FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>  
Silverdale?" repeated Honora. "It's our place in the country," Susan replied. "The family moved up last week. You see, the trees are just beginning to bud." Honora was silent a moment, gazing at the picture. "It's very beautiful, isn't it? You never told me about it." "Didn't I?" said Susan. "I think of it very often. It has always seemed much more like home to me than our house in New York, and I love it better than any spot I know." Honora gazed at Susan, who had resumed her reading. "And you are going there when school is over." "Oh, yes," said Susan; "I can hardly wait." Suddenly she put down her letter, and looked at Honora. "And you," she asked, "where are you going?" "I don't know. Perhaps--perhaps I shall go to the sea for a while with my cousins." It was foolish, it was wrong. But for the life of her Honora could not say she was going to spend the long hot summer in St. Louis. The thought of it had haunted her for weeks: and sometimes, when the other girls were discussing their plans, she had left them abruptly. And now she was aware that Susan's blue eyes were fixed upon her, and that they had a strange and penetrating quality she had never noticed before: a certain tenderness, an understanding that made Honora redden and turn. "I wish," said Susan, slowly, "that you would come and stay awhile with me. Your home is so far away, and I don't know when I shall see you again." "Oh, Susan," she murmured, "it's awfully good of you, but I'm afraid--I couldn't." She walked to the window, and stood looking out for a moment at the budding trees. Her heart was beating faster, and she was strangely uncomfortable. "I really don't expect to go to the sea, Susan," she said. "You see, my aunt and uncle are all alone in St. Louis, and I ought to go back to them. If--if my father had lived, it might have been different. He died, and my mother, when I was little more than a year old." Susan was all sympathy. She slipped her hand into Honora's. "Where did he live?" she asked. "Abroad," answered Honora. "He was consul at Nice, and had a villa there when he died. And people said he had an unusually brilliant career before him. My aunt and uncle brought me up, and my cousin, Mrs. Hanbury, Edith's mother, and Mary's, sent me here to school." Honora breathed easier after this confession, but it was long before sleep came to her that night. She wondered what it would be like to visit at a great
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>  



Top keywords:
Honora
 

mother

 

school

 

moment

 
faster
 

expect

 
beating
 

uncomfortable

 
strangely
 
murmured

awhile

 

budding

 

window

 

afraid

 

couldn

 
walked
 
people
 

unusually

 

brilliant

 
Abroad

answered

 

consul

 

career

 

Hanbury

 

cousin

 

easier

 

brought

 

breathed

 
wondered
 
confession

slowly

 
sympathy
 

slipped

 

father

 

Suddenly

 

resumed

 

reading

 
family
 

replied

 
Silverdale

repeated

 

country

 

beginning

 
beautiful
 
silent
 

gazing

 

picture

 

letter

 

abruptly

 

strange