National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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Please say goodbye for us to Mrs. Savage. Tell her when we get home we expect to find her downstairs again and enjoying the view from that big window of hers where sheâs always loved to sit. Tell her papa wants to come with me to see her. He wants to talk with her about the old days when this was a little town. There arenât so many left now he can do that with, though I know Mrs. Savage regards him as a mere youth, comparatively! He asks me to say goodbye to Mr. Oliphant and all of you for himâ âand for myself I close with goodbye to you and send you my best love, always.
âLordy!â Dan said, staring at this missive when he had finished reading it. âShe is goinâ to be gone a long while! I donât get to see her often, but itâs always mighty satisfactory to know sheâs thereâ âjust next door. That houseâll look pretty empty for a while, wonât it?â He sighed. âWell, I suppose Iâd better go and let Lena know thereâs nothinâ to disturb her now about the christening.â
Mrs. Oliphant told him lightly that she had already informed her daughter-in-law of Marthaâs departure, and that it would be better for him not to mention the subject again;â âLena had selected his aunt Olive as a proper godmother. Dan looked rueful, but muttered an unenthusiastic consent and went into the library to consult his father upon the best way to raise money in thirteen days.
Mr. Oliphant was unable to offer him either the money itself or practical advice how to get it. âIâm afraid it looks like pretty hard luck this time, Dan, old fellow,â he said. âItâs funny a man with as good a practice as mine canât ever seem to be able to lay his hands on a little cash that doesnât have to go right out on some old debt. If I just didnât have to meet that confounded note I went on for poor old Tom Vertrees Iâ ââ
âNo, no,â his son protested;â ââI wouldnât let you, if you could. My conscienceâd trouble me about what I did let you do for me if I wasnât so sure youâll get paid back with seven percent interest as soon as I begin to get these lots to sellinâ off a little faster.â
âWhat about the three men your mother tells me have been out there looking at lots since you sold the first one? Couldnât you offer them a reduction in the price for a little cash in hand?â
âI did,â Dan replied. âI did that the first thing with each of âem. But one of âem told a darkey Iâve got workinâ out there he thought he could get what he wanted still cheaper after the mortgage is foreclosed; and I guess maybe the other two thought the same way about it. I guess thatâs the way those seven people felt that came when I tried to auction off some lots awhile back.â
âIâm afraid so. I hope you arenât going to take it too hard, Dan.â
âTake what too hard, sir?â
âThere are other things you can go into, my boy. Youâve shown youâve got immense energy and perseverance. They may laugh at you, but you can be sure they like the grit youâve shown, and if you do have to give up the ideaâ ââ
âWhat idea, sir?â
âI mean the idea of this Addition,â his father explained. âIf the timeâs come when you have to let it goâ ââ
âOrnaby?â Dan interrupted with an incredulity wholly untouched by the facts confronting him. âWhy, you just put any such notion out of your mind, sir.â And he repeated the extreme comparison he had made the night before. âWhy, Iâm not goinâ to let Ornaby go any more than I am our little namesake upstairs in his cradle! Iâm goinâ to keep it this time and every time! Iâve got thirteen days left and Iâll find some way!â
He kept Ornaby âthis time,â but in spite of his determined prophecy and all he did to fulfil it, six of his thirteen days passed and he had not found the way. Indeed, he did not find the way at all; for it was found through none of his seeking. On the seventh of the thirteen days his grandmother sent for him to come to talk to her in the evening; and when he sat down beside her and for a moment covered the ghostly hand on the coverlet with his own, he told her truthfully that she was looking better.
âWhy, a great deal better!â he said. âI guess youâre goinâ to do what Martha said in her message, grandma, and get downstairs again before she comes home.â
âDo you think so?â she said in a voice a little stronger than it was when he had last talked with her. âYou think I might fool that doctor after all?â
âBut doesnât he say youâre better, grandma?â
âYes,â she said, and smiled faintly. âBut he doesnât think so. Told me this morning I was better and then came three times during the day! He doesnât fool anybody.â
âBut youâre goinâ to get well,â her grandson assured her. âWhat I want to know is: When are you goinâ to let me bring that baby to see you? Mother says you donâtâ ââ
âNo, no,â she interrupted peevishly. âI donât want to see any babies.â
âBut, grandma, youâve never seen any baby likeâ ââ
âNo, no!â
âBut you donât understand what a baby can be like,â he persisted. âI donât know I ever thought much of babies generally, either; but Iâve found out thereâs just as much difference between âem as there is between people. Think of this, for instance: one day I was bendinâ down over him, just lookinâ at himâ âand this was before he was even four weeks old, rememberâ âand all at once he took the notion I must be kind of funny. He broke right out in a laugh! He did! It was a real laugh, too, though a good many people might
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