[Ethelyn’s Mistake by Mary Jane Holmes]@TWC D-Link book
Ethelyn’s Mistake

CHAPTER XXXI
4/10

You know he has been governor ?" Ethie nodded, and Mrs.Van Buren continued: "You lost a great deal, Ethelyn, when you went away; and I must say that, though, of course, you had great provocation, you did a very foolish thing leaving your husband as you did, and involving us all, to a certain extent, in disgrace." It was the first direct intimation Ethie had received that her family had suffered from mortification on her account.

She had felt that they must, and knew that she deserved some censure; but as kind Aunt Barbara had withheld it, she was not quite willing to hear it from Mrs.Van Buren, and for an instant her eyes flashed, and a hot reply trembled on her lips; but she restrained herself and merely said: "I am sorry if I disgraced you, Aunt Sophia.

I was very unhappy at the time," "Certainly; I understand that, but the world does not; and if it did, it forgot all when your husband became governor.

He was greatly honored and esteemed, I hear from a friend who spent a few weeks at Des Moines, and everybody was so sorry for him." "Did they talk of me ?" Ethie asked, repenting the next minute that she had been at all curious in the matter.
Mrs.Van Buren, bent upon annoying her, replied, "Some, yes; and knowing the governor as they did, it is natural they should blame you more than him.

There was a rumor of his getting a divorce, but my friends did not believe it and neither do I, though divorces are easy to get out West.
Have you written to him?
Are you not 'most afraid he will think you came back because he has been governor ?" "Aunt Sophia!" and Ethie looked very much like her former self, as she started from her pillow and confronted her interlocutor.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books