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Between Cup and Lip

by Frances Mary Schoolcraft


The vesper service at Notre Dame was over. Among the last who left the cathedral were a young woman and a young man. They were not in company. The young woman came out first, and walked away with the step and air of one who is in haste to arrive at home. The young man followed her almost immediately, but not closely, and paused a moment, looking doubtfully up and down the place, until his eye fell upon the receding figure of the young woman, when their sudden lighting up told that it was she they were searching for. He started in pursuit eagerly, and yet cautiously, keeping her in sight, but never coming very near. He was not much more than twenty-one, this young man, and had a very handsome face, of almost feminine delicacy of feature and complexion, but with keen, quick, hazel eyes, and a haughty and resolute air that were no more feminine than the short brown mustache that marked the curve of his upper lip. His dress was plain to coarseness, and of anything but a fashionable cut; but either the wearer had a dress far below his station in society, or manners far above it. The young woman, though she was good-looking enough, with her jet-black hair and eyes, nut-brown skin and ivory teeth, did not seem one likely to win the doubtful and dangerous compliment of being followed in the street by an over-devoted lover. She was certainly several years his senior, and her handsome, erect figure was a trifle more square-shouldered and strongly-built than belongs to the highest order of beauty. Neither did she look at all like a coquette, having a bright, energetic, practical and somewhat sarcastic face. For all this, the young man followed her as if his life and happiness depended upon keeping her in sight. As she entered a quiet old French street, she suddenly stopped, and looked round. The young man regarding himself either as detected or invited,… Read More