Success - A Novel by Samuel Hopkins Adams
page 59 of 811 (07%)
page 59 of 811 (07%)
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inevitable, which entranced Banneker when it did not appall him. After
the meal was over, the girl seated herself on a low bench which Banneker had built with his own hands and the Right-and-Ready Tool Kit (9 T 603), her knee between her clasped hands and an elfish expression on her face. "Don't you think," she suggested, "that we'd get on quicker if you washed the dishes and I sat here and talked to you?" "Very likely." "It isn't so easy to begin, you know," she remarked, nursing her knee thoughtfully. "Am I--Do you find me very much in the way?'" "No." "Don't suppress your wild enthusiasm on my account," she besought him. "I haven't interfered with your duties so far, have I?" "No," answered Banneker wondering what was coming next. "You see"--her tone became ruminative and confidential--"if I give you my name and you report it, there'll be all kinds of a mix-up. They'll come after me and take me away." Banneker dropped a tin on the floor and stood, staring. "Isn't that what you want?" "It's evident enough that it's what _you_ want," she returned, aggrieved. |
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