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Updated: September 20, 2025
Fenelby had been proceeding in somewhat this way in her conversation with Kitty, under the impression that she was showing Kitty how lovely and domestically perfect was her life, but Kitty gained from it only the impression that Mrs. Fenelby had become the slave of Mr. Fenelby and Bobberts. The more Mrs.
Now we see it was all a mistake and we want to do away with it. If you will just take it seriously for five minutes if you can be sensible that long we will not trouble you with it any more. Laura, awaken Bobberts!" Mrs. Fenelby awakened the Territory by gently kissing him on his eyes, and he opened them and blinked sleepily at the ceiling. "Congress is in session," said Mr. Fenelby.
Three pairs of eyes watched him as he entered, but he faced them unflinchingly. Mr. and Mrs. Fenelby let their eyes drop before his glance, but Kitty met his gaze with a challenge. There was nothing of treachery in her face, and yet she had sought to betray him.
"Now, about this girl-person that you have over at your house," he said to his brother, when they were seated at their lunch, "what about her?" "About her?" asked Mr. Fenelby. "How do you mean?" "What about her?" repeated Billy. "You know how I feel about the girl-business. I suppose she is going to stay awhile?" "Kitty? I think so. We want her to. But you needn't bother about Kitty.
I was only wondering what to do with her in in the Commonwealth of Bobberts." "Oh!" cried Mrs. Fenelby, with a sigh of profound relief. She took up her sewing again, and bent her head over it. "Is that all! Of course Bridget expects to be treated like one of the family. I told her when she came that I always treated my maids as part of the family."
We will give them a chance to vote the tariff out of existence, and if they don't we will just secede from the Commonwealth of Bobberts. We will have a free trade commonwealth of our own, and Kitty and Billy can do as they please." "Tom," said Mrs. Fenelby, "that is just what we will do!" And so it was settled. By the time Kitty and Billy returned loiteringly from church Mr.
Fenelby, with the air of a man stating a great discovery, "because, don't you see, you can open your trunks at the Rankins', and bring over just as many things as you think you can afford to pay on." For some reason that Mr. Fenelby could not fathom Kitty laughed merrily at this, and then they all went in to dinner.
It isn't as if no one in this house ever broke that tariff law except Kitty and Billy; you haven't explained about that box " Mr. Fenelby reddened and he looked at his wife sternly. "Do you mean the box I found hidden under the eaves in the attic, addressed to you, my dear?" he asked with cutting sweetness, and Mrs. Fenelby, in turn, grew red and gasped. "You are mean!" she exclaimed.
"Of course, if it is going to harm the grass at all, Mr. Fenelby, I sha'n't think of it," she said.
Billy Fenelby, after having been heroized by innumerable girls during his college years, had become definitely a man's man, and was in the habit of saying that his girly-girl days were over, and that he would walk around a block any day to escape meeting a girl. He was not afraid of girls, and he did not hate them, but he simply held that they were not worth while.
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