The Great God Success by David Graham Phillips
page 37 of 247 (14%)
page 37 of 247 (14%)
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"I've been away from home four months. But I saw her in the street
yesterday. She didn't see me though." "Then you've got a step-father?" "No, I haven't. Nellie told that to Mrs. Sands. But it's not so. You know Nellie's not my sister?" "I fancied not from what you said a moment ago." "No, she used to be nurse girl in our family. We just say we're sisters. I wish she'd come. I'm tired of standing. Won't you come in?" She went into her room, her manner a frank and simple invitation. Howard hesitated, then went just inside the door and half sat, half leaned upon the high roll of the lounge. The room was cheaply furnished, the lounge and a closed folding bed almost filling it. Upon the mantel, the bureau and the little table were a few odds and ends that stamped it a woman's room. A street gown of thin pale-blue cloth was thrown over a rocking chair. As the girl leaned back in this chair with her face framed in the pale-blue of the gown, she looked tired and sad and beautiful and very young. "If Nellie doesn't look out, I'll go away and live alone," she said, and the accompanying unconscious look of loneliness touched Howard. "You might go back home." "You don't know my home or you wouldn't say that. You don't know my father." She had got upon the subject of herself, and, once in that road she kept it with no thought of turning out. "He can't treat me as he treats |
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