The Last of the Gang
by Paul Blume
The wind blew a perfect tempest carrying with it heavy drifts of snow that rendered it very difficult for pedestrians to pursue their way along the streets. As one blast, more fierce than the others, shook the house to its very foundation, Luke Brainard walked to the window and gazed out on the night.
‘Twas only a few moments he looked on the storm, and with a weary sigh he drew the curtain closely together and sat down at his writing-table, with his eyes fixed upon the glowing fire that roared in the grate.
Luke Brainard was a man of fashion, a gentleman, dandy, if you will. His age was about four-and-fifty, but he was so well preserved that he was generally taken to be much younger than he really was. His glossy brown hair and beard were without a single streak of gray, and no crows’ feet marked his handsome florid face. He was habited in an elegant cashmere dressing-gown, and his faultless white shirt was thrown open at the throat, displaying a neck, short and bull-like, but white as a dainty belle’s. His small hands were adorned by a single diamond, and his feet were encased in yellow Turkish slippers.
Luke Brainard was counted handsome even by men, and no one was more popular among his fellows. His exquisite taste made him a leading authority at his club, and many a dandy would have considered himself blessed for even one of Brainard’s familiar nods in public.
No one could form a conjecture of his worldly possessions. He was always moderately supplied with money, and played so cautiously that his losses were never very serious.
His most intimate-associates, had they seen him upon the evening we have introduced him to the reader, would have supposed he was a ruined man.
As he sat looking into the fire, there came a quick pull at the… Read More