[Bad Hugh by Mary Jane Holmes]@TWC D-Link book
Bad Hugh

CHAPTER XXXIII
13/15

Why, your face is white as paper," and rather familiarly Pamelia pinched Adah's marble cheek.
Adah did not mean to be proud, but still she could not help shrinking from the familiarity, drawing back so quickly that Pamelia saw the implied rebuke.

She did not ask pardon, but she became at once more respectful.
A moment after Anna's bell was heard, but Adah paid no heed, till Pamelia said: "That was Miss Anna's bell, and it means for you to come." Adah colored, and hastily left the room, while Pamelia muttered to herself: "Ain't no more a maid than Miss Anna herself.

But why has she come here?
That's the mystery.

She's been unfortunate." This was the solution in Pamelia's mind; but the thought went no further than to her better half.
Adah's feelings at being called just as Lulu and Muggins were at home, had been in a measure shared by Anna, who hesitated several minutes ere touching the bell.
"If she is to be my maid, it will be better for us both not to act under restraint," she thought, and so rang out the summons which brought Adah to her room.
It was an awkward business, requiring a menial's service of that ladylike creature, and Anna would have been exceedingly perplexed had not Adah's good sense come to the rescue, prompting her to do things unasked in such a way that Anna was at once relieved from embarrassment, and felt that in Rose Markham she had found a treasure.

She did not join the family in the evening, but kept her room instead, talking with Adah and caressing and playing with little Willie, who persisted in calling her "Arntee," in spite of all Adah could say.
"Never mind," Anna answered, laughingly; "I rather like to hear him.


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