A Bicycle of Cathay - Page 67/112

The family showed themselves delighted when they heard that I was to

spend the night with them, and I did not object to the plan, for I had

not the slightest desire to go to a summer hotel. Just before I went

up to my room to get ready for supper, the young Genevieve came to me

upon the porch.

"Would you mind," she said, "letting me feel your muscle?"

Very much surprised, I reached out my arm for her inspection, and she

clasped her long thin fingers around my biceps flexor cubiti.

Apparently, the inspection was very satisfactory to her.

"I would give anything," she said, "if I had muscle like that!"

I laughed heartily. "My dear little girl," said I, "you would be

sorry, indeed, if you had anything of the sort. When you grow up and

go to parties, how would you like to show bare arms shaped like mine?

You would be a spectacle, indeed."

"Well," said she, "perhaps you are right. I might not care to have

them bulge, but I would like to have them hard."

It was a lively supper and an interesting evening. Miss Edith sat

opposite to me at table--I gave her this title because I was informed

that there was an elder sister who was away on a visit. I could see

that she regarded me as her especial charge. She did not ask me what I

would have, but she saw that every possible want was attended to. As

the table was lighted by a large hanging-lamp, I had a better view of

her features than I had yet obtained. She was not handsome. Her eyes

were too wide apart, her nose needed perhaps an eighth of an inch in

length, and her well-shaped mouth would not have suffered by a slight

reduction. But there was a cheerful honesty in her expression and in

her words which gave me the idea that she was a girl to believe in.

After supper we played round games, and the nervous young lady talked.

She could not keep her mind on cards, and therefore played no game. In

the course of the evening Mrs. Larramie took occasion to say to me,

and her eyes were very full as she spoke, that she did not want me to

think she had forgotten that that day I had given her her daughter,

and although the others--greatly to my satisfaction--did not indulge

in any such embarrassing expressions of gratitude, they did not fail

to let me know the high estimation in which they held me. The little

girl, Clara, sat close to me while I was playing, every now and then

gently stroking my arm, and when she was taken off to bed she ran back

to say to me that the next time I brought a bear to their house she

hoped I would also bring some little ones. Even Percy took occasion to

let me know that, under the circumstances, he was willing to overlook

entirely the fact of my being a school-master.