Rosa Mundi and Other Stories by Ethel M. (Ethel May) Dell
page 16 of 404 (03%)
page 16 of 404 (03%)
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She sank down thankfully on the shingle, and he strode swiftly on. When he returned she had hollowed a nest for herself, and was lying curled up in the sun. Her head was pillowed on her cap, and the soft golden curls waved tenderly above her white forehead. Once more she seemed to him a mere child, and he looked down upon her with compassion. She sat up at his approach with a boyish, alert movement, and lifted her eyes to his. He likened them half-unconsciously to the purple-blue of hare-bells, in the ardent light of the early morning. "You are kind!" she said gratefully. He placed the white mackintosh around her slim figure. "Take my advice," he said in his brief fashion, "and don't come bathing alone in this direction again!" She made a small shy gesture of invitation. "Sit down a minute!" she said half-pleadingly. "I know you are very wet; but the sun is so warm, and they say sea-water never chills." He hesitated momentarily; then, possibly because she had spoken with so childlike an appeal, he sat down in the shingle beside her. She stretched out a slender hand to him, almost as though feeling her way. And when he took it she made a slight movement towards him, as of one about to make a confidence. "Now we can talk," she said. He let her hand go again, and felt in the pocket of his coat, which he |
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