Strawberry Acres eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Strawberry Acres.

Strawberry Acres eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Strawberry Acres.

“I think it’s a godsend, if ever anything was,” she was saying.  “Here’s Max, killing himself in the bank, and Alec growing pale and grouchy in the office, and even Bob—­” She was interrupted by a chorus of protests against her terms of description.

“I’m not killing myself!”

“Pale and grouchy!  I’m not a patch on—­”

“What’s the matter with Bob, Sally Lunn?”

“And Uncle Timmy,” continued Sally, undisturbed by interpolations to which she was quite accustomed, “pining for fresh air—.”

“I walk in the park every day, my dear,” Uncle Timothy felt obliged to remind her.

“Yes, I know.  But you’ve lived in a little city flat just as long as it’s good for you, and you need to be turned outdoors.  So do we all.  Oh, boys, and Uncle Timmy!—­I just sat there, crying and smiling under my veil in that dreadful office—­crying to think that I couldn’t cry for Uncle Maxwell, because he was so cold and queer to us always, and yet he had given us this property, after all—.”

“And a mighty small fraction of the estate it is, I hope you understand!” growled Max.

But Sally went on without minding.  Everybody was used to Max’s growls.  “And smiling because I couldn’t help it just to think we had a chance at last to get out of the city.  We can do it.  Five miles by trolley is nothing for you boys, or for me, when I need to come in.”

“You’re not talking about our going to live out there!” Max’s tone was derisive.

“Why not?”

“Have you seen the place lately?”

“Not since I was a little girl, but I remember I thought it was lovely then.”

“It isn’t lovely now, if it ever was—­which I doubt.  In the first place it belongs to that little suburb of Wybury—­as commonplace a village as ever existed within five miles of as big a city as this.  In the second place it’s as much an abandoned farm as neglect can make a place that was once, I suppose, an aristocratic sort of country home.  The old mansion is as big as a barn, and as hopeless.  You couldn’t any more make a home out of it!—­Why, you could put this whole apartment into the room at the left of the hall!”

“How do you know so much about it?” demanded Sally.  “None of us has been there since Aunt Alicia died—­that was when we were children, and Uncle Maxwell used to spend his summers there.”

“He hasn’t spent them there since she died,” Max asserted.  “How do I know so much about it?  I was down there last summer with Frank Sustis.  His father sent him out to look the place over, with a view to buying it himself for a summer home.  You should have heard Prank jeer at the idea while we were going about.”

“It makes no difference,” persisted Sally, removing her hat and folding the veil with care.  “I want to see it.  We’ll go out to-morrow, won’t we?”

She appealed to her second brother, Alec, a young fellow of twenty, who had thrown himself listlessly into a chair but who was listening attentively to the discussion.  He nodded.  “Of course.  You couldn’t keep one of us away, even Max.  He wouldn’t be done out of the pleasure of showing us over the place and pointing out the defects, if, by keeping still, he could own the whole ranch himself.”

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Project Gutenberg
Strawberry Acres from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.