The City of Fire - Page 133/221

Laurie Shafton had caught Lynn as she came down the stairs with a bit

of sewing in her hand to give Naomi a direction from her mother, and

had begged her to come out on the porch and talk to him. He pleaded

that he was lonesome, and that it was her duty as hostess to amuse him

for a while.

Lynn had no relish for talking with the guest. Her heart was too sore

to care to talk with any one. But her innate courtesy, and natural

gentleness finally yielded to his pleading, for Laurie had put on a

humility that was almost becoming, and made her seem really rude to

refuse.

She made him sit down in the hammock at the far end, however, and

insisted on herself taking the little rocker quite near the front door.

She knew her father would soon be returning from some parish calls and

would relieve her, so she settled herself with the bit of linen she was

hemstitching and prepared to make the best of it.

"It's a shame my car is out of commission yet," began Laurie settling

back in the hammock and by some strange miracle refraining from

lighting a cigarette. It wouldn't have entered his head that Lynn would

have minded. He didn't know any girls objected to smoking. But this

girl interested him strangely. He wasn't at all sure but it was a case

of love at first sight. He had always been looking for that to happen

to him. He hoped it had. It would be such a delightful experience. He

had tried most of the other kinds.

"Yes, it is too bad for you to be held up in your journey this way,"

sympathized Lynn heartily, "but father says the blacksmith is going to

fix you up by to-morrow he hopes. Those bearings will likely come

to-night."

"Oh, but it has been a dandy experience. I'm certainly glad it

happened. Think what I should have missed all my life, not knowing

you!"

He paused and looked soulfully at Lynn waiting for an appreciative

glance from her fully occupied eyes, but Lynn seemed to have missed the

point entirely: "I should think you might have well afforded to lose the experience of

being held up in a dull little town that couldn't possibly be of the

slightest interest to you," she said dryly, with the obvious idea of

making talk.

"Oh, but I think it is charming," he said lightly! "I hadn't an idea

there was such a place in the world as this. It's ideal, don't you

know, so secluded and absolutely restful. I'm having a dandy time, and

you people have been just wonderful to me. I think I shall come back

often if you'll let me."