[Frances Waldeaux by Rebecca Harding Davis]@TWC D-Link bookFrances Waldeaux CHAPTER VI 11/16
As he talked, George noted the clear-cut American features of the girls, and their dainty gowns, with a keen pleasure; then he glanced quickly at the opposite box. "Ah!" said Jean to Mr.Perry.
"The soiled lace and musk are beginning to tell! He is tired of Lisa already!" "I never liked the fellow," said Mr.Perry coldly.
"But he is hardly the cad that you suppose." He fell into a gloomy silence.
He had wasted two years' salary in following Lucy Dunbar about, in showering flowers on her, in posing before her in the last fashions of Conduit Street, and yet when this conceited fellow came into the box she was blind and deaf to all besides! Her eyes filled with tears just now when he talked of his loneliness.
Lonely--with his wife! A married man! George, when the curtain fell again, sat down by Frances. "Mother," he said. "Yes, George." Her eyes were bright and attentive, but her countenance had fallen into hard lines new to him. "I went to Morgan's this afternoon.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|