[The Early Bird by George Randolph Chester]@TWC D-Link book
The Early Bird

CHAPTER XVII
4/15

It hasn't been but a few minutes since that identical idea popped into my head, and I had just now decided that if I could secure options on this property I would have a real summer resort here--one that would make Hollis Creek and Meadow Brook mere farm boarding-houses.

Do you see how close together these hills draw at their feet?
The hollow is at least a thousand feet across at the widest part, but down there at the road, where the stream emerges to the fields, they close in with natural buttresses, as it were, to not over a hundred feet in width.
Well, right across there we'll build a dam, and there is enough water here to make a beautiful lake up as high as that yellow rock." Miss Josephine looked up at the yellow rock and clasped her hands with an exclamation of delight.
"Glorious!" she said.

"I never would have thought of that; and how beautiful it will be! Why, if the lake comes up that high it will go clear back around that turn in the valley, won't it ?" "Easily," he replied; "although that might make us trouble, for I don't know where that turn in the valley leads.

I have never explored that region.

Suppose we go up and look it over." "Won't that be fun ?" she agreed, and they started to follow the stream.
As they reached the rear of the "pocket," where they could see around the curve, they turned and looked back over the route they had just traversed.
"My idea," Sam explained, having waited until they reached this viewpoint to do so, "is to build the dam down there at the roadside, and build the hotel right over it so that arriving guests will, after an elevator has brought them up to the height of the main floor, find the blue of the lake suddenly bursting upon them from the main piazza, which will face the valley.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books