Vera, the Medium by Richard Harding Davis
page 90 of 144 (62%)
page 90 of 144 (62%)
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strides up and down the room. "What do I care for that?" he
cried contemptuously. He tossed the words at her over his shoulder. "I put lots of people in jail myself that are better than I am. Only, they won't play the game." He halted, and turned on her. "Now, you're not playing the game. This is a mean business, taking money from silly girls and old men. You're too good for that." He halted at the table and stood facing her. "I've got two sisters uptown," he said. He spoke commandingly, peremptorily. "And tomorrow I am going to take you to see them. And we fellow townsmen," he smiled at her appealingly, "will talk this over, and we'll make you come back to your own people." For a moment the two regarded each other. Then the girl answered firmly, but with a slight hoarseness in her voice, and in a tone hardly louder than a whisper: "You know I can't do that!" "I don't!" blustered Winthrop. "Why not?" "Because," said the girl steadily, "of what I did in Geneva." As though the answer was the one he had feared, the man exclaimed sharply, rebelliously. "Nonsense!" he cried. "You didn't know what you were doing. No decent person would consider that." "They do," said the girl, "they are the very ones who do. And -- it's been in the papers. Everybody in Geneva knows it. And here |
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