"And suppose she does?" said J.C., determining to brave the worst.

"Suppose she does?"

Mrs. Kelsey was very uncomfortable, and coughing a little she

replied, "It is wrong to raise hopes which cannot be realized, for

of course you have never entertained a serious thought of a low

country girl like Maude Remington."

There had been a time when a remark like this from the fashionable

Mrs. Kelsey would have banished any girl from J.C.'s mind, for he

was rather dependent on the opinion of others, but it made no

difference now, and, warming up in Maude's defense, he replied, "I

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assure you, madam, I have entertained serious thoughts toward Miss

Remington, and have this day asked her to be my wife."

"Your wife!" almost screamed the high-bred Mrs. Kelsey. "What will

your city friends--What will Nellie say?"

"Confound them all, I don't care what they, say," and J.C. drove his

knife-blade into the pine table, while he gave his reasons for

having chosen Maude in preference to Nellie, or anyone else he had

ever seen. "There's something to her," said he, "and with her for my

wife I shall make a decent man. What would Nellie and I do together-

-when neither of us know anything--about business, I mean," he

added, while Mrs. Kelsey rejoined, "I always intended that you would

live with me, and I had that handsome suite of rooms arranged

expressly for Nellie and her future husband. I have no children, and

my niece will inherit my property."

This, under some circumstances, would have strongly tempted the

young man; nay, it might perchance have tempted him then, had not

the deep tones of the organ at that moment have reached his ear. It

was the night when Maude usually rehearsed for the coming Sabbath,

and soon after her interview with her sister she had gone to the

church where she sought to soothe her ruffled spirits by playing a

most plaintive air. The music was singularly soft and sweet, and the

heart of J.C. De Vere trembled to the sound, for he knew it was

Maude who played--Maude, who out-weighed the tempting bait which

Mrs. Kelsey offered, and with a magnanimity quite astonishing to

himself he answered, "Poverty with Maude, rather than riches with

another!"

"Be it so, then," was Mrs. Kelsey's curt reply, "but when in the

city you blush at your bride's awkwardness don't expect me to lend a

helping hand, for Maude Remington cannot by me be recognized as an

equal," and the proud lady swept from the room, wearing a deeply

injured look, as if she herself had been refused instead of her

niece.




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