The Port of Adventure by Charles Norris Williamson;Alice Muriel Williamson
page 118 of 390 (30%)
page 118 of 390 (30%)
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The likeness between Mr. Sealman and a codfish became so marked that
Angela feared he was going to be ill. "You don't know what the car can do," he answered reproachfully. "Perhaps not," she admitted. "Very well, we'll start at eight." "Better make it earlier." She made it earlier, and was actually ready; but at half-past eight Sealman appeared on foot. Of the car's health he said nothing, but of his mother's health he said much. She had suffered a relapse. The doctor had been with her all night. How Sealman was going to pay the bill he did not know. Would Mrs. May go to Santa Catalina Island this morning, and to Riverside to-morrow? There was time to catch the boat. The doctor's bill was a trump card. Angela consented to wait for Riverside, and she took Kate to that fair island loved by Californians, and by fishermen all over the world. The name Avalon alone would have lured her; for who would not set sail for Avalon at a moment's notice? Santa Catalina is Corsica in miniature, Corsica without Napoleon or vendetta. But it has sea-gardens, fathoms deep under green water, where flowers bloom and fish glitter in a dazzle of jewelled armour beneath the glass floors of flat-bottomed boats. The fishermen were catching yellow-tail that day, too, just as Franklin Merriam had caught them in his time; and his daughter went back to Los Angeles full of thoughts of him. |
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