[Peter by F. Hopkinson Smith]@TWC D-Link bookPeter CHAPTER X 10/24
Back of them lay their good-will and good feeling; still back of them, again, their bank accounts and--another scoop in Mukton! Most of the guests had had a hand in the last deal and they were ready to share in the next.
Although this particular dinner was supposed to be a celebration of the late victory, two others, equally elaborate, had preceded it; both Crossbin and Hodges having entertained nearly this same group of men at their own tables. That Breen, with his reputation for old Madeira and his supposed acquaintance with the intricacies of a Maryland kitchen, would outclass them both, had been whispered a dozen times since the receipt of his invitation, and he knew it.
Hence the alert boy, the chef in the white cap, and hence the seesawing on the hearth-rug. "Like it, Crossbin ?" asked Breen. Parkins had just passed down the table with a dust covered bottle which he handled with the care of a collector fingering a peachblow vase. The precious fluid had been poured into that gentleman's glass and its contents were now within an inch of his nose. The moment was too grave for instant reply; Mr.Crossbin was allowing the aroma to mount to the innermost recesses of his nostrils.
It had only been a few years since he had performed this same trick with a gourd suspended from a nail in his father's back kitchen, overlooking a field of growing corn; but that fact was not public property--not here in New York. "Yes--smooth, and with something of the hills in it.
Chateau Lamont, is it not, of '61 ?" It was Chateau of something-or-other, and of some year, but Breen was too wise to correct him.
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