Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures.

Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures.

“I hope,” she said, shortly after she was seated, “that you won’t say a word about what I told you a few days ago; I shouldn’t have opened my lips on the subject if you hadn’t asked me about it.  I only mentioned it in the first place to a friend in whom I had the greatest confidence in the world.  She has told some one, very improperly, for it was imparted to her as a secret, and in that way it has been spread abroad.  I regret it exceedingly, for I would be the last person in the world to say a word to injure any one.  I am particularly guarded in this.”

“If it’s the truth, Mrs. Grimes, I don’t see that you need be so anxious about keeping it a secret,” returned Mrs. Markle.

“The truth!  Do you think I would utter a word that was not true?”

“I did not mean to infer that you would.  I believe that what you said in regard to Mrs. Comegys was the fact.”

“It certainly was.  But then, it will do no good to make a disturbance about it.  What has made me call in to see you is this; some one told me that, in consequence of this matter, you had dropped the acquaintance of Mrs. Comegys.”

“It is true; I cannot associate on intimate terms with a woman who lacks honest principles.”

“But don’t you see that this will bring matters to a head, and that I shall be placed in a very awkward position?”

“You are ready to adhere to your statement in regard to Mrs. Comegys?”

“Oh, certainly; I have told nothing but the truth.  But still, you can see that it will make me feel exceedingly unpleasant.”

“Things of this kind are never very agreeable, I know, Mrs. Grimes.  Still we must act as we think right, let what will follow.  Mrs. Comegys has already called upon me to ask an explanation of my conduct wards her.”

“She has!” Mrs. Grimes seemed sadly distressed.  “What did you say to her?”

“I told her just what I had heard.”

“Did she ask your author?” Mrs. Grimes was most pale with suspense.

“She did.”

“Of course you did not mention my name.”

“She asked the author of the charge, and I named you.”

“Oh dear, Mrs. Markle!  I wish you hadn’t done that.  I shall be involved in a world of trouble, and the reputation of a tattler and mischief-maker.  What did she say?”

“Not one word.”

“She didn’t deny it?”

“No.”

“Of course she could not.  Well, that is some satisfaction at least.  She might have denied it, and tried make me out a liar, and there would have been plenty to believe her word against mine.  I am glad she didn’t deny it.  She didn’t say a word?”

“No.”

“Did she look guilty?”

“You would have thought so, if you had seen her.”

“What did she do?”

“She sat with her eyes upon the floor for some time, and then rose up, and without uttering a word, left the house.”

“I wish she had said something.  It would have been a satisfaction to know what she thought.  But I suppose the poor woman was so confounded, that she didn’t know what to say.”

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Project Gutenberg
Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.