Scattergood Baines by Clarence Budington Kelland
page 357 of 384 (92%)
page 357 of 384 (92%)
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little district school on Hiper Hill, came in hesitatingly, clutching
with each arm half a dozen books which struggled to escape with the ingenuity of inanimate objects. Nahum's hair was white; his face was vague--lovably vague.... A man of considerable, if confused, learning, he was. "Well?" said Scattergood. "Got suthin' on to your mind? Commence unloadin' it before it busts your back." "It's Sarah," said Nahum, helplessly. "Um!... Sairy, eh? What's Sairy up to?" "I don't seem to gather, Mr. Baines. She's--she's difficult. Something seems to be working in her head." "Twenty-two, hain't she? Twenty-two?... Prob'ly a number of things a-workin' in her head. Got any special symptoms?" "She--she wants to leave home, Mr. Baines." Nahum said this with mild amazement. His amazement would have been no greater--and not a whit less mild--had his daughter announced her intention to swim from New York to Liverpool, or to marry the chef of the Czar of Russia. "Um!... Can't say's that's onnatural--so's to require callin' in a doctor. Live five mile from town, don't you? Nearest neighbor nigh on to a mile. Sairy gits to see company only about so often or not so seldom as that, eh?" Scattergood shut his eyes until there appeared at the corners of them a network of little wrinkles. "I'm a-goin' to astonish you, Nahum. This here hain't the first girl that ever come down with the |
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