[The Daughter of Anderson Crow by George Barr McCutcheon]@TWC D-Link bookThe Daughter of Anderson Crow CHAPTER XI 11/14
But you jest wait." He was standing very close to her now and looking her full in the face.
"You're sure you don't know anythin' 'bout her ?" "Why, how should I know? You've told me nothing." "You've got purty good clothes fer a common school-teacher," he flung at her in an aggressive, impertinent tone, but the warm colour that swiftly rose to her cheeks forced him to recall his words, for he quickly tempered them with, "Er, at least, that's what all the women folks say." "Oh, so some one has been talking about my affairs? Some of your excellent women want to know more about me than--" "Don't git excited, Miss Banks," he interrupted; "the women ain't got anythin' to do with it--I mean, it's nothin' to them.
I--" "Mr.Crow," she broke in, "if there is anything you or anybody in Tinkletown wants to know about me you will have to deduce it for yourself.
I believe that is what you call it--deduce? And now good-bye, Mr.Crow.Recess is over," she said pointedly; and Mr.Crow shuffled out as the children galloped in. That evening Ed Higgins and 'Rast Little came to call, but she excused herself because of her correspondence.
In her little upstairs room she wrote letter after letter, one in particular being voluminous.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|