Five Thousand an Hour : how Johnny Gamble won the heiress eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about Five Thousand an Hour .

Five Thousand an Hour : how Johnny Gamble won the heiress eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about Five Thousand an Hour .

“I’ll consider the matter,” she said musingly.

“What about the price?” asked Johnny, whose mind had been fixed upon that important detail.

“Oh, yes—­the price,” agreed Miss Purry indifferently; “I’ve been holding it at two hundred thousand.  I shall continue to hold it at that figure.”

“Then that’s the price,” decided Johnny.  “Can’t we come to an agreement now?”

“To-morrow afternoon at three,” she dryly insisted.

He saw that she meant to-morrow afternoon at three.

“Can’t I arrange with you for a twenty-four-hour option?” he begged, becoming anxious.

“I shall not bind myself in any way,” she declared.  “To-morrow afternoon at three.”

“That’s a beautiful piece of property,” commented Johnny as they drove by.  “By George, the apartment-house will shut those people off from the river!”

“That’s the only reason she’d be willing to sell,” replied Val.  “What set you hunting up this property?”

“The De Luxe Apartments Company intends confining its operations to this quarter.  They’ll go scouting among the listed properties first--and they may not find this one until I am asking them two hundred and fifty for it.”

That afternoon, Johnny, always prompt, was ahead of time at the final committee meeting of the Babies’ Fund Fair, but Constance Joy did not seem in the least surprised at his punctuality.

“I was in hopes you’d come early,” she greeted him.  “I want to show you the score board of your game.”

“Honest, did you make one?” he asked, half-incredulous of his good fortune, as she led the way into the library; and his eyes further betrayed his delight when she showed him the score board itself.

“See,” she pointed out, “you were to make five thousand dollars an hour for two hundred working hours, beginning on April twenty-second and ending May thirty-first.”

Johnny examined the board with eager interest.  It was ruled into tiny squares, forty blocks long and seven deep.

“I want to frame that when we’re through,” he said, admiring the perfect drawing.

“Suppose you lose?” she suggested, smiling to herself at his unconscious use of the word “we”.

“No chance,” he stoutly returned.  “I have to paste a five-thousand-dollar bill in each one of those blocks.”

“You’ve kept your paste brush busy,” she congratulated him, marveling anew at how he had done it, as she glanced at the record which she had herself set down.  “I have the little squares crossed off up to two hundred and sixty-five thousand dollars.”

“The money’s in Loring’s bank,” he cheerfully assured her.  “That pays me up to next Tuesday, May second, at two o’clock.  This is two o’clock, Thursday.  I have twenty-four working hours to loaf.”

“Lazy!” she bantered him.  “That isn’t loafing time; it’s only a safety margin.”

Her eagerness about it pleased Johnny very much.  When he had his million he intended to ask her to marry him; and it was pleasant to have her, all unaware of his purpose, of course, taking such an acute interest in this big game.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Five Thousand an Hour : how Johnny Gamble won the heiress from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.