I might miss myself, Mr. Babcock.”

Selma was wondering why it was that she rather liked being alone with this man, big enough, indeed, to play the monster, yet half school-boy, but a man who had done well in his calling.  He must be capable; he could give her a home in Benham; and it was plain that he loved her.

“I’ll tell you something,” he said, eagerly, ignoring her suggestion.  “I’d like to run away with you and be married to-night, Selma.  That’s what I’d like, and I guess you won’t.  But it’s the burning wish of my heart that you’d marry me some time.  I want you to be my wife.  I’m a rough fellow along-side of you, Selma, but I’d do well by you; I would.  I’m able to look after you, and you shall have all you want.  There’s a nice little house building now in Benham.  Say the word and I’ll buy it for us to-morrow.  I’m crazy after you, Selma.”

The rein was dangling, and Babcock reached his left arm around the waist of his lady-love.  He had now and again made the same demonstration with others jauntily, but this was a different matter.  She was not to be treated like other women.  She was a goddess to him, even in his ardor, and he reached gingerly.  Selma did not wholly withdraw from the spread of his trembling arm, though this was the first man who had ever ventured to lay a finger on her.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Unleavened Bread from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.