[The Master of the Shell by Talbot Baines Reed]@TWC D-Link book
The Master of the Shell

CHAPTER FOUR
11/21

"I can't suppose one master would willingly do anything to injure the house of another." Ainger smiled in a manner which offended Railsford considerably.
"I am sorry to find," he said, rather more severely, "that my head boys, who ought to aim at the good of their house, are parties to a feud which, I am sure, can do nobody any good.

I must say I had hoped better things." Ainger looked up quickly.

"I am quite willing to resign the captaincy, sir, if you wish it." "By no means," said Railsford, a little alarmed at the length to which his protest had carried him, and becoming more conciliatory.

"All I request is that you will do your best to heal the feud, so that we may have no obstacle in the way of the order of our own house.

You may depend on me to co-operate in whatever tends in that direction, and I look to you to take the lead in bringing the house up to the mark and keeping it there." At this particular juncture further conference was entirely suspended by a most alarming and fiendish disturbance in the room above.
It was not an earthquake, for the ground beneath them neither shook nor trembled; it was not a dynamite explosion, for the sounds were dull and prolonged; it was not a chimney-stack fallen, for the room above was two storeys from the roof.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books