[The Just and the Unjust by Vaughan Kester]@TWC D-Link bookThe Just and the Unjust CHAPTER NINETEEN 6/11
It was a happy moment for Mr.Shrimplin, but not by so much as the flicker of an eyelash did he betray that this was so.
He had considered himself such a public character since the night of the McBride murder that he now deemed it incumbent to preserve a stoic manner; the admiration of his fellows could win nothing from the sternness of his nature, so he ignored the neighbors, while he was barely civil to the landlord.
The big roll of bills which, with something of a flourish, he produced from the pocket of his greasy overalls, settled the rent, and the neighbors noted with bated breath that the size of this roll was not perceptibly diminished by the transaction. Presently Mr.Shrimplin found himself standing alone with Nellie; the landlord had departed with his money, while the neighbors, having devoted the greater part of the day to a sympathetic interest in Mrs. Montgomery's fortunes, now had leisure for their own affairs. "Why didn't you send for me sooner ?" demanded the little man with some asperity.
"No sense in having your things put out like this when you only got to put them back again!" "If Joe was only here this would never have happened!" said Mrs. Montgomery, giving way to copious tears. But Mr.Shrimplin seemed not so sure of this.
The settling of the handy-man's difficulties had been one of the few extravagances he had permitted himself.
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