Only One Love; or, Who Was the Heir. Garvice Charles
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Only One Love; or, Who Was the Heir - Garvice Charles страница 4

Название: Only One Love; or, Who Was the Heir

Автор: Garvice Charles

Издательство: Public Domain

Жанр: Зарубежная классика

Серия:

isbn:

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ must be such a wonderful place! Not so wonderful as I think it, perhaps, and that’s just because I have never seen anything of it. Is it not strange that for all these years I have never been outside Warden?”

      “Strange?” he echoed, reluctantly.

      “Yes; are other girls so shut in and kept from seeing the world that one reads so pleasantly of?”

      “Not all. It would be well for most of them if they were. It has been well for you. You have not been unhappy, Una?”

      “Unhappy! No! How could one be unhappy in Warden? Why, it’s a world in itself, and full of friends. Every living thing in it seems a friend, and an old friend, too. How long have we lived in Warden, father?”

      “Eighteen years.”

      “And I am twenty-one. Mother told me yesterday. Where did we live before we came to Warden?”

      “Don’t worry your father, Una,” said Mrs. Rolfe, who had been listening and looking from one to the other with ill-concealed anxiety; “he is too weary to talk.”

      “Forgive me, father. It was thoughtless of me. I should have remembered that you have had a hard day, while I have been idling in the wood, and over my books; it was stupid of me to trouble you. Won’t you sit down again and – and I will promise not to talk.”

      “Say no more, Una. It grieves me to think that you might not be content, that you were not happy; if you knew as much of the world that raves and writhes outside as I do, you would be all too thankful that you are out of the monster’s reach, and that all you know of it is from your books, which – Heaven forgive them – lie all too often! See now, here is something I found in Arkdale;” and as he spoke he drew from the capacious pocket of his velveteen jacket a small volume.

      The girl sprang to her feet – not clumsily, but with infinite grace – and leaned over his shoulder eagerly.

      “Why, father, it is the poems you promised me, and it was in your pocket all the while I was wearying you with my foolish questions.”

      “Tut, tut! Take your book, child, and devour it, as usual.”

      Once or twice Gideon looked up, roused from his reverie by the rustling of the trees as the gusts shook them, and suddenly the sky was rent by a flash of lightning and a peal of thunder, followed by the heavy rattle of the rainstorm.

      “Hark at the night, father!” she said, raising her eyes from the book, but only for a moment.

      “Ay, Una,” he said, “some of the old elms will fall to-night. Woodman Lightning strikes with a keen ax.”

      Suddenly there came another sound which, coming in an interval of comparative quiet, caused Una to look up with surprise.

      “Halloa there! open the door.”

      Gideon sprang to his feet, his face pale with anger.

      “Go to your room, Una,” he said.

      She rose and moved across the room to obey, but before she had passed up the stairs the woodman had opened the door, and the voice came in from the outside, and she paused almost unconsciously.

      “At last! What a time you have been! I’ve knocked loud enough to wake the dead. For Heaven’s sake, open the door and let me in. I’m drenched to the skin.”

      “This is not an inn, young sir.”

      “No, or it would soon come to ruin with such a landlord. It’s something with four walls and a roof, and I must be content with that. You don’t mean to say that you won’t let me come in?”

      “I do not keep open house for travelers.”

      “Oh, come,” exclaimed the young man, with a short laugh. “It’s your own fault that I am back here; you told me the wrong turning. I’ll swear I followed your directions. I must have been walking in a circle; anyhow I lost my way, and here I am, and, with all your churlishness, you can’t refuse me shelter on such a night as this.”

      “The storm has cleared. It is but an hour’s walk to Arkdale; I will go with you.”

      “That you certainly will not, to-night, nor any other man,” was the good-humored retort. “I’ve had enough of your confounded forest for to-night. Why, man, are you afraid to let me in? It’s a nasty thing to have to do, but – ” and with a sudden thrust of his strong shoulder he forced the door open and passed the threshold.

      But the woodman recovered from the surprise in a moment and, seizing him by the throat, was forcing him out again, when, with a low cry, Una sprang forward and laid her hand on his arm.

      At her touch Gideon’s hands dropped to his side. The stranger sprang upright, but almost staggered out with discomfited astonishment.

      For the first time in her life she stood face to face with a man other than a woodman or a charcoal-burner. And as she looked her heart almost stopped beating, the color died slowly from her face. Was it real, or was it one of the visionary heroes of her books created into life from her own dreaming brain?

      With parted lips she waited, half longing, half dreading, to hear him speak.

      It seemed ages before he found his voice, but at last, with a sudden little shake of the head, as if he were, as he would have expressed it, “pulling himself together,” he took off his wide hat and slowly turned his eyes from the beautiful face of the girl to the stern and now set face of the woodman.

      “Why didn’t you tell me that you had a lady – ladies with you?” half angrily, half apologetically. Then he turned quickly, impulsively, to Una. “I hope you will forgive me. I had no idea that there was anyone here excepting himself. Of course I would rather have got into the first ditch than have disturbed you. I hope, I do hope you believe that, though I can’t hope you’ll forgive me. Good-night,” and inclining his head he turned to the door.

      Una, who had listened with an intent, rapt look on her face, as one sees a blind man listen to music, drew a little breath of regret as he ceased speaking, and then, with a little, quick gesture, laid her hand on her father’s arm.

      It was an imploring touch. It said as plainly as if she had spoken:

      “Do not let him go.”

      “Having forced your way into my house you – may remain.”

      “Thanks. I should not think of doing so. Good-night.”

      “No; you must not go. He does not mean it. You have made him angry. Please do not go!”

      The young man hesitated, and the woodman, with a gesture that was one of resigned despair, shut the door.

      Then he turned and pointed to the next room.

      “There’s a fire there,” he said.

      “I’d rather be out in the wood by far,” he said, “than be here feeling that I have made a nuisance of myself. I’d better go.”

      But Gideon Rolfe led the way into the next room, and after another look from Mrs. Rolfe to Una, the young man followed.

      Una stood in the center of the room looking at the door behind which he had disappeared, СКАЧАТЬ