McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 6, May, 1896 by Various
page 38 of 204 (18%)
page 38 of 204 (18%)
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was certain there was no one else he liked and admired half so much. But
in the following winter he went to spend the holidays with the Mandisons, and when he came away he and Mary were engaged. The next summer the Mandisons took a cottage at the shore, and Windham went to spend some weeks with them. Idly busy and calmly happy in the pleasant company of Mary and all the friendly house, the sunny days slipped by till one came that disturbed his dream. An aunt of Mary's arrived with her husband, Dr. Saxon, and his niece, Agnes Maine. At the first glance Miss Maine challenged Windham's attention. She was a tall and striking person, with a keen glance that he felt took his measure at the first look. She piqued his curiosity, and interested him more and more. One day he saw her and Mary together, and caught himself comparing them, not in Mary's favor. Panic seized him, and he turned his back on Miss Maine and devoted himself to Mary. Miss Maine went to stay with some neighbors, the Colemans. One night she was caught at the Mandisons by a storm. Mary asked Windham to entertain her, and he went and asked her to play chess. She declined coldly, and Windham turned away with such a look that Mary wondered what Agnes could have said so unkind. And the next day Miss Maine spoke so gently to him that it warmed him all through. Still he persistently avoided her. The Colemans got up a play in the attic of their large old house. On the night of the performance the place was crowded. The first two acts went off smoothly. Windham had been helping to shift the scenes, and was standing alone, looking over the animated spectacle as the audience chatted and laughed. |
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