"It will be more comfortable to have our coffee there--unless indeed, Mr.Ware, tobacco is unpleasant to you?""Oh, my, no!" the young minister exclaimed, eager to free himself from the suggestion of being a kill-joy.
"I don't smoke myself; but I am very fond of the odor, I assure you."Father Forbes led the way out.It could be seen now that he wore a long house-gown of black silk, skilfully moulded to his erect, shapely, and rounded form.Though he carried this with the natural grace of a proud and beautiful belle, there was no hint of the feminine in his bearing, or in the contour of his pale, firm-set, handsome face.
As he moved through the hall-way, the five people whom Theron had seen waiting rose from their bench, and two of the women began in humble murmurs, "If you please, Father," and "Good-evening to your Riverence;"but the priest merely nodded and passed on up the staircase, followed by his guests.The people sat down on their bench again.
A few minutes later, reclining at his ease in a huge low chair, and feeling himself unaccountably at home in the most luxuriously appointed and delightful little room he had ever seen, the Rev.Theron Ware sipped his unaccustomed coffee and embarked upon an explanation of his errand.
Somehow the very profusion of scholarly symbols about him--the great dark rows of encased and crowded book-shelves rising to the ceiling, the classical engravings upon the wall, the revolving book-case, the reading-stand, the mass of littered magazines, reviews, and papers at either end of the costly and elaborate writing-desk--seemed to make it the easier for him to explain without reproach that he needed information about Abram.He told them quite in detail the story of his book.