Between the Dark and the Daylight by William Dean Howells
page 9 of 181 (04%)
page 9 of 181 (04%)
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making a belated breakfast. The father recognized Lanfear first and
spoke to his daughter, who looked up from her coffee and down towards him where he wavered, lifting his hat, and bowed smiling to him. He had no reason to cross the roadway towards the white stairway which climbed from it to the hotel grounds, but he did so. The father leaned out over the wall, and called down to him: "Won't you come up and join us, doctor?" "Why, yes!" Lanfear consented, and in another moment he was shaking hands with the girl, to whom, he noticed, her father named him again. He had in his glad sense of her white morning dress and her hat of green-leafed lace, a feeling that she was somehow meeting him as a friend of indefinite date in an intimacy unconditioned by any past or future time. Her pleasure in his being there was as frank as her father's, and there was a pretty trust of him in every word and tone which forbade misinterpretation. "I was just talking about you, doctor," the father began, "and saying what a pity you hadn't come to our hotel. It's a capital place." "_I've_ been thinking it was a pity I went to mine," Lanfear returned, "though I'm in San Remo for such a short time it's scarcely worth while to change." "Well, perhaps if you came here, you might stay longer. I guess we're booked for the winter, Nannie?" He referred the question to his daughter, who asked Lanfear if he would not have some coffee. "I was going to say I had had my coffee, but I'm not sure it _was_ coffee," Lanfear began, and he consented, with some demur, banal enough, |
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