Madame Flirt - A Romance of 'The Beggar's Opera' by Charles Edward Pearce
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page 27 of 307 (08%)
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"I don't say you'll act like them. You'll act in your own way, and if
you work hard your own way will be good enough. If you succeed the friends who are now helping you will be more than rewarded." "Ah, I will do anything to please you, sir." She caught his hand and impulsively raised it to her lips. Gay was a little embarrassed at this outburst. Did it mean that the girl had fallen in love with him? He checked the rising thought. Yet there was nothing outrageous in such a possibility. Lavinia was only sixteen, it is true, and romantic sixteen might see nothing incongruous in thirty-seven, which was Gay's age. "What pleases me, child, doesn't matter," he returned hastily. "I want to see you please others--in the play house I mean." She looked at him wistfully. "But," he continued, "it will be time enough to talk of that when I see how you get on. Now is it all settled? You're leaving this place and your mother of your own free will--isn't that so?" Lavinia said nothing, but pinched her lips and nodded her head vigorously. The action was sufficiently expressive and Gay was satisfied. Three days went by. Her Grace of Queensberry's maid, a hard-faced Scotswoman who was not to be intimidated nor betrayed into confidences, superintended Lavinia's shopping and turned a deaf ear to Mrs. Fenton's |
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