Supper was over, and Guy was back again in his library. He had not

stopped as he usually did, to romp with Jessie or talk to Maddy Clyde,

until it was so dark that he could not see her sparkling face, but had

come directly back, dropping the heavy curtains and piling fresh coal

upon the fire. Mrs. Noah had lighted the lamps and then gone after

Maddy, explaining to Jessie how she must stay with her while Maddy

went to Mr. Guy, who wanted to talk with her.

"Is he angry with me, Mrs. Noah?" and remembering his moody looks when

she went in quest of the book, Maddy felt her heart misgive her as to

what might be the result of an interview with Guy.

Mrs. Noah, however, reassured her, and Maddy stole for a moment to her

own room to see how she was looking. The crimson dress, with its soft

edge of lace about the slender throat, became her well, and smoothing

the folds of her black silk apron, whose jaunty shoulder pieces gave

her a very girlish appearance, she went down to where Guy was waiting

for her. He heard her coming, and involuntarily drew nearer to him the

chair where he intended she should sit. But Maddy took instead a

stool, and leaning her elbow on the chair, turned her face fully

toward him, waiting for him to speak.

"Maddy," he began, "are you happy here at Aikenside?"

"Oh, yes, very, very happy," and Maddy's soft eyes shone with the

happiness she tried to express.

It was at least a minute before he spoke again, and when he did, it

came out how he had concluded it best to send her and Jessie to

school, for a year or two at least; not that he was tired of teaching

her, but it would be better for her, he thought, to mingle with other

girls and learn the ways of the world. Aikenside would still be her

home, still the place where her vacations would be spent with Jessie

if she chose, and then he spoke of New York as the place he had in

view, and asked her what she thought of it.

Maddy was too much stunned to think of anything at first. That the

good she had coveted most should be placed within her grasp, and by

Guy Remington too, was almost too much to credit. She was happy at

Aikenside, but she had never expected her life there to continue very

long, and had often wished that when it ended she might devise some

means of entering a seminary as other young ladies did. But she had

never dreamed of being sent to school by Guy, nor could she conceive

of his motive. He hardly knew himself, only he liked her, and wished

to do something for her. This was his reply to her tearful question: "Oh, Mr. Remington, you are so good to me; what makes you?"




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