Mildred Arkell: A Novel. Vol. 3 (of 3)
LONDON: TINSLEY BROTHERS, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND 1865.
All rights of Translation and Reproduction are reserved.
It happened on that same second of December that Mr. Littelby took his place for the first time as conductor of the business of Mynn and Mynn. He had arrived at Eckford the previous day, as per agreement, but was not installed formally in the office until this. Old Mynn, not in his gout now, had come down early, and was brisk and lively; George Mynn was also there.
He was an admitted solicitor just as much as were Mynn and Mynn; he was to be their confidential locum tenens ; the whole management and conduct of affairs was, during their absence, to fall upon him; he was, in point of fact, to be practically a principal, not a clerk, and at the end of a year, if all went well, he was to be allowed a share in the business, and the firm would be Mynn, Mynn, and Littelby.
It was not, then, to be wondered at, that the chief of the work this day was the inducting him into the particulars of the various cases that Mynn and Mynn happened to have on hand, more especially those that were to come on for trial at the Westerbury assizes, and would require much attention beforehand. They were shut up betimes, the three, in the small room that would in future be Mr. Littelby's—a room which had hitherto been nobody's in particular, for the premises were commodious, but which Mr. Richards had been in the habit of appropriating as his own, not for office purposes, but for private uses. Quite a cargo of articles belonging to Mr. Richards had been there: coats, parcels, pipes, letters, and various other items too numerous to mention. On the previous day, Richards had received a summary mandate to clear it out, as it was about to be put in order for the use of Mr. Littelby. Mr. Richards had obeyed in much dudgeon, and his good feeling towards the new manager—his master in future—was not improved. It had not been friendly previously, for Mr. Richards had a vague idea that his way would not be quite so much his own as it had been.
Mrs. Henry Wood
---
MILDRED ARKELL.
A Novel.
CONTENTS.
MILDRED ARKELL.
DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND—A SURPRISE.
A DOUBTFUL SEARCH.
DETECTION.
ASSIZE SATURDAY.
ASSIZE SUNDAY.
PEACHING TO THE DEAN.
CARR VERSUS CARR.
THE SECOND DAY.
THE SHADOW OF DEATH.
THE GRAVESTONE IN THE CLOISTERS.
THOUGHTLESS WORDS.
MISCONCEPTION.
THE TABLES TURNED.
A RECOGNITION.
MILDRED'S RECOMPENSE.
MISS FAUNTLEROY LOVED AT LAST.
THE END.