Read Books Online, for Free |
| The White People | Frances Hodgson Burnett |
Chapter IX |
Page 5 of 5 |
"Feargus!" I cried. "What--" I knew he heard me, because he turned and looked at me with the most extraordinary smile. He was usually a rather grave-faced man, but this smile had a kind of startling triumph in it. He certainly heard me, for he whipped off his bonnet in a salute which was as triumphant as the smile. But he did not answer, and actually passed in and out of sight in the mist. When I rose Mr. MacNairn had risen, too. When I turned to speak in my surprise, he had fixed on me his watchful look. "Imagine its being Feargus at this hour!" I exclaimed. "And why did he pass by in such a hurry without answering? He must have been to a wedding and have been up all night. He looked--" I stopped a second and laughed. "How did he look?" Mr. MacNairn asked. "Pale! That won't do--though he certainly didn't look ill." I laughed again. "I'm laughing because he looked almost like one of the White People." "Are you sure it was Feargus?" he said. "Quite sure. No one else is the least like Feargus. Didn't you see him yourself?" "I don't know him as well as you do; and there was the mist," was his answer. "But he certainly was not one of the White People when I saw him last night." I wondered why he looked as he did when he took my hand and drew me down to my place on the plaid again. He did not let it go when he sat down by my side. He held it in his own large, handsome one, looking down on it a moment or so; and then he bent his head and kissed it long and slowly two or three times. |
Who's On Your Reading List? Read Classic Books Online for Free at Page by Page Books.TM |
The White People Frances Hodgson Burnett |
Home | More Books | About Us | Copyright 2004