Garnet Buttons
by Captain Felix Constant
Half an hour out of New York, that is to say, long enough for the express train to have acquired the peculiar vibrating, thrilling motion peculiar to express trains, because only in them is the forward impulse steady enough and prolonged enough to pervade with equal force every particle of matter animate and inanimate from the front of the engine to the rear of the last car. The notion is, I flatter myself, an original one, and as such I generously preset it to the public, merely asking such of my readers as are gifted with a sensitive and sympathetic organization to test the matter for themselves. Meanwhile, we will return to our mutton, or rather to our lamb, for it is pretty, innocent and youthful, also sentimental and melancholy; all of which are lamblike qualities and seldom found in sheep. Her name is Marcia Brandon, and she is returning from a somewhat prolonged visit with some city cousins to her home in a large western town which we will name Io, that being as far as possible from its actual cognomen.
And why should Miss Marcia Brandon be melancholy, being, as has been stated, young, pretty and innocent? The city cousins had provided her with an elaborate lunch, two of the latest novels, shawls, foot-rug, kisses, good wishes, and invitations for next winter. She was going home to a father who idolized her, a maiden aunt who spoiled her, and two brothers who did not torment her, what more should a young lady want, given a handsome wardrobe and liberal pocket-money? She wanted—a pocket-handkerchief, and having extricated it from her traveling-bag, she withdrew in its company behind the very thickest and bluest of blue veils, and began to cry.
“I don’t care, I don’t care a single bit!” whispered this untruthful young woman, in the depths of the combined handkerchief and veil. Yes, untruthful, for if she did not care, why did she cry?… Read More