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Prudence of the Parsonage by Ethel Hueston
page 118 of 269 (43%)
line of conversation, all would have been well.

"But it came just like a clap of thunder in the sunshine," said
Prudence to Fairy dramatically, as they sat in their room talking
things over that night. "We were having a perfectly grand time, and I
was just thinking he was as nice and interesting as if he didn't know
one thing to his name, when--Crash! That's how it happened."

Fairy wiped her eyes, and lay back weakly on the bed. "Go on," she
urged. "What happened?"

"He stopped right in the middle of a sentence about me, something real
nice, too, that I was awfully interested in, and said, 'Look, Miss
Starr!' Then he got down on his knees and began cautiously scraping
away the sticks and leaves. Then he fished out the most horrible,
woolly, many-legged little animal I ever saw in my life. He said it
was a giminythoraticus billyancibus, and he was as tickled over it as
though he had just picked up a million-dollar diamond. And what do you
suppose the weird creature did with it? He wrapped it in a couple of
leaves, and put his handkerchief around it and put it in his
pocket!--Do you remember when we were eating by the creek, and I got
jam on my fingers? He offered me his handkerchief to wipe it off? Do
you remember how I shoved him away, and shuddered? I saw you look
reprovingly at me! That's why! Do you suppose I could wipe my fingers
with a handkerchief that had been in one of his pockets?"

"It wasn't the one that had the giminy billibus, was it?"

"No, but goodness only knows what had been in this one,--an alligator,
maybe, or a snake. He's very fond of snakes. He says some of them are
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