Prince Charlie
CHAP. PAGE
The advent of its regatta is usually the herald of a sea-side season's demise. Wivernsea, as yet, is not sufficiently developed to justify indulgence in a water festival. So far, its carnival flights have been confined within the limits of flower shows and the treats of its Sunday school.
The builder—his surname is Jerry—is around with a rule though. His conspiracy with the man who plots lands and dispenses free luncheons and railway tickets, will possibly wreak a change on that part of the map's countenance. Increased population may render the place more famous—or infamous. So very much depends on one's viewpoint.
The houses of Wivernsea are built in its bay. Stuck in round the fringe of it like teeth in a lower jaw. Picture to yourself the long ago—the bay's origin—and the present appearance of the place may come before you. If possible to introduce a belief that there were giants in the earth in those days it will make realization simpler. Because it looks as if a mammoth had snapped at the coast just there and bitten out a huge mouthful.
If your imagination is sufficiently elastic to give play to it, conceive houses being dropped into the marks left by the giant's teeth—a sort of dental stopping. So may be garnered a fair idea of the presentment of this particular indentation in the land.
When the goose of Michaelmas is shaking in its scales, Wivernsea lodging letters encroach on the farmer's privilege. The closing time of their harvest is near enough to be grumbled at. It is painful knowledge to them that visitors scuttle away as September ends. The exodus is due to some absurd belief that the weather then—like a school at the advent of the holidays—breaks up.
In the ears of one man—William Masters by name, binder-together-of-sensational-incidents in-book-form by profession—such grumbles tingled pleasantly. Because the usual October Wivernsea weather is mild and bright and rainless. Being a non-gregarious man, the place shaped before his eyes as a land flowing with milk and honey. He knew it to be good then.
Burford Delannoy
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CONTENTS
PRINCE CHARLIE
CHAPTER I
HERO AND HEROINE MEET
CHAPTER II
THE CHILD, THE WISE MAN, AND THE LADY
CHAPTER III
SHE DISCOVERS THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER IV
THE DANGER SIGNAL
CHAPTER V
PLAYING WITH FIRE
CHAPTER VI
A STRANGE REQUEST
CHAPTER VII
READING THE HAND
CHAPTER VIII
A SOFT GOOD NIGHT
CHAPTER IX
OVER THE GARDEN WALL
CHAPTER X
THE LITTLE WINGED GOD
CHAPTER XI
THE VOICE IN THE DARKNESS
CHAPTER XII
MISUNDERSTANDINGS
CHAPTER XIII
FEVERISH SYMPTOMS
CHAPTER XIV
TO BEG FOR MERCY
CHAPTER XV
ON HER KNEES TO HIM
CHAPTER XVI
GOD'S LITTLE BOY
CHAPTER XVII
THE PASSING OF THE NIGHT
CHAPTER XVIII
THE BREAKING OF THE DAY
CHAPTER XIX
PLAYING THE SPY
CHAPTER XX
A HORRIBLE REVELATION
CHAPTER XXI
THE ONLY WAY
CHAPTER XXII
WHITE LIES
CHAPTER XXIII
LOVE'S LABOUR LOST
CHAPTER XXIV
RESTORED SIGHT
CHAPTER XXV
EJECTED FROM THE CABIN
CHAPTER XXVI
AS SOBER AS A JUDGE
CHAPTER XXVII
THE FINANCIAL LOADSTONE
CHAPTER XXVIII
HOMEWARD BOUND
CHAPTER XXIX
ACHING HEARTS AND LAUGHING FACES
CHAPTER XXX
AS FAITHFUL AS A DOG
CHAPTER XXXI
A TEACUP STORM
CHAPTER XXXII
RESUMPTION OF DICK'S GOOD TEMPER
CHAPTER XXXIII
A TANGLED TRINITY
CHAPTER XXXIV
OUR SEAT
CHAPTER XXXV
CHRISTMAS EVE
CHAPTER XXXVI
THE CHRISTMAS BOX
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