grin, "it's a good thing you are
along, J. P.; you can show 'em around town until they begin to feel at
home."
"He's got three hundred dollars left to build a house and store with,"
went on J. Pinkney, as if he were talking to himself. "And he thinks
there's an open house up there."
Captain MacFarland released the wheel long enough to give his leg a
roguish slap.
"You old fat rascal!" he chuckled, with a wink.
"Mac, you're a fool," said J. Pinkney Bloom, coldly. He went back and
joined the Blaylocks, where he sat, less talkative, with that straight
furrow between his brows that always stood as a signal of schemes being
shaped within.
"There's a good many swindles connected with these booms," he said
presently. "What if this Skyland should turn out to be one--that is,
suppose business should be sort of dull there, and no special sale for
books?"
"My dear sir," said Colonel Blaylock, resting his hand upon the back of
his wife's chair, "three times I have been reduced to almost penury by
the duplicity of others, but I have not yet lost faith in humanity. If
I have been deceived again, still we may glean health and content, if
not worldly profit. I am aware that there are dishonest schemers in
the world who set traps for the unwary, but even they are not
altogether bad. My dear, can you recall those verses entitled 'He
Giveth the Increase,' that you composed for the choir of our church in
Holly Springs?"
"That was four years ago," said Mrs. Blaylock; "perhaps I can repeat a
verse or two.
"The lily springs from the rotting mould;
Pearls from the deep sea slime;
Good will come out of Nazareth
All in God's own time.
"To the hardest heart the softening grace
Cometh, at last, to bless;
Guiding it right to help and cheer
And succor in distress.
"I cannot remember the rest. The lines were not ambitious. They were
written to the music composed by a dear friend."
"It's a fine rhyme, just the same," declared Mr. Bloom. "It seems to
ring the bell, all right. I guess I gather the sense of it. It means
that the rankest kind of a phony will give you the best end of it once
in a while."
Mr. Bloom strayed thoughtfully back to the captain, and stood
meditating.
"Ought to be in sight of the spires and gilded domes of Skyland now in
a few minutes," chirruped MacFarland, shaking with enjoyment.
"Go to the devil," said Mr. Bloom, still pensive.
And now, upon the left bank
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