A Beautiful Possibility by Edith Ferguson Black
page 10 of 260 (03%)
page 10 of 260 (03%)
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a merry song. "Poor little lass!" he murmured. Then he smiled as she
came towards him, quaffed off the beverage she had prepared with loving skill, and called her the best cook in all the Indies. "Has it refreshed you, dearest?" she asked anxiously. "Immensely! Now you shall read me some of Lalla Rookh, and after dinner I will set about making a Mecca for your crab." Evadne stroked the dainty claws,-- "Poor little chap! So you are a pilgrim like the rest of us. I wish we did not have to go on and on, dearest!" she exclaimed passionately, "why cannot we stand still and enjoy?" "It would grow monotonous, little Vad. Progress is the law of all being, and seventy years of life is generally enough for the majority. You would not like to live to be an old lady of two hundred and fifty? Think how tired you would be!" She laid her cheek against his upon the pillow. "I should _never_ grow tired,--with you!" The evening drew on, hot and breathless. Low growls of distant thunder were heard at intervals, and in the eastern sky the lightning played. Evadne watched it, sitting on the top step of the veranda, her white muslin dress in happy contrast with the deep green of the vines which clustered thickly about the pillar against which she leaned. On the step below her a young man sat. He too was clad in white and the rich crimson |
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