Winter Evening Tales eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 254 pages of information about Winter Evening Tales.

Winter Evening Tales eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 254 pages of information about Winter Evening Tales.

“After this we became quietly, almost secretly, as far as Dr. Orman was concerned, very great friends.  Mother so thoroughly pitied Alfred, that she not only pretended oblivion of our friendship, but even promoted it in many ways; and in the course of time Dr. Orman began to recognize its value.  I was requested to walk past Mr. Compton’s windows and say ’Good morning’ or offer him a flower or some ripe peaches, and finally to accompany the gentlemen in their short rambles in the neighborhood.

“I need not tell you how all this restricted intercourse ended.  We were soon deeply in love with each other, and love ever finds out the way to make himself understood.  We had many a five minutes’ meeting no one knew of, and when these were impossible, a rose bush near his window hid for me the tenderest little love-letters.  In fact, Julia, I found him irresistible; he was so handsome and gentle, and though he must have been thirty-five years old, yet, to my thinking, he looked handsomer than any younger man could have done.

“As the weeks passed on, the doctor seemed to have more confidence in us, or else his patient was more completely under control.  They had much fewer quarrels, and Alfred and I walked in the garden, and even a little way up the hill without opposition or remark.  I do not know how I received the idea, but I certainly did believe that Dr. Orman was keeping Alfred sick for some purpose of his own, and I determined to take the first opportunity of arousing Alfred’s suspicions.  So one evening, when we were walking alone, I asked him if he did not wish to see his relatives.

“He trembled violently, and seemed in the greatest distress, and only by the tenderest words could I soothe him, as, half sobbing, he declared that they were his bitterest enemies, and that Dr. Orman was the only friend he had in the world.  Any further efforts I made to get at the secret of his life were equally fruitless, and only threw him into paroxysms of distress.  During the month of August he was very ill, or at least Dr. Orman said so.  I scarcely saw him, there were no letters in the rose bush, and frequently the disputes between the two men rose to a pitch which father seriously disliked.

“One hot day in September everyone was in the fields or orchard; only the doctor and Alfred and I were in the house.  Early in the afternoon a boy came from the village with a letter to Dr. Orman, and he seemed very much perplexed, and at a loss how to act.  At length he said, ’Miss Phoebe, I must go to the village for a couple of hours; I think Mr. Alfred will sleep until my return, but if not, will you try and amuse him?’

“I promised gladly, and Dr. Orman went back to the village with the messenger.  No sooner was he out of sight than Alfred appeared, and we rambled about the garden, as happy as two lovers could be.  But the day was extremely hot, and as the afternoon advanced, the heat increased.  I proposed then that we should walk up the hill, where there was generally a breeze, and Alfred was delighted at the larger freedom it promised us.

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Project Gutenberg
Winter Evening Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.