The Amazing Interlude by Mary Roberts Rinehart
page 6 of 289 (02%)
page 6 of 289 (02%)
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Sara Lee did not wish another blanket.
"I'm a little worried about your Uncle James," said Aunt Harriet, at the door. "He's got indigestion. I think I'll make him a mustard plaster." She prepared to go out then, but Sara Lee spoke from her white bed. "Aunt Harriet," she said, "I don't think I'll ever get married." "I said that too, once," said Aunt Harriet complacently. "What's got into your head now?" "I don't know," Sara Lee replied vaguely. "I just--What's the use?" Aunt Harriet was conscious of a hazy impression of indelicacy. Coming from Sara Lee it was startling and revolutionary. In Aunt Harriet's world young women did not question their duty, which was to marry, preferably some one in the neighborhood, and bear children, who would be wheeled about that same neighborhood in perambulators and who would ultimately grow up and look after themselves. "The use?" she asked tartly. "Of having babies, and getting to care about them, and then--There will always be wars, won't there?" "You turn over and go to sleep," counseled Aunt Harriet. "And stop looking twenty years or more ahead." She hesitated. "You haven't quarreled with Harvey, have you?" |
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