FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   >>  
ious lest the child should not really love Anderson, because she hesitated, since he could see no other reason for her hesitation. However, when, about eleven o'clock, he heard the stir of approaching departure, and went hurriedly into the hall in order to intercept Anderson before he went, one glimpse of the girl's little face reassured him. She seemed to at once have grown older and younger. She was reflective, and fairly beaming with utmost anticipations. She looked at Anderson as he had never seen her look at any one. He had doubted a little about Ina; he had no doubt whatever about Charlotte. "She is in love with him, fast enough," he said to himself. He spoke to Anderson, and asked to have a word with him before he went. "Come back into the parlor a moment, if you please," he said. "I have a word to say to you." Anderson followed him into the room. He already had on his overcoat. Carroll stood close to him and spoke in a low voice. His face was ghastly when he had finished, but he looked proudly at the other man. "Now it is for you to say whether you will advance or retreat, for I think that, under the circumstances, nobody could say that you did not do the last with honor," he concluded. Anderson, who had also turned pale, stared at him a second, and his look was a question. "There is absolutely nothing else that I can do," replied Carroll, simply; "it is my only course." Anderson held out his hand. "I shall be proud to have your daughter for my wife," he said. "Remember she is not to know," Carroll said. "Do you think the ignorance preferable to the anxiety?" "I don't know. I cannot have her know. None of them shall know. I have trusted you," Carroll said, with a sort of agonized appeal. "I had, as a matter of honor, to tell you, but no one else," he continued, still in his voice which seemed strained to lowness. "I had to trust you." "You will never find your trust misplaced," replied Anderson, gravely, "but it will be hard for her." "You can comfort her," Carroll said, with a painful smile, in which was a slight jealousy, the feeling of a man outside all his loves of life. "When?" asked Anderson, in a whisper. "Monday." "She will, of course, come straight to my mother, and it can all be settled as soon as possible afterwards. There will be no occasion to wait." "Amy may wish to come," said Carroll, "and Anna." "Of course." The two men shook hands and went out in the ha
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   >>  



Top keywords:
Anderson
 

Carroll

 
looked
 

replied

 

trusted

 

strained

 
lowness
 

matter

 
appeal
 
agonized

continued

 

ignorance

 

hesitated

 

simply

 

preferable

 
anxiety
 

Remember

 

daughter

 

gravely

 

occasion


settled

 

mother

 
straight
 

slight

 
jealousy
 

painful

 
comfort
 

misplaced

 

feeling

 
whisper

Monday
 

absolutely

 

parlor

 

moment

 

glimpse

 

intercept

 

overcoat

 

younger

 

reflective

 

fairly


utmost

 

anticipations

 

Charlotte

 
doubted
 
reassured
 

hurriedly

 

concluded

 

eleven

 

circumstances

 
turned