[Ranching for Sylvia by Harold Bindloss]@TWC D-Link book
Ranching for Sylvia

CHAPTER XIX
1/21

CHAPTER XIX.
AN OPPOSITION MOVE It was a wet and chilly night, and Singleton sat in an easy chair beside the hearth in his city quarters with an old pipe in his hand.
The room was shabbily furnished, the hearthrug had a hole in it, the carpet was threadbare, and Singleton's attire harmonized with his surroundings, though the box of cigars and one or two bottles and siphons on the table suggested that he expected visitors.

The loose Tuxedo jacket he had bought in America was marked by discolored patches; his carpet slippers were dilapidated.

His means, though long restricted, would have warranted better accommodations; but his clothes were comfortable and he did not think it worth while to put on anything smarter.

There was a vein of rather bitter pride in the man, and he would not, out of deference to any other person's views, alter conditions that suited him.
A notebook lay beside him and several bulky treatises on botany were scattered about, but he had ceased work and was thinking.

After the shadow and silence of the tropical bush, to which he was most accustomed, the rattle of the traffic in the wet street below was stimulating; but his reflections were not pleasant.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books