[Aunt Jane’s Nieces at Millville by Edith Van Dyne]@TWC D-Link bookAunt Jane’s Nieces at Millville CHAPTER VI 2/17
Here she practiced persistently, shooting at sixty yards with much skill.
But occasionally, when Louise tired of her novel and her cushions in the hammock, the two girls would play tennis or croquet together--Beth invariably winning. Such delightful laziness could brook no interference for the first days of their arrival, and it was not until Peggy McNutt ventured over on Monday morning for a settlement with Mr.Merrick that any from the little world around them dared intrude upon the dwellers at the Wegg farm. Although the agent had been late in starting from Millville and Nick Thorne's sorrel mare had walked every step of the way, Peggy was obliged to wait in the yard a good half hour for the "nabob" to finish his breakfast.
During that time he tried to decide which of the two statements of accounts that he had prepared he was most justified in presenting.
He had learned from the liveryman at the Junction that Mr. Merrick had paid five dollars for a trip that was usually made for two, and also that the extravagant man had paid seventy-five cents more to Lucky Todd, the hotel keeper, than his bill came to.
The knowledge of such reckless expenditures had fortified little McNutt in "marking up" the account of the money he had received, and instead of charging two dollars a day for his own services, as he had at first intended, he put them down at three dollars a day--and made the days stretch as much as possible.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|