etween you and your brother, and not
between myself and my servant," said Miss Trotter coldly. "If you
cannot convince HIM, your own brother, I do not see how you expect me
to convince HER, a servant, over whom I have no control except as a
mistress of her WORK, when, on your own showing, she has everything
to gain by the marriage. If you wish Mr. Bilson, the proprietor, to
threaten her with dismissal unless she gives up your brother,"--Miss
Trotter smiled inwardly at the thought of the card-room incident,--"it
seems to me you might only precipitate the marriage."
Mr. Calton looked utterly blank and hopeless. His reason told him
that she was right. More than that, a certain admiration for her
clear-sightedness began to possess him, with the feeling that he would
like to have "shown up" a little better than he had in this interview.
If Chris had fallen in love with HER--but Chris was a fool and wouldn't
have appreciated her!
"But you might talk with her, Miss Trotter," he said, now completely
subdued. "Even if you could not reason her out of it, you might find
out what she expects from this marriage. If you would talk to her as
sensibly as you have to me"--
"It is not likely that she will seek my assistance as you have," said
Miss Trotter, with a faint smile which Mr. Calton thought quite pretty,
"but I will see about it."
Whatever Miss Trotter intended to do did not transpire. She certainly
was in no hurry about it, as she did not say anything to Frida that day,
and the next afternoon it so chanced that business took her to the bank
and post-office. Her way home again lay through the Summit woods. It
recalled to her the memorable occasion when she was first a witness to
Frida's flirtations. Neither that nor Mr. Bilson's presumed gallantries,
however, seemed inconsistent, in Miss Trotter's knowledge of the world,
with a serious engagement with young Calton. She was neither shocked nor
horrified by it, and for that reason she had not thought it necessary to
speak of it to the elder Mr. Calton.
Her path wound through a thicket fragrant with syringa and southernwood;
the faint perfume was reminiscent of Atlantic hillsides, where, long
ago, a girl teacher, she had walked with the girl pupils of the Vermont
academy, and kept them from the shy advances of the local swains. She
smiled--a little sadly--as the thought occurred to her that after this
interval of years it was again her business to restrain the callow
aff
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