FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150  
>>  
it afterwards and stood listening acutely he heard so sound from below. By the end of the second hour his uneasiness had increased to consternation. The house was as silent as a tomb, the sitting-room was still in a state of chaos, and a healthy appetite would persist in putting ominous and inconvenient questions as to dinner. Whistling a cheerful air he went downstairs again and put his head in at the kitchen. Selina sat in the same attitude, and when he coughed made no response. "What about dinner?" he said, at last, in a voice which strove to be unconcerned. "Go away," said Selina, thickly. "I don't want no dinner." The captain started. "But I do," he said, feelingly. "You'd better get it yourself, then," replied Miss Vickers, without turning her head. "I might steal a potato or something." "Don't talk nonsense," said the other, nervously. "I'm not a thief," continued Miss Vickers. "I work as hard as anybody in Binchester, and nobody can ever say that I took the value of a farthing from them. If I'm poor I'm honest." "Everybody knows that," said the captain, with fervour. "You said you didn't want the paper," said Selina, turning at last and regarding him fiercely. "I heard you with my own ears, else I wouldn't have taken it. And if they had come back you'd have had your share. You didn't want the treasure yourself and you didn't want other people to have it. And it wasn't yours, because I heard you say so." "Very well, say no more about it," said the captain. "If anybody asks you can say that I knew you had it. Now go and put that back in the bureau." He tossed the key on to the table, and Miss Vickers, after a moment's hesitation, turned with a gratified smile and took it up. The next hour he spent in his bedroom, the rapid evolutions of Miss Vickers as she passed from the saucepans to the sitting room and from the sitting-room back to the saucepans requiring plenty of sea room. A week later she was one of the happiest people in Binchester. Edward Tredgold had received a cable from Auckland: "All safe; coming home," and she shared with Mrs. Chalk and Mrs. Stobell in the hearty congratulations of a large circle of friends. Her satisfaction was only marred by the feverish condition of Mr. Tasker immediately on receipt of the news. CHAPTER XXI Fortunately for their peace of mind, Mr. Chalk and his friends, safe on board the s.s. Silver Star, bound for home, had no i
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150  
>>  



Top keywords:
Vickers
 
captain
 
Selina
 

dinner

 
sitting
 

turning

 
saucepans
 
friends
 

Binchester

 

people


hesitation

 
turned
 

gratified

 

bureau

 

treasure

 
tossed
 

moment

 

Edward

 

condition

 

feverish


Tasker

 

immediately

 

receipt

 

marred

 

circle

 

satisfaction

 

CHAPTER

 

Silver

 
Fortunately
 
congratulations

plenty

 
requiring
 

passed

 

bedroom

 

evolutions

 

coming

 

shared

 

Stobell

 

hearty

 

Auckland


happiest

 
Tredgold
 

received

 

downstairs

 

kitchen

 
cheerful
 
ominous
 

inconvenient

 

questions

 
Whistling