He had added years to our friendship. So had he stopped there it
would have been wonderfully well; but he had to go floundering
innocently on. He was laughing softly.
"Do you know, Mark," he said, rubbing his spectacles nervously, "she
made me jealous of you when she talked that way. I thought she'd set
her cap for you, I did. Whenever a man and woman gits polite, whenever
they has to bow and scrape that way, a-misterin' and a-missin' one
another, they're hiding somethin'; they ain't actin' open. So I was
beginnin' to think mebbe she wanted to marry you and----"
"Go on reading--please read to us," pleaded Mary.
"Yes, do read to us," I echoed, for the position was a new one to me,
and at best I am awkward and slow-witted where women are concerned. I
could not adroitly turn the old man's wandering speculation into a
general laugh as Weston would have done. My best was to break in
rudely.
"Well--if I must," Luther said, opening the great book across his knees.
A long silence followed. I heard the solemn ticking of the clock on
the mantel behind me; I heard Mary laughing softly in her retreat
beyond the table; I heard Luther, now bending over his book, mumbling
to himself a few words of the text.
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