The Adventures of Sally by P. G. Wodehouse (good books for 7th graders .TXT) π
Read free book Β«The Adventures of Sally by P. G. Wodehouse (good books for 7th graders .TXT) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Read book online Β«The Adventures of Sally by P. G. Wodehouse (good books for 7th graders .TXT) πΒ». Author - P. G. Wodehouse
βYes, a kennels.β
βWhat a weird mind you have, Ginger. You couldn't say kennels at first, could you? That wouldn't have made it difficult enough. I suppose, if anyone asked you where you had your lunch, you would say, 'Oh, at a thingamajig for mutton chops'... Ginger, my lad, there is something in this. I believe for the first time in our acquaintance you have spoken something very nearly resembling a mouthful. You're wonderful with dogs, aren't you?β
βI'm dashed keen on them, and I've studied them a bit. As a matter of fact, though it seems rather like swanking, there isn't much about dogs that I don't know.β
βOf course. I believe you're a sort of honorary dog yourself. I could tell it by the way you stopped that fight at Roville. You plunged into a howling mass of about a million hounds of all species and just whispered in their ears and they stopped at once. Why, the more one examines this, the better it looks. I do believe it's the one thing you couldn't help making a success of. It's very paying, isn't it?β
βWorks out at about a hundred per cent on the original outlay, I've been told.β
βA hundred per cent? That sounds too much like something of Fillmore's for comfort. Let's say ninety-nine and be conservative. Ginger, you have hit it. Say no more. You shall be the Dog King, the biggest thingamajigger for dogs in the country. But how do you start?β
βWell, as a matter of fact, while I was up at White Plains, I ran into a cove who had a place of the sort and wanted to sell out. That was what made me think of it.β
βYou must start to-day. Or early to-morrow.β
βYes,β said Ginger doubtfully. βOf course, there's the catch, you know.β
βWhat catch?β
βThe capital. You've got to have that. This fellow wouldn't sell out under five thousand dollars.β
βI'll lend you five thousand dollars.β
βNo!β said Ginger.
Sally looked at him with exasperation. βGinger, I'd like to slap you,β she said. It was maddening, this intrusion of sentiment into business affairs. Why, simply because he was a man and she was a woman, should she be restrained from investing money in a sound commercial undertaking? If Columbus had taken up this bone-headed stand towards Queen Isabella, America would never have been discovered.
βI can't take five thousand dollars off you,β said Ginger firmly.
βWho's talking of taking it off me, as you call it?β stormed Sally. βCan't you forget your burglarious career for a second? This isn't the same thing as going about stealing defenceless girls' photographs. This is business. I think you would make an enormous success of a dog-place, and you admit you're good, so why make frivolous objections? Why shouldn't I put money into a good thing? Don't you want me to get rich, or what is it?β
Ginger was becoming confused. Argument had never been his strong point.
βBut it's such a lot of money.β
βTo you, perhaps. Not to me. I'm a plutocrat. Five thousand dollars! What's five thousand dollars? I feed it to the birds.β
Ginger pondered woodenly for a while. His was a literal mind, and he knew nothing of Sally's finances beyond the fact that when he had first met her she had come into a legacy of some kind. Moreover, he had been hugely impressed by Fillmore's magnificence. It seemed plain enough that the Nicholases were a wealthy family.
βI don't like it, you know,β he said.
βYou don't have to like it,β said Sally. βYou just do it.β
A consoling thought flashed upon Ginger.
βYou'd have to let me pay you interest.β
βLet you? My lad, you'll have to pay me interest. What do you think this isβa round game? It's a cold business deal.β
βTopping!β said Ginger relieved. βHow about twenty-five per cent.β
βDon't be silly,β said Sally quickly. βI want three.β
βNo, that's all rot,β protested Ginger. βI mean to sayβthree. I don't,β he went on, making a concession, βmind saying twenty.β
βIf you insist, I'll make it five. Not more.β
βWell, ten, then?β
βFive!β
βSuppose,β said Ginger insinuatingly, βI said seven?β
βI never saw anyone like you for haggling,β said Sally with disapproval. βListen! Six. And that's my last word.β
βSix?β
βSix.β
Ginger did sums in his head.
βBut that would only work out at three hundred dollars a year. It isn't enough.β
βWhat do you know about it? As if I hadn't been handling this sort of deal in my life. Six! Do you agree?β
βI suppose so.β
βThen that's settled. Is this man you talk about in New York?β
βNo, he's down on Long Island at a place on the south shore.β
βI mean, can you get him on the 'phone and clinch the thing?β
βOh, yes. I know his address, and I suppose his number's in the book.β
βThen go off at once and settle with him before somebody else snaps him up. Don't waste a minute.β
Ginger paused at the door.
βI say, you're absolutely sure about this?β
βOf course.β
βI mean to say...β
βGet on,β said Sally.
2
The window of Sally's sitting-room looked out on to a street which, while not one of the city's important arteries, was capable, nevertheless, of affording a certain amount of entertainment to the observer: and after Ginger had left, she carried the morning paper to the window-sill and proceeded to divide her attention between a third reading of the fight-report and a lazy survey of the outer world. It was a beautiful day, and the outer world was looking its best.
She had not been at her post for many minutes when a taxi-cab stopped at the apartment-house, and she was surprised and interested to see her brother Fillmore heave himself out of the interior. He paid the driver, and the cab moved off, leaving him on the sidewalk casting a large shadow in the sunshine. Sally was on the point of calling to him, when his behaviour became so odd that astonishment checked her.
Comments (0)