The Bent Twig by Dorothy Canfield
page 60 of 564 (10%)
page 60 of 564 (10%)
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He looked at her with a sudden, unexpected softening of his somber eyes. "Do you know, Barbara Marshall, that there are times when you keep one unhappy old misanthrope from despairing of his kind?" She had at this unlooked-for speech only the most honest astonishment. "I don't know what you're talking about," she said bluntly. Judith stirred in her sleep and woke up blinking. When she saw that Professor Kennedy had come in, she did what Sylvia would never have dared do; she ran to him and climbed up on his knee, laying her shining, dark head against his shoulder. The old man's arms closed around her. "Well, spitfire," he said, "_comment ça roule_, eh?" Judith did not trouble herself to answer. With a gesture of tenderness, as unexpected as his speech to her mother, her old friend laid his cheek against hers. "You're another, Judy, _You'll_ never marry a dolichocephalic blond and make him pull the chestnuts out of the fire for you, will you?" he said confidently. Mrs. Marshall rose with the exasperated air of one whose patience is gone. She made a step as though to shield her husband's sister from the cantankerous old man. "If I hear another word of argument in this house tonight--" she threatened. "Mr. Reinhardt, what are these people _here for_?" The musician awoke, with a sigh, from his dazzled contemplation of his host's sister, and looked about him. "Ach, yes! Ach, yes!" he admitted. With a glance of adoration at the visitor, he added impressively what to his mind evidently signified some profoundly |
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