Page:Georgie by Dorothea Deakin, 1906.djvu/22

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

"Georgie"

suppose, confound him, that you are fond of him?"

Her cheeks flamed.

"Am I the sort of girl to promise to marry a man I don't love?" she cried quickly.

"No," said I sadly, "I don't think you are. He is a lucky beggar. Georgie always was the darling of the gods."

"He is the dearest boy in the world," said Drusilla, with an inexplicable sob as I left her, and I had to listen to that, still holding my tongue; still keeping back what I knew.

But after dinner that night I went to look for the young hound, and found him oiling his bat with a light heart. He greeted me with a hearty shout, and I noticed the breadth of his shoulders, and measured his six feet with a disgusted eye.

"A straight nose; an arm like the stump of a tree," I told myself, "and the best bat in the town. I might have guessed. What more can a girl want

6