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Virgie's Inheritance 
 
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Title: Virgie's Inheritance 
Author: Mrs. Georgie Sheldon 
Release Date: February 24, 2004 [EBook #11269] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VIRGIE'S 
INHERITANCE *** 
 
Produced by Distributed Proofreaders 
 
Virgie's Inheritance 
By Mrs. Georgie Sheldon
Author of "Nora," "Trixy," "Earle Wayne's Nobility," "Helen's 
Victory," "A True Aristocrat," Etc. 
Copyright, 1887, 1888, 1891 By Street & Smith 
 
Virgie's Inheritance. 
Chapter I. 
Virgie and the Benighted Traveler. 
 
"Virgie, I shall have to give up the race." 
"Papa!" 
"My strength is failing rapidly. It was all that I could do to creep home 
to-night. My trembling limbs, my labored breathing, and this dreadful 
cough, all warn me that I must set my house in order, and make 
provision for your future." 
It was an apparently old man who spoke thus, and yet the years of his 
life numbered but a little over fifty. 
His hair was silvery white; his face was colorless and haggard, his eyes 
dim and sunken, and his form was much attenuated and bowed by the 
disease which was fast consuming him. 
He was sitting by a blazing fire, in an ordinary easy-chair over which a 
heavy coverlid had been thrown to make it more comfortable; but he 
shivered, and hovered over the blaze, as if he were chilled to the very 
marrow, while the hands which he held extended to catch the warmth 
were livid, and trembling from weakness. 
The room was small, but cozy and home-like. A cheap, coarse carpet,
though of a bright and tasteful pattern, lay upon the floor. An oval table, 
covered with a daintily embroidered cloth, stood in the center. There 
was a pretty lamp, with a bright Japanese shade upon it. There were 
also a few books in choice bindings, and a dainty work-basket filled 
with implements for sewing. A few pictures--some done with pen and 
ink, others in crayon, but all showing great talent and nicety of 
execution--hung, in simple frames, upon the walls. The two windows 
of the apartment were screened by pretty curtains of spotless muslin 
over heavier hangings of crimson, while a lounge and two or three 
chairs completed the furnishing of the room. 
Beside the table, in a low rocker, several paces from the invalid by the 
fire, yet where she could catch every expression of his pale, sad face, 
there sat a young girl, with a piece of fancy work in her hands, upon 
which she had been busily engaged before her father spoke. 
She was perhaps twenty years of age, with a straight, perfect form, and 
a face that would have better graced a a palace than the humble 
mountain home where she now abode. It was a pure, oval, with delicate, 
beautiful brows; soft, round cheeks, in which a lovely pink came and 
went with every emotion. Her eyes were of a deep violet color, shaded 
by dark silken lashes, though their expression was saddened somewhat 
just now by a look of care and anxiety. Her white forehead was 
surmounted by rich chestnut-brown hair, which was gathered into a 
graceful knot at the back of her finely shaped head. A straight, patrician 
nose; a small, but rather resolute mouth, and a rounded chin, in which 
there was a bewitching dimple; small, lady-like hands and feet, 
completed the tout ensemble of Virginia Abbot, the daughter 
and only child of a whilom honored and wealthy bank president of San 
Francisco. 
When addressed, as recorded above, the beautiful girl had started and 
grown suddenly pale, and a look of keenest pain shot into her violet 
eyes. 
Then her sweet mouth straightened itself into a stern, resolute line. 
There was a moment of solemn silence, which she broke, by saying, in 
a repressed but gentle tone:
"I am sorry that you are feeling worse than usual to-night, papa. I know 
you must be weary. You are always that after being all day in the mine, 
and the storm, of course, aggravates your cough; but if you will rest a 
few days you will surely be better." 
"No, Virgie, it is useless to build upon false hopes. I shall never be any 
better. My work is done. I shall go no more to my claim, and I have 
decided to dispose of it to the first one who will offer me a fair price for 
it. But, dear child, if it were not    
    
		
	
	
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