The Trumpeter Swan by Temple Bailey
page 37 of 361 (10%)
page 37 of 361 (10%)
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It was while she was reading Truxton's letter that the Flippins came by--Mr. Flippin and his wife, Mary, and little Fidelity. A slender mulatto woman followed with a basket. The Flippins were one of the "second families." Between them and the Paines of King's Crest and the Bannisters of Huntersfield stretched a deep chasm of social prejudice. Three generations of Flippins had been small farmers on rented lands. They had no coats-of-arms or family trees. They were never asked to dine with the Paines or Bannisters, but there had been always an interchange of small hospitalities, and much neighborliness, and as children Mary Flippin, Randy and Becky and Truxton had played together and had been great friends. So it was now as they stopped to speak to the Judge's party that Mrs. Beaufort said graciously, "I am reading a letter from Truxton. Would you like to hear it?" Mary, speaking with a sort of tense eagerness, said, "Yes." So the Flippins sat down, and Mrs. Beaufort read in her pleasant voice the letter from France. Randy, lying on his back under the old oak, listened. Truxton gave a joyous diary of the days--little details of the towns through which he passed, of the houses where he was billeted, jokes of the men, of the food they ate, of his hope of coming home. "He seems very happy," said Mrs. Beaufort, as she finished. |
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