A Love Story
A Love Story by A Bushman. Vol. I. "My thoughts, like swallows, skim the main, And bear my spirit back again Over the earth, and through the air, A wild bird and a wanderer." 1841. To Lady Gipps
called the hotel valet, gave the order to have them ready as soon as
possible, and went below. From the office he telephoned upstairs to
Marie, and learned that madame would meet him in the breakfast-room at
nine. This left him a half-hour in which to pay his bill at the hotel,
order a reservation on the express to Calais, and buy a large bunch of
fresh violets, which he had placed on the breakfast table--a little
table in a sunshiny corner.
Monte was calmer this morning than he had been the night before. He
was rested; the interval of eight hours that had passed since he last
saw her gave him, however slight, a certain perspective, while his
normal surroundings, seen in broad daylight, tended to steady him
further. The hotel clerk, busy about his uninspired duties; the
impassive waiters in black and white; the solid-looking Englishmen and
their wives who began to make their appearance, lent a sense of
unreality to the events of yesterday.
Yet, even so, his thoughts clung tenaciously to the necessity of his
departure. In a way, the very normality of this morning world
emphasized that necessity. He recalled that it was to just such a day
as this he had awakened, yesterday. The hotel clerk had been standing
exactly where he was now, sorting the morning mail, stopping every now
and then with a troubled frown to make out an indistinct address. The
corpulent porter in his blue blouse stood exactly where he was now
standing, jealously guarding the door. Vehicles had been passing this
way and that on the street outside. He had heard the same undertone of
A Love Story by A Bushman. Vol. I. "My thoughts, like swallows, skim the main, And bear my spirit back again Over the earth, and through the air, A wild bird and a wanderer." 1841. To Lady Gipps