uk
r. Stil
eep and dust the o
id,
u d
s,
tate, was my esteemed uncle. "I must say, young man, th
e not falsified-not t
n't contr
ing the tr
e, and then dare to tell me that this office ha
nto his office with one hand, while with the
ntly some business matters had gone wrong, and he intended to vent the spleen raised thereby upon me. He was a high-strun
me I was a scholar at the Hargrove Military and Commercial Academy, a first class t
in a terrible railway accident in England. The death of both my parents at once was a fearful blow to me, and for a long while I could not think, and was utterly unable to judge what was ta
s expected to clean everything as bright as a pin. Then I went to the post-office, a
ents a week spending money-not a large sum, but one with w
do not care to call her my aunt-was a very proud woman who had come from a blue-blooded Boston family, and she
le miss of seventeen, never spoke to me excepting when she wanted something done, and Gu
ce, and my Sunday suit was two years old. I had my breakfast with the servants before the others were up, took my noon lunch wi
During my parents' lives I had had nearly everything that my heart wished, and to be thus cu
lewoman and my father a gentleman, and I was conceited enough to think that by both breeding and education I was f
knew a soul. But my work kept me so busy I had no time to think of my
Mr. Ira Mason, who had his law offices in the same building with Stillwell, Grinder & Co. I h
had finished he told me that if matters did not mend, or got wor
n patents, and whom he had taken elsewhere; the reason given being that Stillwell, Grinder & Co
ious, to give me a holiday, which I intended to spend with an old school chum of mine, Har
received numerous invitations from them to spend some time at
or him to refuse, as it was the middle of July, and business was dull. I had saved my money for som
ary, there was work to do, and, besides, Gus was going to take the day
oliday for two years, and was clearly entitled to one. Gus had had a week at Christmas, and half a dozen
ations, so that I might find him home, and we could have a good time. He would surely exp
Gus had seen me do so, and had made a mean remark concerning the
the point of hitting me when my uncle came in and stopped the row. But my cousin was fearf
and so set to with a will to clean up as usual. This job took fully half an hour, and when it was done I crossed
Gus enter his father's private office, closing the door after him. I was on the point of following, w
e door softly behind him. He paused for a moment in the hallway, an
ing busy at his desk in a smaller office beyond. Presently I heard my uncle's well-known step, and hu
neglect your work," he went on, in a rising voice. "
ly not half an hour ag
to contradict
e truth," was a
at look
, and the bottle of ink on the desk had been upset, creating a small blue-black river
d to get square with me, and this was his method of doing so
k like it?" repeated Mr. St
do this, U
"Well, who did, then? We
a two-legged cat, but thinking he
know. Gus
! I left him at hom
ot ten minutes
uld he make a pig-pen of the office,
it up, and he wanted to get even wit
asn't beyond such childishness! You did this
t do--"
word! Clean i
to reason with him. So getting a sponge and some water, I began to clean up the
you come back from the post-office. I want some let
he letters
he cried, "or I'll crack you o
way to the post-office