Wild Heather
L. T. Meade
eBook
(, Jan. 12, 2013)
Excerpt:"Upstairs, or downstairs, or in my lady's chamber," replied Daddy. "Don't you bother about it, Heather. No, I don't want to play at being burgled to-night. Sit close to me; lay your little head on my breast."I did so. I could feel his great heart beating. It beat in big throbs, now up, now down, now up, now down again.Dinner was brought in, and I forgot all about the ring in the delight of watching the preparations, and of seeing the grand, tall waiter laying the table for two. He placed a chair at one end of the table for father, and at the other end for me. This I did not like, and I said so. Then father requested that the seats should be changed and that I should sit, so to speak, in his pocket. I forget, in all the years that have rolled by, what we had for dinner, but I know that some of it I liked and some I could not bear, and I also remember that it was the dishes I could not bear that father loved. He ate a good deal, and then he took me in his arms and settled me on his knee, sitting so that I should face him, and then he spoke."Heather, how old are you?"I was accustomed to this sort of catechism, and answered at once, very gravely:"Eight, Daddy.""Oh, you are more than eight," he replied, "you are eight and a half, aren't you?""Eight years, five months, one week, and five days," I said."Come, that is better," he said, his blue eyes twinkling. "Always be accurate when you speak. Always remember, please, Heather, that it was want of accuracy ruined me.""What is ruined?" I asked. "What in the world do you mean?"