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قراءة كتاب May Iverson's Career
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MAY IVERSON'S CAREER
BY
ELIZABETH JORDAN
AUTHOR OF
"MAY IVERSON—HER BOOK"
"MANY KINGDOMS" ETC.

HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
TO
F. H. B.
WITH MEMORIES OF THE WISTFUL ADRIATIC
CONTENTS
CHAP. | PAGE | |
I. | My First Assignment | 1 |
II. | The Cry of the Pack | 24 |
III. | The Girl in Gray | 43 |
IV. | In Gay Bohemia | 68 |
V. | The Case of Helen Brandow | 94 |
VI. | The Last of the Morans | 120 |
VII. | To the Rescue of Miss Morris | 140 |
VIII. | Maria Annunciata | 162 |
IX. | The Revolt of Tildy Mears | 184 |
X. | A Message from Mother Elise | 206 |
XI. | "T. B." Conducts a Rehearsal | 228 |
XII. | The Rise of the Curtain | 256 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
May Iverson | Frontispiece | |
"Don't Stand There Staring. I Know I'm Not a Beauty," and She Cackled Like an Angry Hen. |
Facing p. | 12 |
It Was Young "Shep," the Last of the Morans | 124 | |
"D'ye Know the Woman?" He Said | 176 |
MAY IVERSON'S CAREER
MAY IVERSON'S CAREER
I
MY FIRST ASSIGNMENT
The Commencement exercises at St. Catharine's were over, and everybody in the big assembly-hall was looking relieved and grateful. Mabel Muriel Murphy had welcomed our parents and friends to the convent shades in an extemporaneous speech we had overheard her practising for weeks; and the proud face of Mabel Muriel's father, beaming on her as she talked, illumined the front row like an electric globe. Maudie Joyce had read a beautiful essay, full of uplifting thoughts and rare flowers of rhetoric; Mabel Blossom had tried to deliver her address without the manuscript, and had forgotten it at a vital point; Adeline Thurston had recited an original poem; Kittie James had sung a solo; and Janet Trelawney had played the Sixth Hungarian Rhapsody on the piano.
Need I say who read the valedictory? It was I—May Iverson—winner of the Cross of Honor, winner of the Crown, leader of the convent orchestra, and president of the senior class. If there are those who think I should not mention these honors I will merely ask who would do it if I did not—and pause for a reply. Besides, young as I am, I know full well that worldly ambitions and triumphs are as ashes on the lips; and already I was planning to cast mine aside. But at this particular minute the girls were crying on one another over our impending parting, and our parents were coming up to us and saying the same things again and again, while Sister Edna was telling Mabel Muriel Murphy, without being asked, that she was not ashamed of one of us.
I could see my father coming toward me through the crowd, stopping to shake hands with my classmates and tell them how wonderful they were; and I knew that when he reached me I must take him out into the convent garden and break his big, devoted heart. At the thought of it a great lump came into my throat, and while I was trying to swallow it I felt his arm flung over my shoulder.
He bent down and kissed me. "Well, my girl," he said, "I'm proud of you."
That was all. I knew it was all he would ever say; but it meant more than any one else could put into hours of talk. I did not try to answer, but I kissed him hard, and, taking his arm, led him down-stairs, through the long halls and out into the convent garden, lovely with the scent of roses and honeysuckle and mignonette. He had never seen the garden before. He wanted to stroll through it and glance into the conservatories, to look at the fountain and visit the Grotto of Lourdes and stand gazing up at the huge cross that rises from a bed of