e contemplated eventually retiring from business. If Mr. Bilson
was uneasily conscious during this interview that he had once paid
attentions to Miss Trotter, which she had ignored, she never betrayed
the least recollection of it. She thanked him for his confidence and
wished him happiness.
Sudden as was this good fortune to Miss Trotter, an independence she
had so often deservedly looked forward to, she was, nevertheless,
keenly alive to the fact that she had attained it partly through Chris's
disappointment and unhappiness. Her sane mind taught her that it was
better for him; that he had been saved an ill-assorted marriage; that
the girl had virtually rejected him for Bilson before he had asked
her mediation that morning. Yet these reasons failed to satisfy her
feelings. It seemed cruel to her that the interest which she had
suddenly taken in poor Chris should end so ironically in disaster to
her sentiment and success to her material prosperity. She thought of his
boyish appeal to her; of what must have been his utter discomfiture in
the discovery of Frida's relations to Mr. Bilson that afternoon, but
more particularly of the singular change it had effected in him. How
nobly and gently he had taken his loss! How much more like a man he
looked in his defeat than in his passion! The element of respect which
had been wanting in her previous interest in him was now present in her
thoughts. It prevented her seeking him with perfunctory sympathy and
worldly counsel; it made her feel strangely and unaccountably shy of any
other expression.
As Mr. Bilson evidently desired to avoid local gossip until after his
marriage, he had enjoined secrecy upon her, and she was also debarred
from any news of Chris through his brother, who, had he known of Frida's
engagement, would have naturally come to her for explanation. It also
convinced her that Chris himself had not revealed anything to his
brother.
III
When the news of the marriage reached Buckeye Hill, it did not, however,
make much scandal, owing, possibly, to the scant number of the sex
who are apt to disseminate it, and to many the name of Miss Jansen was
unknown. The intelligence that Mr. Bilson would be absent for a year,
and that the superior control of the Summit Hotel would devolve upon
Miss Trotter, DID, however, create a stir in that practical business
community. No one doubted the wisdom of the selection. Every one knew
that to Miss Trotter's tact and intellec
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