Shadows of Flames - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Shadows of Flames Part 74 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"Then," said Sophy, looking away from him, "you must think of last night as ... as a 'Twelfth Night's' madness. Very sweet.... Yes, beautiful in its way ... but just a moment's dream.... When you ... really love some one ... you will know that it was only a dream...."
"'When I really love some one'?"
"Yes."
"You think that?"
"Yes."
"Would you mind looking at me?"
"No...."
But her eyes wavered, and the soft red ran up again into her face, as she met that young, keen look, all fierce with wounded love.
"How _dare_ you say that I do not love you really?" he demanded, his voice shaking with pa.s.sion. "Even Selene didn't _trample_ on Endymion----"
She went pale.
"My dear...."
"How can you call me 'your dear,' and yet set your foot down like that--hard--right on my bare heart! How can you suggest that my love for you is not real?"
He flung his arm about her suddenly--caught both her hands in his.
"Listen...." he said. "Perhaps because I bring you wors.h.i.+p, too, you think that I don't love you with man's love.... But it's because I love you so madly that I bring you wors.h.i.+p. I wouldn't soil the soles of your shoes with what most men call love. I never believed in this kind ...
this that I feel for you. But, by G.o.d! I've found it _is_ real! It only kneels because it's so strong. Because it's so strong, it has reverence.
Do you understand? Now give me your lips to wors.h.i.+p. Don't waste them in words. You needn't fear my kisses ... white Moon. I wouldn't sully you with base fire."
He had drawn her to her feet. He held her crushed against him. His face was white and fine with purifying fire.
Sophy felt awe steal over her. This was no boy that held her. His love made him her equal. And he offered her what she had craved without knowing it--the fire of love tempered with adoration.
"Give me your lips, my Wonder ... my white Wonder!" he was commanding, yet there was also pleading in his voice. "Give me your lips, that I may show you _how_ I love you ... not with gross hunger, but with thirst ...
divine thirst...."
That golden trance crept over her, as on the night before. Her head lay drowned in its thick hair against his breast. He stooped slowly, marvelling at the rapt beauty of her white, upturned face. Like a face coming slowly towards her through deep waters, his face bent nearer.
There was that fine, quivering touch upon her lips--then their mouths melted into one....
This kiss was no less marvellous than their first had been. But it held this difference: With it she yielded herself consciously, though against her judgment.
They stood there tranced, after this long kiss was over, as they had sat hand in hand the evening before.
He said shakenly at last:
"'Too young'?... '_Too young_'--am I? G.o.d!--I feel as though I had been from everlasting...."
X
But though Sophy yielded to these first bewildering moments of sudden glamour, she was not in the least minded to enter into a long, unbroken, spellbound dalliance. Loring found himself very short of kisses indeed during the next few weeks.
Sophy, as it were, got her head above those heavy, golden waves. She gasped deep of the fresh air of reason. She would not sink down to this strange, love-lighted underworld without a final struggle for freedom, for the clear daylight of common sense. He had to listen to much plain speaking. Sometimes he sulked, sometimes fumed; usually he ended by laughing with that low laughter against which she felt so oddly helpless. There is nothing in the world more disconcerting than this low, mocking laughter of love that knows itself stronger than reason. In vain Sophy pointed out to him the difference in their ages, in their tastes (this he furiously denied). She sternly bade him listen while she read aloud from books that were her daily food. He listened with heroism.
But one evening over Plotinus he actually nodded. They had been hunting.
The geranium-scented warmth of her study, the soft crackle of the fire, her lulling contralto voice as she read aloud to him the words of the mystic whom he privately thought "a hipped old Johnny" because he was so ashamed of having a body that he wouldn't tell his birth-date ... (How Loring despised him for this denial of ruddy life!)--these things, together with the deep comfort of the old, leather armchair in which he sat, caused him to doze pleasantly. He woke with a jerk, at the sudden stopping of her voice. Her grey eyes were fixed on him over the volume of Plotinus, cool and smiling.
"You see?" she said. "What rouses my soul puts you to sleep!"
Loring had looked at her sombrely.
"I'll tell you what _I_ think," he had said at last. "I think you fence yourself about with these old philosopher Johnnies because you're afraid of love. That's what I think, Beautiful."
Sophy had coloured, which always delighted him. He felt that he had won when her blood rose at his words.
She pointed out to him the complications that would arise in their life together, from the fact that Bobby would have to be educated in England.
"I couldn't possibly let him go there alone," she said. "His grandmother dislikes me, as I've told you. She'd do all in her power to wean him from me. And it's absolutely right and necessary that he should grow up an Englishman...."
"He can grow up a Timbuctooan, for all I care," Loring had replied, unmoved. "I've always wanted to hunt in the 's.h.i.+res. We can have a country place near Melton...."
"You'd expatriate yourself?" Sophy asked severely.
"Nonsense, Diana! You're too Olympian sometimes. Good Americans can live all over the place and still feel that 'little old New York is good enough for them.'"
"There's another thing," Sophy had retorted: "I am sure that I shan't care for New York--and as ... well, as Mrs. Loring, I should have to live there...."
"Only a bit in the winter. And it would do you good, Beautiful. You like homage--you know you do. You'd be first and beautifulest there. Thank G.o.d, I'm so rotten rich!... You'll queen it, I can tell you."
"Are you so rich, Morris?"
"I am--rather. Why?"
"Because that's another thing.... I hate this over-richness of some Americans. I feel as if my throat and eyes were full of gold-dust when I'm with them. I don't mean I'm such a goose as to despise money--but I do hate this ... this sort of golden Elephantiasis that deforms so many Americans...."
Loring gazed up at her with wondering adoration.
"By George!" he said humbly, "it's downright awe-inspiring to feel that you don't care a hang for my being rich. That you only care ... what little you _do_ care ... for me, myself."
"'King Midas has the ears of an a.s.s,'" Sophy had laughed, pulling the one next her.
He had responded only too quickly to this slight caress. She had to put both hands to her face to s.h.i.+eld herself from his eager kisses.
"Ah, dearest--be kind.... Do.... Ah, do!" he had pleaded. But she had said, "No.... I shall be sensible--if that's being unkind.... I won't be rushed into elf-land by the hair of my head. I.... I won't be ...
_honeyfuggled_...."