The Powers and Maxine by Charles Norris Williamson
page 6 of 249 (02%)
page 6 of 249 (02%)
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"It made me happy to send it," he said.
"Does it please you to do things for me?" I asked. "Why, of course." "You do like poor little me a tiny bit, then?" I couldn't help adding--"Even though I'm different from other girls?" "Perhaps more for that reason," he said, with his voice as kind as his eyes. "Oh, what shall I do if you go away!" I burst out, partly because I really meant it, and partly because I hoped it might lead him on to say what I wanted so much to hear. "Suppose you get that consulship at Algiers." "I hope I may," he said quickly. "A consulship isn't a very great thing--but--it's a beginning. I want it badly." "I wish I had some influence with the Foreign Secretary," said I, not telling him that the man actually dislikes me, and looks at me as if I were a toad. "Of course, he's Lord Mountstuart's cousin, and brother-in-law as well, and that makes him seem quite in the family, doesn't it? But it isn't as if I were really related to Lady Mountstuart. I was never sorry before that Di and I are only step-sisters--no, not a bit sorry, though her mother had all the money, and brought it to my poor father; but now I wish I were Lady Mountstuart's niece, and that I had some of the coaxing, 'girly' ways Di can put on when she wants to get something out of people. I'd make the |
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