Gigolo by Edna Ferber Chapter 2 Page 8

going to have any money for years. Besides, look at the neighbourhood!

Old man Minick said George was right. He said everybody was right. You would hardly have recognized in this shrunken figure and wattled face the spruce and dressy old man whom Ma Minick used to spoil so delightfully. “You know best, George. You know best.” He who used to stand up to George until Ma Minick was moved to say, “Now, Pa, you don’t know everything.”

After Matthews’ bills, and the hospital, and the nurses and the medicines and the thousand and one things were paid there was left exactly five hundred dollars a year.

“You’re going to make your home with us, Father,” George and Nettie said. Alma, too, said this would be the best. Alma, the married daughter, lived in Seattle.