The Day of Days - An Extravaganza by Louis Joseph Vance
page 94 of 307 (30%)
page 94 of 307 (30%)
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"He ain't come in yet," said the latter; "but he's liable to be here
any minute now." "Oh, yes," said P. Sybarite brightly, after a brief pause--"Mr. Penfield, of course. Sorry I can't wait." "Well, you'll want your hat before you go--won't you?" Placing an incredulous hand upon the crown of his head, P. Sybarite realised that it was covered exclusively with hair. "I must have put it down somewhere upstairs," he murmured in panic. "Mebbe you left it with Pete before you went up." "Perhaps I did." Turning back to the lounge, he entered to find it deserted save for the somnolent old gentleman and the hospitable Pete, but for whom P. Sybarite would probably never have known the delirious joy of that internal celebration or found the courage to risk his first bet. And suddenly the fifty-cent tip previously bestowed upon the servitor seemed, to one unexpectedly fallen heir to the princely fortune then in P. Sybarite's pockets, the very nadir of beggarliness. "Pete," said he with owlish gravity, "I begin to see that I have done you an inexcusable injustice." Giggling, the negro scratched his head. |
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