A Book o' Nine Tales.
ARLO BATES
BOSTON ROBERTS BROTHERS 1891
He lay upon an old-fashioned bedstead whose carved quaintness would once have pleased him, but to which he was now indifferent. He rested upon his back, staring at the ceiling, on whose white surface were twinkling golden dots and lines in a network which even his broken mind knew must be the sunlight reflected from off the water somewhere. The windows of the chamber were open, and the sweet summer air came in laden with the perfume of flowers piquantly mingled with pungent sea odors. Now and then a bee buzzed by the casement, or a butterfly seemed tempted to enter the sick-room—apparently thought better of it, and went on its careless way.
Of all these things the sick man who lay there was unconscious, and the sweet young girl sitting by his bed was too deeply buried in her book to notice them. For some time there was no movement in the chamber, until, the close of a chapter releasing for an instant the reader’s attention, she looked to discover that the patient’s eyes were open. Seeing him awake, she rose and came a step nearer, thereby making the second discovery, more startling than the first, that the light of reason had replaced in those eyes the stare of delirium.
“Ah,” she said, softly, “you are awake!”
The invalid turned his gaze toward her, far too feeble to make any other movement; but he made no attempt to speak.
“No,” she continued, with that little purring intonation which betrays the feminine satisfaction at having a man helpless and unable to resist coddling; “don’t speak. Take your medicine, and go to sleep again.”
She put a firm, round arm beneath his head, and bestowed upon him a spoonful of a colorless liquid, afterward smoothing his pillows with deft, swift touches. He submitted with utter passiveness of mind and body, ignorant who this maiden might be, where he was, or, indeed, who he was. Painfully he endeavored to think, to remember, to understand; but with no result save confusing himself and bringing on an ache in his head. His nurse, at the convenient end of another chapter, observed a look of pain and trouble upon the thin face, scarcely less white than the pillow against which it rested.
Arlo Bates
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CONTENTS.
A STRANGE IDYL.
A BOOK O’ NINE TALES.
A STRANGE IDYL.
AN EPISODE IN MASK.
AN EPISODE IN MASK.
THE TUBEROSE.
THE TUBEROSE.
AN EVENING AT WHIST.
AN EVENING AT WHIST.
SAUCY BETTY MORK.
SAUCY BETTY MORK.
MRS. FRUFFLES IS AT HOME.
MRS. FRUFFLES IS AT HOME.
JOHN VANTINE.
JOHN VANTINE.
THE RADIATOR.
THE RADIATOR.
MÈRE MARCHETTE.
MÈRE MARCHETTE.
“SUCH SWEET SORROW.”
“SUCH SWEET SORROW.”
BARUM WEST’S EXTRAVAGANZA.
BARUM WEST’S EXTRAVAGANZA.
A BUSINESS MEETING.
A BUSINESS MEETING.
A SKETCH IN UMBER.
A SKETCH IN UMBER.
THIRTEEN.
THIRTEEN.
APRIL’S LADY.
APRIL’S LADY.
A CUBAN MORNING.
A CUBAN MORNING.
DELIA GRIMWET.
DELIA GRIMWET.