[The Woman-Haters by Joseph C. Lincoln]@TWC D-Link bookThe Woman-Haters CHAPTER VIII 1/32
CHAPTER VIII. NEIGHBORS AND WASPS And now affairs at the lights settled down into a daily routine in which the lightkeeper and his helper each played his appointed part. All mysteries now being solved, and the trust between them mutual and without reserve, they no longer were on their guard in each other's presence, but talked freely on all sorts of topics, and expressed their mutual dislike of woman with frequency and point.
No regular assistant was appointed or seemed likely to be, for the summer, at least.
Seth and his friend, the superintendent, held another lengthy conversation over the wire, and, while Brown's uncertain status remained the same, there was a tacit understanding that, by the first of September, if the young man was sufficiently "broken in," the position vacated by Ezra Payne should be his--if he still wanted it. "You may change your mind by that time," observed Seth.
"This ain't no place for a chap with your trainin', and I know it.
It does well enough for an old derelict like me, with nobody to care a hang whether he lives or dies, but you're different.
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