The Key Note. Burnham Clara Louise
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Название: The Key Note

Автор: Burnham Clara Louise

Издательство: Public Domain

Жанр: Зарубежная классика

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СКАЧАТЬ goin' to run the place this summer, so I thought it might be a good job for me. I never took a thought that it was goin' to be so hard to get help. They tell me there ain't any servants any more; and there are enough folks writin' for rooms to fill me up entirely. I can do the cookin' myself – "

      "Now, Miss Burridge, you aren't leading up to asking me to put on an apron and wait on table, are you? You must remember I'm recuperating also from a too vaulting ambition."

      "Recuperatin', nothin'! You're the huskiest-lookin' thing I ever saw. No, I ain't goin' to ask you to wait on table; but I've got an idea. We're too out o' the way here for me to get college boys. They'd rather go to the mountains and so on – fashionable resorts. But I've got a niece, if she don't feel too big of herself to do that sort of thing; she might come. I'm goin' to ask her anyway. I haven't seen her for years 'cause her mother's been gone a long time and her father went out to Jersey to live, but I've no doubt she's a nice girl. Her name's Veronica. Isn't that a beater? I told my sister I couldn't see why she didn't name her Japonica and be done with it."

      "It's the name of a saint," remarked Philip.

      "Well, I hope she's enough of one to come and help me out. I'm goin' to ask her."

      "Better get Miss Wilbur to write her about the rosy dawn and the jeweled denizens. I'm afraid you'll be too truthful and tell about the leaks. With an 'old master' and a saint, you ought to get on swimmingly."

      "Well, will you stay with me a few days?" said Miss Priscilla coaxingly. "If I had a rapscallion to add to the menagerie – "

      "Do you mean ménage, Miss Burridge?"

      "I'll call it anything in the world you like, if you'll only stand by me, Phil."

      "All right." The young fellow tossed the second cleaned fish on to the plate. "Let me wash my hands and I'll go and throw out a line for the plumber."

      "You're a good boy," returned Miss Burridge, relieved. "I do think, Philip, that in the main you are a good boy! Who's that comin' over?" Miss Burridge craned her neck and narrowed her eyes the better to observe a bicycle which appeared across the field.

      The apparition of any human being was exciting to one responsible for the comfort of others in this Arcadia, where modern conveniences could only be obtained by effort both spasmodic and continuous.

      "Oh, it's Marley Hughes from the post-office."

      A youngster of fourteen came wheeling nonchalantly over the bumps of the field, and finally jumped off his machine and came leisurely up the rise among the trees.

      "I hoped you might be Matt Blake," said Miss Priscilla. "He's got as far as to have the shingles here."

      "Well, I ain't," remarked Marley in the pleasant, drawling, leisurely, island voice.

      "What you got for me?" inquired Miss Burridge.

      "Telegram." The boy brought the store envelope from his pocket.

      "Oh, I hate 'em," said Miss Burridge apprehensively.

      Marley held it aggravatingly away from Philip's extended hand. "Take it back if you want me ter," he said with a grin. "It's ten cents anyway, whether you take it or not."

      "Oh, yes, I've got the money right here." Miss Priscilla turned to a shelf over the sink and took a dime from a purse which lay there.

      "Here." She gave it to Marley, who without more ado jumped on his wheel and coasted down among the trees and off over the soft grass.

      "You open it, Phil. My spectacles ain't here anyway," said Miss Priscilla anxiously.

      So Philip tore open the envelope. The look of amazement which overspread his face as the message greeted him caused Miss Burridge to exclaim fearfully: "Speak out, speak out, Phil."

      "They must have taken this down wrong at the store," he said. Then he read the scrawled words slowly. "'Look in broiler oven for legs.'"

      The cryptic sentence appeared to have a magical effect upon Miss Priscilla. Her face beamed and she threw up her hands in thanksgiving.

      "Glory be!" she exclaimed devoutly.

      "What am I stumbling on?" said Philip. "Have you taken to wiring in cipher?"

      "You see" said Miss Priscilla excitedly, reaching for the telegram which Philip yielded, "it came without any legs. Mr. Buell himself looked it over on the wharf and said he couldn't find 'em anywhere; and, of course, it was a terrible anxiety to me and I wrote to them right off, and I was goin' to get Mr. Buell to set it up without the legs if necessary and stick somethin' else under. Come and help me look, Phil."

      Miss Burridge seized the young fellow's arm and dragged him into the kitchen, where in one corner reposed the new stove in its shining newness, its parts piled ignominiously lop-sided. Talking all the time, its owner pulled open one door after another, as Philip disengaged them, and at last she laid hands on the missing treasure.

      "Now I'll give you as good a dinner as ever comes off this stove if you'll go and get those men and bring 'em up here," she said. "Don't leave me till I'm whole-footed, Phil."

      "Want feet as well as legs, do you?" he chuckled. "All right. See you later if I can get Blake and Buell. If I can't, I suppose I'd better drown myself."

      "No, no, don't do that, Phil. You're better than nothing, yourself."

      CHAPTER II

      VERONICA

      For the next few days the right moment for Philip to desert Miss Burridge never seemed to arrive, and by that time the new establishment had come to be in very good running order, which was fortunate, as the expected boarders' dates were drawing near.

      Diana approached Philip one morning with a pleased countenance. He was encouraging the hopeful little sweet peas that stood in a green row below the porch. She came and sat on the rail above and watched him.

      "Miss Burridge is going to allow me to name our domicile," she announced.

      "Brave woman!" said Philip, coaxing the brown earth up against the line of green with his trowel.

      "Which of us is brave?" asked Diana, smiling, – "Miss Priscilla or myself?"

      "What are you going to call it? Olympus?"

      "Why should I?" Diana gave a soft, gurgling laugh.

      "I thought perhaps it might bring happy memories and prove a palliation of nostalgia."

      "I always have a feeling that you are amusing yourself with me, Mr. Barrison."

      "Have you any objection to my seeing that you are a goddess? What have you done with Apollo, by the way? Couldn't you persuade him to leave the gallery?"

      "To what gallery do you refer? I do not particularly care for handsome men," was Miss Wilbur's thoughtful response.

      "I'm sorry I'm so beautiful, then," said Philip, extending his little earth barricade.

      Diana looked down from her balcony on his tumbling blond hair.

      "You have a very good presence for your purpose," she said.

      "What is my purpose?"

      "The СКАЧАТЬ