The Tale of Timber Town. Grace Alfred Augustus
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Название: The Tale of Timber Town

Автор: Grace Alfred Augustus

Издательство: Public Domain

Жанр: Зарубежная классика

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СКАЧАТЬ Rachel, you haf no heart. You don’t loaf your father.”

      “You don’t love your daughter, else you’d give me what I want.”

      “I not loaf you, Rachel! Didn’t I gif you that ring last week, and the red silk dress the week pefore? Come down, my child, and next birthday you shall have a better watch than in all Tresco’s shop. My ’tear Rachel, my ’tear child, you’ll be killed; and what good will be your father’s money to him then? Oh! that bale moved. Rachel! sit still.”

      “Then you’ll give me the watch?”

      “Yes, yes. You shall have the watch. Come down now, while Packett holds your hand.”

      “Can I have it to-day?”

      “Be careful, Packett. Oh! that bale is almost ofer.”

      “Will you give it me this morning, father?”

      “Yes, yes, this morning.”

      “Before I go home to dinner?”

      “Yes, pefore dinner.”

      “Then, Packett, give me your hand. I will come down.”

      The dainty victress placed her little foot firmly on the uppermost rung; and while Packett held the top, and the merchant the bottom, of the ladder, the dream of muslin and ribbons descended to the floor.

      Old Varnhagen gave a sigh of relief.

      “You’ll nefer do that again, Rachel?”

      “I hope I shall never need to.”

      “You shouldn’t upset your poor old father like that, Rachel.”

      “You shouldn’t drive me to use such means to make you do your duty.”

      “My duty!”

      “Yes, to give me that watch.”

      “Ah, the watch. I forgot it.”

      “I shall go now, and get it.”

      “Yes, my child, get it.”

      “I’ll say you will pay at the end of the month.”

      “Yes, I will pay – perhaps at the end of the month, perhaps it will go towards a contra account for watches I shall supply to Tresco. We shall see.”

      “Good-bye, father.”

      “Good-bye, Rachel; but won’t you gif your old father a kiss pefore you go?”

      The vision of muslin and ribbons laid her parasol upon an upturned barrel, and came towards the portly Jew. Her soft dress was crumpled by his fat hand, and her pretty head was nestled on his shoulder.

      “Ah! my ’tear Rachel. Ah! my peautiful. You loaf your old father. My liddle taughter, I gif you everything; and you loaf me very moch, eh?”

      “Of course, I do. And won’t it look well with a brand-new gold chain to match?”

      “Next time my child wants something, she won’t climb on the wool-bales and nearly kill herself?”

      “Of course not. I shall wear it this afternoon when I go out calling.”

      “Now kiss me, and run away while I make some more money for my liddle Rachel.”

      The saintly face raised itself, and looked with a smile into the face of the old Jew; and then the bright red lips fixed themselves upon his wrinkled cheek.

      “You are a good girl; you are my own child; you shall have everything you ask; you shall have all I’ve got to give.”

      “Good-bye, father. Thanks awfully much.”

      “Good-bye, Rachel.”

      The girl turned; the little heels tapped regularly on the floor; the pigeon-like walk was resumed; and Rachel Varnhagen, watched by the loving eyes of her father, passed into the street.

      The gold-buying clerk at the Kangaroo Bank was an immaculately dressed young man with a taste for jewelry. In his tie he wore a pearl, in a gold setting shaped like a diminutive human hand; his watch-chain was of gold, wrought in a wonderful and extravagant design. As he stepped through the swinging, glazed doors of the Bank, and stood on the broad step without, at the witching hour of twelve, he twirled his small black moustache so as to display to advantage the sparkling diamond ring which encircled the little finger of his left hand. His Semitic features wore an expression of great self-satisfaction, and his knowing air betokened intimate knowledge of the world and all that therein is. He nodded familiarly to a couple of young men who passed by, and glanced with the appreciative eye of a connoisseur at the shop-girls who were walking briskly to their dinners.

      Loitering across the pavement he stood upon the curbing, and looked wistfully up and down the street. Presently there hove in sight a figure that riveted his attention: it was Rachel Varnhagen, with muslins blowing in the breeze and ribbons which streamed behind, approaching like a ship in full sail.

      The gold-clerk crossed over the street to meet her, and raised his hat.

      “You’re in an awful hurry. Where bound, Rachel?”

      “If your old Dad told you to go and buy a gold watch and chain, you’d be in a hurry, lest he might change his mind.”

      “My soul hankers after something dearer than watches and chains. If your Dad would give me leave, I’d annex his most precious jewel before he could say, ‘Knife!’ He’d never get a chance to change his mind. But he always says, ‘My boy, you wait till you’re a manager, and can give me a big overdraft.’ At that rate we shall have to wait till Doomsday.”

      “The watch is at Tresco’s. Come along: help me turn the shop upside down to find the dandiest.”

      “How d’you manage to get round the Governor, Rachel? I’d like to know the dodge.”

      “He wouldn’t mind if you fell off a stack of bales and broke your neck. He’d say, ‘Thank God! that solves that liddle difficulty.’”

      “Wool bales? Has wool gone up? I don’t understand.”

      “Of course you don’t, stupid. If you were on the top of a pile of swaying bales, old Podge would say, ‘Packett, take away the ladder: that nice young man must stay there. It’s better for him to die than marry Rachel – she’d drive him mad with bills in a month.’”

      “Oh, that wouldn’t trouble me – I’d draw on him.”

      “Oh, would you?” Rachel laughed sceptically. “You don’t know the Gov. if you think that. You couldn’t bluff him into paying a shilling. But I manage him all right. I can get what I want, from a trip to Sydney to a gold watch, dear boy.”

      “Then why don’t you squeeze a honeymoon out of him? – that would be something new, Rachel.”

      She actually paused in her haste.

      “Wouldn’t it be splendid!” she exclaimed, putting her parasol well СКАЧАТЬ