A Fountain Sealed by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
page 21 of 358 (05%)
page 21 of 358 (05%)
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plainly, it intimated.
"Of course," said Mrs. Pakenham, after some moments of this silent acquiescence and silent skepticism, "that will make it very evident why you didn't stay before." "Not necessarily. Imogen has no one with her now; my preferences as to a home would naturally go down before such an obvious duty." "So that you will simply take up all the threads, yours and hers?" "I shall try to." "You think she'll like that?" Mrs. Pakenham inquired. "Like what?" Mrs. Upton rather quickly asked. "That you should take up her threads. Isn't she very self-reliant? Hasn't her life, the odd situation, made her so?" At this Mrs. Upton, her eyes on the fire, blushed; faintly, yet the deepening of color was evident, and Mrs. Pakenham, leaning impulsively forward, put her hand on hers, saying, "Dear Valerie, I don't mean that you're responsible!" "But I am responsible." Mrs. Upton did not look at her friend, though her hand closed gently on hers. "For nothing with which you can reproach yourself, which you can even regret, then. It's well, altogether well, that a girl should be |
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