At Last - Page 96/170

"I beg your pardon!" said a deep, familiar voice. Then the formality

vanished from face and address. "Is this YOU?" holding out his hand

in hearty friendliness that instantly dispelled Rosa's forebodings."

What or whom are you seeking in these wilds?"

The crystal beads glistened upon her lashes in the fulness and joy

of her deliverance from doubt and fear, and before she could twinkle

them back, broke into smaller brilliants upon her cheeks and the

bosom of her dress. It was very babyish and foolish, but it is to be

questioned whether she could have contrived a more telling situation

had she studied it for a month.

"What is it!" inquired Frederic, kindly, not releasing the fingers

that twitched, more than struggled, in his. "Have you been

frightened?"

"Yes," with grieved, but fearless simplicity, "I was frightened

because I thought I had offended you--perhaps driven you away--and

that I should never be able to ask your forgiveness for my cruel

abruptness last night! In thinking about and worrying over this, I

somehow lost my way, and was just trying to remember by what route I

reached this strange neighborhood, when your appearance startled

me."

"You did not know, then, that this is Bachelor's Hall--the haunt of

unmated Benedicts, wifeless visitors to the city, and celibate M.

C.'s?" he rejoined, pleasantly. "Let me be your guide to more

desirable as well as more accessible quarters!"

On the stairs he bent to scan her blushing countenance.

"How am I to punish you for your naughty distrust of my friendship

and common sense? I have been too busy all day to spare a minute for

social pleasure. I dined at two o'clock, having an appointment at

three, returned at half-past five, and was just coming down to your

parlor to look you up. Another bit of unimportant news, with which I

should not have annoyed you if you had not merited a little vexation

by your preposterous fancies, is, that, instead of taking an early

train to Philadelphia, I have to-day entered into engagements that

will oblige me to prolong my stay in this place until the first of

February."

He looked bright and cheerful, ready for sport or badinage. Rosa

caught herself wondering many times during that evening, and the

succeeding days of the three weeks they passed under the same roof,

if she had dreamed of--not beheld with her bodily optics--that one

stormy burst of passion which had been his farewell to the hope of a

final reconciliation with Mabel Aylett.