On the Church Steps by Sarah C. Hallowell
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page 10 of 103 (09%)
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called for. We are partners in our expenses, and the arrangement can
be broken up at any moment." Was this all? No word of love or praise for the fair young thing that had brightened all her household in these two years that Bessie had been fatherless? I believe there was love and appreciation, but it was not Mrs. Sloman's method to be demonstrative or expansive. She approved of the engagement, and in her grim way had opened an immediate battery of household ledgers and ways and means. Some idea, too, of making me feel easy about taking Bessie away from her, I think, inclined her to this business-like manner. I tried to show her, by my own manner, that I understood her without words, and I think she was very grateful to be spared the expression of feeling. Poor soul! repression had become such a necessity to her! So we talked on gravely of the weather, and of the celebrated Doctor McQ----, who was expected to give us an argumentative sermon that morning, until _my_ argument came floating in at the door like a calm little bit of thistledown, to which our previous conversation had been as the thistle's self. The plain little church was gay that morning. Carriage after carriage drove up with much prancing and champing, and group after group of city folk came rustling along the aisles. It was a bit of Fifth Avenue let into Lenox calm. The World and the Flesh were there, at least. In the hush of expectancy that preceded the minister's arrival there was much waving of scented fans, while the well-bred city glances took |
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