Miss Dexie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 576 pages of information about Miss Dexie.

Miss Dexie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 576 pages of information about Miss Dexie.

Then on fine Sundays all the children went to church, except the two youngest, and the advent of a new member in the family was hailed with delight by one of the family at least; for of course a baby, however new, counted one, and it was warmly welcomed by the one who was thus raised to the dignity of a church-goer.

We must not forget the treat that was reserved for Sunday afternoons, for directly after Sunday-school there was sure to be in readiness for each member of the family a plate containing what the children called “goodies.”  This was a mixture of confectionery, dates or figs, apples, nuts, pears or oranges, or other fruits as the season might be.  As Dexie Sherwood was expected to spend this part of the day with the family, her plate was regularly prepared with the rest; and until the time that Lancy had made known his feelings for her, Dexie had enjoyed the tete-a-tete which he always managed to arrange in some quiet corner.  Even now she was not always able to avoid it, without being positively rude, for she could not make Elsie see that her presence was necessary when Lancy managed to give his sister the impression that it was otherwise; it was quite clear that Mother Gurney saw nothing amiss in Lancy’s desire to take Dexie “somewhere out of the noise,” for the little ones made much of their Sunday freedom.

It was during one of these Sunday afternoon chats that a better understanding was arrived at between Lancy and Dexie.  They were sitting in the parlor, with a screen drawn between them and any chance observer, their plates on a small table near them, when Dexie playfully tossed over a piece of confectionery bearing the words, “You look unhappy.”

Lancy looked up with such a tender look in his eyes that Dexie instantly repented her action, but it was too late, and she dropped her eyes to read the sweet messenger that fell in her lap, “You have my heart.”

Dexie had no answer except, “Do forgive me,” and she tossed it over with a look in her eyes that filled Lancy with an unutterable longing to take her in his arms.

“What shall I forgive you for?” he said, laying his hand on hers.  “I am not unhappy, only when I see how you try to avoid me.  I have kept my promise, and have not spoken a word that could annoy you.  Why do you try never to be alone with me?  It is hard to forgive you for that,” he said, in a low tone.

“I did not mean anything by those silly candies; I was only in fun.”

“Then you don’t want to be forgiven, is that it? or do you mean that you are going to be good to me in the future?”

“I don’t know what ‘being good’ implies, so I won’t promise,” she replied, smiling.

“It means that you will not act as if you were afraid to be alone with me a minute, and to talk to me as freely as you did before, well—­before that snowstorm.  You have never put your hand on my shoulder, and asked me to take you any place since then.  You don’t know how I miss the pleasant hours we used to spend together, or the delight I felt in the pressure of the hand that has never willingly touched mine since I spoke to you here in the parlor.  The Dexie I knew a few weeks ago seems to have gone away, and I miss her very much, indeed.”

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Project Gutenberg
Miss Dexie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.