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The Counterfeit Bill

by Amy Randolph


“It is too bad!” sobbed Kitty Eldon, with burning cheeks and a throbbing heart, “it is too bad! and I won’t endure it another day—no, not another moment!”

Kitty was a plump, chubby-cheeked damsel, with a profusion of dimples, and large, wistful-looking brown eyes—a girl whose face and physique clearly betokened quick passions and a warm, tropical nature, very evidently in a state of revolt just at the present moment.

“Kitty!” remonstrated a matronly personage, who had just entered, and stood with a troubled face watching the busy hands and flushed temples of the girl, “Kitty, you surely are not going away?”

“Yes, I am going away, Aunt Myra,” said Kitty, tossing back the chestnut curls with a defiant motion, “I will not spend another night under a roof where my letters are intercepted, and—and—”

But, my child, your uncle acts solely for your good. Duval Martyn bears no enviable character, and— “

“I will not hear him aspersed!” indignantly interrupted Kitty, tying on her bonnet with nervous fingers. “I shake the dust of your threshold off my feet henceforth. I chose to take my own pathway in the world. I would sooner earn my bread as governess or ladies’ maid than be longer dependent on your cold charity.”

“But, Kitty, my darling, consider—”

Kitty Eldon drew herself haughtily away from her aunt’s detaining hand, and passed out of the door like a small embodiment of the spirit of defiance.

Out of the door! but, not until she had reached the corner of the street did impulsive Kitty pause to reflect where she was going.

“I wish I knew of some employment agency or intelligence bureau,” thought Kitty, with a strange sensation of loneliness. “Or, perhaps, I might buy a newspaper and see something among the advertisements.

This was an idea that seemed feasible, and Kitty drew out her little… Read More