Ambrotox and Limping Dick, by
Oliver Fleming
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Title: Ambrotox and Limping Dick
Author: Oliver Fleming
Release Date: December 16, 2006 [EBook #20119]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
AMBROTOX AND LIMPING DICK ***
Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
AMBROTOX
AND
LIMPING DICK
BY OLIVER FLEMING
1920
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I.
--THE VISITOR'S SHADOW
II.--THE HEN WITH ONE CHICK
III.--"HUMMIN' BIRD'S WESKIT"
IV.--COFFEE
V.--AMBROTOX
VI.--AMARYLLIS
VII.--PERFUME
VIII.--THE SWINE THAT STANK
IX.--THE POLITICAL COVES
X.--THE GREEN FROCK
XI.--THE WINDOW
XII.--THE STAIRS
XIII.--THE KNIFE-THROWER
XIV.--PENNY PANSY
XV.--THE LIZARD
XVI.--"THE GOAT IN BOOTS"
XVII.--THE UNICORN
XVIII.--THE SERANG
XIX.--SAPPHIRE AND EMERALD
XX.--A ROPE OR SOMETHING
XXI.--THE BAAG-NOUK
XXII.--LORD LABRADOR
XXIII.--FALLING OUT
XXIV.--KUK-KUK-KUK-KATIE
XXV.--WAITERS
XXVI.--PRISONER AND ESCORT
XXVII.--AN INTERIM REPORT
AMBROTOX AND LIMPING DICK.
CHAPTER I.
THE VISITOR'S SHADOW.
Randal Bellamy's country house was a place of pleasant breakfasts.
From the dining room the outlook was delightful; grass, flowers and
sunshine, with the host's easy charm, made it almost as easy for
Theophilus Caldegard to drink his tea fresh, as for his daughter
Amaryllis not to keep her host, Sir Randal, waiting for his coffee.
This morning, while she waited for the two men, the girl, remembering
that this was the eighteenth of June, was surprised by the ease with
which the five weeks of her stay had slipped by; and she wondered,
without anxiety, at what point the guest merges into the inmate.
"I can't live here for ever," she thought; "but as long as there's room for
his test-tubes, and his dinner's good, dad thinks it's all right for a girl."
And, as if it was all right, she laughed--just in time for Randal Bellamy
to get full benefit of the pleasant sound.
"Laughing all alone?" he said.
"That's when the funny things happen," replied Amaryllis.
Bellamy looked down at her, as if asking a share in her merriment.
"After all, I don't know why I laughed," she said. "I was only thinking
it's five whole weeks since we came here, and----"
"And you want to go somewhere else?"
Amaryllis shook her head. "And it's gone like five days, I was going to
say."
She took her seat at the table and poured out his coffee. "I'm not going
to let you wait a moment for father this morning; it was two o'clock
when he went to bed."
"How do you know that, you bad girl?" said Bellamy.
"Because dad can't get out of the habit of putting his boots outside his
door," she replied. "And when he's pleased with his work, he throws
'em out."
"I've heard them," he said, laughing. "But last night I was in bed before
twelve; I suppose he took advantage of that and sneaked back to the
laboratory again."
"But I thought," said Amaryllis, after a pause, "that Ambrotox was
finished and ready to make its bow to the public."
"God forbid!" said Bellamy, in a tone of such intensity that the girl was
astonished.
"But surely you've been helping him to finish it--you wanted it
finished," she exclaimed.
"Yes, but not published," said the man.
The girl's next eager question was cut short by the entrance of the
parlour-maid with the morning's letters; and after her came Theophilus
Caldegard.
His person was as unlike the popular conception of a man of science as
can well be imagined. His sturdy figure, thick white hair, and the ruddy
complexion of his face, where the benevolence of the mouth attracted
attention before the keenness of the eyes, suggested rather the country
gentleman than the man of genius whose discoveries might move a
world.
He kissed his daughter, and, "Tea quick--the kettle's boiling, Amy," he
said. "Morning, Bellamy."
And, as Bellamy made no response, "First time I ever saw him
absorbed by a letter," he remarked:
"Best one I've had for six months," said Bellamy, looking up. "That
young brother of mine's coming down by the three-ten."
"Rolling down, you mean," said Caldegard.
"Can't roll any longer--covered with moss," retorted Bellamy. "Aunt
Jenny died and didn't leave me a cent."
"Why didn't he come before?" asked Caldegard.
"Been looking for something to do," said the brother. "Now he's been a
soldier, I don't believe there's anything left."
"How long was he in the Army?"
"Twelve months in the trenches, two years in the Air Force, and, one
time with another, ten months in hospital," replied Bellamy.
"And as soon as
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