An Alabaster Box by Florence Morse Kingsley;Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman
page 138 of 320 (43%)
page 138 of 320 (43%)
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leather-bound, wouldn't you? They come high, but they wear real well,
and I will say there's nothing handsomer for a parlor table." "I want them all leather-bound," said Lydia, smiling. "I want one for myself, one for a library and the other three--" "There's nothing neater for a Christmas or birthday present!" shrilled Lois Daggett joyously. "And so informing." She swallowed her tea in short, swift gulps; her faded eyes shone. Inwardly she was striving to compute the agent's profit on five leather-bound copies of Famous People. She almost said aloud "I can have a new dress!" "We've been thinking," Lydia Orr said composedly, "that it might be pleasant to open a library and reading room in the village. What do you think of the idea, Miss Daggett? You seem interested in books, and I thought possibly you might like to take charge of the work." "Who, me?-- Take charge of a library?" Lois Daggett's eyes became on the instant watchful and suspicious. Lydia Orr had encountered that look before, on the faces of men and even of boys. Everybody was afraid of being cheated, she thought. Was this just in Brookville, and because of the misdeeds of one man, so long ago? "Of course we shall have to talk it over some other day, when we have more time," she said gently. |
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