Judith of the Plains eBook

Marie Manning
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Judith of the Plains.

Judith of the Plains eBook

Marie Manning
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Judith of the Plains.
remaining three had opportunity presented itself.  Supper was a mockery to them, a Barmecide feast.  Each watched his rivals—­and Eudora.  This was a matter of life and death.  There was no time for food.  The girl revelled in the situation to the full of her untaught, unthinking, primitive nature.  She gave the incident a tighter twist by languishing at them in turns.  She smiled, she sighed, she drove them mad by taking crescent bites out of a slice of bread and exhibiting the havoc of her little, white teeth with a delectably dainty gluttony.

Her mother, mumbling her supper with toothless impotency, renewed her youth vicariously, and, while she quarrelled with her daughter from the rising of the sun to the setting of the same, she added the last straw to the burden of the distracted suitors by announcing what a comfort Eudora was to her and how handy she was about the house.

Warren Rodney supported the air of an exile at his own table.  Beyond a preliminary greeting to his daughter’s guests, he said nothing.  His family, in their dealings with him, seemed to accord him the exemptions of extreme age.  He ate with the enthusiasm of a man to whom meals have become the main business in life.

“How’s your mine up to Bad Water comin’ along, Iry?” Orlando inquired, not from any hospitable interest in Ira’s claim, but because he had sundry romantic interests in that neighborhood and hoped to make use of the young prospector’s interest in his sister by securing an invitation to return with him.  Ira regarded the inquiry in the light of a special providence.  Here was his chance to impress Eudora with the splendor of his prospects and at the same time smite the claims of his rivals, and behold! a brother of his lady had led the way.

Ira cleared his throat.  “They tell me she air like to yield a million any day.”  At this Eudora gave him the wealth of her eyes, and her mother reached across two of the glowering suitors and dropped a hot flapjack on his plate.

“Who sez that she air likely to yield a million any day?” inquired Ben Swift, openly flouting such prophecy.  “Yes, who sez it?” inquired Hawks and Taylor, joining forces for the overthrow of the common enemy.

“‘They sez’ is easy talkin’, shore ’nuff,” mumbled Mrs. Rodney, as she helped herself to butter with her own knife.

“A sharp from the Smithsonian Institute at Washington, he said it, and he has taken back speciments with him.”

“Ye can’t keep lackings from freightin’ round speciments—­naw, sir, ye can’t, not till the fool-killer has finished his job.”  Ben Swift charged the table with the statement as the prosecution subtly appeals to the high grade of intelligence on the part of the jury.  The point told.  Eudora, wavering in her donation of hot flapjacks, gave them to Ben Swift.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Judith of the Plains from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.