The Wishing-Ring Man by Margaret Widdemer
page 13 of 283 (04%)
page 13 of 283 (04%)
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Poor Mrs. Harmsworth-Jones! She hadn't done a thing. Her own girls went to fashionable schools and attended sub-deb dances by the score until they came out, which they did at eighteen each like clockwork. She couldn't have been expected to see to it for somebody else's girl, too. Her getting the full blast of it was a quite fortuitous affair, and Joy always felt, looking back afterwards on her explosion, that it had been hard on the lady--who was frightened by it to the point of silence. It must have been very much as if the sedate full-length of Mr. Shakspere, over in the corner and _not_ autographed, had opened its mouth and begun to recite limericks. "Why--why!" she said; and that was all she was capable of saying for the moment. Joy, terrified herself at her deed, turned and fled. What happened between Mrs. Jones and Grandfather she never knew, and never asked. She never halted in her flight till she was safe in her own little eyrie upstairs. There she stopped before her dresser mirror, and looked at the flushed, breathless girl in the glass. "I wonder," Joy said aloud, "what really is the difference between me and other people?" She stared into the glass to see if she couldn't find out, leaning her hands down on the dresser-top. But the pretty white-enamel-framed mirror showed her just the same Joy as ever. Her heavy bronze-gold braids swung forward, and their ends coiled down on the dresser-top. Between them her little pointed face looked straight at her, blue-eyed, |
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