<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2></div>
<p>Meantime Allison was dashing over fallen
trees, climbing rocks, and pushing his way
between tangled vines and close-grown laurel,
up and up through the college woods, and across country
in the direction of the quarry, a still, wonderful
place like a cathedral, with a deep, dark pool at the
bottom of the massive stone walls. There were over-arching
pines, hemlocks, and oaks for vaulted roof
with the fresco of sky and flying cloud between. It
was a wonderful place. Once when they had climbed
there together and stood for a long time in silence
watching the shadows on the deep pool below, looking
up to the arching green, and listening to the praisings
of a song sparrow up above in some hidden choir, Jane
had said that this was a place to come and worship––or
to come when one was in trouble! A place where
one might meet God! He had looked down at her
sweet face upturned searching for the little thrilling
singer, and had thought how sweet and wonderful she
was, and how he wanted to tell her so, and would some
day, but must not just yet. He hadn’t thought much
about what she was saying––but now it came back––and
he knew that she must have gone here with
her trouble.</p>
<p>He need not have worried about the quarry and the
deep, dark pool. He kept telling himself all the way
up that he need not, but when he reached the top and
came in sight of her he knew it. Knew also that he
had been <i>sure</i> of it all along.</p>
<p>She was sitting on a great fallen log, quietly, calmly,
with her back against an old gnarled branch that rose
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_328' name='page_328'></SPAN>328</span>
in a convenient way, and her head was thrown back and
up as if she were seeing wonderful visions somewhere
among the green, and the blue and white above. It
was as if she had reached a higher plane where earthly
annoyances do not come, and felt it good to be there.
There was almost a smile on her beautiful lips, a
strong, sweet, wistful smile. She had not been looking
down at the deep, treacherous pool at all. She had been
looking <i>up</i> and her strength had come upon her so.
For one long instant the young man paused and lifted
his hat, watching her in a kind of awe. Her face almost
seemed to shine as if she had been talking with God.
He remembered dimly the story of Moses on the Mount
talking with God. He hesitated almost to intrude upon
a solitude so fine and wonderful. Then in relief and
eagerness he spoke her name:</p>
<p>“Jane!”</p>
<p>She turned and looked at him and her face lit up
with joy:</p>
<p>“Oh! It is you! Why––how did you happen–––?”</p>
<p>“I came to find you, Jane. Leslie told me everything
and I have hunted everywhere. But when you
were not at college I somehow knew you would be
here. I wanted to find you––and––enfold you, Jane––wrap
you around somehow with my love and care if
you will let me, so that nothing like that can ever hurt
you again. I love you, Jane. I suppose I’m a little
previous and all that, being only a kid, as it were, and
neither of us out of college yet, but I shan’t change,
and I’ll be hanged if I see why it isn’t all right for
me to have the right to protect you against such
annoyances as this–––”</p>
<p>He was beside her on the log now, his face burning
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_329' name='page_329'></SPAN>329</span>
eagerly with deep feeling, one arm protectingly
behind her, the other hand laid strongly, possessively
over the small folded hands in her lap.</p>
<p>“Perhaps I’m taking a whole lot for granted,” he
said humbly. “Perhaps you don’t love me––can’t even
like me the way I hoped you do. Oh, Jane, speak quick,
and tell me! Darling, can you ever love me enough?
You haven’t drawn your hands away! Look up and let
me read your eyes, please–––”</p>
<p>No, she had not drawn her hands away, and she
did not shrink from his supporting arm––and she was
the kind of girl who would not have allowed such
familiarities <i>unless</i>––<i>Ah!</i> She had lifted her eyes and
there was something blindingly beautiful in them, and
tears––great wonderful tears, so sweet and misty that
they made him glad with a thrill of beautiful pain!
Her lips were trembling. He longed to kiss her, yet
knew he must wait until he had her permission–––</p>
<p>“Allison! Listen! You are dear––<i>wonderful</i>––but
you don’t know a thing about me!”</p>
<p>“I know all I want to know, and that is a great deal,
you darling, you!” And now he did kiss her, and
drew her close into his arms and would not let her go
even when she struggled gently.</p>
<p>“Allison, listen. <i>Listen</i>––please! I must tell
you! <i>Wait–––!</i>”</p>
<p>She put her hands against his breast and pushed
herself back away from him where she could look in
his face.</p>
<p>“Please, you <i>must</i> let me go and listen to what I
have to say!”</p>
<p>“I’ll let you go when you tell me yes or no, Jane.
Do you, can you love me? I must know that first.
Then you shall have your way.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_330' name='page_330'></SPAN>330</span></div>
<p>Jane’s eyes did not falter. She looked at him,
“You promised, you know–––!”</p>
<p>“Yes, Allison––I love you––but––<i>NO!</i> You must
<i>not</i> kiss me again. You must let me go, and listen––You
promised, you know–––!”</p>
<p>Allison’s arms dropped away from her, but his
eyes held her in a long look of joy.</p>
<p>“All right, darling, go to it”––he said with a
joyous sound in his voice––“I can stand anything now,
I know. It seems too good to be true and it’s enough
for me. But hurry! A fellow can’t wait forever.”</p>
<p>“No, Allison, you must sit back and be serious.
It isn’t really <i>happy</i>, you know––what I have to
tell you–––!”</p>
<p>Allison became grave at once.</p>
<p>“All right, Jane, only I can’t imagine anything
terrible enough to stop this happiness of mine unless
you’re already married––and have been concealing it
from us all this time–––!”</p>
<p>In spite of herself Jane laughed at that, and Allison
breathed more freely now the tenseness was gone out
of her voice. His hands went out and grasped hers.</p>
<p>“At least I can do this,” he pleaded, and Jane lifted
her eyes, now serious again, and smiled tenderly, letting
her hands stay in his passively.</p>
<p>“Listen, Allison––my father!”</p>
<p>“I know, Jane, dear––I heard it long ago. Your
father was a forger! What do you suppose I care?
He probably had some overpowering temptation and
yielded, never dreaming but he would be able to make it
right. You can’t make me believe that any parent of
<i>yours</i> was actually bad! And besides, if he was, it
wouldn’t be <i>you</i>–––”</p>
<p>“Allison! Listen!” broke in Jane gravely, stopping
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_331' name='page_331'></SPAN>331</span>
the torrent of words with which he was attempting
to silence her. “It isn’t what you think at all. My
father <i>wasn’t</i> a forger! He was a good man!”</p>
<p>“He wasn’t!” exclaimed Allison joyously. “Then
what in thunder? Why didn’t you tell ’em so, Jane?”
He tried to draw her to him, but she still resisted.</p>
<p>“That’s just it, Allison, I can’t. I <i>never</i> can–––”</p>
<p>“Well, then <i>I</i> will! You shan’t have a thing like
that hanging over you–––!”</p>
<p>“But that is just what you <i>must not do</i>. And you
<i>can’t</i> do it, either, if I don’t tell you about it, for you
wouldn’t have a thing to say, nor any way to prove it.
And I won’t tell you, Allison, ever, unless you
will promise–––!”</p>
<p>Allison was sobered in an instant.</p>
<p>“Jane, don’t you know me well enough to be sure
I would not betray any confidence you put in me?”</p>
<p>“I thought so–––” said Jane, smiling through
her tears.</p>
<p>“Dear!” said Allison in a tone that was a caress,
full of longing and sympathy.</p>
<p>Jane sat up bravely and began her story.</p>
<p>“When I was twelve years old my mother died.
That left father and me alone, and we became very
close comrades indeed. He was a wonderful father!”</p>
<p>Allison’s fingers answered with a warm pressure of
sympathy and interest.</p>
<p>“He was father and mother both to me. And
more and more we grew to confide in one another. I
was interested in all his business, and used to amuse myself
asking him about things at the office when he
came home, the way mother used to do when she was
with us. He used to talk over all my school friends
and interests and we had beautiful times together. My
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_332' name='page_332'></SPAN>332</span>
father had a friend––a man who had grown up with
him, lived next door and went to school with him
when he was a boy. He was younger than father, and––well,
not so serious. Father didn’t always approve
of what he did and used to urge him to do differently.
He lived in the same suburb with us, and his wife had
been a friend of mother’s. She was a sweet little child-like
woman, very pretty, and an invalid. They had
one daughter, a girl about my age, and when we were
children we used to play together, but as we grew older
mother didn’t care for us to be together much. She
thought––it was better for us not to––and as the years
went by we didn’t have much to do with one another.
Her father was the only one who kept up the acquaintance,
and sometimes I used to think he worried my
father every time he came to the house. One day when
I was about fourteen he came in the afternoon just
after I got home from school and said he wanted to
see father as soon as he came home. Couldn’t I telephone
father and ask him to come home at once, that
there was someone there wanting to see him on important
business? He finally called him up himself
and when father got there they went into a room by
themselves and talked until late into the night. When
at last Mr.––that is––the <i>man</i>, went away, father did
not go to bed but walked up and down the floor in
his study all night long. Toward morning I could
not stand it any longer. I knew my father was in
trouble. So I went down to him, and when I saw
him I was terribly frightened. His face was white
and drawn and his eyes burned like coals of fire. He
looked at me with a look that I never shall forget.
He took me in his arms and lifted up my face, a way
he often had when he was in earnest, and he seemed
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_333' name='page_333'></SPAN>333</span>
to be looking down into my very soul. ‘Little girl,’
he said, ‘we’re in deep trouble. I don’t know whether
I’ve done right or not.’ There was something in his
voice that made me tremble all over, and he saw I was
frightened and tried to be calm himself. ‘Janie,’ he
said––he always called me Janie when he was deeply
moved––‘Janie, it may hit hardest on you, and oh, I
meant your life to be so safe and happy!’</p>
<p>“I tried to tell him it didn’t matter about me, and
for him not to be troubled, but he went on telling about
it. It seems the father of this man had once done a
great deal for my father when he was in a very trying
situation, and father always felt an obligation to look
after the son. Indeed, he had promised when the old
man was dying that he would be a brother to him no
matter what happened. And now the son had been
speculating and got deep into debt. He had formed
some kind of stock company, something to do with
Western land and mines. I never fully understood it
all, but there had been a lot of fraudulent dealing,
although father only suspected that at the time, but
anyway, everything was going to fall through and the
man was going to be brought up in disgrace before
the world if somebody didn’t help him out. And father
felt obliged to stand by him. Of course, he did not
know how bad it was, because the man had not told
him all the truth, but father had taken over the obligations
of the whole thing. He thought he might be
able to pull the thing out of trouble by putting a good
deal of his own money into it, and make it a fair and
square proposition for all the stockholders without
their ever finding out that everything had been on the
verge of going to pieces. You see the man had put
it up to father very eloquently that his wife was very
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_334' name='page_334'></SPAN>334</span>
ill in the hospital and, if anything should happen to
him and he were arrested it could not be kept from
her and she would die. It’s true she was very critically
ill, had just been through a severe operation, and was
very frail indeed. Father felt it was up to him to
shoulder the whole responsibility, although, of course,
he felt that the man richly deserved the law to the
full. Nevertheless, because of his promise he stood
by him.</p>
<p>“That night the man was killed in an automobile
accident soon after leaving our house, and when it
developed that the business was built on a rotten foundation,
and that father was in partnership––you see the
man had been very wily and had his papers all fixed up
so that it looked as if father had been a silent partner
from the beginning––everything came back on father,
and he found there were overwhelming debts that he
had not been told about, although he supposed he had
sifted the business to the foundation and understood it
all before he made the agreement to help him. Perhaps
if the man had lived he would have been able to carry
his crooked dealings through and save the whole thing,
with what help father had given him, and neither father
nor the world would ever have found out––I don’t know.––But
anyway, his dying just then made the whole
thing fall in ruins, and right on top of father. But
even that we could have stood. We didn’t care so
much about money. Father was well off, and he found
that if he put in everything he could satisfy the creditors,
and pay off everything, and he had courage enough
to be planning to start all over again. But suddenly
it turned out that there had been a check forged for a
large amount and it all looked as if father had done it.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_335' name='page_335'></SPAN>335</span>
I can’t go into the details now, but we were suddenly
face to face with the fact that there was no evidence to
prove that he had not been a hypocrite all these years
except his own life. We thought for a few days that
of course that would put him beyond suspicion––but
do you know, the world is very hard. One of father’s
best friends––one he thought was a friend––came to
him and offered to go bail for him for my sake if
he would just tell him the whole truth and own up.
There was only one way and that was to go to the
man’s wife and try to get certain papers which father
knew were in existence because he had seen them, and
which he had supposed were left in his own safe the
night the man talked with him, but which could not
be found. As the wife had just been brought back
from the hospital and was still in a very critical condition,
father would not do more than ask if he might
go through the house and search. And that woman
sent back a very indignant refusal, charging father
with having been at the bottom of her husband’s failure,
and even the cause of his death, and telling him
he had pauperized her and her little helpless daughter.
And the daughter began treating me as a stranger
whenever we chanced to meet–––”</p>
<p>Allison’s face darkened and his eyes looked stern
and hard. He said something under his breath angrily.
Jane couldn’t catch the words, but he drew her close
in his arms and held her tenderly:</p>
<p>“And were those papers never found, dear?” he
asked after a moment:</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Jane wearily, resting her head back
against his shoulder, “I found them, after father died.”</p>
<p>“You found them?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_336' name='page_336'></SPAN>336</span></div>
<p>“Yes, I found them slipped down behind the chest
in the hall. It was a heavy oak chest, a great carved
affair that had belonged in the family a long time, and
it was seldom moved. It stood below the hat-rack in the
alcove in the hall, and I figured it out that the man
must have meant to keep those papers himself, so there
would be no incriminating evidence in father’s hands,
and that he must have picked them up without father’s
noticing and started to carry them home; but that when
he was going away, putting on his overcoat, he had
somehow dropped some of them behind that chest without
knowing it. Because they were not all there––two
of them were missing. Father had described them
to me, and three––the most important ones with the
empty envelope––were found. The other two were
probably larger, and looked like the whole bundle,
which explains how he came to think he had them
all. But the two he had and must have had about
him when he was killed would not in themselves
have been any evidence against him. So, my father
was arrested–––!”</p>
<p>The tears choked Jane’s voice and suddenly rained
into her sweet eyes as she struggled to recall the whole
sorrowful experience.</p>
<p>“Oh, my darling!” cried Allison, tenderly holding
her close.</p>
<p>“Father was very brave. He said it was sure to
come out all right, but he wouldn’t accept bail, though
it was offered him by several loyal friends. He saw that
they suspected him, and the papers all came out with
big headlines, ‘<span class='smcap'>Church Elder Arrested</span>.’”</p>
<p>Allison’s voice was deep with loving sympathy as
his lips swept her forehead softly and he murmured,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_337' name='page_337'></SPAN>337</span>
“My poor little girl!” but Jane went bravely on.</p>
<p>“That was a hard time,” she said with trembling
lips, “but God was good; he didn’t let it last long.
There came an old friend back from abroad who had
known father ever since he was a boy, and who happened
to have been associated with him in business
long enough to give certain proofs that cleared the
whole thing up. In a week the case was dismissed
so far as father was concerned, and he was back at
home again, and restored to the full confidence of his
business associates––that is, those who knew intimately
about the matter. If father had lived I have no doubt
everything would have been all right, and he would
have been able to live down the whole thing, but the
trouble had struck him hard, he was so terribly worried
for my sake, you know. Then he took a little cold
which we didn’t think anything about, and suddenly,
before we realized it, he was down with double pneumonia
from which he never rallied. His vitality
seemed to be gone. After he died, the papers said
beautiful things about his bravery and courage and
Christianity, and people tried to be nice, but when it
was all over there were still people who looked at me
curiously when I passed, and whispered noticeably
together; and that man’s wife and daughter openly
called me a forger’s daughter and said that my father
had stolen their income, when all the time they were
living on what he had given up to save them from disgrace.
The daughter made it so unpleasant for me
that I decided to go away where I was not known,
although I had several dear beautiful homes opened to
me if I had chosen to stay, where I might have been a
daughter and treated as one of the other children.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_338' name='page_338'></SPAN>338</span>
But I thought it was better to go away and make my
own life–––”</p>
<p>“But you had evidence. Did you never go and tell
those two how wrong they were and how it was their
father, not yours, who was the forger?”</p>
<p>“No, not exactly,” said Jane, lifting clear untroubled
eyes to his face. “You see that was part
of father’s obligation; it was a point of honor not to
give that man’s shame away to his wife––he had promised––and
then, the man, was dead––he could not be
brought to justice; what good would it do?”</p>
<p>“It would have done the good that those two
women wouldn’t have gone around snubbing you and
telling lies about you–––”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, after all, that didn’t really hurt me–––”</p>
<p>“And that brazen girl wouldn’t have dared come
here to the same college and make it hot for you–––!”</p>
<p>“Allison! How did you <i>know</i>?” Jane sat up and
looked into his eyes, startled.</p>
<p>“I knew from the first mention that it must have
been Eugenia Frazer. No girl in her senses would
have taken the trouble to do what she did to-day
without some grievance–––! Oh, that girl! She is
beyond words! Think of anybody ever falling in love
with her! I’d like the pleasure of informing her what
her father was. Of course, though, it wasn’t her fault.
She couldn’t help her father being what he was, but
she could help what she is herself. I should certainly
like to see her get what’s coming to her–––!”</p>
<p>“Don’t Allison––please! It isn’t the right spirit
for us to have. Perhaps I’d be just like her if I
were in her place–––”</p>
<p>“I see you being like her––you angel!” And
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_339' name='page_339'></SPAN>339</span>
Allison leaned over again to look into the eyes of
his beloved.</p>
<p>“Well, dear, we’ll get the right spirit about it somehow,
and forget her, but I mean she shall understand
right where she gets off before this thing goes any
farther. No, you needn’t protest. I’m not going to
give away your confidence. But I’m going to settle
that girl where she won’t dare to make any more trouble
for you ever again. And the first thing we’re going to
do is to announce our engagement. I feel like going
up to the college bulletin board right this minute and
writing it out in great big letters!”</p>
<p>“Allison!” Jane sat up with shining eyes and her
cheeks very red. Then they both broke down and
laughed, Jane’s merriment ending in a serious look.</p>
<p>“Allison, you really <i>want me</i>, now you know what
people may think about my father?”</p>
<p>“Jane, I’ve known all that since I first saw you.
Our beloved pastor kindly informed me of it the night
he introduced us, so you see how little weight it had
with any of us. I had no knowledge but that it was
all true, although I couldn’t for the life of me see
how a man who was unworthy of you could have possibly
been your father; but it was you, and not your
father, I fell in love with the first night I saw you.
I’m mighty glad for your sake that he wasn’t that kind
of man, because I know how you would feel about it,
but as for what other people think about it, <i>I should
worry</i>! And Jane, make up your mind right here and
now that we’re going to be married the day we both
graduate, see? I won’t wait a day longer to have the
right to protect you–––”</p>
<p>The tall trees whispered above their heads, and the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_340' name='page_340'></SPAN>340</span>
birds looked down and dropped wonderful melodies
about them, and Leslie stormily drove her car
back and forth on the pike and sounded her klaxon
loud and long, but it was almost an hour later that it
suddenly occurred to Allison that Leslie was waiting
for them, and still later before the two with blissful
lingering finally wended their way out to the road and
were taken up by the subdued and weary Leslie, who
greeted them with relief and fell upon her new sister
with eager enthusiasm and genuine delight.</p>
<p>An hour later Allison, after committing his future
bride to the tender ministries of Julia Cloud, who had
received her as a daughter, took his way collegeward.
He sent up his card to Miss Frazer and Miss Brice and
requested that he might see them both as soon as possible,
and in a flutter of expectancy the two presently
entered the reception-room. They were hoping he had
come to take them out in his car, although each was
disappointed to find that she was not the only
one summoned.</p>
<p>Allison in that few minutes of waiting for them,
seemed to have lost his care-free boyish air and have
grown to man’s estate. He greeted the two young
women with utmost courtesy and gravity and proceeded
at once to business:</p>
<p>“I have come to inform you,” he said with a bow
that might almost be called stately, so much had the
tall, slender figure lost its boyishness, “that Miss Bristol
is my fiancée, and as such it is my business to protect
her. I must ask you both to publicly apologize before
your sorority for what happened this morning.”</p>
<p>Eunice Brice grew white and frightened, but
Eugenia Frazer’s face flamed angrily.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_341' name='page_341'></SPAN>341</span></div>
<p>“Indeed, Allison Cloud, I’ll do nothing of the kind.
What in the world did you suppose I had to do with
what happened this morning?”</p>
<p>“You had all to do with it. Miss Frazer, I happen
to know all about the matter.”</p>
<p>“Well, you certainly don’t,” flamed Eugenia, “or
you wouldn’t be engaged to that little Bristol hypocrite.
Her father was a common–––”</p>
<p>Allison took a step toward her, his face stern
but controlled.</p>
<p>“Her father was <i>not</i> a <i>forger</i>, Miss Frazer, and I
have reason to believe that you know that the report
you are spreading about college is not true. But
however that may be, Miss Frazer, if I should say that
your father was a forger would that change <i>you</i> any?
I have asked Miss Bristol to marry me because of what
<i>she is herself</i>, and not because of what her father was.
But there is ample evidence that her father was a noble
and an upright man and so recognized by the law and
by his fellow-townsmen, and I demand that you take
back your words publicly, both of you, and that you,
Miss Frazer, take upon yourself publicly the responsibility
for starting this whole trouble. I fancy it may
be rather unpleasant for you to remain in this college
longer unless this matter is adjusted satisfactorily.”</p>
<p>“Well, I certainly do not intend to be bullied into
any such thing!” said Eugenia angrily. “I’ll leave college
first!”</p>
<p>Eunice Brice began to cry. She was the protégée
of a rich woman and could not afford to be disgraced.</p>
<p>“I shall tell them all that you asked me to make that
motion for you and promised to give me your pink
evening dress if I did,” reproached Eunice tearfully.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_342' name='page_342'></SPAN>342</span></div>
<p>“Tell what you like,” returned Eugenia grandly,
“it will only prove you what you are, a little fool!
I’m going up to pack. You needn’t think you can hush
me up, Allison Cloud, if you <i>are</i> rich. Money won’t
cover up the truth–––”</p>
<p>“No,” said Allison looking at her steadily, controlledly,
with a memory of his promise to Jane. “No,
but <i>Christianity</i> will––sometimes.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, everybody knows you’re a fanatic!”
sneered Eugenia, and swept herself out of the room
with high head, knowing that the wisest thing she could
do was to depart while the going was good.</p>
<p>When Allison reached home a few minutes later
Julia Cloud put into his hand a letter which his guardian
had written her soon after his first visit, in which
he stated that he had made it a point to look up both
the young people with whom his wards were intimate,
and he found their records and their family irreproachable.
He especially went into details concerning Jane’s
father and the noble way in which he had acted, and
the completeness with which his name had been cleared.
He uncovered one or two facts which Jane apparently
did not know, and which proved that time had revealed
the true criminal to those most concerned and that only
pity for his family, and the expressed wish of the man
who had borne for a time his shame, had caused the
matter to be hushed up.</p>
<p>Allison, after he had read it, went to find Jane
and drew her into the little sun-parlor to read it with
him, and together they rejoiced quietly.</p>
<p>Jane lifted a shining face to Allison after the
reading.</p>
<p>“Then I’m glad we never said anything to
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_343' name='page_343'></SPAN>343</span>
Eugenia! Poor Eugenia! She is greatly to be pitied!”</p>
<p>Allison, a little shamefacedly, agreed, and then
owned up that he had “fired” Eugenia, as he expressed
it, from the college.</p>
<p>“O, Allison!” said Jane, half troubled, though
laughing in spite of herself at the vision of Eugenia
trying to be lofty in the face of the facts. “You ought
not to have done it, dear. I have stood it so
long, it didn’t matter! Only for your sake––and
Leslie’s–––!”</p>
<p>“For our sakes, nothing!” said Allison. “That
girl needed somebody to tell her where to get off, and
only a man could do it. She’ll be more polite to people
hereafter, I’m thinking. It won’t do her any harm.
Now, Jane darling, forget it, and let’s be happy!”</p>
<p>“Be careful, Allison, some one is coming. I think
it’s that Mr. Terrence.”</p>
<p>“Dog-gone his fool hide!” muttered Allison. “I
wish he’d take himself home! I certainly would like
to tell <i>him</i> where to get off. Leslie’s as sick of him as
I am, and as for Cloudy, she’s about reached the limit.”</p>
<p>“Why, Allison, isn’t Leslie interested in him? He
told Howard that they were as good as engaged.”</p>
<p>“Leslie interested in that little cad? I should say
not. If she was I’d disown her. You say he told
Howard they were engaged! What a lie! So that’s
what’s the matter with the old boy, is it? I thought
something must be the matter that he got so busy all
of a sudden. Well, I’ll soon fix that! Come on up
to Cloudy’s porch, quick, while he’s in his room.
Cloudy won’t mind. We’ll be by ourselves there till
dinner is ready!”</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_344' name='page_344'></SPAN>344</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXX' id='CHAPTER_XXX'></SPAN>
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