onnibel, and many hap
n the sofa in her dressing-room,
her cat-like steps and a deceit
ed wearily, "though your wishes
dropping into an easy-chair and resting her head with i
is rathe
hem-and we thought-mother and I-that you might be well enough to come down into the d
ot deepen under the jealous scrutiny of the watc
that I must remain closely confined to my sofa at least two weeks. And indeed I c
nder the skirt of her warm white wrappe
nearer under prete
n instant she had dexterously slipped it off Bonnibel's finger, and, holding it up, re
like a grieved child's, and q
ot have taken[Pg 35] it off. I never meant for t
sneering laugh-and t
e going to be such a baby over it. It must have been the gift of a l
her tapering third finger, while
" she said, angrily. "I do not suppose it ca
a prettier ring than that soon I should not mind telling you the donor. And by the way," said she, walking to the wind
not like him very well," said the gi
aughing. "Should you have liked him if you
im until he told me he had been an intimate friend of my papa while in the army
e she drew her black brows angrily together. "Alrea
s certainly no longer young-don't you th
because she thought it would please Felise; "he does not see
the entrance of Lucy, Bonnibel's maid. A broad smile lighted
lendidly-bound poems and a rare hot-house bouquet, whose fragrance filled the room, and turn
d. She swept forward and looked
exquisite rose-buds and waxen tube-roses and azalias. The border of the lovely floral tribute was a delica
g
mpliments of the day fr
elise, reading it aloud. "Tha
"He is very kind to remember me to-da
y," Felis
oets-and glanced rapidly through it, but found no writing o
it down and trailing her silken
earing Felise and it pleased her to see what her innocent young mistress never dreamed of-that Mr
with glowing rubies, and a bouquet that was a perfect triumph of the floral art. Its central flower was a white japonica, and sprigs of scarlet salvia blazed around it; but Felise
herself to please her elderly suitor. She had laid aside the more cumbrous appendages of mourning, such as crape and bombazine, and appeared in a handsome black silk, with filmy white laces at throat and wrists. A single spray of the scarlet salvia, carelessly broken and fastened in her dark
art. He was as foolishly in love with Bonnibel's dainty loveliness as any boy of twenty, and through all his brilliant talk to-day his heart was bounding with the thought of her, and he was revolving p
made him shrink from asking Felise even that simple question. He[Pg 37] knew that he had paid her sufficient attention t
but not able to leave her sofa. Doctor Graham th
it will be several weeks before I can see her ag