Contents
- [Contents]
- [Chapter I - The Kissing Of Miss Grace Sheraton]
- [Chapter II - The Meeting Of Gordon Orme]
- [Chapter III - The Art Of The Orient]
- [Chapter IV - Wars And Rumors Of War]
- [Chapter V - The Madness Of Much Kissing]
- [Chapter VI - A Sad Lover]
- [Chapter VII - What Cometh In The Night]
- [Chapter VIII - Beginning Adventures In New Lands]
- [Chapter IX - The Girl With The Heart]
- [Chapter X - The Supreme Court]
- [Chapter XI - The Morning After]
- [Chapter XII - The Wreck On The River]
- [Chapter XIII - The Face In The Firelight]
- [Chapter XIV - Au Large]
- [Chapter XV - Her Infinite Variety]
- [Chapter XVI - Buffalo!]
- [Chapter XVII - Sioux!]
- [Chapter XVIII - The Test]
- [Chapter XIX - The Quality Of Mercy]
- [Chapter Xx - Gordon Orme, Magician]
- [Chapter XXI - Two In The Desert]
- [Chapter XXII - Mandy McGovern On Marriage]
- [Chapter XXIII - Issue Joined]
- [Chapter XXIV - Forsaking All Others]
- [Chapter XXV - Cleaving Only Unto Her.]
- [Chapter XXVI - In Sickness And In Health]
- [Chapter XXVII - With All My Worldly Goods I Thee Endow]
- [Chapter XXVIII - Till Death Do Part]
- [Chapter XXIX - The Garden]
- [Chapter XXX - They Twain]
- [Chapter XXXI - The Betrothal]
- [Chapter XXXII - The Covenant]
- [Chapter XXXIII - The Flaming Sword]
- [Chapter XXXIV - The Loss Of Paradise]
- [Chapter XXXV - The Yoke]
- [Chapter XXXVI - The Goad]
- [Chapter XXXVII - The Furrow]
- [Chapter XXXVIII - Hearts Hypothecated]
- [Chapter XXXIX - The Uncovering Of Gordon Orme]
- [Chapter XL - A Confusion In Covenants]
- [Chapter XLI - Ellen Or Grace]
- [Chapter XLII - Face To Face]
- [Chapter XLIII - The Reckoning]
- [Chapter XLIV - This Indenture Witnesseth]
- [Chapter XLV - Ellen]
Chapter I - The Kissing Of Miss Grace Sheraton
I admit I kissed her.
Perhaps I should not have done so. Perhaps I would not do so again. Had I known what was to come I could not have done so. Nevertheless I did.
After all, it was not strange. All things about us conspired to be accessory and incendiary. The air of the Virginia morning was so soft and warm, the honeysuckles along the wall were so languid sweet, the bees and the hollyhocks up to the walk so fat and lazy, the smell of the orchard was so rich, the south wind from the fields was so wanton! Moreover, I was only twenty-six. As it chances, I was this sort of a man: thick in the arm and neck, deep through, just short of six feet tall, and wide as a door, my mother said; strong as one man out of a thousand, my father said. And then—the girl was there.
So this was how it happened that I threw the reins of Satan, my black horse, over the hooked iron of the gate at Dixiana Farm and strode up to the side of the stone pillar where Grace Sheraton stood, shading her eyes with her hand, watching me approach through the deep trough road that flattened there, near the Sheraton lane. So I laughed and strode up—and kept my promise. I had promised myself that I would kiss her the first time that seemed feasible. I had even promised her—when she came home from Philadelphia so lofty and superior for her stopping a brace of years with Miss Carey at her Allendale Academy for Young Ladies—that if she mitigated not something of her haughtiness, I would kiss her fair, as if she were but a girl of the country. Of these latter I may guiltily confess, though with no names, I had known many who rebelled little more than formally.