People of the Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about People of the Whirlpool.

People of the Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about People of the Whirlpool.

Mrs. Latham sailed last week, and Sylvia is now in New York visiting her father at his hotel and arranging her future plans.  To-morrow she returns, and together with Lavinia Dorman goes to the Alton cottage until late August or early September, when her wedding is expected to take place.

At the last moment Mrs. Latham changed her plan of leaving the Bluff cottage in the charge of servants, had all her personal belongings moved away, and offered the place for sale.

“Yes, my dear,” said Mrs. Jenks-Smith, who, being a sort of honorary stewardess of the Colony, usually remains a full week after the breaking-up time, and frequently runs in to report progress, “she’s not coming back; being divorced she doesn’t need to claim residence here.  The place is so convenient to town, too, but I can’t really blame her,—­though of course I’m glad poor Sylvia’s to be happy in her own way, and all that, for it’s plain to be seen with one eye she’s too slow to go her mother’s pace—­you couldn’t expect Vivvy Latham, over all the hurdles but one, and almost at the end of the race, to relish her daughter’s mother-in-law being in the egg trade in the very neighbourhood.

“At first everybody thought that the Bradfords, mother and son, would probably give up work and float on Sylvester J. Latham’s money, for they say (to spite Vivvy, most likely) he took to Horace Bradford at the first, for what did the young fellow do but go straight to town and look Sylvester up, and make a clean breast of it before the gossips could even twist their tongues around the affair.

“Sylvester thought he could handle Bradford to suit himself, move him to New York, jam him into business, cut up the farm in house lots, reorganize his affairs, and declare a dividend out of him for his own benefit, as he does with lame railroads,—­but not a bit of it!

“’With what you may choose to do for Sylvia personally, it would be selfish for me to interfere; but our way of living can only be planned upon the basis of what I earn,’ said Horace, looking Mr. Latham in the face, and he’s a big man too,—­Sylvia gets her height from him.

“It rather knocked Sylvester out, because it was a kind of spunk he’d never met, and he told Jenks-Smith about it.  Thought they didn’t speak?  Oh yes, they’re thick again, just now, over some kind of a deal.

“Did you know Jenks-Smith had bought Vivvy’s house here?  Yes, the deed was passed the day she sailed.  We’ve got to keep the Bluffs select, you know, and if the house was put on the market, goodness knows who might buy it, just to get in with us.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
People of the Whirlpool from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.