[Nancy by Rhoda Broughton]@TWC D-Link book
Nancy

CHAPTER V
9/10

Father is alone with his wife and his two lovely daughters.

We make a faint movement toward effacing ourselves, but our steps are speedily checked.
"Barbara! Nancy!" "Yes, father" (in a couple of very small voices).
"May I ask what induced you to keep my guests waiting half an hour for their dinner to-night ?" No manner of answer.

_How_ hooked his nose looks! how fearfully like a hawk he has grown all in a minute! "When you have houses of your own," he continues with iced politeness, "you may of course treat your visitors to what vagaries you please, but as long as you deign to honor _my_ roof with your presence, you will be good enough to behave to my guests with decent civility, do you hear ?" "Well, Roger, how is the glass?
up or down?
What is it doing?
Are we to have a fine day to-morrow ?" For Roger apparently has got quickly into his smoking-coat: at least he is here: he has heard all.

Barbara and I _crawl_ away with no more spring or backbone in us than a couple of torpid, wintery flies.
Five minutes later, "Do you wonder that we hate him ?" cry I, with flaming cheeks, holding a japanned candlestick in one hand, and Sir Roger's right hand in the other.
"I do not care if he _does_ hear me!--yes, I do, though" (giving a great jump as a door bangs close to me).
Sir Roger is looking down at me with an expression of most thorough discomfiture and silent pain in his face.
"He did not mean it, Nancy!" he says, hesitatingly, and with a sort of look of shamed wonder in his friendly eyes.
"_Did_ not he ?" (ironically).
A little pause, the position of the japanned candlestick and of Sir Roger's hand still remaining the same.

"_How_ I wish that _you_ were my father instead!" I say with a sort of sob.


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