Mary Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about Mary Marie.

Mary Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about Mary Marie.

“I do sew every day in Aunt Jane’s room, ten minutes hemming, ten minutes seaming, and ten minutes basting patchwork squares together.  I don’t know how to knit.”

“How about reading?  Don’t you care for reading?”

“Why, of course I do.  I love it!” I cried.  “And I do read lots—­at home.”

“At—­home?”

I knew then, of course, that I’d made another awful break.  There wasn’t any smile around Father’s eyes now, and his lips came together hard and thin over that last word.

“At—­at my home,” I stammered.  “I mean, my other home.”

“Humph!” grunted Father.  Then, after a minute:  “But why, pray, can’t you read here?  I’m sure there are—­books enough.”  He flourished his hands toward the bookcases all around the room.

“Oh, I do—­a little; but, you see, I’m so afraid I’ll leave some of them out when I’m through,” I explained,

“Well, what of it?  What if you do?” he demanded.

“Why, Father!” I tried to show by the way I said it that he knew—­of course he knew.  But he made me tell him right out that Aunt Jane wouldn’t like it, and that he wouldn’t like it, and that the books always had to be kept exactly where they belonged.

“Well, why not?  Why shouldn’t they?” he asked then, almost crossly, and hitching again in his chair.  “Aren’t books down there—­in Boston—­kept where they belong, pray?”

It was the first time since I’d come that he’d ever mentioned Boston; and I almost jumped out of my chair when I heard him.  But I soon saw it wasn’t going to be the last, for right then and there he began to question me, even worse than Aunt Jane had.

He wanted to know everything, everything; all about the house, with its cushions and cozy corners and curtains ’way up, and books left around easy to get, and magazines, and Baby Lester, and the fun we had romping with him, and everything.  Only, of course, I didn’t mention Mother.  Aunt Jane had told me not to—­not anywhere; and to be specially careful before Father.  But what can you do when he asks you himself, right out plain?  And that’s what he did.

He’d been up on his feet, tramping up and down the room all the time I’d been talking; and now, all of a sudden, he wheels around and stops short.

“How is—­your mother, Mary?” he asks.  And it was just as if he’d opened the door to another room, he had such a whole lot of questions to ask after that.  And when he’d finished he knew everything:  what time we got up and went to bed, and what we did all day, and the parties and dinners and auto rides, and the folks that came such a lot to see Mother.

Then all of a sudden he stopped—­asking questions, I mean.  He stopped just as suddenly as he’d begun.  Why, I was right in the middle of telling about a concert for charity we got up just before I came away, and how Mother had practiced for days and days with the young man who played the violin, when all of a sudden Father jerked his watch from his pocket and said: 

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Project Gutenberg
Mary Marie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.