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Page:The Copper Box - Fletcher (1923).djvu/37

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The Second Stranger
35

"Pooh, pooh!" he said. "We'll just be glad. And there's no need to be dull, my girl, when you're about!" he added, nodding at his ward. "A lively damsel, this, Craye; the air of the hills is in her blood!"

"Miss Durham, sir, is, I am sure, one of those admirable hostesses who could never let a guest be anything but happy," I said, with a glance towards the object of my compliment. "And," I added, more seriously, "I should be very ungrateful not to accept your kind invitation. I won't let you get tired of me."

"Mr. Craye thinks he could paint a picture of the house, with the hills for a background, Jimmie," remarked Miss Durham. "You'd buy that, wouldn't you?"

"Hoots, toots! We'll see, woman, we'll see!" answered Mr. Parslewe. "There's finer subjects than this old place, but you'll not see them to-day, my lad," he added, turning to me. "The snow's thick and deep all round our walls, and what you'll see of the land for the next twenty-four hours, and maybe more, 'll be from the top of our tower. And a grand observation post it is, too!"

He took me up the tower after breakfast