t Miller
girl." They had reached the helps' house now, and Cynthia said: "You
wait outside here, and I'll go right back with you. Oh, I hope it isn't
doing wrong to put it off till I've seen that girl!" She disappeared
through the door, and Jeff waited by the steps outside, plucking up one
long grass stem after another and biting it in two. When Cynthia came
out she said: "I guess she'll be all right. Now come, and don't-lose
another second."
"You're afraid I sha'n't do it if I wait any longer!"
"I'm afraid I sha'n't." There was a silence after this.
"Do you know what I think of you, Cynthy?" asked Jeff, hurrying to keep
up with her quick steps. "You've got more courage--"
"Oh, don't praise me, or I shall break down!"
"I'll see that you don't break down," said Jeff, tenderly. "It's the
greatest thing to have you go with me!"
"Why, don't you SEE?" she lamented. "If you went alone, and told your
mother that I approved of it, you would look as if you were afraid, and
wanted to get behind me; and I'm not going to have that."
They found. Mrs. Durgin in the dark entry of the old farmhouse, and
Cynthia said, with involuntary imperiousness: "Come in here, Mrs.
Durgin; I want to tell you something."
She led the way to the old parlor, and she checked Mrs. Durgin's
question, "Has that Miller girl--"
"It isn't about her," said Cynthy, pushing the door to. "It's about me
and Jeff."
Mrs. Durgin became aware of Jeff's presence with an effect of surprise.
"There a'n't anything more, is there?"
"Yes, there is!" Cynthia shrilled. "Now, Jeff!"
"It's just this, mother: Cynthy thinks I ought to tell you--and she
thinks I ought to have told you last night--she expected me to--that I'm
not going to study law."
"And I approve of his not doing it," Cynthia promptly followed, and
she put herself beside Jeff where he stood in front of his mother's
rocking-chair.
She looked from one to the other of the faces before her. "I'm sorry a
son of mine," she said, with dignity, "had to be told how to act with
his mother. But, if he had, I don't know as anybody had a better right
to do it than the girl that's going to marry him. And I'll say this,
Cynthia Whitwell, before I say anything else: you've begun right. I wish
I could say Jeff had."
There was an uncomfortable moment before Cynthia said: "He expected to
tell you."
"Oh Yes! I know," said his mother, sadly. She added, sharply: "And did
he expect to tell me what h
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