The Day of the Dog - George Barr McCutcheon

The Day of the Dog

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
GEORGE BARR MCCUTCHEON Author of Grauslark The Sherrods etc
With Illustrations by Harrison Fisher and decorations by Margaret & Helen Maitland Armstrong
New York 1904
SWALLOW (in color) Frontispiece CROSBY DRIVES TO THE STATION THE HANDS HAD GONE TO THEIR DINNER THE BIG RED BARN THE TWO BOYS MRS. DELANCY AND MRS. AUSTIN MR. AUSTIN MRS. DELANCY PLEADS WITH SWALLOW THEY EXAMINE THE DOCUMENTS SHE DELIBERATELY SPREAD OUT THE PAPERS ON THE BEAM (in color) SWALLOW SHE WATCHES HIM DESCEND INTO DANGER MR. CROSBY SHOWS SWALLOW A NEW TRICK SWALLOW'S CHUBBY BODY SHOT SQUARELY THROUGH THE OPENING (in color) THE MAN WITH THE LANTERN MR. HIGGINS HE WAS SPLASHING THROUGH THE SHALLOW BROOK (in color) HE CARRIES HER OVER THE BROOK MRS. HIGGINS THEY ENJOY MRS. HIGGINS'S GOOD SUPPER LONESOMEVILLE THE DEPUTY SHERIFF CROSBY AND THE DEPUTY MRS. DELANCY FALLS ASLEEP THEY GO TO THE THEATRE 'GOOD HEAVENS!' 'WHAT IS IT?' HE CRIED. 'YOU ARE NOT MARRIED, ARE YOU?' (in color) CROSBY WON BOTH SUITS
I'll catch the first train back this evening, Graves. Wouldn't go down there if it were not absolutely necessary; but I have just heard that Mrs. Delancy is to leave for New York to-night, and if I don't see her to-day there will be a pack of troublesome complications. Tell Mrs. Graves she can count me in on the box party to-night.
We'll need you, Crosby. Don't miss the train.
I'll be at the station an hour before the train leaves. Confound it, it's a mean trip down there—three hours through the rankest kind of scenery and three hours back. She's visiting in the country, too, but I can drive out and back in an hour.
On your life, old man, don't fail me.
Don't worry, Graves; all Christendom couldn't keep me in Dexter after four o'clock this afternoon. Good-by. And Crosby climbed into the hansom and was driven away at breakneck speed toward the station.
Crosby was the junior member of the law firm of Rolfe & Crosby, and his trip to the country was on business connected with the settlement of a big estate. Mrs. Delancy, widow of a son of the decedent, was one of the legatees, and she was visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs. Robert Austin, in central Illinois. Mr. Austin owned extensive farming interests near Dexter, and his handsome home was less than two miles from the heart of the town. Crosby anticipated no trouble in driving to the house and back in time to catch the afternoon train for Chicago. It was necessary for Mrs. Delancy to sign certain papers, and he was confident the transaction could not occupy more than half an hour's time.

George Barr McCutcheon
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2004-05-01

Темы

Humorous stories; Inheritance and succession -- Fiction; Love stories; Widows -- Fiction; Adventure stories; United States -- Fiction; Lawyers -- Fiction

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