anything against her. You know perfectly well I 
admire her beyond any woman in the world. I don't care who knows it." 
"Your mother?" suggested Mary, in the tone of one who makes a 
venture. 
"Ah, come now, Miss Marston! Don't you turn my mother loose upon 
me. I shall be of age in a few months, and then my mother may-- think 
as she pleases. I know, of course, with her notions, she would never 
consent to my making love to Letty--" 
"I should think not!" exclaimed Mary. "Who ever thought of such an 
absurdity? Not you, surely, Mr. Helmer? What would your mother say 
to hear you? I mention her in earnest now."
"Let mothers mind their own business!" retorted the youth angrily. "I 
shall mind mine. My mother ought to know that by this time." 
Mary said no more. She knew Mrs. Helmer was not a mother to deserve 
her boy's confidence, any more than to gain it; for she treated him as if 
she had made him, and was not satisfied with her work. 
"When are you going to see Letty, Miss Marston?" resumed Helmer, 
after a brief pause of angry feeling. 
"Next Sunday evening probably." 
"Take me with you." 
"Take you with me! What are you dreaming of, Mr. Helmer?" 
"I would give my bay mare for a good talk with Letty Lovel," he 
returned. 
Mary made no reply. 
"You won't?" he said petulantly, after a vain pause of expectation. 
"Won't what?" rejoined Miss Marston, as if she could not believe him 
in earnest. 
"Take me with you on Sunday?" 
"No," she answered quietly, but with sober decision. 
"Where would be the harm?" pleaded the youth, in a tone mingled of 
expostulation, entreaty, and mortification. 
"One is not bound to do everything there would be no harm in doing," 
answered Miss Marston. "Besides, Mr. Helmer, I don't choose to go out 
walking with you of a Sunday evening." 
"Why not?"
"For one thing, your mother would not like it. You know she would 
not." 
"Never mind my mother. She's nothing to you. She can't bite you. --Ask 
the dentist. Come, come! that's all nonsense. I shall be at the stile 
beyond the turnpike-gate all the afternoon--waiting till you come." 
"The moment I see you--anywhere upon the road--that moment I shall 
turn back.--Do you think," she added with half-amused indignation, "I 
would put up with having all the gossips of Testbridge talk of my going 
out on a Sunday evening with a boy like you?" 
Tom Helmer's face flushed. He caught up the gloves, threw the price of 
them on the counter, and walked from the shop, without even a good 
night. 
"Hullo!" cried George Turnbull, vaulting over the counter, and taking 
the place Helmer had just left opposite Mary; "what did you say to the 
fellow to send him off like that? If you do hate the business, you 
needn't scare the customers, Mary." 
"I don't hate the business, you know quite well, George. And if I did 
scare a customer," she added, laughing, as she dropped the money in 
the till, "it was not before he had done buying." 
"That may be; but we must look to to-morrow as well as to-day. When 
is Mr. Helmer likely to come near us again, after such a wipe as you 
must have given him to make him go off like that?" 
"Just to-morrow, George, I fancy," answered Mary. "He won't be able 
to bear the thought of having left a bad impression on me, and so he'll 
come again to remove it. After all, there's something about him I can't 
help liking. I said nothing that ought to have put him out of temper like 
that, though; I only called him a boy." 
"Let me tell you, Mary, you could not have called him a worse name." 
"Why, what else is he?"
"A more offensive word a man could not hear from the lips of a 
woman," said George loftily. 
"A man, I dare say! But Mr. Helmer can't be nineteen yet." 
"How can you say so, when he told you himself he would be of age in a 
few months? The fellow is older than I am. You'll be calling me a boy 
next." 
"What else are you? You at least are not one-and-twenty." 
"And how old do you call yourself, pray, miss?" 
"Three-and-twenty last birthday." 
"A mighty difference indeed!" 
"Not much--only all the difference, it seems, between sense and 
absurdity, George." 
"That may be all very true of a fine gentleman, like Helmer, that does 
nothing from morning to night but run away from his mother; but you 
don't think it applies to me, Mary, I hope!" 
"That's as you behave yourself, George. If you do not make it apply, it 
won't apply of itself. But if    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
 
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.
	    
	    
