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PAGE 5

The Way Of The Winning Of Anne
by [?]

“Goodness gracious, Anne! Do you care after all? Tell me that!”

“I don’t suppose it matters to you if I do,” sobbed Anne. “It hasn’t seemed to matter, anyhow.”

“Anne, look here! Didn’t I come after you for fifteen years? It’s you I always have wanted and want yet, if I can get you. I don’t care a rap for Harriet Warren or anyone but you. Now that’s the truth right out, Anne.”

No doubt it was, and Anne was convinced of it. But she had to have her cry out–on Jerome’s shoulder–and it soothed her nerves wonderfully. Later on Octavia, slipping noiselessly up the steps in the dusk, saw a sight that transfixed her with astonishment. When she recovered herself she turned and fled wildly around the house, running bump into Sam Mitchell, who was coming across the yard from a twilight conference with the hired men.

“Goodness, Tavy, what’s the matter? Y’ look ‘sif y’d seen a ghost.”

Octavia leaned up against the wall in spasms of mirth.

“Oh, Sam,” she gasped, “old Jerome Irving and Aunt Anne are sitting round there in the dark on the front porch and he had his arms around her, kissing her! And they never saw nor heard me, no more’n if they were deaf and blind!”

Sam gave a tremendous whistle and then went off into a shout of laughter whose echoes reached even to the gloom of the front porch and the ears of the lovers. But they did not know he was laughing at them and would not have cared if they had. They were too happy for that.

There was a wedding that fall and Anne Stockard was the bride. When she was safely his, Jerome confessed all and was graciously forgiven.

“But it was kind of mean to Harriet,” said Anne rebukingly, “to go with her and get her talked about and then drop her as you did. Don’t you think so yourself, Jerome?”

Her husband’s eyes twinkled.

“Well, hardly that. You see, Harriet’s engaged to that Johnson fellow out west. ‘Tain’t generally known, but I knew it and that’s why I picked on her. I thought it probable that she’d be willing enough to flirt with me for a little diversion, even if I was old. Harriet’s that sort of a girl. And I made up my mind that if that didn’t fetch it nothing would and I’d give up for good and all. But it did, didn’t it, Anne?”

“I should say so. It was horrid of you, Jerome–but I daresay it’s just as well you did or I’d likely never have found out that I couldn’t get along without you. I did feel dreadful. Poor Octavia could tell you I was as cross as X. How did you come to think of it, Jerome?”

“A fellow had to do something,” said Jerome oracularly, “and I’d have done most anything to get you, Anne, that’s a fact. And there it was–courting fifteen years and nothing to show for it. I dunno, though, how I did come to think of it. Guess it was a sort of inspiration. Anyhow, I’ve got you and that’s what I set out to do in the beginning.”