The Little Red Chimney - Being the Love Story of a Candy Man by Mary Finley Leonard
page 97 of 122 (79%)
page 97 of 122 (79%)
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just make out the address, the postmark is quite gone," she added,
laying it in her companion's lap. "You haven't missed an important letter, have you?" "Not that I know of," Margaret Elizabeth replied with a laugh that was a bit unsteady. "It is probably nothing of value." She kept her gaze on the road ahead. "Just slip it in my pocket, please." All the rest of the way to the park her heart thumped uncomfortably. Could it be? Of course not, it was an advertisement. Why get excited? Meanwhile she chatted pleasantly with Dr. Prue. "All you need is fresh air and a simple life for a while. Your colour has come back wonderfully," the doctor remarked as they drew up at the cottage gate. "Will you wait for me here?" "If you don't mind, I think I'll go into the park, and if I'm not back by the time you are ready, don't wait. I can take the street car." Turning in at the entrance to the park, Margaret Elizabeth was for a fleeting moment aware of a Candy Wagon standing at the curb a few yards away. There was nothing unusual in this except the odd way in which it fitted into the situation, and the next moment she had forgotten everything but the letter in her hand. She walked slowly down the path. The April sunshine sifted through a faint and feathery greenness overhead, the air was clear and fresh. She was thinking that she had seen just one little scrap of the Candy Man's writing--on the card accompanying the Christmas basket; and this on the letter was blurred and stained, yet she was sure of it. He had written. |
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