V. V.'s Eyes by Henry Sydnor Harrison
page 19 of 700 (02%)
page 19 of 700 (02%)
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for no other amateur, not on your life. Yet old V.V. was kind of
puzzling at times, as now; wild-talking, then kind of reserved all of a sudden, like pulling down a shade on you. Talked different at different times.... Business awaited the Commissioner at his office in the Capitol, as he now recalled. However, V.V. was opening his dingy old door. Without, in the corridor, there was seen standing a scraggly-bearded individual in a ragged shirt, which offered glimpses of a hairy chest in need of soap. A stranger this chanced to be, but the genus was by no means unfamiliar in the environs of the Dabney House. The young doctor's speaking countenance, confronting him, appeared to fall a little. Doubtless he had learned by now the usual business of such as these. "Good morning," he said, in rather a firm way. "What can I do for you?" The caller, having turned a china-blue gaze upon his host, wore a confused air. He spoke in a furry, plaintive voice, professional in its way. "Jes lookin' fer the Doc a minute, sir, that's all. You ain't him, are yer?" "Why not?..." And then it came over Vivian who this man must be: surely no other than the Dabney House prodigal, spouse of his own fellow-lodger, landlady, and _blanchisseuse_. Upon that thought he stepped out into the hall, closing the office door behind him upon Sam O'Neill. |
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