Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Peter.

Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Peter.

Knowing these things, therefore, and fearing that after all something would happen to mar the pleasant relations he had established with Peter, and with the honor of his uncle’s family in his keeping, so to speak, Jack had awaited the arrival of Corinne and Garry with considerable trepidation.  What if, after all, they should stay away, ignoring the great courtesy which this most charming of old ladies—­never had he seen one so lovable or distinguished—­had extended to them; and she a stranger, too, and all because her brother Peter had asked her to be kind to a boy like himself.

The entrance of Corinne and Garry, therefore, into the crowded room half an hour after his own had brought a relief to Jack’s mind (he had been watching the door, so as to be ready to present them), which Miss Felicia’s gracious salutation only intensified.

“I remember your dear mother perfectly,” he heard the old lady say as she advanced to Corinne and took both her hands.  “And she was quite lovely.  And this I am very sure is Mr. Breen’s friend, Mr. Minott, who has carried off all the honors.  I am delighted to see you both.  Peter, do you take these dear young people and present them to Ruth.”

The two had thereupon squeezed through to Ruth’s side; Peter in his formal introduction awarding to Garry all the honors to which he was entitled, and then Ruth, remembering her duties, said how glad she was to know them; and would they have lemon or sugar?—­ and Corinne, with a comprehensive glance of her rival, declined both, her excuse being that she was nearly dead now with the heat and that a cup of tea would finish her.  Jack had winced when his ears caught the flippant answer, but it was nothing to the way in which he shrivelled up when Garry, after shaking Miss MacFarlane’s hand as if it had been a pump-handle instead of a thing so dainty that no boy had a right to touch it except with reverence in his heart, had burst out with:  “Glad to see you.  From the South, I hear—­” as if she was a kangaroo or a Fiji Islander.  He had seen Miss MacFarlane give a little start at Garry’s familiar way of speaking, and had noticed how Ruth shrank behind the urn as if she were afraid he would touch her again, although she had laughed quite good-naturedly as she answered: 

“Not very far South; only from Maryland,” and had then turned to Jack and continued her talk with the air of one not wishing to be further interrupted.

The Scribe does not dare to relate what would have become of one so sensitive as our hero could he have heard the discussion going on later between the two young people when they were backed into one of Peter’s bookcases and stood surveying the room.  “Miss MacFarlane isn’t at all my kind of a girl,” Corinne had declared to Garry.  “Really, I can’t see why the men rave over her.  Pretty? —­yes, sort of so-so; but no style, and such clothes!  Fancy wearing a pink lawn and a sash tied around her waist like a girl at a college commencement—­and as to her hair—­why no one has ever thought of dressing her hair that way for ages and ages.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.