The Wall Street Girl. Bartlett Frederick Orin

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here he was in Stuyvesant’s house, engaged to Stuyvesant’s daughter.

      “It seems,” he began–“it seems that Dad would have his little joke before he died.”

      “Yes?” she responded indifferently. She was bored by business of any sort.

      “I had a talk to-day with Barton–his lawyer. Queer old codger, Barton. Seems he’s been made my guardian. Dad left him to me in his will. He left me Barton, the house, and twelve dollars and sixty-three cents.”

      “Yes, Don.”

      She did not quite understand why he was going into details. They did not seem to concern her, even as his fiancée.

      “Of that patrimony I now have thirteen cents left,” Don continued. “See, here it is.”

      He removed from his pocket two nickels and three coppers.

      “It doesn’t look like much, does it?”

      “Oh, Don,” she laughed, “do be serious!”

      “I am serious,” he assured her. “I’ve been serious ever since I went to Sherry’s for lunch, and found I did not have enough for even a club sandwich.”

      “But, Don!” she gasped.

      “It’s a fact. I had to leave.”

      “Then where did you lunch?”

      “I didn’t lunch.”

      “You mean you did not have enough change to buy something to eat?”

      “I had thirteen cents. You can’t buy anything with that, can you?”

      “I–I don’t know.”

      Suddenly she remembered how, once on her way home from Chicago, she lost her purse and did not have sufficient change left even to wire her father to meet her. She was forced to walk from the station to the house. The experience had always been like a nightmare to her. She rose and stood before him.

      “But, Don–what are you going to do?”

      “I telephoned Barton, and he suggested I take some sort of position with a business house. He’s going to find something for me. I’m not worrying about that; but what I want to know is what I ought to do about you.”

      “I don’t understand, Don.”

      “I mean about our engagement.”

      She looked puzzled.

      “I’m afraid I’m very stupid.”

      “We can’t be married on thirteen cents, can we?”

      “But we needn’t be married until you have more, need we?”

      “That’s so. And you’re willing to wait?”

      “You know I’ve told you I didn’t wish to be married before spring, anyway. I think it’s much pleasanter staying just as we are.”

      “We can’t be engaged all our lives,” he protested.

      “We can be engaged as long as we wish, can’t we?”

      “I want to marry you as soon as I can.”

      Her eyes brightened and she placed a soft hand upon his arm.

      “That’s nice of you, Don,” she said. “But you don’t know what a frightfully expensive burden I’ll be as a wife.”

      “If I earned, to start with, say fifty dollars a week–would you marry me on that?”

      “If I did, what would we live on?” she inquired.

      “Well, I have the house. That’s provided for–all except the table.”

      “But if I spent the fifty dollars for a new hat, then what would we have left for provisions?”

      “You mustn’t spend it all on a new hat,” he warned.

      “Then, there are gowns and–oh, lots of things you don’t know anything about.”

      “Couldn’t you get along with a little less?”

      She thought a moment.

      “I don’t see how,” she decided. “I never get anything I don’t want.”

      “That’s something,” he nodded approvingly. “Then you think I must earn more than fifty a week?”

      “I only know that Dad gives me an allowance of ten thousand a year, and there’s never anything left,” she answered.

      “Ten thousand a year!” he exclaimed.

      “Everything is so expensive to-day, Don. All this talk sounds frightfully vulgar, but–there’s no use pretending, is there?”

      “Not a bit,” he answered. “If ten thousand a year is what you need, ten thousand a year is what I must earn.”

      “I don’t believe it’s very hard, because Dad does it so easily,” she declared.

      “I’ll get it,” he nodded confidently. “And, now that it’s all settled, let’s forget it. Come over to the piano and sing for me.”

      He sat down before the keys and played her accompaniments, selecting his own songs. They ran through some of the latest opera successes, and then swung off to the simpler and older things. It was after “Annie Laurie” that he rose and looked deep into her eyes.

      “I’ll get it for you,” he said soberly.

      “Oh, Don!” she whispered. “Sometimes nothing seems important but just you.”

      CHAPTER IV

      CONCERNING SANDWICHES

      The arrangement that Barton made for his late client’s son was to enter the banking house of Carter, Rand & Seagraves, on a salary of twelve hundred dollars a year. Don found the letter at the Harvard Club the next morning, and immediately telephoned Barton.

      “Look here!” he exclaimed. “I appreciate what you’ve tried to do and all that, but what in thunder good is twelve hundred dollars a year?”

      “It is at least twelve hundred more than you have now,” suggested Barton.

      “But how can I live on it?”

      “You must remember you have the house–”

      “Hang the house,” Don interrupted. “I must eat and smoke and buy clothes, mustn’t I? Besides, there’s Frances. She needs ten thousand a year.”

      “I have no doubt but that, in time, a man of your ability–”

      “How long a time?”

      “As to that I am not prepared to give an opinion,” replied Barton.

      “Because

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