Arms and the Woman eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Arms and the Woman.

Arms and the Woman eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Arms and the Woman.

And then, right in the midst of my dreams, a small foot planted itself.  I turned my head and saw a woman.  On seeing the bright end of my cigar, she stopped.  She stood so that the light of the moon fell full upon her face.

My cigar trembled and fell.

“Phyllis!” I cried, springing to my feet, almost dumbfounded, my heart nigh suffocating me in its desire to leap forth.  “Phyllis!—­and here?  What does this mean?”

The woman looked at me with a puzzled frown, but did not answer.  Then, as I started toward her with outstretched arms, she turned and fled into the shadows, leaving with me nothing but the echo of her laughter, the softest, sweetest laughter!  I made no effort to follow her, because I was not quite sure that I had seen anything.

“Moonlight!” I laughed discordantly.

Phyllis in this deserted place?  I saw how impossible that was.  I had been dreaming.  The spirit of some wood-nymph had visited me, and for a brief space had borrowed the features of the woman I loved.  In vain I searched the grove.  The vision was nowhere to be found.  I went back to the inn somewhat shaken up.

Several old veterans were seated in the barroom, smoking bad tobacco and drinking a final bout.  Their jargon was unintelligible to me.

“Where’s your barmaid?” I asked of the inn-keeper.

His faded blue eyes scanned me sharply.  I read a question in them and wondered.

“She went into the garden to get a breath of fresh air,” he said.  “She does not like the smoke.”

It annoyed me.  I had seen some one, then.  What would Phyllis, proud Phyllis, say, I mused, when she heard that a barmaid was her prototype?  This thought had scarcely left me when the door in the rear of the bar opened and in came the barmaid herself.  No, it was not Phyllis, but the resemblance was so startling that I caught my breath and stared at her with a persistency which bordered on rudeness.  The barmaid was blonde, whereas Phyllis was neither blonde nor brunette, but stood between the extremes, and there was a difference in the eyes:  I could see that even in the insufficient light.

“Good evening, fraulein,” said I, with apparent composure.  “And what might your name be?”

“It is Gretchen, if it please you,” with a courtesy.  I had a vague idea that this courtesy was made mockingly.

“Gretchen?  I have heard the name before,” said I, “and you remind me of some one I have seen.”

“Herr has been to the great city?”

B——­ is the greatest city in the world to the provincial.

“Yes,” said I; “but you remind me of no one I ever saw there.”

She plucked a leaf from the rose she wore and began nibbling at it.  Her mouth was smaller than the one belonging to Phyllis.

“The person to whom I refer,” I went on, “lives in America, where your compatriots brew fine beer and wax rich.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Arms and the Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.