[The Debtor by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman]@TWC D-Link book
The Debtor

CHAPTER XI
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He was a little short this morning, and had to use some money before he could go to the bank, but my sister and I are very anxious to take the eleven-thirty train to New York, and we had only a dollar and six cents between us." She laughed as she said the last, and Anderson echoed her.
"That is not a very large amount, certainly, to equip two ladies to visit the shopping district," he said.
"I am very glad to accommodate you, and it is not the slightest inconvenience, I assure you." "Well, I am very much obliged, very much," she repeated, with a pretty smile and nod, and she was gone with a little fluttering hop like a bird down the steps.
"He's got stuck," the boy motioned with his lips to the old clerk as Anderson re-entered the office, and the man nodded in assent.

Neither of them ventured to express the opinion to Anderson.

Both stood in a certain awe of him.

The former lawyer still held familiarity somewhat at bay.
However, there followed a whispered consultation between the two clerks, and both chuckled, and finally Sam Riggs advanced with bravado to the office door.
"Mr.Anderson," he said, with mischief in his tone, and Anderson turned and looked at him inquiringly.

"Oh, it is nothing, not worth speaking of, I suppose," said Sammy Riggs, "but that kid, the Carroll boy, swiped an apple off that basket beside the door when he went out with his sister.


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