Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Peter.

Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Peter.

“And now tell me about the supper,” asked Jack.

“Oh, that was all right.  We whooped it up till they closed the bar and then went home with the milk.  Had an awful head on me next morning; nearly fell off the scaffold, I was so sleepy.  How’s Miss Corinne?  I’m going to stop in on my way uptown this afternoon and apologize to her.  I have her note, but I haven’t had a minute to let her know why I didn’t come.  I’ll show her the ring; then she’ll know why.  Saw it, didn’t you?”

Jack hadn’t seen it.  He had been too excited to look.  Now he examined it.  With the flash of the gems Biffy sat up straight, and the others craned their heads.  Garry slipped it off his finger for the hundredth time for similar inspections, and Jack utilized the pause in the conversation to say that Corinne had received the note and that in reply she had vented most of her disappointment on himself, a disclosure which sent a cloud across Garry’s face.

The cocktail hour had now arrived—­one hour before dinner, an hour which was fixed by that distinguished compounder of herbs and spirits, Mr. Biffton—­and the room began filling up.  Most of the members were young fellows but a few years out of college, men who renewed their Society and club life within its walls; some were from out of town—­students in the various professions.  Here and there was a man of forty—­one even of fifty-five—­who preferred the gayer and fresher life of the younger generation to the more solemn conclaves of the more exclusive clubs further up and further down town.  As is usual in such combinations, the units forming the whole sought out their own congenial units and were thereafter amalgamated into groups, a classification to be found in all clubs the world over.  While Biffy and his chums could always be found together, there were other less-fortunate young fellows, not only without coupon shears, but sometimes without the means of paying their dues—­who formed a little coterie of their own, and who valued and used the club for what it brought them, their election carrying with it a certain social recognition:  it also widened one’s circle of acquaintances and, perhaps, of clients.

The sound of loud talking now struck upon Jack’s ear.  Something more important than the angle of a parasol or the wearing of out-of-date spats was engrossing the attention of a group of young men who had just entered.  Jack caught such expressions as—­“Might as well have picked his pocket. ...”  “He’s flat broke, anyhow. ...”  “Got to sell his house, I hear. ...”

Then came a voice louder than the others.

“There’s Breen talking to Minott and Biffy.  He’s in the Street; he’ll know. ...  Say, Breen!”

Jack rose to his feet and met the speaker half way.

“What do you know, Breen, about that scoop in gold stock?  Heard anything about it?  Who engineered it?  Charley Gilbert’s cleaned out, I hear.”

“I don’t know anything,” said Jack.  “I left the office at noon and came up town.  Who did you say was cleaned out?”

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Project Gutenberg
Peter: a novel of which he is not the hero from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.