l, don't take it too much to heart," said Lapham, alarmed at the
feeling he had excited; "I don't say she thought so. I was trying to
guess--trying to----"
"If there is anything I can say or do to convince you----"
"Oh, it ain't necessary to say anything. I'm all right."
"But Miss Lapham! I may see her again? I may try to convince her
that----"
He stopped in distress, and Lapham afterwards told his wife that he
kept seeing the face of Irene as it looked when he parted with her in
the car; and whenever he was going to say yes, he could not open his
lips. At the same time he could not help feeling that Penelope had a
right to what was her own, and Sewell's words came back to him.
Besides, they had already put Irene to the worst suffering. Lapham
compromised, as he imagined. "You can come round to-night and see ME,
if you want to," he said; and he bore grimly the gratitude that the
young man poured out upon him.
Penelope came down to supper and took her mother's place at the head of
the table.
Lapham sat silent in her presence as long as he could bear it. Then he
asked, "How do you feel to-night, Pen?"
"Oh, like a thief," said the girl. "A thief that hasn't been arrested
yet."
Lapham waited a while before he said, "Well, now, your mother and I
want you should hold up on that a while."
"It isn't for you to say. It's something I can't hold up on."
"Yes, I guess you can. If I know what's happened, then what's happened
is a thing that nobody is to blame for. And we want you should make
the best of it and not the worst. Heigh? It ain't going to help Irene
any for you to hurt yourself--or anybody else; and I don't want you
should take up with any such crazy notion. As far as heard from, you
haven't stolen anything, and whatever you've got belongs to you."
"Has he been speaking to you, father?"
"Your mother's been speaking to me."
"Has HE been speaking to you?"
"That's neither here nor there."
"Then he's broken his word, and I will never speak to him again!"
"If he was any such fool as to promise that he wouldn't talk to me on a
subject"--Lapham drew a deep breath, and then made the plunge--"that I
brought up----"
"Did you bring it up?"
"The same as brought up--the quicker he broke his word the better; and
I want you should act upon that idea. Recollect that it's my business,
and your mother's business, as well as yours, and we're going to have
our say. He hain't done anythi
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