Calvary Alley by Alice Caldwell Hegan Rice
page 252 of 366 (68%)
page 252 of 366 (68%)
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instant appraisal of the lady's dainty costume, then rested in startled
surprise on her lowered profile. The straight delicate features, slightly foreign, the fair hair rippling from the neck, were disconcertingly familiar. But when Nance saw her full face, with the petulant mouth and wrinkled brow, the impression vanished. After a long time the service came to an end, and just as Nance was waiting to pass out, she heard some one say: "When do you expect your son home, Mrs. Clarke? We miss him in the choir." And the fair-haired lady in front of her looked up and smiled, and all her wrinkles vanished as she said: "We expect him home before next Sunday, if the naughty boy doesn't disappoint us again!" Nance waited to hear no more, but fled into the sunlight and around the corner, hugging her secret. She was not going to let Mr. Mac see her, she assured herself; she was just going to see him, and hear him sing. When the next Sunday morning came, it found her once more hurrying up the broad steps of the cathedral. She was just in time, for as she slipped into a vacant pew, the notes of the organ began to swell, and from a side door came the procession of choir boys, headed by Mac Clarke carrying a great cross of gold. Nance, hiding behind the broad back of the man in front of her, watched the procession move into the chancel, and saw the members of the choir |
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