[The Astonishing History of Troy Town by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch]@TWC D-Link book
The Astonishing History of Troy Town

CHAPTER XVI
6/11

It's very complicated, I daresay: but I'll be quiet as a mouse, and won't interrupt you at all." She paused for breath.

The Collector smiled, and handed back the invoice.
"It seems all right," he said.

"Let us hurry to the Custom House.
An hour in your company, Geraldine, will transfigure even the dull round of duty." Mrs.Goodwyn-Sandys smiled back divinely.

She thought it extremely probable.
A few minutes later the poet sat by Geraldine's side--sweet proximity!--in the stern of one of Her Majesty's boats, while two "minions," as he was wont in verse to term his subordinates, rowed them towards a shapely barque that had just dropped anchor not far from the Bower Slip.
She flew a yellow flag in sign that she hailed from a foreign port, and as the Customs' boat dropped under her quarter Mr.Moggridge shouted-- "_Maryland_, ahoy!" "Ahoy!" answered a gruff voice, and a red face looked over the side.
"Captain ?" inquired Mr.Moggridge.
"That's me--Uriah T.Potter, Cap'n.

Customs, I guess," said the red-faced man, with a slow look at Mrs.Goodwyn-Sandys.
"Clean bill of health ?" "Waal, two fo'c's'le hands down with whoopin'-cough: take it you won't keep us in quarantine for that." The Collector helped Mrs.Goodwyn-Sandys up the ship's side.


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