Under Handicap - A Novel by Jackson Gregory
page 13 of 337 (03%)
page 13 of 337 (03%)
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the season! What do you think?"
Conniston laughed carelessly. "You're an impressionable young thing, Hapgood." "Am I?" grunted Roger. "Just the same, I know a fine-looking woman when I clap my bright eyes on her. And I'd like to camp on her trail as long as the sun shines! Say"--his voice half losing its eternal drawl--"who do you suppose she is? Her old man might own about a million acres of this God-forsaken country. If she goes on through to 'Frisco--" "You wouldn't be strong for stopping off out here?" the fat man put in genially. Hapgood shuddered. And to Greek Conniston there came a sudden inspiration. "Anyway," Roger Hapgood went on in his customary drawl, "I'm going to find out. It's little Roger to learn something about the prairie flower. I'll soon tell you who she is," he added, rising from his seat. But he never did. For one thing, young Conniston was not there when Roger returned five minutes later, and it is extremely doubtful if Roger Hapgood would have told how his venture had fared. Being duly impressed with the fascination of his own debonair little person, and having the imagination of a cow, he had smirked his way to the girl, who now sat in the observation-car, and had begun on the weather. |
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