The Stolen Singer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about The Stolen Singer.

The Stolen Singer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about The Stolen Singer.

The orchestra ceased, but Hambleton did not heed the commotion about him.  The pause and the fresh beginning of the strings scarcely disturbed his ecstatic reverie.  A deep hush lay upon the vast assemblage, broken only by the voices of the violins.  And then, in the zone of silence that lay over the listening people—­silence that vibrated to the memory of the strings—­there rose a little song.  To Hambleton, sitting absorbed, it was as if the circuit which galvanized him into life had suddenly been completed.  He sat up.  The singer’s lips were slightly parted, and her voice at first was no more than the half-voice of a flute, sweet, gentle, beguiling.  It was borne upward on the crest of the melody, fuller and fuller, as on a flooding tide.

  “Free of my pain, free of my burden of sorrow,
  At last I shall see thee—­”

There was freedom in the voice, and the sense of space, of wind on the waters, of life and the love of life.

Jimsy was a soft-hearted fellow.  He never knew what happened to him; but after uncounted minutes he seemed to be choking, while the orchestra and the people in boxes and the singer herself swam in a hazy distance.  He shook himself, called somebody he knew very well an idiot, and laughed aloud in his joy; but his laugh did not matter, for it was drowned in the roar of applause that reached the roof.

Jim did not applaud.  He went outdoors to think about it; and after a time he found, to his surprise, that he could recall not only the song, but the singer, quite distinctly.  It was a tall, womanly figure, and a fair, bright face framed abundantly with dark hair, and the least little humorous twitch to her lips.  And her name was Agatha Redmond.

“Of course, she can sing; but it isn’t like having the real thing—­’tisn’t an alto,” said Jimsy ungratefully and just from habit.

The day’s experience filled his thoughts and quieted his restlessness.  He awaited Aleck with entire patience.  Monday morning he spent in small necessary business affairs, securing, among other things, several hundred dollars, which he put in his money-belt.  About the middle of the afternoon he left his hotel, engaged a taxicab and started for Riverside.  The late summer day was fine, with the afternoon haze settling over river and town.  He watched the procession of carriages, the horse-back riders, the people afoot, the children playing on the grass, with a feeling of comradeship.  Was he not also tasting freedom—­a lord of the earth?  His gaze traveled out to the river, with the glimmer here and there of a tug-boat, a little steamer, or the white sail of a pleasure craft.  The blood of some seagoing ancestor stirred in his veins, and he thrilled at the thought of the days to come when his prow should be headed offshore.

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Project Gutenberg
The Stolen Singer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.