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Annie Kilburn

Page 118

She folded her hands at her waist, and stood up very straight, looking

firmly at Mrs. Munger, who made a show of taking a new grip of her senses

as she sank unbidden into a chair.

"Why, what do you mean, Miss Kilburn?"

"It seems to me that I needn't say."

"Why, but you must! You _must_, you know. I can't be _left_ so! I

must know where I _stand_! I must be sure of my _ground_! I can't

go on without understanding just how much you mean by my being mistaken."

She looked Annie in the face with eyes superficially expressive of

indignant surprise, and Annie perceived that she wished to restore herself

in her own esteem by browbeating some one else into the affirmation of her

innocence.

"Well, if you must know, Mrs. Munger, I mean that you ought to have

remembered Mr. Putney's infirmity, and that it was cruel to put temptation

in his way. Everybody knows that he can't resist it, and that he is making

such a hard fight to keep out of it. And then, if you press me for an

opinion, I must say that you were not justifiable in asking Mr. Peck to

take part in a social entertainment when we had explicitly dropped that

part of the affair."

Mrs. Munger had not pressed Annie for an opinion on this point at all; but

in their interest in it they both ignored the fact. Mrs. Munger tacitly

admitted her position in retorting, "He needn't have stayed."

"You made him stay--you remember how--and he couldn't have got away without

being rude."

"And you think he wasn't rude to scold me before my guests?"

"He told you the truth. He didn't wish to say anything, but you forced him

to speak, just as you have forced me."

"Forced _you_? Miss Kilburn!"

"Yes. I don't at all agree with Mr. Peck in many things, but he is a good

man, and last night he spoke the truth. I shouldn't be speaking it if I

didn't tell you I thought so."

"Very well, then," said Mrs. Munger, rising.

"After this you can't expect me to have anything to do with the Social

Union; you couldn't _wish_ me to, if that's your opinion of my

character."

"I haven't expressed any opinion of your character, Mrs. Munger, if you'll

remember, please; and as for the Social Union, I shall have nothing further

to do with it myself."

Annie drew herself up a little higher, and silently waited for her visitor

to go.

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