Miss Anstruther’s Diamonds
by Caroline Conrad
“You know, dear, we are not in the least bit in love with each other,” Lucy Basset said, reaching up to pull my whiskers, and laying a coaxing cheek against my shoulder. “It would be very foolish for you and me to fall in love with each other; and we just won’t—there!”
And to emphasize the declaration, the softest little fingers n the world being still twisted in my whiskers, pulled my face down to a level with hers; and this girl who was not in the least bit in love with me, kissed me!
There’s a great many different ways of kissing, you know. There are cold lips, and dry lips, and oily lips that glide past your face like ghosts, and lips that you’d rather have a blow than kisses from; but Lucy’s kisses were like half-opened rose-buds, at five o’clock of a June morning.
Lucy herself was a whole garden of roses—dew, color, fragrance, and all. When she looked at you felt as if your whole heart was exhaling at your eyes; and when she smiled upon you, it did not matter what sort of thunder and lightening there was in any other part of the globe, it was distilled sunshine where you were. I don’t know if Lucy were pretty, but she had a lot of pretty characteristics. She was all quality, like golden wine that is better the longer you keep it, and that gets a new flavor every time you taste it—a more molten sparkle every time it drips over the beaker’s brim.
The beauty of her eyes was in their expression; of her hair in its brightness. Her face was a blossom, her hands birds, and if the white wings of her fingers fluttered across your horizon, you might as well be blind for all seeing anything else but her. In short, you see I was in love with Lucy, if Lucy was not in love with me; and it is my private opinion that we were very much in love with each other, in spite of Mrs. Anstruther’s parting admonition, that we were… Read More