"
"I can't! Do you care for me? That's what I want to know."
"Obed, you and I ain't young folks. We're gettin' on towards old age.
What would folks say if--"
He threw his arms about her and literally lifted her from the chair.
"I don't care a durn WHAT they say," he shouted, exultantly. "You've
said what I was waitin' for. Or you've looked it, anyhow. Now then, WHEN
shall we be married? That's the next thing for you to say, my girl."
They sat there in the gathering dusk and talked. The captain was
uproariously gay. He could scarcely keep still, but whistled and drummed
tunes upon the chair arm with his fingers. Thankful was more subdued and
quiet, but she was happy, completely happy at last.
"This'll be some boardin'-house, this one of ours," declared the
captain. "We'll build the addition you wanted and we'll make the city
folks sit up and take notice. And," with a gleeful chuckle, "we won't
have any ghost snorin' warnin's, either."
Thankful laughed. "No, we won't," she said. "And yet I'm awfully
grateful to that--that--that pig ghost. If it hadn't been for him that
mortgage would still be hangin' over us. And Solomon would never have
been scared into doin' what he promised Uncle Abner he would do. Perhaps
he'll be a better man, a more generous man to some of his other poor
victims after this. I hope he will."
"So do I, but I have my doubts."
"Well, we'll never kill old Patrick Henry, will we? That would be TOO
ungrateful."
Captain Obed slapped his knee.
Pages:
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407