But later she heard of a night-school, and then she took up the subject

once more. Lizzie scoffed at this. She said night-school was only for very

poor people, and it was a sort of disgrace to go. But Elizabeth stuck to

her point, until one day Lizzie came home with a tale about Temple

College. She had heard it was very cheap. You could go for ten cents a

night, or something like that. Things that were ten cents appealed to her.

She was used to bargain-counters.

She heard it was quite respectable to go there, and they had classes in

the evening. You could study gymnastics, and it would make you graceful.

She wanted to be graceful. And she heard they had a course in millinery.

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If it was so, she believed she would go herself, and learn to make the new

kind of bows they were having on hats this winter. She could not seem to

get the right twist to the ribbon.

Elizabeth wanted to study geography. At least, that was the study Lizzie

said would tell her where the Desert of Sahara was. She wanted to know

things, all kinds of things; but Lizzie said such things were only for

children, and she didn't believe they taught such baby studies in a

college. But she would inquire. It was silly of Bessie to want to know,

she thought, and she was half ashamed to ask. But she would find out.

It was about this time that Elizabeth's life at the store grew

intolerable.

One morning--it was little more than a week before Christmas--Elizabeth

had been sent to the cellar to get seven little red tin pails and shovels

for a woman who wanted them for Christmas gifts for some Sunday-school

class. She had just counted out the requisite number and turned to go

up-stairs when she heard some one step near her, and, as she looked up in

the dim light, there stood the manager.

"At last I've got you alone, Bessie, my dear!" He said it with suave

triumph in his tones. He caught Elizabeth by the wrists, and before she

could wrench herself away he had kissed her.

With a scream Elizabeth dropped the seven tin pails and the seven tin

shovels, and with one mighty wrench took her hands from his grasp.

Instinctively her hand went to her belt, where were now no pistols. If one

had been there she certainly would have shot him in her horror and fury.

But, as she had no other weapon, she seized a little shovel, and struck

him in the face. Then with the frenzy of the desert back upon her she

rushed up the stairs, out through the crowded store, and into the street,

hatless and coatless in the cold December air. The passers-by made way for

her, thinking she had been sent out on some hurried errand.




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