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It was Guy who received her, Guy who pointed to a chair, Guy who

seemed perfectly at home, and, naturally enough, she took him for Dr.

Holbrook, wondering who the other black-haired man could be, and if he

meant to stay in there all the while. It would be very dreadful if he

did, and in her agitation and excitement the cube root was in danger

of being altogether forgotten. Half guessing the cause of her

uneasiness, and feeling more averse than ever to taking part in the

matter, the doctor, after a hasty survey of her person, withdrew into

the background, and sat where he could not be seen. This brought the

short dress into full view, together with the dainty little foot,

nervously beating the floor.

"She's very young," he thought; "too young, by far," and Maddy's

chances of success were beginning to decline even before a word had

been spoken.

How terribly still it was for the time, during which telegraphic

communications were silently passing between Guy and the doctor, the

latter shaking his dead decidedly, while the former insisted that he

should do his duty. Madeline could almost hear the beatings of her

heart, and only by counting and recounting the poplar trees growing

across the street could she keep back the tears. What was he waiting

for, she wondered, and, at last, summoning all her courage, she lifted

her great brown eyes to Guy, and said, pleadingly: "Would you be so kind, sir, as to begin?"

"Yes, certainly," and electrified by that young, bird-like voice, the

sweetest save one he had ever heard, Guy knocked down from the pile of

books the only one at all appropriate to the occasion, the others

being as far beyond what was taught in the district schools as his

classical education was beyond Madeline's common one.

Remembering that the teacher of whom he had once been for a week a

pupil, in the town of Framingham, had commenced operations by

sharpening a lead pencil, so he now sharpened a similar one,

determining as far as he could to follow that teacher's example. Maddy

counted every fragment as it fell upon the floor, wishing so much that

he would commence, and fancying that it would not be half so bad to

have him approach her with some one of those terrible dental

instruments lying before her, as it was to sit and wait as she was

waiting. Had Guy Remington reflected a little, he would never have

consented to do the doctor's work; but, unaccustomed to country

usages, especially those pertaining to schools and teachers, he did

not consider that it mattered which examined that young girl, himself

or Dr. Holbrook. Viewing it somewhat in the light of a joke, he rather

enjoyed it; and as the Framingham teacher had first asked her pupils

their names and ages, so he, when the pencil was sharpened

sufficiently, startled Madeline by asking her name.