Aikenside - Page 3/166

"MADELINE A. CLYDE.

"P. S.--For particular reasons I hope you can attend to me as early as

Monday. M. A. C."

Dr. Holbrook knew very little of girls, but he thought this note, with

its P. S., decidedly girlish. Still he made no comment, either verbal

or mental, so flurried was he with knowing that the evil he so much

dreaded had come upon him at last. Had it been left to his choice, he

would far rather have extracted every one of that maiden's teeth, than

to have set himself up before her like some horrid ogre, asking what

she knew. But the choice was not his, and, turning to the boy, he

said, laconically, "Tell her to come."

Most men would have sought for a glimpse of the face under the bonnet

tied with blue, but Dr. Holbrook did not care a picayune whether it

were ugly or fair, though it did strike him that the voice was

singularly sweet, which, after the boy had delivered his message, said

to the old man, "Now, grandpa, we'll go home. I know you must be

tired."

Slowly Sorrel trotted down the street, the blue ribbons fluttering in

the wind, while one little ungloved hand was seen carefully adjusting

about the old man's shoulders the ancient camlet cloak which had done

duty for many a year, and was needed on this chill April day. The

doctor saw all this, and the impression left upon his mind was, that

Candidate No. 1 was probably a nice-ish kind of a girl, and very good

to her grandfather. But what should he ask her, and how demean himself

toward her? Monday afternoon was frightfully near, he thought, as this

was only Saturday; and then, feeling that he must be ready, he brought

out from the trunk, where, since his arrival in Devonshire, they had

bean quietly lying, books enough to have frightened an older person

than poor little Madeline Clyde, riding slowly home with grandpa, and

wishing so much that she'd had a glimpse of Dr. Holbrook, so as to

know what he was like, and hoping he would give her a chance to repeat

some of the many pages of geography and "Parley's History," which she

knew by heart. How she would have trembled could she have seen the

formidable volumes heaped upon his table and waiting for her. There

were French and Latin grammars, "Hamilton's Metaphysics," "Olmstead's

Philosophy," "Day's Algebra," "Butler's Analogy," and many others,

into which poor Madeline had never so much as looked. Arranging them

in a row, and half wishing himself back again to the days when he had

studied them, the doctor went out to visit his patients, of which

there were so many that Madeline Clyde entirely escaped his mind, nor

did she trouble him again until the dreaded Monday came, and the hands

of his watch pointed to two.