[Kate Bonnet by Frank R. Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
Kate Bonnet

CHAPTER XXXIX
3/3

As for Mr.Delaplaine, Dame Charter, and Dickory, they brightened without any trouble at all, the disappearance of the wicked having such a direct and forcible effect upon them.
Dickory Charter, who matured in a fashion which made everybody forget that Kate Bonnet was eleven months his senior, entered into business with Mr.Delaplaine, and Jamaica became the home of this happy family, whose welfare was founded, as on a rock, upon the disappearance of the wicked.
Here, then, was a brave girl who had loved her father with a love which was more than that of a daughter, which was the love of a mother, of a wife; who had loved him in prosperity and in times of sorrow and of shame; who had rejoiced like an angel whenever he turned his footsteps into the right way, and who had mourned like an angel whenever he went wrong.

She had longed to throw her arms around her father's neck, to hold him to her, and thus keep off the hangman's noose.

Her courage and affection never waned until those arms were rudely thrust aside and their devoted owner dastardly repulsed.
True to herself and to him, she loved her father so long as there was anything parental in him which she might love; and, true to herself, when he had left her nothing she might love, she bowed her head and suffered him, as he passed out of his life, to pass out of her own..


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books