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Major Truslow’s Mistake


by Amy Randolph


It was a mellow spring day upon the Sound, the blue water sparkling in the noon sunshine, the far off Long Island hills diademed with yellow rings of mist, and Major Truslow, leaning back in his easy-chair, as he carelessly glanced up and down the columns of the morning paper, passively enjoyed the golden beauty of the day, the rush of the steamer’s bows through the shining flow of the deep, and the merry sounds of life and vivacity around him.

As he sat there, his Panama slightly tipped forward over his handsome middle-aged brows, the voice of one of the boat servants struck on his ear.

“She’s a sittin’ there, cryin’ as if her heart would break; and there’s no kind o’ use tellin’ her it’s all her own fault.”

Major Truslow lifted his head. As a general thing, it was not his custom to interest himself in business not his own, yet he had acquired the habit of hearing and noticing all thar went on around him.

“A pretty little thing too, an’t she?” said the mulatto stewardess. “An’t it strange folks can’t have a little more common-sense!”

“What is the matter?” asked Major Truslow, now tilting the Panama back into its proper place. “Whom are you talking of?”

“It’s a young girl, sir, as has taken the wrong boat, and never found it out until there was two good miles atween us and the slip,” answered the man; “and she do take on awful. Perhaps, sir, if you was to speak to her—she won’t pay no attention to what we says?”

“Where is she?”

“In the upper cabin, sir.”

Major Truslow laid down his paper and walked aft.

Crouching on one of the sofas, with her face hidden in the pillow, and a… Read More