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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1929)
PAGE SIX l'Hte CAPITAL JUUKNAL. SALKM. OUMUON THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1929 LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE From Tr:jt?3 T Pancakes By Harold Cray LIFE STEPS IN By Claire Pomeroy , oh- I neviw. COOV.T 6he wneu i,j y aiuuuu It was all the wanted In the world, but Anthony was already married, and to this girl who sat laughing and talking with her in such a friendly way. She leaned back In her chair with a little Blck feeling. It was all horrible horrible. She felt as If someone had thrown pitch all over tomethia? beautiful which she valued. Supposing she never could marry Anthony? Supposing there she was a?oln, straining every nerve to look ahead into the future. Why could she not be content to wait, and leave everything to the man she loved. For the first time she was consci ous of something very near despair. She had built a castle in the Air, and lived In it for a few hours but already the castle was tottering and threatening to fall She was thank ful when Mollie said she must go. "It's been lovely seeing you, and I hate running away, but I've got an appointment at three," she said. Ana looked at her steadily. MI saw you in a car the other day with Mr. Mahon," she aid. She longed desperately to tell Mollie all the truth; to say "Anthony and I were together and s v you; and Anthony knows everything, or thinks he does. He and I love each other. What are we going to do about It? Don't you care for him any more? Do you want to lose him?" .But she dared not. Mollie flushed up to her pretty eyes, but she laughed. "Did you? Poor old Ralph I He will run about after me. Of course, he has a pretty thin time w.'Ui his wife." She deliberately 'changed the conversation. "How do you get back to Wimble don? It's an awful long way out, isn't It?" They parted outside the hotel. "I'll tell Anthony I saw you," Mollie said. Ana walked away without answer - in?. "Horrible, horrible," she told her self again, but hardly knew what she meant. She felt guilty, as If she had been discovered in tome crime. She tried to recall what Anthony had said to her, how he had looked, how he had held her hands and kissed her Hps, but somehow it all seemed unreal and so for away. With him she had forgotten that he was Mollie's hus band; now she could remember nothing else. She went back to Wimbledon by the longest route. She felt she could not bear the silence of the house. Even poor old Benny would have been a welcome companion. When she got home sh made her self some tea. Her head ached, and she was surprised to find that her hands were trembling. "I wish I hadn't seen Mollie," she thought angrily. "Why did I? It was like being a Judas." The postman's knock rang through the empty house, and Ana ran to the door. One letter lay on the mat. It was addressed in Anthony's writ ing. Ana picked it up and held it to her heart. She was conscious of a sudden reaction a grateful re action. It was as if he were with her ukuuu, uumi ner nana, dittoing her fears away, showing her only the beauty and happiness nf the future with him. "I love him. I will never give him up, Ana told herself fiercely, and realized for the first time that since she left Mollie that afternoon there had been no other thought In her mind but that the must give him up, that she could not go on. Anthony Hambledon's letter was short. "Unless you hear from me to the contrary," he wrote. "I shall be in London on Monday." He gave the address of the hotel at which he would stay. "Come to me there. Ana I saw Mahon's wife when I got back hereor rather she came to see me. I will tell you about it when we meet. You can say goodbye to Wim bledon, my dear I am not going to part from you again. I have come to the conclusion that 'honor Is an empty word invented by somebody without human Impulse. I feel like a man who has unexpectedly been let out of prison into sunshine which only exists because of you. I give you my word that you shall never regret the step we are to take to gether. I am living only for the moment when I shall see you. A man's life is his own affair, after all. If you have any fear for the future I will make you forget it when we are together." "He Is mad," Ana told herself breathlessly. She raised his letter to her lips. "But I love hu madness; Monday I and today was Friday. Anthony made no mention of Mollie, nor of the General; he took it for granted that Ana would ask no question, raise no objections. She sat down at the foot of the stairs with sudden overwhelming weak ncss. Life had been so uneventful until lately, end now all at once the was whirled into the midst of things which she had never thought could touch her life. She was conscious of a great fear through all her happiness. What would the world say? What would Miss Sawyer say? . She chut her eyes and tried to realize the gossip there would be the horror among her aunt's few cronies; the nine days' scandal Ana had been brought up with a whole some idea of scandal. It had always seemed so terrible to her to hear people talke about In lowered voices. as if they were unclean; whispered about with a sort of ghoulish glee. It would be terrible for Miss Saw yer, too; she so prided herself upon her unimpeachable respectability. "Run away with a married man How shocking I What a terrible woman !" She seemed almost to hear the voice of Miss Sclby and Mrs. Clair, her aunt's chief friends. Ana clasped her hands to steady their trembling. Once before she had heard those two excellent, but ex ceedingly narrow-minded women sit ting in Judgment upon a girl who, like herself, had thrown everything to the winds, and followed the call of love. She had even listened and ap proved of their condemnation. "He cannot possibly marry her" so they had declared. 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