From Sand Hill to Pine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about From Sand Hill to Pine.

From Sand Hill to Pine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about From Sand Hill to Pine.

“I did you a great injustice,” he said, with a smile.

“I don’t understand you,” she replied a little coldly.

“Why, this woman and her marriage,” he said; “you must have known something of it all the time, and perhaps helped it along to save Chris.”

“You are mistaken,” returned Miss Trotter truthfully.  “I knew nothing of Mr. Bilson’s intentions.”

“Then I have wronged you still more,” he said briskly, “for I thought at first that you were inclined to help Chris in his foolishness.  Now I see it was your persuasions that changed him.”

“Let me tell you once for all, Mr. Calton,” she returned with an impulsive heat which she regretted, “that I did not interfere in any way with your brother’s suit.  He spoke to me of it, and I promised to see Frida, but he afterwards asked me not to.  I know nothing of the matter.”

“Well,” laughed Mr. Calton, “Whatever you did, it was most efficacious, and you did it so graciously and tactfully that it has not altered his high opinion of you, if, indeed, he hasn’t really transferred his affections to you.”

Luckily Miss Trotter had her face turned from him at the beginning of the sentence, or he would have noticed the quick flush that suddenly came to her cheek and eyes.  Yet for an instant this calm, collected woman trembled, not at what Mr. Calton might have noticed, but at what she had noticed in herself.  Mr. Calton, construing her silence and averted head into some resentment of his familiar speech, continued hurriedly:—­

“I mean, don’t you see, that I believe no other woman could have influenced my brother as you have.”

“You mean, I think, that he has taken his broken heart very lightly,” said Miss Trotter, with a bitter little laugh, so unlike herself that Mr. Calton was quite concerned at it.

“No,” he said gravely.  “I can’t say that!  He’s regularly cut up, you know!  And changed; you’d hardly know him.  More like a gloomy crank than the easy fool he used to be,” he went on, with brotherly directness.  “It wouldn’t be a bad thing, you know, if you could manage to see him, Miss Trotter!  In fact, as he’s off his feed, and has some trouble with his arm again, owing to all this, I reckon, I’ve been thinking of advising him to come up to the hotel once more till he’s better.  So long as she’s gone it would be all right, you know!”

By this time Miss Trotter was herself again.  She reasoned, or thought she did, that this was a question of the business of the hotel, and it was clearly her duty to assent to Chris’s coming.  The strange yet pleasurable timidity which possessed her at the thought she ignored completely.

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From Sand Hill to Pine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.