[David Harum by Edward Noyes Westcott]@TWC D-Link book
David Harum

CHAPTER XXXIX
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She was settin' lookin' out o' winder when I come in, an' when I spoke to her she didn't give me no answer except to say, lookin' up at the clock, 'What's kept ye like this ?' "'Little matter o' bus'nis,' I says, lookin' as smilin' 's I knew how, an' holdin' the box behind me.
"'What you got there ?' she says, slewin' her head 'round to git a sight at it.
"'Little matter o' bus'nis,' I says agin, bringin' the box to the front an' feelin' my face straighten out 's if you'd run a flat iron over it.
She seen the name on the paper.
"'You ben spendin' your time there, have ye ?' she says, settin' up in her chair an' pointin' with her finger at the box.

'_That's_ where you ben the last half hour, hangin' 'round with them minxes in Mis' Shoolbred's.

What's in that box ?' she says, with her face a-blazin'.
"'Now, Lizy,' I says, 'I wa'n't there ten minutes if I was that, an' I ben buyin' you a bunnit.' "'_You--ben--buyin'-- me--a--bunnit_ ?' she says, stifnin' up stiffer 'n a stake.
"'Yes,' I says, 'I heard you say somethin' 'bout a spring bunnit, an' I thought, seein' how economicle you was, that I'd buy you a nicer one 'n mebbe you'd feel like yourself.

I thought it would please ye,' I says, tryin' to rub her the right way.
"'Let me see it,' she says, in a voice dryer 'n a lime-burner's hat, pressin' her lips together an' reachin' out fer the box.

Wa'al, sir, she snapped the string with a jerk an' sent the cover skimmin' across the room, an' then, as she hauled the parcel out of the box, she got up onto her feet.


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