The Stolen Singer
THE STOLEN SINGER by MARTHA BELLINGER With Illustrations by Arthur William Brown [Frontispiece: Miss Redmond detected a passage of glances between them.] Indianapolis
"Any irremediable grief were gnawing at her damask cheeks?--"
"What's this about damask cheeks?" The question came along with a
swirl of skirts from the great hall. "Cousin Anna, don't hate me for
keeping you so long. Mr. Brockton, I owe you a thousand apologies."
Some of those who admitted Millicent Harned's charm declared that it
lay in her voice. Always there sounded through its music the note of
eagerness, with eagerness's underlying hint of pathos. Her tones were
like her face, her motions, herself. Impulse, merriment, yearning, and
the shadow of melancholy dwelt in her eyes and shaped her lips to
sensitive curves. She was tall, and her motions were of a spontaneous
grace, swifter and more changeful than most women's.
"You have been a disgracefully long time, Millicent," her cousin
answered her apology. "But"--she looked at the beautifully gowned
figure, the lovely, imaginative face, thereby, like a good showman,
calling Mr. Brockton's attention to them--"we'll forgive you."
"Oh, it wasn't primping that kept me. I stopped for a few minutes at
the schoolroom door. Poor Lena! She seemed to be feeling the
responsibilities of erudition terribly this morning. She showed me her
botany slides with such an air! Do you know what genus has the
_rostellum_, Anna?"
"No, I don't," said Anna, shortly. "And Lena's growing up a perfect
THE STOLEN SINGER by MARTHA BELLINGER With Illustrations by Arthur William Brown [Frontispiece: Miss Redmond detected a passage of glances between them.] Indianapolis