Page:The mislaid uncle (IA mislaiduncle00raym).pdf/157

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  • ually she'll bring everything right. I don't

mind the table business; the main thing is that I am in his house, tolerated there, and determined, if the time is not too short, to prove to him that blood is thicker than water, and that, just though he thinks himself, he has been wholly unjust in his treatment of others. Oh, I don't object to the situation. I get lots of quiet fun out of it, and haven't felt so happy in a long time. I've even lost all bitterness against him, poor, solitary, prejudice-bound old man," returned the nurse.

"Well, may I be there to see when the revelation is at last made! Though I prophesy that his behavior in the matter will be as straightforward as it was about the line-fence. Think! We squabbled over it like a couple of silly children, for years and years. I can't understand now how I could ever have been so absurd. Must you go? Well, then, since your employer wishes you to take little Josephine down town to get that Rudanthy a head, suppose you both go with me in my carriage? I will call for you at three o'clock."