[The Lion and The Mouse by Charles Klein]@TWC D-Link bookThe Lion and The Mouse CHAPTER XIV 40/43
rang a bell. "Perhaps she has an engagement with you.
We'll ask her." To the butler, who entered, he said: "Tell Miss Roberts that her father would like to see her here." The man disappeared and the senator took a hand in cross-examining the now thoroughly uncomfortable secretary. "So you thought my daughter looked pale and that a little excursion to Buffalo would be a good thing for her? Well, it won't be a good thing for you, young man, I can assure you of that!" The English aristocrat began to wilt.
His assurance of manner quite deserted him and he stammered painfully as he floundered about in excuses. "Not with me--oh dear, no," he said. "You never proposed to run away with my daughter ?" cried the irate father. "Run away with her ?" stammered Bagley. "And marry her ?" shouted the senator, shaking his fist at him. "Oh say--this is hardly fair--three against one--really--I'm awfully sorry, eh, what ?" The door opened and Kate Roberts bounced in.
She was smiling and full of animal spirits, but on seeing the stern face of her father and the pitiable picture presented by her faithful Fitz she was intelligent enough to immediately scent danger. "Did you want to see me, father ?" she inquired boldly. "Yes, Kate," answered the senator gravely, "we have just been having a talk with Mr.Bagley, in which you were one of the subjects of conversation.
Can you guess what it was ?" The girl looked from her father to Bagley and from him to the Ryders.
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