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Jacobs, W. W., 1863-1943

"At Sunwich Port, Part 3. Contents: Chapters 11-15"

Smith, coldly.
"They may find all sorts of treasure for you," continued his visitor.
"It's a very old house, Smith, and there may be bags of guineas hidden
away under the flooring. You may be able to retire."
"You're a gentleman as is fond of his joke, Mr. Swann," returned the
boarding-master, lugubriously. "I wish I'd got that 'appy way of looking
at things you 'ave."
"I'm not joking, Smith," said the other, quietly.
Mr. Smith pondered and, stealing a side-glance at him, stood scraping his
foot along the floor.
"There ain't nothing much to tell," he grumbled, "and, mind, the worst
favour you could do to the cap'n would be to put it about how he was
done. He's gone for a little trip instead of 'is son, that's all."
"Little trip!" repeated the other; "you call a whaling cruise a little
trip?"
"No, no, sir," said Mr. Smith, in a shocked voice, "I ain't so bad as
that; I've got some 'art, I hope. He's just gone for a little trip with
'is old pal Hardy on the _Conqueror_. Kybird's idea it was."
"Don't you know it's punishable?" demanded the shipbroker, recovering.
Mr. Smith shook his head and became serious. "The cap'n fell into 'is
own trap," he said, slowly. "There's no lor for 'im! He'd only get
laughed at. The idea of trying to get me to put little Amelia Kybird's
young man away.


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