"Are you crazy?"
"It's the God's truth, Kess. He's begging me for an answer by to-night, before he goes back home."
"I.W. Goldstone, of Goldstone & Auer, ladies' wear?"
She nodded, her hand to her throat.
"Well, I'll be strung up!"
"He—he says, Kess, it's been on his mind for a year and a half, ever since his spring trip a year ago. He wants to take me back with him, Kess, home."
"Whew!" said Mr. Kessler, wiping his brow and the back of his collar.
"You're no more surprised than me, Kess. I—I nearly fell off the
Christmas tree."
"Good Lord! Why, his wife—he had her in the store it seems yesterday!"
"She's been dead four years and seven months, Kess."