Written for the Prairie Farmer
Guilty or Not Guilty
by Eben E. Rexford
I.
“I can tell you this much, Kitty Warner, I’m not the man to be twisted around any woman’s little finger, as suits her fancy. You must either break off your flirtation with Max Fielding, or consider the engagement which has existed between us, null and void. I’ve stood on one side and looked on long enough. Everybody is talking about you and Fielding, and yesterday I overheard one man say to another in the street, ‘I wonder how Rosevelt likes the way matters are working? I should think he’d begin to get jealous!’ Such remarks are not very pleasant.”
“Ah?” Miss Warner said, with a trifle of sarcasm in her voice. “You are too sensitive, Paul! I don’t care what people say about me. They will talk, and I always think that when they are talking about me, they are letting some one else alone, and think no more about the matter. What’s the use?”
“You may laugh if you choose,” Paul Rosevelt answered, icily. “To me it is no laughing matter. If you have tired of me, say so, and you shall be released at once, I don’t want to intrude. If you prefer Max Fielding, you are welcome to him, and I shall not stand between you.”
“Very kind, indeed,” Kitty said, patting the woolly head of the King Charles spaniel.
“Kitty!” Paul’s tone was full of anger, “Will you tell me once for all whether you wish to be free from our engagement or not?”
“If you are so anxious to break it, I’ve no objections,” said Kitty, very coolly.
“The deuce!” exclaimed Paul in anger, “You’re enough to try the patience of a saint, and you know well enough I’m not one.
“You’re just right, there,” answered… Read More