The Real Adventure by Henry Kitchell Webster
page 44 of 717 (06%)
page 44 of 717 (06%)
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Rose!"
The girl came shuffling into the room in a pair of old bedroom slippers. She had on a skirt that she used to go skating in, and a somewhat tumbled middy-blouse. Her hair was wopsed around her head anyhow--it really takes one of Rose's own words to describe it. As a toilet representing the total accomplishment of a morning, it was nothing to boast of. But, if you'd been sitting there, invisibly, where you could see her, you'd have straightened up and drawn a deeper breath than you'd indulged in lately, and felt that the world was distinctly a brighter place to live in than it had been a moment before. She came up behind Portia, whom she had not seen before that day, and enveloped her in a big lazy hug. "Back to work another Saturday afternoon, Angel?" she asked commiseratingly. "Aren't you ever going to stop and have any fun?" Then she slumped into a chair, heaved a yawning sigh and rubbed her eyes. "Tired, dear?" asked her mother. She said it under her breath in the hope that Portia wouldn't hear. "No," said Rose. "Just sleepy." She yawned again, turned to Portia, and, somewhat to their surprise, said: "Yes, what do you mean--the _real_ Rodney Aldrich? He looked real enough to me. And his arm felt real--the one he was going to punch the conductor with." "I didn't mean he was imaginary," Portia explained. "I only meant I didn't believe it was the Rodney Aldrich--who's so awfully prominent; either somebody else who happened to have the same name, or somebody who |
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