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Mary-'Gusta by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 286 of 462 (61%)
courthouse, he rose from his chair in the inner room and, without
waiting for his clerk to announce the visitor, opened the door himself.

The caller whose question the clerk was about to answer, or would
probably have answered as soon as he finished staring in awestruck
admiration, was a young lady. The Judge looked at her over his
spectacles and then through them and decided that she was a stranger. He
stepped forward.

"I am Judge Baxter," he said. "Did you wish to see me?"

She turned toward him. "Yes," she said simply. "I should like to talk
with you for a few moments if you are not too busy."

The Judge hesitated momentarily. Only the week before a persistent and
fluent young female had talked him into the purchase of a set of
"Lives of the Great Jurists," the same to be paid for in thirty-five
installments of two dollars each. Mrs. Baxter had pronounced the "Great
Jurists" great humbugs, and her husband, although he pretended to find
the "Lives" very interesting, was secretly inclined to agree with her.
So he hesitated. The young woman, evidently noticing his hesitation,
added:

"If you are engaged just now I shall wait. I came to see you on a matter
of business, legal business."

Judge Baxter tried to look as if no thought of his visitor's having
another purpose had entered his mind.

"Oh, yes, certainly! Of course!" he said hastily, and added: "Will you
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