[The Way of a Man by Emerson Hough]@TWC D-Link bookThe Way of a Man CHAPTER I 6/8
So now I said how glad I was that she had come back from school, though a fine lady now, and no doubt forgetful of her friends, of myself, who once caught young rabbits and birds for her, and made pens for the little pink pigs at the orchard edge, and all of that.
But she had no mind, it seemed to me, to talk of these old days; and though now some sort of wall seemed to me to arise between us as we sat there on the bank blowing at dandelions and pulling loose grass blades, and humming a bit of tune now and then as young persons will, still, thickheaded as I was, it was in some way made apparent to me that I was quite as willing the wall should be there as she herself was willing. My mother had mentioned Miss Grace Sheraton to me before.
My father had never opposed my riding over now and then to the Sheraton gates.
There were no better families in our county than these two.
There was no reason why I should feel troubled.
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