[The Man and the Moment by Elinor Glyn]@TWC D-Link bookThe Man and the Moment CHAPTER XIV 3/13
Uncle was only wanting my money for him, and Aunt Jemima detested me, and only had me with her because Papa left in his will that she had to, or lose his legacy.
You can't think what I've learned of their meannesses in the month I've know them!" Thus Mr.Parsons had no further arguments to use--and felt that after seeing her safe to his own hotel that night, and helping to engage a suitable and responsible maid next day to travel with her, he could do no more. The question of the name troubled him most, and he almost refused to agree that she should be known as Mrs.Howard. "But I have told Mr.Arranstoun that I mean to be only that!" Sabine exclaimed, "and he didn't mind, and"-- here her violet eyes flashed--"I _will not_ be anything else--so there!" Mr.Parsons shrugged his shoulders; she was impossible to deal with, and as he himself was obliged to return to America in the following week, he felt the only thing to do was to let her have her way.
And so well did he guard his client's secret then and afterwards, that even Simone, though a shrewd Frenchwoman, had never known that her mistress' name was not really Howard.
At the time of her being engaged she was just leaving an American lady from the far West whom Mr.Parsons knew of, and she was delighted to come as maid and almost chaperon to this sweet, but wilful young lady. So they had gone to Paris together, to order clothes--such a joyous task--and to make herself forget those hours so terribly full of strange emotion was all which occupied Sabine's mind at this period.
Other preoccupations came later; and it was then that she listened to Simone's suggestion of going to San Francisco.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|