FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137  
138   139   140   141   >>  
that his week has begun. Until then I keep the child, law or no law.' Then I rose and said: 'I thank you, Mr. Gilday. You've been very kind, and I'd like to pay you what I owe you.' "He sat there a moment and chewed on his mustache, and he said: 'You don't owe me a cent.' "'It wasn't charity I came to you for, and I can pay for what I get, Mr. Gilday,' I said. 'Will you give me your regular bill?' I said. "And he said at last: 'I will.' "In the middle of the week Paul Bargee's mother came to me and went down on her knees and begged for her son, and I said to her: 'Why should there be one law for him and one law for the likes of me. He's taken my wife; but he sha'n't put her to shame, ma'am, and he sha'n't cast a cloud on the life of my child!' "Then she stopped arguing, and caught my hands and cried: 'But you won't kill him, you won't kill my son, if he don't?' "'As sure as Saturday comes, ma'am, and he hasn't made Fanny Montrose a good woman,' I said, 'I'm going to kill Paul Bargee wherever he stands.' "And Friday morning Mr. Gilday called me down to his office and told me that Paul Bargee had done as I said he should do. And I pressed his hand and said nothing, and he let me sit awhile in his office. "And after awhile I rose up and said: 'Then I must take the child to her, as I promised, to-night.' "He walked with me from the office and said: 'Go home to your little girl. I'll see to the tickets, and will come for you at nine o'clock.' "And at nine o'clock he came in his big carriage, and took me and the child to the station and said: 'Telegraph me when you're leaving to-morrow.' "And I said: 'I will.' "Then I went into the car with my little girl asleep in my arms and sat down in the seat, and the porter came and said: "'Can I make up your berths?' "And I looked at the child and shook my head. So I held her all night and she slept on my shoulder, while I looked from her out into the darkness, and from the darkness back to her again. And the porter kept passing and passing and staring at me and the child. "And in the morning we went up to the great house and into the big parlor, and Fanny Montrose came in, as I had said she should, very white and not looking at me. And the child ran to her, and I watched Fanny Montrose catch her up to her breast, and I sobbed. And she looked at me, and saw it. So I said: "'It's because now I know you love the child and that you'll be kind to her.'
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137  
138   139   140   141   >>  



Top keywords:

Montrose

 

Bargee

 
Gilday
 

looked

 

office

 

porter

 

passing

 

darkness


morning

 

awhile

 

leaving

 
asleep
 
Telegraph
 

morrow

 
tickets
 
carriage

station

 

watched

 

parlor

 

breast

 

sobbed

 

shoulder

 

staring

 

berths


charity

 

stopped

 

arguing

 

caught

 

begged

 
middle
 

regular

 

pressed


promised
 

mother

 

called

 
Friday
 

Saturday

 
mustache
 

chewed

 
moment

stands

 

walked