Miss McDonald eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Miss McDonald.

Miss McDonald eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Miss McDonald.

She was very tired, Guy said, and ought to lie down before dinner.  Would I show her to her room with Zillah, her maid?  Then for the first time I noticed a dark-haired girl who had alighted from the carriage and stood holding Daisy’s traveling bag and wraps.

“Her waiting maid, whom we found in Boston,” Guy explained when we were alone.  “She is so young and helpless, and wanted one so badly, that I concluded to humor her for a time, especially as I had not the most remote idea how to pin on those wonderful fixings which she wears.  It is astonishing how many things it takes to make up the tout ensemble of a fashionable woman,” Guy said, and I thought he glanced a little curiously at my plain cambric wrapper and smooth hair.

Indeed he has taken it upon himself to criticise me somewhat! thinks I am too slim, as he expresses it, and that my head might be improved if it had a more snarly appearance.  Daisy, of course, stands for his model, and her hair does not look as if it had been combed in a month, and yet Zillah spends hours over it.  She—­that is, Daisy—­was pleased with her boudoir, and gave vent to sundry exclamations of delight when she entered it and skipped around like the child she is, and said she was so glad it was blue instead of that indescribable drab, and that room is almost the only thing she has expressed an opinion about since she has been here.  She does not talk much except to Zillah, and then in French, which I do not understand.  If I were to write just what I think I should say that she had expected a great deal more grandeur than she finds.  At all events, she takes the things which I think very nice and even elegant as a matter of course, and if we were to set up a style of living equal to that of the Queen’s household I do believe she would act as if she had been accustomed to it all her life; or, at least, that it was what she had a right to expect.  I know she imagines Guy a great deal richer than he is; and that reminds me of something which troubles me.

Guy has given his name to Dick Trevylian for one hundred thousand dollars.  To be sure, it is only for three months, and Dick is worth three times that amount, and an old friend and every way reliable and honest.  And still I did not want Guy to sign.  I wonder why it is that women will always jump at a conclusion without any apparent reason.  Of course, I could not explain it, but when Guy told me what he was going to do, I felt in an instant as if he would have it all to pay and told him so, but he only laughed at me and called me nervous and fidgety, and said a friend was good for nothing if he could not lend a helping hand occasionally.  Perhaps that is true, but I was uneasy, and shall be glad when the time is up and the paper canceled.

Our expenses since Daisy came are double what they were before, and if we were to lose one hundred thousand dollars now we should be badly off.  Daisy is a luxury Guy has to pay for, but he pays willingly and seems to grow more and more infatuated every day.  “She is such a sweet-tempered, affectionate little puss,” he says; and I admit to myself that she is sweet-tempered, and that nothing ruffles her, but about the affectionate part I am not so certain.  Guy would pet her and caress her all the time if she would let him, but she won’t.

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Project Gutenberg
Miss McDonald from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.