Amarilly of Clothes-line Alley by Belle K. Maniates
page 20 of 216 (09%)
page 20 of 216 (09%)
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"But the laundry work _is_ the main issue. Yesterday I had quite decided
to give up this uninteresting work." Watching him warily, she let the shadow in his eyes linger a moment before she continued: "And then there came into my class a new pupil, poorly clad and ignorant, but so redolent of soapsuds and with such a freshly laundered look that I renewed my inclinations to charity. I took her home in my electric, and she lived at a distance that gave me ample time to listen to the complete chronicles of her young life. Her father is dead. Her mother was left with eight children whom she supports by taking in washing. They have a boarder and they go around the dining-room table twice. My new pupil's name is Amarilly Jenkins, and she has educational longings which cannot be satisfied because she has to work, so I am going to enter her in St. Mark's night-school when she has finished a special course with the private tutor she now has." "Colette," said the young minister earnestly, "why do you continually try to show yourself to me in a false light? It was sweet in you to take this little girl home in your brougham and to feel an interest in her improvement." "Not at all!" protested Colette. "My trend at present may appear to be charitable, but Amarilly and I have a common interest--a fellow feeling--that makes me wondrous kind. We both have longings to appear in public on the stage." At this sudden challenge, this second lowering of the red flag, John's face grew stern. |
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