"
"Well, I was thinkin' mebbe I'd stop in there, too, Lois," said Mrs.
Daggett apologetically. "I ain't been to see Miss Orr for quite a
spell, and--"
The spinster turned and fixed a scornfully, intelligent gaze upon the
mild, rosy countenance of her sister-in-law.
"Oh, _I see!_" she sniffed. "That was where you was pointing for, all
the while! And you didn't let on to me, oh, no!"
"Now, Lois, don't you get excited," exhorted Mrs. Daggett. "It was
just about the wall papers. Henry, he says to me this mornin'--...
Git-ap, Dolly!"
_"'Henry says--Henry says'!_ Yes; I guess so! What do you know about
wall papers, Abby? ...Well, all I got to say is: I don't want nobody
looking on an' interfering when I'm trying to sell 'Lives of Famous
People.' Folks, es a rule, ain't so interested in anything they got
to pay out money fer, an' I want a clear field."
"I won't say a word till you're all through talkin', Lois," promised
Mrs. Daggett meekly. "Mebbe she'd kind of hate to say 'no' before me.
She's took a real liking to Henry.... Git-ap, Dolly.... And anyway,
she's awful generous. I could say, kind of careless; 'If I was you,
I'd take a leather-bound.' Couldn't I, Lois?"
"Well, you can come in, Abby, if you're so terrible anxious,"
relented Miss Daggett. "You might tell her, you and Henry was going
to take a leather-bound; that might have some effect. I remember once
I sold three Famous People in a row in one street. There couldn't one
o' them women endure to think of her next door neighbor having
something she didn't have.
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