The Re-Creation of Brian Kent by Harold Bell Wright
page 104 of 254 (40%)
page 104 of 254 (40%)
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"There is only one thing to do,"--said Auntie Sue, at last, when the matter had been discussed several times,--"we must send for Betty Jo. She has been studying stenography in a business college in Cincinnati, and, in her latest letter to me, she wrote that she would finish in April. I'll just write her to come right here, and bring her typewriter along. She will need a vacation, and she can have it and do your work at the same time. Besides, I need to see Betty Jo. She hasn't been to visit me since before Judy came." Brian thought that Auntie Sue seemed a little nervous and excited as she spoke, but he attributed it to her combined interest in the book and in the proposed typist. The man could not know the real cause of his gentle old companion's agitation, nor with what anxiety she had considered the matter for many days before she announced her plan. The fact was that Auntie Sue was taking a big chance, and she realized it fully. But she could find no other way to secure the services of a competent stenographer for Brian, and, as Brian must have a competent stenographer in order to finish his book properly, she had decided to accept the risk. "That sounds all right, Auntie Sue," returned Brian. "But who, pray tell, is Betty Jo?" "Betty Jo is,"--Auntie Sue paused and laughed with a suggestion of embarrassed confusion,--"Betty Jo is--just Betty Jo, Brian," she finished. Brian laughed now. "Fine, Auntie Sue! That describes her exactly,--tells me her life's history and gives me a detailed account of her |
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