as every confidence in you, I'm showing you I've
more--don't you see? Come, now, promise--won't you, dear Miss Trotter?"
He again took her hand, and this time pressed a kiss upon her slim
fingers. And this time she did not withdraw them. Indeed, it seemed to
her, in the quick recurrence of her previous sympathy, as if a hand
had been put into her loveless past, grasping and seeking hers in its
loneliness. None of her school friends had ever appealed to her like
this simple, weak, and loving young man. Perhaps it was because they
were of her own sex, and she distrusted them.
Nevertheless, this momentary weakness did not disturb her good common
sense. She looked at him fixedly for a moment, and then said, with a
faint smile, "Perhaps she does not trust YOU. Perhaps you cannot trust
yourself."
He felt himself reddening with a strange embarrassment. It was not so
much the question that disturbed him as the eyes of Miss Trotter; eyes
that he had never before noticed as being so beautiful in their color,
clearness, and half tender insight. He dropped her hand with a new-found
timidity, and yet with a feeling that he would like to hold it longer.
"I mean," she said, stopping short in the trail at a point where a
fringe of almost impenetrable "buckeyes" marked the extreme edge of the
woods,--"I mean that you are still very young, and as Frida is
nearly your own age,"--she could not resist this peculiarly feminine
innuendo,--"she may doubt your ability to marry her in the face of
opposition; she may even think my interference is a proof of it; but,"
she added quickly, to relieve his embarrassment and a certain abstracted
look with which he was beginning to regard her, "I will speak to her,
and," she concluded playfully, "you must take the consequences."
He said "Thank you," but not so earnestly as his previous appeal might
have suggested, and with the same awkward abstraction in his eyes. Miss
Trotter did not notice it, as her own eyes were at that moment fixed
upon a point on the trail a few rods away. "Look," she said in a lower
voice, "I may have the opportunity now for there is Frida herself
passing." Chris turned in the direction of her glance. It was indeed the
young girl walking leisurely ahead of them. There was no mistaking
the smart pink calico gown in which Frida was wont to array her rather
generous figure, nor the long yellow braids that hung Marguerite-wise
down her back. With the consciousness of good looks
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