The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

The Street of Seven Stars eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about The Street of Seven Stars.

“Won’t you sit down?” said Peter.

“I’m not hungry, thank you.”

“You can sit down without eating.”

Peter was nervous.  To cover his uneasiness he was distinctly gruff.  He pulled a chair out for her and she sat down.  Now that they were face to face the tension was lessened.  Peter laid Anna’s list on the table between them and bent over it toward her.

“You are hurting me very much, Harry,” he said.  “Do you know why?”

“I?  I am only sorry about Anna.  I miss her.  I—­I was fond of her.”

“So was I. But that isn’t it, Harry.  It’s something else.”

“I’m uncomfortable, Peter.”

“So am I. I’m sorry you don’t trust me.  For that’s it.”

“Not at all.  But, Peter, what will people say?”

“A great deal, if they know.  Who is to know?  How many people know about us?  A handful, at the most, McLean and Mrs. Boyer and one or two others.  Of course I can go away until we get some one to take Anna’s place, but you’d be here alone at night, and if the youngster had an attack—­”

“Oh, no, don’t leave him!”

“It’s holiday time.  There are no clinics until next week.  If you’ll put up with me—­”

“Put up with you, when it is your apartment I use, your food I eat!” She almost choked.  “Peter, I must talk about money.”

“I’m coming to that.  Don’t you suppose you more than earn everything?  Doesn’t it humiliate me hourly to see you working here?”

“Peter!  Would you rob me of my last vestige of self-respect?”

This being unanswerable, Peter fell back on his major premise.

“If you’ll put up with me for a day or so I’ll take this list of Anna’s and hunt up some body.  Just describe the person you desire and I’ll find her.”  He assumed a certainty he was far from feeling, but it reassured the girl.  “A woman, of course?”

“Of course.  And not young.”

“‘Not young,’” wrote Peter.  “Fat?”

Harmony recalled Mrs. Boyer’s ample figure and shook her head.

“Not too stout.  And agreeable.  That’s most important.”

“‘Agreeable,’” wrote Peter.  “Although Anna was hardly agreeable, in the strict sense of the word, was she?”

“She was interesting, and—­and human.”

“‘Human!’” wrote Peter.  “Wanted, a woman, not young, not too stout, agreeable and human.  Shall I advertise?”

The strain was quite gone by that time.  Harmony was smiling.  Jimmy, waking, called for food, and the morning of the first day was under way.

Peter was well content that morning, in spite of an undercurrent of uneasiness.  Before this Anna had shared his proprietorship with him.  Now the little household was his.  His vicarious domesticity pleased him.  He strutted about, taking a new view of his domain; he tightened a doorknob and fastened a noisy window.  He inspected the coal-supply and grumbled over its quality.  He filled the copper kettle on the stove, carried in the water for Jimmy’s morning bath, cleaned the mouse cage.  He even insisted on peeling the little German potatoes, until Harmony cried aloud at his wastefulness and took the knife from him.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Street of Seven Stars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.