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Count And The Manager
by
And the advertisements! They was sent everywheres. Lots of ’em was what Peter called “reading notices,” and them he mostly got for nothing, for he could talk an editor foolish same as he could anybody else. By the middle of April most of our money was gone, but every room in the house was let and we had applications coming by the pailful.
And the folks that come had money, too–they had to have to pay Brown’s rates. I always felt like a robber or a Standard Oil director every time I looked at the books. The most of ’em was rich folks–self-made men, just like Peter prophesied–and they brought their wives and daughters and slept on cornhusks and eat chowder and said ’twas great and just like old times. And they got the rest we advertised; we didn’t cheat ’em on REST. By ten o’clock pretty nigh all hands was abed, and ’twas so still all you could hear was the breakers or the wind, or p’raps a groan coming from a window where some boarder had turned over in his sleep and a corncob in the mattress had raked him crossways.
There was one old chap that we’ll call Dillaway–Ebenezer Dillaway. That wan’t his name; his real one’s too well known to tell. He runs the “Dillaway Combination Stores” that are all over the country. In them stores you can buy anything and buy it cheap– cheapness is Ebenezer’s stronghold and job lots is his sheet anchor. He’ll sell you a mowing machine and the grass seed to grow the hay to cut with it. He’ll sell you a suit of clothes for two dollars and a quarter, and for ten cents more he’ll sell you glue enough to stick it together again after you’ve worn it out in the rain. He’ll sell you anything, and he’s got cash enough to sink a ship.
He come to the “Old Home House” with his daughter, and he took to the place right away. Said ’twas for all the world like where he used to live when he was a boy. He liked the grub and he liked the cornhusks and he liked Brown. Brown had a way of stealing a thing and yet paying enough for it to square the law–that hit Ebenezer where he lived.
His daughter liked Brown, too, and ’twas easy enough to see that Brown liked her. She was a mighty pretty girl, the kind Peter called a “queen,” and the active manager took to her like a cat to a fish. They was together more’n half the time, gitting up sailing parties, or playing croquet, or setting up on the “Lover’s Nest,” which was a kind of slab summer-house Brown had rigged up on the bluff where Aunt Sophrony’s pig-pens used to be in the old days.
Me and Jonadab see how things was going, and we’d look at one another and wink and shake our heads when the pair’d go by together. But all that was afore the count come aboard.
We got our first letter from the count about the third of June. The writing was all over the plate like a biled dinner, and the English looked like it had been shook up in a bag, but it was signed with a nine fathom, toggle-jinted name that would give a pollparrot the lockjaw, and had the word “Count” on the bow of it.
You never see a feller happier than Peter T. Brown.
“Can he have rooms?” says Peter. “CAN he? Well, I should rise to elocute! He can have the best there is if yours truly has to bunk in the coop with the gladsome Plymouth Rock. That’s what! He says he’s a count and he’ll be advertised as a count from this place to where rolls the Oregon.”