ordered his car. He talked to the Terror jerkily
and somewhat incoherently till it came; and the Terror observed his
perturbation with considerable interest. It seemed to him very curious
in a hard-bitten hunter of big game. They started and in the two level
miles to Little Deeping Sir James changed his car's speeds nine times.
As they came very slowly up to Colet House, the Terror said with an air
of detachment: "I should think, you know, Mum could be rushed."
He had definitely made up his mind that it would be a good thing for
her.
"If I only could!" said Sir James in a tone of feverish doubt.
Mrs. Dangerfield was mending a rent in a frock of Erebus when he
entered the drawing-room; and at the first glance she knew, with a
thrill half of pleasure, half of apprehension, why he had come.
At the sight of her Sir James felt his tremulous courage oozing out of
him; but with what was left of it he blurted out desperately:
"Look here, Anne, dear, I want you to marry me!"
"Oh!" said Mrs. Dangerfield, rising quickly.
"Yes, I want it more than ever I wanted anything in my life!"
Mrs. Dangerfield's face was one flush; and she cried: "B-b-but it's out
of the question. I--I'm old enough to be your mother!"
"Now how?--I'm three years and seven months older than you," said Sir
James, taken aback.
"I shall be an old woman while you're still quite young!" she protested.
"You won't ever be old! You're not the kind!" cried Sir James with
some heat; and then with sudden understanding: "If that's your only
reason, why, that settles it!"
With that he picked her up and kissed her four times.
When he set her down and held her at arm's length, gazing at her with
devouring eyes, she gasped somewhat faintly: "Oh, James, you are--ever
so much more--impetuous--than I thought. You gave me--no time."
"Thank goodness, I took the Terror's tip!" said Sir James.
THE END
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Terrible Twins, by Edgar Jepson
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