"Why do you say that?" I asked, a little sharply.

"Of course you don't like it," she replied, "but it is true. She may

be as lovely as you think her--and I am sure she is. She may be of

good family, finely educated, and a great many more things, but all

that goes for nothing beside the fact that for over five years she has

been the landlady of a little hotel."

"I do not care a snap for that!" I exclaimed. "I like her all the

better for it. I--"

"That makes it worse," she interrupted, and as she spoke I could not

but recollect that a similar remark had been made to me before. "I

have not the slightest doubt that you would have been perfectly

willing to settle down as the landlord of a little hotel. But if you

had not--even if you had gone on in the course which father has

marked out for you, and you ought to hear him talk about you--you

might have become famous, rich, nobody knows what, perhaps President

of a college, but still everybody would have known that your wife was

the young woman who used to keep the Holly Sprig Inn, and asked the

people who came there if they objected to a back room, and if they

wanted tea or coffee for their breakfast. Of course Mrs. Chester

thought too much of you to let you consider any such foolishness."

I made no answer to this remark. I thought the young woman was taking

a great deal upon herself.

"Of course," she continued, "it would have been a great thing for Mrs.

Chester, and I honor her that she stood up stiffly and did the thing

she ought to do. I do not know what she said when she gave you her

final answer, but whatever it was it was the finest compliment she

could have paid you."

I smiled grimly. "She likened me to a bear," I said. "Do you call that

a compliment?"

Edith Larramie looked at me, her eyes sparkling. "Tell me one thing,"

she said. "When she spoke to you in that way weren't you trying to

find out how she felt about the matter exclusive of the inn?"

I could not help smiling again as I assented.

"There!" she exclaimed. "I am beginning to have the highest respect

for my abilities as a forecaster of human probabilities. It was like

you to try to find out that, and it was like her to snub you. But

let's walk on. Would you like me to give you some advice."

"I am afraid your advice is not worth very much," I answered, "but I

will hear it."

"Well, then," she said, "I advise you to fall in love with somebody

else just as soon as you can. That is the best way to get this affair

out of your mind, and until you do that you won't be worth anything."




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