The Handsome Stranger
by Mrs. M. A. Denison
Chapter I.
"So polished!" “So handsome!” “So fascinating!” “Pray who is he?” “And his name—?” “Is Edwin Gray.”
“How sweet! Just like music!”
These and kindred exclamations formed the staple of conversation, at the moment, at a birthday party, as the subject of so much comment moved quietly away down the long, well-lighted, well-furnished apartment.
The waltzing was over; the rich, softly undulating waves of Strauss’s music had subsided upon the shore of comparative silence.
“Oh, Eva, he was quite taken with you!” said Amy Pendleton, in her quick, straightforward English. “He told me your hair was the color of beaten gold.”
“Did he? Well, he spoke of your eyes, and compared them to heaven’s own blue.”
“And he said Kate’s smile was the sweetest he had ever seen,” said Lu Baker. “I wonder what be praised about me?” she added, with a queer little grimace.
“Your hands, my dear. For whiteness and symmetry, they were like lilies.”
“Then we are, every one of us, charming in his eyes! Oh, how delightful!” said Eva Warren, the brightest and wittiest of the four young girls gathered at this birthday party. “Can’t we conglomerate our charms some way, and make one perfect whole, worthy of worship by this knight of the fathomless eyes?”
“By-the-way, he has wonderful eyes, hasn’t he?” said Amy Pendleton. “Do you know, I scarcely dare to look in them, for fear I shall have to take up with the old strain, slightly altered:
“‘Oh my heart, my heart is breaking,
For the love of Edwin Gray.’”
“Don’t be silly, Amy,” exclaimed Eva.
“I was never wise,” was the retort; “and for that very reason, I shall be singled out by this paragon, see if I’m not. And then, I shall smile and smile on him, till… Read More