[The Terrible Twins by Edgar Jepson]@TWC D-Link book
The Terrible Twins

CHAPTER VI
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He found Mr.
Carrington uncommonly bitter against his client; and he did his best to placate him by urging that the assault had been met with a promptitude which had robbed it of its violence, and that he could well afford to be generous to a man whom he had so neatly put to sleep with an uppercut on the point.
Mr.Carrington held out for a while; but in the background, behind the more prominent figures in the affair, lurked the Terror with a veritable poached pheasant; and at last he made terms.

The summonses should be withdrawn on condition that nothing more was heard about that poached pheasant and that Mr.D'Arcy Rosenheimer contributed fifty guineas to the funds of the Deeping Cottage Hospital.

The lawyer accepted the terms readily; and his client made no objection to complying with them.
The matter was at an end by noon of the next day; and Mr.Carrington sent for the Terror and talked to him very seriously about this poaching.

He did not profess to consider it an enormity; he dwelt at length on the extreme annoyance his mother would feel if he were caught and prosecuted.

In the end he gave him the choice of giving his word to snare no more pheasants, or of having his mother informed that he was poaching.


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