[Ailsa Paige by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link book
Ailsa Paige

CHAPTER XIII
36/48

Come, will you ?" And she held out her hand.
Her supper was ready, as she had predicted, and she delightedly made room for him beside her on the bench, and helped him to freshly baked bread and ancient tinned vegetables, and some doubtful boiled meat, all of which he ate with an appetite and a reckless and appreciative abandon that fascinated her.
"Darling!" she whispered in consternation, "don't they give you _anything_ in camp ?" "Sometimes," he enunciated, chewing vigorously on the bread.

"We don't get much of this, darling.

And the onions have all sprouted, and the potatoes are rotten." She regarded him for a moment, then laughed hysterically.
"I _beg_ your pardon, Phil, but somehow this reminds me of our cook feeding her policeman:--just for one tiny second, darling----" They abandoned any effort to control their laughter.

Ailsa had become transfigured into a deliciously mischievous and bewildering creature, brilliant of lip and cheek and eye, irresponsible, provoking, utterly without dignity or discipline.
She taunted him with his appetite, jeered at him for his recent and marvellous conversion to respectability, dared him to make love to her, provoked him at last to abandon his plate and rise and start toward her.

And, of course, she fled, crying in consternation: "Hush, Philip! You _mustn't_ make such a racket or they'll put us both out!"-- keeping the table carefully between them, dodging every strategy of his, every endeavour to make her prisoner, quick, graceful, demoralising in her beauty and abandon.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books