Copyright, 1900, 1903.
By MRS. MARY J. HOLMES.
[All rights reserved.]
The Merivale Banks. Issued September, 1903.
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
|---|---|---|
| I. | The Banks | [5] |
| II. | Herbert and Louie | [16] |
| III. | Invitations for the Party | [34] |
| IV. | The Morning of the Party | [42] |
| V. | The Run | [50] |
| VI. | Louie Comes to the Rescue | [71] |
| VII. | The Judge | [83] |
| VIII. | Louie and Fred | [91] |
| IX. | The Party | [104] |
| X. | On the Grey Piazza | [121] |
| XI. | Keeping the Secret | [132] |
| XII. | Mr. Grey | [155] |
| XIII. | The Crash | [177] |
| XIV. | Louie’s Courage | [199] |
| XV. | The Session | [215] |
| XVI. | Severing the Tie | [223] |
| XVII. | The Shadow of Death | [233] |
| XVIII. | Mr. Grey’s Story | [248] |
| XIX. | The End and After | [256] |
| XX. | On the Other Side | [269] |
| XXI. | At the Savoy | [281] |
| XXII. | In Paris | [290] |
| XXIII. | Louie and Miss Percy | [299] |
| XXIV. | At Home | [309] |
The Merivale Banks
CHAPTER I
THE BANKS
There were two of them: the First National, familiarly known as the White Bank, and a private bank, known as the Grey Bank, and they stood side by side in the same imposing block, with marble front and massive doors of oak, and broad granite steps. High up in the cornice was an inscription telling that the building had been erected in 1875 by Robert White, Esq. He would like to have had Judge Robert White, instead of Robert White, Esq., so proud was he of the title held for a year only, and for which he was indebted to the resignation of an intimate friend and the influence of money. But his wife dissuaded him from it, but could not keep off the “Esq.” He was both a judge and a ‘squire, he said, having held the office of Justice of the Peace for two terms, and being called ‘squire before he became a judge, and one of the titles should go down to posterity.