Page:The mislaid uncle (IA mislaiduncle00raym).pdf/152

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person is regularly established in your house to look after little Josephine, I will step in there now and then, myself, to see that all is right."

They parted most amicably, and the first action of Mr. Smith, upon reaching his office, was to send for his lawyer and tell him that he had abandoned the question of line-fences entirely; that Mrs. Merriman should be notified that all claim to the "insignificant strip of land midway their respective side-yards was hereby and forever relinquished, with no costs to herself."

Her own proceeding was the writing of a note to her friend, the nurse, and so imperative was the summons it contained that the lady answered in person, although not yet sufficiently rested from the fatigue of a long journey and her previous engagement to desire another so promptly.

As for Josephine, after a morning of dreamless, health-restoring sleep, she woke to find a familiar figure sitting by her bedside, smiling affectionately upon her. A brief, puzzled