Cap'n Eri by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 125 of 316 (39%)
page 125 of 316 (39%)
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relation of mine--Elsie, you ain't goin' to no hotel, that is, unless
you're real set on it. Your grandpa's here and we're here, and there's room enough. I don't want to say too much, but I'd like to have you b'lieve that me and Perez and Jerry want you to stay right in this house jest as long's you stop in Orham. Now you will, won't you?" And so it was settled, and Captain Perez harnessed Daniel and went to the station for the trunk. That evening, just before going to bed, the captains stood by the door of the sick room watching Elsie and the lady from Nantucket as they sat beside John Baxter's bed. Mrs. Snow was knitting, and Elsie was reading. Later, as Captain Eri peered out of the dining-room window to take a final look at the sky in order to get a line on the weather, he said slowly: "Fellers, do you know what I was thinkin' when I see them two women in there with John? I was thinkin' that it must be a mighty pleasant thing to know that if you're took sick somebody like that 'll take care of you." Perez nodded. "I think so, too," he said. But if this was meant to influence the betrothed one, it didn't succeed, apparently, for all Captain Jerry said was: "Humph! 'Twould take more than that to make me hanker after a stroke of palsy." |
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