Part 9 (1/2)
”This is the same suit.” Bill's jest might have brought further nagging upon his shoulders, but Millie's entrance from the dining-room turned Mrs. Jones's attention to her.
”Oh, daddy, you're back!” Millie went quickly to her foster-father and attempted to put her arms about his neck.
He drew away from her, asking, quickly, ”What of it?”
”Are you all right?” Her tones were anxious and her gaze not less so.
Whereupon Bill proved his sobriety just as he had proved it to her mother.
”Now are you satisfied?” he asked, as she smiled at him.
Kissing him, Millie reminded him gently that it was past dinner-time and that he had better go into the dining-room, where something hot awaited him.
”Please come now, daddy,” she added. ”The girls want to get their work done.”
Bill hesitated. He glanced surrept.i.tiously over at the Nevada desk, where, to the best of his knowledge, he had deposited a half-filled flask the night previous. His wife's eye, however, was on him. Suddenly she stepped up to him and took him firmly by the arm.
”Bill Jones,” she said, ”you're comin' right inside now an' eat!
Whatever else is on your mind can wait--an' it might be a waste o' time, anyway!”
Finding himself propelled toward the dining-room, Lightnin' cast an appealing, whimsical glance at Millie, but she covertly shook her head to indicate that even she could not gainsay Mrs. Jones just then.
Left alone, Millie busied herself at the desk with some accounts which she wanted to finish before the arrival of a fresh contingent of guests, due that afternoon. She put down her pencil after a few minutes of work, however, and leaned her elbows on the desk, her chin in her hands thoughtfully. She had a well-defined suspicion as to where Lightnin' had been the night previous, and--well, Millie was curious about it.
Her reflections were interrupted by the entrance of Lemuel Townsend.
There was an air of importance about him. He was frock-coated and altogether spick and span.
”h.e.l.lo, Millie!” he said, walking up to the desk and shaking hands with her. ”I've been trying to get around here all week, but I'm mighty pressed for time these days, you know! How is everything? You're all filled up, I suppose?”
”Nevada is full,” Millie answered, smiling; ”it always is, but the California side is often empty. Oh, it's great fun--I call it the Hotel Lopside! Sometimes I'm sorry that we're giving it up.”
”Oh! Then you've really decided to put through the idea of selling the place!”
”Yes. Mother made up her mind this morning, and I more than approve it, all things considered. Daddy hasn't--hasn't quite agreed, though, but it's for his own good. I don't quite understand daddy's objections. I wanted to talk to him this morning about it, but I didn't get a chance.
There's been something mysterious in his manner lately.”
”Something mysterious--about Lightnin'?”
”Yes,” said Millie, thoughtfully. ”Mother hasn't noticed it, of course, being so busy and worried--and outwardly daddy is his usual easy-going, amiable self. But I have a feeling that he has--or thinks he has--something up his sleeve. Daddy can't hide things from me, you know!
Another thing, he doesn't seem to like Mr. Thomas at all--is downright rude to him at times. I can't understand it, for it isn't like daddy!”
Townsend frowned in a puzzled way. ”Perhaps you're taking some of dear old Lightnin's notions too seriously, Millie,” he remarked. ”Though I must say that I have a great deal of faith in Bill. I've been a little out of touch with the situation lately,” he went on, judicially, ”but from what you and mother have told me about the proposed sale, and from the one or two talks I have had with Mr. Thomas, I am inclined to agree with you and mother that this sale is an excellent idea. So far as I can judge, it is a sound investment and all for the best.”
”Of course it is!” said Millie. ”But now--how about yourself? How is the campaign going, Mr. Townsend?”
”Splendidly! But it's rather trying, as I have to do most of the campaigning myself--even the odd jobs!”
He looked down at a bundle of large, printed placards which he carried under his arm. Withdrawing one, he held it up for her inspection. Millie read, ”Vote for Lemuel Townsend for Superior Judge of the Second Judicial District.”