FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   >>  
ew. You shall marry her an' I'll buy you a house in New York and come an' live with you." Jack sat silent, but smiling. "Do you think she will want to marry me?" he asked presently. "You go and bring her to me," said the old lady vigorously. "I'll soon find out. Just tell her I want to speak to her--don't tell her what about. That ain't none of your business an' I'm a great believer in people's not interfering in what's none of their business. You just get her and then leave her to me." Jack went and found Janice. He was sufficiently mean not to tell her what had happened, and Janice--being built on a different plan from Lucinda--had not kept near enough to the keyhole to be posted anyway. "Mr. Denham says you want me," she said, coming to the bedside with her customary pleasant smile. "I do," said her mistress. "I want to speak to you on a very serious subject and I want you to pay a lot of attention. It's this: I want you to marry Jack." Poor Janice jumped violently,--there was no doubt as to the genuineness of her surprise. "Well, don't you want to?" asked Aunt Mary. "I don't believe I do." At this it was the old lady's turn to be astonished. "Why don't you?" she said; "my heavens alive, what are you a-expectin' to marry if you don't think my nephew's good enough for you?" "But I don't want to marry!" cried poor Janice, in most evident distress. Aunt Mary looked at her severely. "Then what did you kiss him for?" she asked, in the tone in which one plays the trump ace. Janice started again. "Kiss--him--" she faltered. Aunt Mary regarded her sternly. "Granite," she said, "I ain't a-intendin' to be unreasonable, but I must ask you jus' one simple question. You kissed him, for I saw you; an' will you kindly tell me why, in heaven's name, you ain't willin' to marry any man that you're willin' to kiss?" "There's such a difference," wailed the maid. "I don't see it," said her mistress, shaking her head. "I don't see it at all. Of course I never for a minute thought of doin' either myself, but if I had thought of doin' either, I'd had sense enough to have seen that I'd have to make up my mind to do both. I'm a great believer in never doin' things by halves. It don't pay. Never--nohow." Janice was biting her lips. "But I don't want to marry!" she repeated obstinately. "Then you shouldn't have let him kiss you. You've got him all started to lovin' you and if he's stopped too
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   >>  



Top keywords:
Janice
 

willin

 

thought

 
started
 

mistress

 

believer

 

business

 

kissed

 

question

 

simple


heaven

 
kindly
 

Granite

 
silent
 
smiling
 

intendin

 

unreasonable

 

sternly

 

regarded

 

faltered


biting

 

halves

 

things

 

repeated

 

stopped

 
obstinately
 

shouldn

 

shaking

 

difference

 

wailed


minute

 

posted

 
keyhole
 

Lucinda

 

Denham

 

pleasant

 

coming

 

bedside

 

customary

 

interfering


happened
 
sufficiently
 

subject

 

expectin

 

heavens

 
astonished
 

nephew

 
evident
 
distress
 

looked