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e that it was his first mustache, and soft, and that he took it round like a mother pushing a new baby in a perambulater. It was sickning. I left just after supper. He did not see me when I went upstairs, but he had missed me, for when Hannah and I came down, he was at the door, waiting. Hannah was loaded down with silly favors, and lagged behind, which gave him a chance to speak to me. I eyed him coldly and tried to pass him, but I had no chance. "I'll see you tomorrow, DEAREST," he whispered. "Not if I can help it," I said, looking straight ahead. Hannah had dropped a stocking--not her own. One of the Xmas favors--and was fumbling about for it. "You are tired and unerved to-night, Bab. When I have seen your father tomorrow, and talked to him----" "Don't you dare to see my father." "----and when he has agreed to what I propose," he went on, without paying any atention to what I had said, "you will be calmer. We can plan things." Hannah came puffing up then, and he helped us into the motor. He was very careful to see that we were covered with the robes, and he tucked Hannah's feet in. She was awfully flattered. Old Fool! And she babbled about him until I wanted to slap her. "He's a nice young man. Miss Bab," she said. "That is, if he's the One. And he has nice manners. So considerate. Many a party I've taken your sister to, and never before----" "I wish you'd shut up, Hannah," I said. "He's a Pig, and I hate him." She sulked after that, and helped me out of my things at home without a word. When I was in bed, however, and she was hanging up my clothes, she said: "I don't know what's got into you, Miss Barbara. You are that cross that there's no living with you." "Oh, go away," I said. "And what's more," she added, "I don't know but what your mother ought to know about these goingson. You're only a little girl, with all your high and mightiness, and there's going to be no scandal in this Familey if I can help it." I put the bedclothes over my head, and she went out. But of course I could not sleep. Sis was not home yet, or mother, and I went into Sis's room and got a novel from her table. It was the story of a woman who had married a man in a hurry, and without really loving him, and when she had been married a year, and hated the very way her husband drank his coffee and cut the ends off his cigars, she found some one she really loved with her Whole Heart. And it was too late. But she
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