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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Exit Betty, by Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Exit Betty
+
+
+Author: Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2009 [eBook #30759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXIT BETTY***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Emmy, and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+by
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOKS BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ April Gold
+ Happiness Hill
+ The Beloved Stranger
+ The Honor Girl
+ Bright Arrows
+ Kerry
+ Christmas Bride
+ Marigold
+ Crimson Roses
+ Miranda
+ Duskin
+ The Mystery of Mary
+ Found Treasure
+ Partners
+ A Girl to Come Home To
+ Rainbow Cottage
+ The Red Signal
+ White Orchids
+ Silver Wings
+ The Tryst
+ The Strange Proposal
+ Through These Fires
+ The Street of the City
+ All Through the Night
+ The Gold Shoe
+ Astra
+ Homing
+ Blue Ruin
+ Job's Niece
+ Challengers
+ The Man of the Desert
+ Coming Through the Rye
+ More Than Conqueror
+ Daphne Deane
+ A New Name
+ The Enchanted Barn
+ The Patch of Blue
+ Girl from Montana
+ The Ransom
+ Rose Galbraith
+ The Witness
+ Sound of the Trumpet
+ Sunrise
+ Tomorrow About This Time
+ Amorelle
+ Head of the House
+ Ariel Custer
+ In Tune with Wedding Bells
+ Chance of a Lifetime
+ Maris
+ Crimson Mountain
+ Out of the Storm
+ Exit Betty
+ Mystery Flowers
+ The Prodigal Girl
+ Girl of the Woods
+ Re-Creations
+ The White Flower
+ Matched Pearls
+ Time of the Singing of Birds
+ Ladybird
+ The Substitute Guest
+ Beauty for Ashes
+ Stranger Within the Gates
+ The Best Man
+ Spice Box
+ By Way of the Silverthorns
+ The Seventh Hour
+ Dawn of the Morning
+ The Search
+ Brentwood
+ Cloudy Jewel
+ The Voice in the Wilderness
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+Author of
+Marcia Schuyler, The Search, Dawn of the Morning, Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers New York
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+Copyright, 1919, by The Christian Herald
+
+Copyright, 1920, by J. B. Lippincott Company
+
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+THE crowd gave way and the car glided smoothly up to the curb at the
+canopied entrance to the church. The blackness of the wet November night
+was upon the street. It had rained at intervals all day.
+
+The pavements shone wetly like new paint in the glimmer of the street
+lights, and rude shadows gloomed in every cranny of the great stone
+building.
+
+Betty, alone in the midst of her bridal finery, shrank back from the
+gaze of the curious onlookers, seeming very small like a thing of the
+air caught in a mesh of the earth.
+
+She had longed all day for this brief respite from everyone, but it had
+passed before she could concentrate her thoughts. She started forward, a
+flame of rose for an instant in her white cheeks, but gone as quickly.
+Her eyes reminded one of the stars among the far-away clouds on a night
+of fitful storm with only glimpses of their beauty in breaks of the
+overcast sky. Her small hands gripped one another excitedly, and the
+sweet lips were quivering.
+
+A white-gloved hand reached out to open the car door, and other hands
+caught and cared for the billow of satin and costly lace with which she
+was surrounded, as if it, and not she, were the important one.
+
+They led her up the curtained way, where envious eyes peeped through a
+furtive rip in the canvas, or craned around an opening to catch a better
+glimpse of her loveliness, one little dark-eyed foreigner even reached
+out a grimy, wondering finger to the silver whiteness of her train; but
+she, all unknowing, trod the carpeted path as in a dream.
+
+The wedding march was just beginning. She caught the distant notes, felt
+the hush as she approached the audience, and wondered why the ordeal
+seemed so much greater now that she was actually come to the moment. If
+she had known it would be like this--! Oh, why had she given in!
+
+The guests had risen and were stretching their necks for the first
+vision of her. The chaplet of costly blossoms sat upon her brow and
+bound her wedding veil floating mistily behind, but the lovely head was
+bowed, not lifted proudly as a bride's should be, and the little white
+glove that rested on the arm of the large florid cousin trembled
+visibly. The cousin was almost unknown until a few hours before. His
+importance overpowered her. She drooped her eyes and tried not to wish
+for the quiet, gray-haired cousin of her own mother. It was so strange
+for him to have failed her at the last moment, when he had promised long
+ago to let nothing hinder him from giving her away if she should ever be
+married. His telegram, "Unavoidably detained," had been received but an
+hour before. He seemed the only one of her kind, and now she was all
+alone. All the rest were like enemies, although they professed deep
+concern for her welfare; for they were leagued together against all her
+dearest wishes, until she had grown weary in the combat.
+
+She gave a frightened glance behind as if some intangible thing were
+following her. Was it a hounding dread that after all she would not be
+free after marriage?
+
+With measured tread she passed the long white-ribboned way, under arches
+that she never noticed, through a sea of faces that she never saw, to
+the altar smothered in flowers and tropical ferns. It seemed
+interminable. Would it never end? They paused at last, and she lifted
+frightened eyes to the florid cousin, and then to the face of her
+bridegroom!
+
+It was a breathless moment, and but for the deep tones of the organ now
+hushing for the ceremony, one of almost audible silence. No lovelier
+bride had trod those aisles in many a long year; so exquisite, so
+small, so young--and so exceeding rich! The guests were entranced, and
+every eye was greedily upon her as the white-robed minister advanced
+with his open book.
+
+"Beloved, we are met together to-night to join this man----!"
+
+At that word they saw the bride suddenly, softly sink before them, a
+little white heap at the altar, with the white face turned upward, the
+white eyelids closed, the long dark lashes sweeping the pretty cheek,
+the wedding veil trailing mistily about her down the aisle, and her big
+bouquet of white roses and maiden-hair ferns clasped listlessly in the
+white-gloved hands.
+
+For a moment no one stirred, so sudden, so unexpected it was. It all
+seemed an astonishing part of the charming spectacle. The gaping throng
+with startled faces stood and stared. Above the huddled little bride
+stood the bridegroom, tall and dark and frowning, an angry red surging
+through his handsome face. The white-haired minister, with two red spots
+on his fine scholarly cheeks, stood grave with troubled dignity, as
+though somehow he meant to hold the little still bride responsible for
+this unseemly break in his beautiful service. The organ died away with
+a soft crash of the keys and pedals as if they too leaped up to see; the
+scent of the lilies swept sickeningly up in a great wave on the top of
+the silence.
+
+In a moment all was confusion. The minister stooped, the best man sprang
+into the aisle and lifted the flower-like head. Some one produced a fan,
+and one of the ushers hurried for a glass of water. A physician
+struggled from his pew across the sittings of three stout dowagers, and
+knelt, with practiced finger on the little fluttering pulse. The bride's
+stepmother roused to solicitous and anxious attention. The organ came
+smartly up again in a hopeless tangle of chords and modulations, trying
+to get its poise once more. People climbed upon their seats to see, or
+crowded out in the aisle curiously and unwisely kind, and in the way.
+Then the minister asked the congregation to be seated; and amid the
+rustle of wedding finery into seats suddenly grown too narrow and too
+low, the ushers gathered up the little inert bride and carried her
+behind the palms across a hall and into the vestry room. The stepmother
+and a group of friends hurried after, and the minister requested the
+people to remain quietly seated for a few minutes. The organ by this
+time had recovered its poise and was playing soft tender melodies, but
+the excited audience was not listening:
+
+"I thought she looked ghastly when she came in," declared the mother of
+three frowsy daughters. "It's strange she didn't put on some rouge."
+
+"Um-mm! What a pity! I suppose she isn't strong! What did her own mother
+die of?" murmured another speculatively, preparing to put forth a theory
+before any one else got ahead of her.
+
+"Oh! The poor child!" sympathized a romantic friend. "They've been
+letting her do too much! Didn't they make a handsome couple? I'm crazy
+to see them come marching down the aisle. They surely wouldn't put off
+the wedding just for a faint, would they?"
+
+And all over the church some woman began to tell how her sister's child,
+or her brother's niece, or her nephew's aunt had fainted just before her
+wedding or during it, till it began to seem quite a common performance,
+and one furnishing a unique and interesting part of the program for a
+wedding ceremony.
+
+Meanwhile on a couch in the big gloomy vestry room lay Betty with a
+group of attendants about her. Her eyes were closed, and she made no
+move. She swallowed the aromatic ammonia that some one produced, and she
+drew her breath a little less feebly, but she did not open her eyes, nor
+respond when they spoke to her.
+
+Her stepmother stooped over finally and spoke in her ear:
+
+"Elizabeth Stanhope! sit up and control yourself!" she said sharply in a
+low tone. "You are making a spectacle of yourself that you can never get
+over. Your father would be ashamed of you if he were here!"
+
+It was the one argument that had been held a successful lash over her
+poor little quivering heart for the last five years, and Betty flashed
+open her sorrowful eyes and looked around on them with a troubled
+concentration as if she were just taking in what had happened:
+
+"I'm so tired!" she said in a little weary voice. "Won't you just let me
+get my breath a minute?"
+
+The physician nodded emphatically toward the door and motioned them out:
+
+"She'll be all right in just a minute. Step outside and give her a
+chance to get calm. She's only worn out with excitement."
+
+She opened her eyes and looked furtively about the room. There was no
+one there, and the door was closed. She could hear them murmuring in low
+tones just beyond it. She looked wildly about her with a frantic thought
+of escape. The two windows were deeply curtained, giving a narrow
+glimpse of blank wall. She sprang softly to her feet and looked out.
+There was a stone pavement far below. She turned silently and tried a
+door. It opened into a closet overflowing with musty hymn-books. She
+closed it quickly and slipped back to her couch just in time as the door
+opened and the doctor came back. She could catch a glimpse of the others
+through the half open door, anxiously peering in. She gathered all her
+self-control and spoke:
+
+"I'm all right now, Doctor," she said quite calmly. "Would you just ask
+them to send Bessemer here a minute?"
+
+"Certainly." The doctor turned courteously and went back to the door,
+half closing it and making her request in a low tone. Then her
+stepmother's excited sibilant whisper:
+
+"Bessemer! Why, he isn't here! He went down to the shore last night."
+
+"Sh-h-h!" came another voice, and the door was shut smartly.
+
+Betty's eyes grew wide with horror as she lay staring at the closed
+door, and a cold numbness seemed to envelop her, clutching at her
+throat, her heart and threatening to overwhelm her.
+
+Bessemer not here! What could it mean? Her mind seemed unable to grasp
+and analyze the nameless fear that awaited her outside that door. In a
+moment more they would all swarm in and surround her, and begin to
+clamor for her to go back into that awful church--and _she could
+not_--EVER! She would far rather die!
+
+She sprang to her feet again and glided noiselessly to the only
+remaining uninvestigated door in the room. If this was another closet
+she would shut herself inside and stay till she died. She had read tales
+of people dying in a small space from lack of air. At least, if she did
+not die she could stay here till she had time to think. There was a key
+in the lock. Her fingers closed around it and drew it stealthily from
+the keyhole, as she slid through the door, drawing her rich draperies
+ruthlessly after. Her fingers were trembling so that she scarcely could
+fit the key in the lock again and turn it, and every click of the metal,
+every creak of the door, sounded like a gong in her ears. Her heart was
+fluttering wildly and the blood seemed to be pouring in torrents behind
+her ear-drums. She could not be sure whether there were noises in the
+room she had just left or not. She put her hand over her heart, turned
+with a sickening dread to look about her prison, and behold, it was not
+a closet at all, but a dark landing to a narrow flight of stone steps
+that wound down out of sight into the shadows. With a shudder she
+gathered her white impediment about her and crept down the murky way,
+frightened, yet glad to creep within the friendly darkness.
+
+There were unmistakable sounds of footsteps overhead now, and sharp
+exclamations. A hand tried the door above and rattled it violently. For
+an instant her heart beat frightfully in her throat at the thought that
+perhaps after all she had not succeeded in quite locking it, but the
+door held, and she flew on blindly down the stairs, caring little where
+they led only so that she might hide quickly before they found the
+janitor and pried that door open.
+
+The stairs ended in a little hall and a glass door. She fumbled wildly
+with the knob. It was locked, but there was a key! It was a large one
+and stuck, and gave a great deal of trouble in turning. Her fingers
+seemed so weak!
+
+Above the noises grew louder. She fancied the door was open and the
+whole churchful of people were after her. She threw her full weight with
+fear in the balance, and the key turned. She wrenched it out of the
+rusty keyhole, slid out shutting the door after her, and stooping,
+fitted in the key again. With one more Herculean effort she locked it
+and stood up, trembling so that she could scarcely keep her balance. At
+least she was safe for a moment and could get her breath. But where
+could she go? She looked about her. High walls arose on either hand,
+with a murky sky above. A stone walk filled the space between and ran
+down the length of the church to a big iron gate. The lights of the
+street glistened fitfully on the puddles of wet in the depressions of
+the paving-stones. The street looked quiet, and only one or two people
+were passing. Was that gate locked also, and if so could she ever climb
+it, or break through? Somehow she must! She shuddered at the thought of
+what would happen if she did not get away at once. She strained at the
+buttons on her soft white gloves and pulled the fingers off, slipping
+her hands out and letting the glove hands hang limp at her wrists. Then
+with a quick glance backward at a flicker of light that appeared
+wavering beyond the glass door, she gathered her draperies again and
+fled down the long stone walk. Silently, lightly as a ghost she passed,
+and crouched at the gate as she heard footsteps, her heart beating so
+loudly it seemed like a bell calling attention to her. An old man was
+shuffling past, and she shrank against the wall, yet mindful of the
+awful glass door back at the end of the narrow passage. If they should
+come now she could not hope to elude them!
+
+She stooped and studied the gate latch. Yes, it was a spring lock, and
+had no key in it. Stealthily she tried it and found to her relief that
+it swung open. She stepped around it and peered out. The gateway was not
+more than a hundred feet from the brightly lighted corner of the main
+avenue where rows of automobiles were lined up waiting for the wedding
+ceremony to be over. She could see the chauffeurs walking back and forth
+and chatting together. She could hear the desultory wandering of the
+organ, too, from the partly open window near by. A faint sickening waft
+of lily sweetness swept out, mingled with a dash of drops from the maple
+tree on the sidewalk. In a panic she stepped forth and drew back again,
+suddenly realizing for the first time what it would be to go forth into
+the streets clad in her wedding garments? How could she do it and get
+away? It could not be done!
+
+Down the street, with a backward, wistful glance at the church, hurried
+a large woman with a market basket. Her curious eyes shone in the
+evening light and darkness of the street. There was something about her
+face that made Betty know instantly that this woman would love to tell
+how she had seen her, would gather a crowd in no time and pursue her.
+She shrank farther back, and then waited in awful fear and tried to
+listen again. Was that a rattling at the glass door? She must get away
+no matter what happened! Where? Was there an alleyway or anything across
+the block? Could she hope to cross the street between the shadows
+unnoticed?
+
+She looked out fearfully once more. A girl of her own age was
+approaching around the corner, paddling along in rubbers, and a long
+coat. She was chewing gum. Betty could see the outline of a strong
+good-natured jaw working contentedly as she was silhouetted against the
+light. She had her hands in her pockets, and a little dark hat worn
+boyishly on the back of her head, and she was humming a popular song.
+Betty had slipped behind the half open gate again and was watching her
+approach, her desperation driving her to thoughts that never would have
+entered her mind at another time. Suddenly, as the girl passed directly
+in front of the gate, Betty leaned forward and plucked at her sleeve:
+
+"Wait!" she said sharply; and then, with a pitiful pleading in her
+voice, "Won't you help me just a minute, please?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+THE girl came to a standstill abruptly and faced about, drawing away
+just a hair's-breadth from the detaining hand, and surveying her
+steadily, the boyish expression in her eyes changing to an amused
+calculation such as one would fancy a cowboy held up on his native
+plains by a stray lamb might have worn.
+
+"What's the little old idea!" asked the girl coldly, her eyes narrowing
+as she studied the other girl in detail and attempted to classify her
+into the known and unknown quantities of her world. Her face was
+absolutely expressionless as far as any sign of interest or sympathy was
+concerned. It was like a house with the door still closed and a
+well-trained butler in attendance.
+
+"I've got to get away from here at once before anybody sees me,"
+whispered Betty excitedly, with a fearful glance behind her.
+
+"Do you want me to call a cab for you?" sneered the girl on the
+sidewalk, with an envious glance at the white satin slippers.
+
+"Oh, no! Never!" cried Betty, wringing her hands in desperation. "I want
+you to show me somewhere to go out of sight, and if you will I'd like
+you to walk a block or so with me so I won't be so--so conspicuous! I'm
+so frightened I don't know which way to go."
+
+"What do you want to go at all for?" asked the girl bluntly, with the
+look of an inquisitor, and the intolerance of the young for its
+contemporary of another social class.
+
+"Because I _must_!" said Betty with terror in her voice. "They're
+coming! Listen! Oh, help me quick! I can't wait to explain!"
+
+Betty dashed out of the gate and would have started up the street but
+that a strong young arm came out like a flash and a firm young fist
+gripped her arm like a vise. The girl's keen ears had caught a sound of
+turning key and excited voices, and her quick eyes pierced the darkness
+of the narrow court and measured the distance back.
+
+"Here! You can't go togged out like that!" she ordered in quite a
+different tone. She flung off her own long coat and threw it around the
+shrinking little white figure, then knelt and deftly turned up the long
+satin draperies out of sight and fixed them firmly with a pin extracted
+from somewhere about her person. Quickly she stood up and pulled off her
+rubbers, her eye on the long dark passageway whence came now the
+decided sound of a forcibly opened door and footsteps.
+
+"Put these on, quick!" she whispered, lifting first one slippered foot
+and then the other and supporting the trembling Betty in her strong
+young arms, while she snapped on the rubbers.
+
+Lastly, she jerked the rakish hat from her own head, crammed it down
+hard over the orange-wreathed brow and gave her strange protégée a hasty
+shove.
+
+"Now beat it around that corner and wait till I come!" she whispered,
+and turning planted herself in an idle attitude just under the church
+window, craning her neck and apparently listening to the music. A second
+later an excited usher, preceded by the janitor, came clattering down
+the passageway.
+
+"Have you seen any one go out of this gate recently?" asked the usher.
+
+The girl, hatless and coatless in the chill November night, turned
+nonchalantly at the question, surveyed the usher coolly from the point
+of his patent leather shoes to the white gardenia in his buttonhole,
+gave his features a cursory glance, and then shook her head.
+
+"There might have been an old woman come out a while back. Dressed in
+black, was she? I wasn't paying much attention. I think she went down
+the avenoo," she said, and stretched her neck again, standing on her
+tiptoes to view the wedding guests. Her interest suddenly became real,
+for she spied a young man standing in the church, in full view of the
+window, back against the wall with his arms folded, a fine handsome
+young man with pleasant eyes and a head like that of a young nobleman,
+and she wanted to make sure of his identity. He looked very much like
+the young lawyer whose office boy was her "gentleman friend." Just to
+make sure she gave a little spring from the sidewalk that brought her
+eyes almost on a level with the window and gave her a brief glimpse,
+enough to see his face quite clearly; then she turned with satisfaction
+to see that the janitor and the usher had gone back up the passageway,
+having slammed the gate shut. Without more ado the girl wheeled and
+hurried down the street toward the corner where Betty crouched behind a
+tree trunk, watching fearfully for her coming.
+
+"Aw! You don't need to be that scared!" said the girl, coming up.
+"They've gone back. I threw 'em off the scent. Come on! We'll go to my
+room and see what to do. Don't talk! Somebody might recognize your
+voice. Here, we'll cut through this alley and get to the next block.
+It's further away and not so many folks passing."
+
+Silently they hurried through the dark alley and down the next street,
+Betty holding the long cloak close that no gleam of her white satin
+might shine out and give away her secret, her heart beating like a trip
+hammer in her breast, her eyes filled with unshed tears, the last words
+of her stepmother ringing in her ears. Was she making her father
+ashamed? Her dear dead father! Was she doing the wrong thing? So long
+that thought had held her! But she could not go back now. She had taken
+an irrevocable step.
+
+Her guide turned another corner abruptly and led her up some stone steps
+to the door of a tall, dingy brick house, to which she applied a
+latchkey.
+
+The air of the gloomy hall was not pleasant. The red wall-paper was
+soiled and torn, and weird shadows flickered from the small gas taper
+that blinked from the ceiling. There were suggestions of old dinners,
+stale fried potatoes and pork in all the corners, and one moving toward
+the stairs seemed to stir them up and set them going again like old
+memories.
+
+The stairs were bare and worn by many feet, and not particularly clean.
+Betty paused in dismay then hurried on after her hostess, who was
+mounting up, one, two, three flights, to a tiny hall bedroom at the
+back. A fleeting fear that perhaps the place was not respectable shot
+through her heart, but her other troubles were so great that it found no
+lodgment. Panting and trembling she arrived at the top and stood looking
+about her in the dark, while the other girl found a match and lighted
+another wicked little flickering gas-burner.
+
+Then her hostess drew her into the room and closed and locked the door.
+As a further precaution she climbed upon a chair and pushed the transom
+shut.
+
+"Now," she said with a sigh of evident relief, "we're safe! No one can
+hear you here, and you can say what you please. But first we'll get this
+coat and hat off and see what's the damage."
+
+As gently as if she were undressing a baby the girl removed the hat and
+coat from her guest, and shook out the wonderful shining folds of satin.
+It would have been a study for an artist to have watched her face as she
+worked, smoothing out wrinkles, shaking the lace down and uncrushing it,
+straightening a bruised orange-blossom, and putting everything in place.
+It was as if she herself were an artist restoring a great masterpiece,
+so silently and absorbedly she worked, her eyes full of a glad wonder
+that it had come to her once to be near and handle anything so rare and
+costly. The very touch of the lace and satin evidently thrilled her; the
+breath of the exotic blossoms was nectar as she drew it in.
+
+Betty was still panting from her climb, still trembling from her flight,
+and she stood obedient and meek while the other girl pulled and shook
+and brushed and patted her into shape again. When all was orderly and
+adjusted about the crumpled bride, the girl stood back as far as the
+limits of the tiny room allowed and surveyed the finished picture.
+
+"There now! You certainly do look great! That there band of flowers
+round your forehead makes you look like some queen. 'Coronet'--ain't
+that what they call it? I read that once in a story at the Public
+Library. Say! Just to think I should pick that up in the street! Good
+night! I'm glad I came along just then instead o' somebody else! This
+certainly is some picnic! Well, now, give us your dope. It must've been
+pretty stiff to make you cut and run from a show like the one they got
+up for you! Come, tune up and let's hear the tale. I rather guess I'm
+entitled to know before the curtain goes up again on this little old
+stage!"
+
+The two tears that had been struggling with Betty for a long time
+suddenly appeared in her eyes and drowned them out, and in dismay she
+brought out a faint little sorry giggle of apology and amusement and
+dropped on the tiny bed, which filled up a good two-thirds of the room.
+
+"Good night!" exclaimed the hostess in alarm, springing to catch her.
+"Don't drop down that way in those glad rags! You'll finish 'em! Come,
+stand up and we'll get 'em off. You look all in. I'd oughta known you
+would be!" She lifted Betty tenderly and began to remove her veil and
+unfasten the wonderful gown. It seemed to her much like helping an angel
+remove her wings for a nap. Her eyes shone with genuine pleasure as she
+handled the hooks deftly.
+
+"But I've nothing else to put on!" gurgled Betty helplessly.
+
+"I have!" said the other girl.
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a sudden thought. "I wonder! Would you be willing
+to exchange clothes? Have you perhaps got some things you don't need
+that I could have, and I'll give you mine for them? I don't suppose
+perhaps a wedding dress would be very useful unless you're thinking of
+getting married soon, but you could make it over and use it for the
+foundation of an evening dress----"
+
+The other girl was carefully folding the white satin skirt at the
+moment, but she stopped with it in her arms and sat down weakly on the
+foot of the bed with it all spread out in her lap and looked at her
+guest in wonder:
+
+"You don't mean you _wantta give it up_!" she said in an awed tone. "You
+don't mean you would be willing to take some of my old togs for it?"
+
+"I certainly would!" cried Betty eagerly. "I never want to see these
+things again! _I hate_ them! And besides, I want to get away somewhere.
+I can't go in white satin! You know that! But I don't like to take
+anything of yours that you might need. Do you think these things would
+be worth anything to you? You weren't thinking of getting married
+yourself some time soon, were you?"
+
+"Well, I might," said the other girl, looking self-conscious. "I got a
+gentleman friend. But I wasn't expectin' to get in on any trooso like
+this!" She let her finger move softly over the satin hem as if she had
+been offered a plume of the angel's wing. "Sure, I'll take it off you if
+I've got anything you're satisfied to have in exchange. I wouldn't mind
+havin' it to keep jest to look at now and then and know it's mine. It'd
+be somethin' to live for, jest to know you had that dress in the
+house!"
+
+Suddenly Betty, without any warning even to herself, dropped upon her
+knees beside the diminutive bed and began to weep. It seemed somehow so
+touching that a thing like a mere dress could make a girl glad like
+that. All the troubles of the days that were past went over her in a
+great wave of agony, and overwhelmed her soul. In soft silk and lace
+petticoat and camisole with her pretty white arms and shoulders shaking
+with great sobs she buried her face in the old patchwork quilt that her
+hostess had brought from her village home, and gave way to a grief that
+had been long in growing. The other girl now thoroughly alarmed, laid
+the satin on a chair and went over to the little stranger, gathering her
+up in a strong embrace, and gradually lifting her to the bed.
+
+"You poor little Kid, you! I oughtta known better! You're just all in!
+You ben gettin' ready to be married, and something big's been troubling
+you, and I bet they never gave you any lunch--er else you wouldn't eat
+it,--and you're jest natcheraly all in. Now you lie right here an' I'll
+make you some supper. My name's Jane Carson, and I've got a good mother
+out to Ohio, and a nice home if I'd had sense enough to stay in it; only
+I got a chance to make big money in a fact'ry. But I know what 'tis to
+be lonesome, an' I ain't hard-hearted, if I do know how to take care of
+misself. There! There!"
+
+She smoothed back the lovely hair that curled in golden tendrils where
+the tears had wet it.
+
+"Say, now, you needn't be afraid! Nobody'll getcha here! I know how to
+bluff 'em. Even if a policeman should come after yeh, I'd get around him
+somehow, and I don't care what you've done or ain't done, I'll stand by
+yeh. I'm not one to turn against anybody in distress. My mother always
+taught me that. After you've et a bite and had a cup of my nice tea with
+cream and sugar in it you'll feel better, and we'll have a real
+chin-fest and hear all about it. Now, you just shut your eyes and wait
+till I make that tea."
+
+Jane Carson thumped up the pillow scientifically to make as many of the
+feathers as possible and shifted the little flower-head upon it. Then
+she hurried to her small washstand and took a little iron contrivance
+from the drawer, fastening it on the sickly gas-jet. She filled a tiny
+kettle with water from a faucet in the hall and set it to boil. From
+behind a curtain in a little box nailed to the wall she drew a loaf of
+bread, a paper of tea and a sugar-bowl. A cup and saucer and other
+dishes appeared from a pasteboard box under the washstand. A small
+shelf outside the tiny window yielded a plate of butter, a pint bottle
+of milk, and two eggs. She drew a chair up to the bed, put a clean
+handkerchief on it, and spread forth her table. In a few minutes the
+fragrance of tea and toast pervaded the room, and water was bubbling
+happily for the eggs. As cosily as if she had a chum to dine with her
+she sat down on the edge of the bed and invited her guest to supper. As
+she poured the tea she wondered what her co-laborers at the factory
+would think if they knew she had a real society lady visiting her. It
+wasn't every working girl that had a white satin bride thrust upon her
+suddenly this way. It was like a fairy story, having a strange bride
+lying on her bed, and everything a perfect mystery about her. She eyed
+the white silk ankles and dainty slippers with satisfaction. Think of
+wearing underclothes made of silk and real lace!
+
+It seemed to Betty as if never before in all her life had she tasted
+anything so delicious as that tea and toast and soft boiled egg cooked
+by this wonderful girl on a gaslight and served on a chair. She wanted
+to cry again over her gladness at being here. It didn't seem real after
+all the trouble she had been through. It couldn't last! Oh, of course it
+couldn't last!
+
+This thought came as she swallowed the last bite of toast, and she sat
+up suddenly!
+
+"I ought to be doing something quick!" she said in sudden panic. "It is
+getting late and I must get away. They'll be watching the trains,
+perhaps. I ought to have gone at once. But I don't know where I can go.
+Give me some old things, please. I must get dressed at once."
+
+"Lie down first and tell me who you are and what it's all about. I can't
+do a thing for you till I know. I've got to go into this with my eyes
+open or I won't stir one step," she declared stubbornly.
+
+Betty looked at her with wide eyes of trouble and doubt. Then the doubt
+suddenly cleared away, and trust broke through.
+
+"I can trust you, I'm sure! You've been so good to me! But it seems
+dreadful to tell things about my family, even to one who has been so
+kind. My father would be so hurt----"
+
+"Your father? Where is your father? Why didn't he take care of you and
+keep you from getting into such big trouble, I'd like to know?"
+
+The blue eyes clouded with tears again.
+
+"My father died five years ago," she said, "but I've always tried to do
+as he would want to have me do. Only--this--I _couldn't_."
+
+"H'm!" said Jane Carson. "Then he prob'ly wouldn't of wanted you to.
+Suppose you take the rest of those togs off. I'll find you a warm
+nightgown and we'll get to bed. It's turning cold here. They take the
+heat off somewhere about six o'clock in the evening, and it gets like
+ice up here sometimes."
+
+Jane shivered and went to her small trunk, from which she produced a
+coarse but clean flanellete nightgown, and Betty, who had never worn
+anything but a dainty lingerie one before in all her life, crept into it
+thankfully and cuddled down with a warm feeling that she had found a
+real friend. It was curious why she did not shrink from this poor girl,
+but she did not, and everything looked clean and nice. Besides, this was
+a wonderful haven of refuge in her dire necessity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+MEANWHILE, in the stately mansion that Betty had called home, a small
+regiment of servants hastened with the last tasks in preparation for the
+guests that were soon expected to arrive. The great rooms had become a
+dream of paradise, with silver rain and white lilies in a mist of soft
+green depending from the high ceilings. In the midst of all, a fairy
+bower of roses and tropical ferns created a nook of retirement where
+everyone might catch a glimpse of the bride and groom from any angle in
+any room. The spacious vistas stretched away from an equally spacious
+hallway, where a wide and graceful staircase curved up to a low gallery,
+smothered in flowers and palms and vines; and even so early the
+musicians were taking their places and tuning their instruments. On the
+floor above, where room after room shone in beauty, with costly
+furnishings, and perfect harmonies, white-capped maids flitted about,
+putting last touches to dressing tables and pausing to gossip as they
+passed one another:
+
+"Well, 'twill all be over soon," sighed one, a wan-faced girl with
+discontented eyes. "Ain't it kind of a pity, all this fuss just for a
+few minutes?"
+
+"Yes, an' glad I'll be!" declared another, a fresh young Irish girl with
+a faint, pretty brogue. "I don't like the look of my Lady Betty. A
+pretty fuss Candace her old nurse would be makin' if she was here the
+night! I guess the madam knew what she was about when she give her her
+walkin' ticket! Candace never could bear them two bys, and _him_ was the
+worse of the two, she always said."
+
+"Well, a sight of good it would do for old Candace to make a fuss!" said
+the discontented one. "And anyhow, he's as handsome as the devil, and
+she's got money enough, so she oughtn't complain."
+
+"Money ain't everything!" sniffed Aileen. "I wouldn't marry a king if I
+wasn't crazy about him!"
+
+"Oh, you're young!" sneered Marie with disdain. "Wait till your looks
+go! You don't know what you'd take up with!"
+
+"Well I'd never take up with the likes of _him_!" returned the Irish
+girl grandly, "and what's more he knows it!" She tossed her head
+meaningfully and was about to sail away on her own business when a stir
+below stairs attracted their attention. A stout, elderly woman, dressed
+in a stiff new black silk and an apoplectic hat, came panting up the
+stairs looking furtively from side to side, as if she wished to escape
+before anyone recognized her:
+
+"It's Candace!" exclaimed Aileen. "As I live! Now what d'ye wantta know
+about that! Poor soul! Poor soul! Candy! Oh!--Candy! What iver brought
+ye here the night? This is no place for the loikes of you. You better
+beat it while the beatin' is good if ye know which side yer bread's
+buthered!"
+
+But the old nurse came puffing on, her face red and excited:
+
+"Is she here? Has she come, yet, my poor wee Betty?" she besought them
+eagerly.
+
+"Miss Betty's at the church now gettin' married!" announced Marie
+uppishly, "and you'd best be gettin' out of here right away, for the
+wedding party's due to arrive any minute now and madam'll be very angry
+to have a servant as doesn't belong snoopin' round at such a time!"
+
+"Be still, Marie! For shame!" cried Aileen. "You've no need to talk like
+that to a self-respectin' woman as has been in this house more years
+than you have been weeks! Come along, Candace, and I'll slip you in my
+room and tell you all about it when I can get away long enough. You see,
+Miss Betty's being married----"
+
+"But she's _not_!" cried Candace wildly. "I was at the church myself.
+Miss Betty sent me the word to be sure and come, and where to sit and
+all, so she'd see me; and I went, and she come up the aisle as white as
+a lily and dropped right there before the poolpit, just like a little
+white lamb that couldn't move another step, all of a heap in her pretty
+things! And they stopped the ceremony and everybody got up, and they
+took her away, and we waited till bime-by the minister said the bride
+wasn't well enough to proceed with the ceremony and would they all go
+home, and I just slipped out before the folks got their wraps on and
+took a side street with wings to my feet and got up here! Haven't they
+brought her home yet, the poor wee thing? I been thinkin' they might
+need me yet, for many's the time I've brought her round by my nursin'."
+
+The two maids looked wildly at one another, their glances growing into
+incredulity, the eyebrows of Marie moving toward her well-dressed hair
+with a lofty disapproval.
+
+"Well, you'd better come with me, Candy," said Aileen drawing the
+excited old servant along the hall to the back corridor gently. "I guess
+there's some mistake somewheres; anyway, you better stay in my room till
+you see what happens. We haven't heard anything yet, and they'd likely
+send word pretty soon if there's to be any change in the program. You
+say she fell----?"
+
+But just then sounds of excitement came distantly up to them and Aileen
+hastened back to the gallery to listen. It was the voice of Madam
+Stanhope angrily speaking to her youngest son:
+
+"You must get Bessemer on the 'phone at once and order him home! I told
+you it was a great mistake sending him away. If he had been standing
+there, where she could see him, everything would have gone through just
+as we planned it----"
+
+"Aw! Rot! Mother. Can't you shut up? I know what I'm about and I'm going
+to call up another detective. Bessemer may go to the devil for all I
+care! How do you know but he has, and taken her with him? The first
+thing to do is to get that girl back! You ought to have had more sense
+than to show your whole hand to my brother. You might have known he'd
+take advantage----"
+
+Herbert Hutton slammed into the telephone booth under the stairs and
+Madam Stanhope was almost immediately aware of the staring servants who
+were trying not to seem to have listened.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope stood in the midst of the beautiful empty rooms and
+suddenly realized her position. Her face froze into the haughty lines
+with which her menage was familiar, and she was as coldly beautiful in
+her exquisite heliotrope gown of brocaded velvet and chiffon with the
+glitter of jewels about her smooth plump neck, and in her carefully
+marcelled black hair as if she were quietly awaiting the bridal party
+instead of facing defeat and mortification:
+
+"Aileen, you may get Miss Betty's room ready to receive her. She has
+been taken ill and will be brought home as soon as she is able to be
+moved," she announced, without turning an eyelash. "Put away her things,
+and get the bed ready!" One could see that she was thinking rapidly. She
+was a woman who had all her life been equal to an emergency, but never
+had quite such a tragic emergency been thrust upon her to camouflage
+before.
+
+"James!" catching the eye of the butler, "there will be no reception
+to-night, of course, and you will see that the hired people take their
+things away as soon as possible, and say that I will agree to whatever
+arrangements they see fit to make, within reason, of course. Just use
+your judgment, James, and by the way, there will be telephone calls, of
+course, from our friends. Say that Miss Betty is somewhat better, and
+the doctor hopes to avert a serious nervous breakdown, but that she
+needs entire rest and absolute quiet for a few days. Say that and
+nothing more, do you understand, James?"
+
+The butler bowed his thorough understanding and Madam Stanhope sailed
+nobly up the flower-garlanded staircase, past the huddled musicians, to
+her own apartment. Aileen, with a frightened glance, scuttled past the
+door as she was closing it:
+
+"Aileen, ask Mr. Herbert to come to my room at once when he has finished
+telephoning, and when Mr. Bessemer arrives send him to me at once!" Then
+the door closed and the woman was alone with her defeat, and the placid
+enameled features melted into an angry snarl like an animal at bay. In a
+moment more Herbert stormed in.
+
+"It's all your fault, mother!" he began, with an oath. "If you hadn't
+dragged Bessemer into this thing I'd have had her fixed. I had her just
+about where I wanted her, and another day would have broken her in.
+She's scared to death of insane asylums, and I told her long ago that it
+would be dead easy to put a woman in one for life. If I had just hinted
+at such a thing she'd have married me as meek as a lamb!"
+
+"Now look here, Bertie," flared his mother excitedly, "you've got to
+stop blaming me! Haven't I given in to you all your life, and now you
+say it's all my fault the least little thing that happens! It was for
+your sake that I stopped you; you know it was. You couldn't carry out
+any such crazy scheme. Betty's almost of age, and if those trustees
+should find out what you had threatened, you would be in jail for life,
+and goodness knows what would become of me."
+
+"Trustees! How would the trustees find it out?"
+
+"Betty might tell them."
+
+"Betty might _not_ tell them, not if she was _my wife_!" He bawled out
+the words in a way that boded no blissful future to the one who should
+have the misfortune to become his wife. "I think I'd have her better
+trained than that. As for you, Mother, you're all off, as usual! What do
+you think could possibly happen to _you_? You're always saying you do
+everything for me, but when it comes right down to brass tacks I notice
+you're pretty much of a selfish coward on your own account."
+
+For a moment the baffled woman faced her angry uncontrolled son in
+speechless rage, then gathered command of the situation once more, an
+inscrutable expression on her hard-lined face. Her voice took on an
+almost pitiful reproach as she spoke in a low, even tone that could
+hardly fail to bring the instant attention of her spoiled son:
+
+"Bertie, you don't know what you're talking about!" she said, and there
+was a strained white look of fear about her mouth and eyes as she spoke.
+"I'm going to tell you, in this great crisis, what I did for you, what I
+risked that you might enjoy the luxury which you have had for the last
+five years. Listen! The day before Mr. Stanhope died he wrote a letter
+to the trustees of Betty's fortune giving very explicit directions about
+her money and her guardianship, tying things up so that not one cent
+belonging to her should pass through my hands, which would have left us
+with just my income as the will provided, and would have meant
+comparative poverty for us all except as Betty chose to be benevolent. I
+kept a strict watch on all his movements those last few days, of course,
+and when I found he had given Candace a letter to mail, I told her I
+would look after it, and I brought it up to my room and read it, for I
+suspected just some such thing as he had done. He was very fussy about
+Betty and her rights, you remember, and he had always insisted that this
+was Betty's house, her mother's wedding present from the grandfather,
+and therefore not ours at all, except through Betty's bounty. I was
+determined that we should not be turned out of here, and that you should
+not have to go without the things you wanted while that child had
+everything and far more than she needed. So I burned the letter! Now, do
+you see what the mother you have been blaming has done for you?"
+
+But the son looked back with hard glittering eyes and a sneer on his
+handsome lustful lips:
+
+"I guess you did it about as much for your own sake as mine, didn't
+you?" he snarled. "And I don't see what that's got to do with it,
+anyway. Those trustees don't know what they missed if they never got the
+letter, and you've always kept in with them, you say, and made them
+think you were crazy about the girl. They pay you Betty's allowance till
+she's of age, don't they? They can't lay a finger on you. You're a fool
+to waste my time talking about a little thing like that when we ought to
+be planning a way to get hold of that girl before the trustees find out
+about it. If we don't get her fixed before she's of age we shall be in
+the soup as far as the property is concerned. Isn't that so? Well, then,
+we've got to get her good and married----"
+
+"If you only had let her marry Bessemer quietly," whimpered his mother,
+"and not have brought in all this deception. It will look so terrible if
+it ever comes out. I shall never be able to hold up my head in society
+again----!"
+
+"There you are again! Thinking of yourself----!" sneered the dutiful
+son, getting up and stamping about her room like a wild man. "I tell
+you, Mother, that girl is _mine_, and I won't have Bessemer or anybody
+else putting in a finger. _She's mine!_ I told her so a long time ago,
+and she knows it! She can't get away from me, and it's going to go the
+harder with her because she's tried. I'm never going to forgive her
+making a fool out of me before all those people! I'll get her yet!
+Little fool!"
+
+Herbert was well on his way into one of those fits of uncontrollable
+fury that had always held his mother in obedience to his slightest whim
+since the days when he used to lie on the floor and scream himself black
+in the face and hold his breath till she gave in; and the poor woman,
+wrought to the highest pitch of excitement already by the tragic events
+of the evening, which were only the climax of long weeks of agitation,
+anxiety and plotting, dropped suddenly into her boudoir chair and began
+to weep.
+
+But this new manifestation on the part of his usually pliable mother
+only seemed to infuriate the young man. He walked up to her, and seizing
+her by the shoulder, shook her roughly:
+
+"Cut that out!" he said hoarsely. "This is no time to cry. We've got to
+make some kind of a plan. Don't you see we'll have the hounds of the
+press at our heels in a few hours? Don't you see we've got to make a
+plan and stick to it?"
+
+His mother looked up, regardless for once of the devastation those few
+tears had made of her carefully groomed face, a new terror growing in
+her eyes:
+
+"I've told James to answer all telephone calls and say that Betty is
+doing as well as could be expected, but that the doctor says she must
+have perfect quiet to save her from a nervous breakdown----" she
+answered him coldly. "I'm not quite a fool if you do think so----"
+
+"Well, that's all right for to-night, but what'll we say to-morrow if we
+don't find her----"
+
+"Oh! She'll come back," said the stepmother confidently. "She can't help
+it. Why, where would she go? She hasn't a place on earth since she's
+lost confidence in that cousin of her mother's because he didn't come to
+her wedding. She hasn't an idea that he never got her note asking him to
+give her away. Thank heaven I got hold of that before it reached the
+postman! If that old granny had been here we should have had trouble
+indeed. I had an experience with him once just before I married Betty's
+father, and I never want to repeat it. But we must look out what gets in
+the papers!"
+
+"It's rather late for that, I suspect. The bloodhounds 'ill be around
+before many minutes and you better think up what you want said. But I'm
+not so sure she wouldn't go there, and we better tell the detectives
+that. What's the old guy's address? I'll call him up long distance and
+say she was on a motoring trip and intended to stop there if she had
+time. I'll ask if she's reached there yet."
+
+"That's a good idea, although I'm sure she was too hurt about it to go
+to him. She cried all the afternoon. It's a wonder she didn't look
+frightful! But that's Betty! Cry all day and come out looking like a
+star without any paint either. It's a pity somebody that would have
+appreciated it couldn't have had her complexion."
+
+"That's you all over, Mother, talking about frivolous things when
+everything's happening at once. You're the limit! I say, you'd better be
+getting down to business! I've thought of another thing. How about that
+old nurse, Candace? Betty used to be crazy about her? What became of
+her?"
+
+Mrs. Stanhope's face hardened, and anxiety grew in her eyes.
+
+"She might have gone to her, although I don't believe she knows where
+she is. I'm sure I don't. I sent her away just before we began to get
+ready for the wedding. I didn't dare have her here. She knows too much
+and takes too much upon herself. I wouldn't have kept her so long, only
+she knew I took the trustee's letter, and she was very impudent about it
+once or twice, so that I didn't really dare to let her go until just a
+few days ago. I thought things would all be over here before she could
+do any harm, and Betty would be of age and have her money in her own
+right, and being your wife, of course there wouldn't be any more trouble
+about it."
+
+"Well, you better find out what's become of her!" said the young man
+with darkening face. "_She_ ought to be locked up somewhere! She's
+liable to make no end of trouble! You can't tell what she's stirred up
+already! Ring for a servant and find out if they know where she is. Ten
+to one that's where Betty is."
+
+Mrs. Stanhope, with startled face, stepped to the bell and summoned
+Aileen:
+
+"Aileen, have you any idea where we could find Miss Betty's old nurse,
+Candace?" she asked in a soothing tone, studying the maid's countenance.
+"I think it might be well to send for her in case Miss Betty needs her.
+She was so much attached to her!"
+
+Aileen lifted startled eyes to her mistress' face. There was reserve and
+suspicion in her glance:
+
+"Why, she was here a few minutes ago," she said guardedly. "It seems
+Miss Betty sent her an invitation, and when Miss Betty took sick she was
+that scared she ran out of the church and come here to find out how she
+was. She might not have gone yet. I could go see."
+
+"Here! Was she here?" Mrs. Stanhope turned her head to her son and her
+eyes said: "That's strange!" but she kept her face well under control.
+
+"Yes, you might go and see if you can find her, Aileen, and if you do,
+tell her I would like to see her a moment."
+
+Aileen went away on her errand and Mrs. Stanhope turned to her son:
+
+"Betty can't have gone to her unless there was some collusion. But in
+any case I think we had better keep her here until we know something."
+
+Quick trotting steps were heard hurrying along the hall and a little
+jerky knock announced unmistakably the presence of Candace.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope surveyed the little red-faced creature coolly and sharply:
+
+"Candace, you have broken one of my express commands in returning here
+without permission from me, but seeing it was done in kindness I will
+overlook it this time and let you stay. You may be useful if they bring
+my daughter home to-night and I presume she will be very glad to see
+you. Just now she is--umm----" she glanced furtively at her son, and
+lifting her voice a trifle, as if to make her statement more
+emphatic--"she is at a private hospital near the church where they took
+her till she should be able to come home. It will depend on her
+condition whether they bring her to-night or to-morrow or in a few days.
+Meantime, if you like you may go up to your old room and wait until I
+send for you. I shall have news soon and will let you know. Don't go
+down to the servant's quarters, I wish to have you where I can call you
+at a moment's notice."
+
+Candace gave her ex-mistress a long, keen suspicious stare, pinned her
+with a glance as steely as her own for an instant, in search of a
+possible ulterior motive, and then turning on her little fat heel,
+vanished like a small fast racer in the direction of her old room.
+
+"Now," said Mrs. Stanhope, turning with a sigh of relief, "she's safe!
+I'll set Marie to watch her and if there's anything going on between
+those two Marie will find it out."
+
+But Herbert Hutton was already sitting at his mother's desk with the
+telephone book and calling up Long Distance.
+
+All the long hours when he had expected to have been standing under the
+rose bower downstairs in triumph with his bride, Herbert Hutton sat at
+that telephone in his mother's boudoir alternately raging at his mother
+and shouting futile messages over the 'phone. The ancient cousin of
+Betty's mother was discovered to be seriously ill in a hospital and
+unable to converse even through the medium of his nurse, so there was
+nothing to be gained there. Messages to the public functionaries in his
+town developed no news. Late into the night, or rather far toward the
+morning, Bessemer was discovered at a cabaret where his persistent
+mother and brother had traced him, too much befuddled with his evening's
+carouse to talk connectedly. He declared Betty was a good old girl, but
+she might go to thunder for all he cared; he knew a girl "worth twice of
+her."
+
+His mother turned with disgust from his babbling voice, convinced that
+he knew nothing of Betty's whereabouts. Nevertheless, by means of a
+financial system of threats and rewards which she had used on him
+successfully for a number of years, she succeeded in impressing upon him
+the necessity of coming home at once, and just as the pink was beginning
+to dawn in the gray of the morning, Bessemer drove up in a hired car,
+and stumbled noisily into the house, demanding to know where the wedding
+was. He wanted to kiss the bride.
+
+Candace, still in her stiff black silk, stood in the shadowy hall, as
+near as she dared venture, and listened, with her head thoughtfully on
+one side. Betty in her note about the wedding had said she was going to
+be married to Bessemer. But Bessemer didn't sound like a bridegroom. Had
+Bessemer run away then, or what? But some things looked queer. She
+remembered that Aileen had spoken as if Herbert was the bridegroom, but
+she had taken it for a mere slip of the tongue and thought nothing of
+it. When Aileen next came that way, she asked her if she happened to
+have got hold of one of the invitations, and Aileen, with her finger on
+her lips, nodded, and presently returned with something under her apron:
+
+"I slipped it from the waste-basket," she said, "and Miss Betty got a
+holt of it, and there was a tremenjus fuss about something, I couldn't
+make out what; but I heard the missus say it was all a mistake as she
+gave the order over the 'phone, and she must have misspoke herself, but
+anyhow she thought she'd destroyed them all and given a rush order and
+they would be all right and sent out in plenty of time. So she sticks
+this back in the waste-basket and orders me to take the basket down and
+burn it, but I keeps this out and hides it well. I couldn't see nothin'
+the matter with it, can you?"
+
+"There's _all_ the matter with it!" declared the angry nurse as she
+glared at the name of Herbert Hutton thoughtfully, and read between the
+lines more than she cared to tell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+NOT two miles away, Betty lay safe and warm in the flanellette
+nightgown, and watched Jane Carson turn out the light and open the
+window. A light leaped up from the street and made a friendly spot of
+brightness on the opposite wall, and Betty had a sense of cosiness that
+she had not felt since she was in boarding school with a roommate.
+
+"Now," said Jane, climbing into bed and pulling up the covers carefully
+lest she should let the cold in on her guest, "let's hear!--You warm
+enough?"
+
+There was a curious tenderness in her voice as if she had brought home a
+young princess and must guard her carefully.
+
+"Oh, perfectly!" said Betty, giving a little nervous shiver. "And I'm so
+glad to be here safe away from them all! Oh, I've needed some one to
+advise with _so_ much! I haven't had a soul since they sent my old nurse
+away because she dared to take my part sometimes."
+
+Suddenly Betty buried her face in the pillow and began to sob and Jane
+reached out quick gentle arms and gathered her in a close comforting
+embrace. In a moment more Betty had gained control of herself and began
+to explain:
+
+"You see," she said, catching her breath bravely, "they were determined
+I should marry a man I can't _endure_, and when I wouldn't they tried to
+_trick_ me into it anyway. I never suspected until I got into the church
+and looked around and couldn't see Bessemer anywhere; only the other one
+with his evil eyes gloating over me, and then I knew! They thought they
+would get me there before all that church full of people and I wouldn't
+dare do anything. But when I realized it, I just dropped right down in
+the aisle. I couldn't stand up, I was so frightened."
+
+"But I don't understand," said Jane. "Were there _two_ men?"
+
+"Oh, yes," sighed Betty, "there were two."
+
+"Well, where was the other one, the one you _wanted_ to marry?"
+
+"I don't know----" said Betty with a half sob in her voice. "That's just
+what frightened me. You see they were my stepmother's two sons, and it
+was my father's dying wish that I should marry one of them. I didn't
+really _want_ to marry Bessemer, but I simply _loathed_ Herbert, the
+younger one, who was so determined to marry me. I was terribly afraid
+of him. He had been frightfully cruel to me when I was a child and when
+he grew up he was always tormenting me; and then when he tried to make
+love to me he was so repulsive that I couldn't bear to look at him. It
+really made me sick to think of ever marrying him. Oh--I _couldn't_--no
+matter who asked me. So Bessemer and I decided to get married to stop
+the trouble. They were always nagging him, too, and I was kind of sorry
+for him."
+
+"But why should you marry anybody you didn't want to, I'd like to know!"
+exclaimed Jane in horror. "This is a free country and nobody ever makes
+people marry anybody they don't like any more. Why didn't you just beat
+it?"
+
+"I thought about that a good many times," said Betty, pressing her tired
+eyes with her cold little fingers, "but I couldn't quite bring myself to
+do it. In the first place, I didn't know where to go, nor what to do.
+They never would let me learn to do anything useful, so I couldn't have
+got any work; and anyhow I had a feeling that it wouldn't be possible to
+get away where Herbert couldn't find me if he wanted to. He's that way.
+He always gets what he wants, no matter whom it hurts. He's
+_awful_--Jane--really!"
+
+There was a pitiful note in her voice that appealed to the mother in
+Jane, and she stooped over her guest and patted her comfortingly on the
+shoulder:
+
+"You poor little kid," she said tenderly, "you must have been worried
+something awful, but still I don't get you; what was the idea in
+sticking around and thinking you _had_ to marry somebody you didn't
+like? You coulda gone to some one and claimed pertection. You could uv
+appealed to the p'lice if worst came to worst----!"
+
+"Oh! But Jane I couldn't! That would have brought our family into
+disgrace, and father would have felt so _dreadfully_ about it if he had
+been alive! I couldn't quite bring myself, either, to go against his
+dying request. We had always been so much to each other, Daddy and I.
+Besides, I didn't mind _Bessemer_ so _much_--he was always kind--though
+we never had much to do with each other----"
+
+"Well, I don't think I'd have stopped around long to please a father
+that didn't care any more for me than to want me to marry somebody I
+felt that way about!" said Jane, indignantly. "I haven't much use for a
+father like that!"
+
+"Oh, but he wasn't like that!" said Betty, rising up in her eagerness
+and looking at Jane through her shining curls that were falling all
+about her eager, troubled young face, "and he did love me, Jane, he
+loved me better than anything else in the whole world! That was why I
+was willing to sacrifice almost anything to please him."
+
+"Well, I'll be darned!" said Jane Carson, sitting up squarely in bed and
+staring at the spot of light on the wall. "That gets my goat! How could
+a man love you and yet want to torment you?"
+
+"Well, you see, Jane, he hadn't been very fond of them when they were
+boys"--she spoke it with dignity and a little gasp as if she were
+committing a breach of loyalty to explain, but realized that it was
+necessary--"and he felt when he was dying that he wanted to make
+reparation, so he thought if I should marry one of them it would show
+them that he had forgiven them----"
+
+"It--may--be--so," drawled Jane slowly, nodding her head deliberately
+with each word, "but--I don't see it that _way_! What kind of a man was
+this father of yours, anyway?"
+
+"Oh, a wonderful man, Jane!" Betty eagerly hastened to explain. "He was
+all the world to me, and he used to come up to school week-ends and take
+me on beautiful trips and we had the best times together, and he would
+tell me about my own dear mother----"
+
+Betty's hand grasped Jane's convulsively and her voice died out, in a
+sudden sob. Jane's hand went quickly to the bright head on the pillow:
+
+"There! there!" she whispered tenderly, "don't take on so, I didn't mean
+anything. I was just trying to dope it out; get it through my bean what
+in thunder----! Say! Did _he_ TELL _you_ he wanted you to marry those
+guys?"
+
+"Oh, no, he left word--it was his dying request."
+
+"Who'd he request it to?"
+
+"My stepmother."
+
+"H'm! I thought so! How'd you know he did? How'd you know but she was
+lyin'?"
+
+"No," said Betty sorrowfully, "she wasn't lying, she showed me the paper
+it was written on. There couldn't be any mistake. And his name was
+signed to it, his dear hand-writing, just as he always wrote it with the
+little quirl to the S that wasn't like anybody else. It went through me
+just like a knife when I saw it, that my dear father should have asked
+me to do what was so very very hard for me to think of. It was so much
+harder to have it come that way. If he had only asked me himself and we
+could have talked it over, perhaps he would have helped me to be strong
+enough to do it, but to have _her_ have to _tell me_! She felt that
+herself. She tried to be kind, I think. She said she wanted to have him
+wake me up and tell me himself, but she saw his strength was going and
+he was so anxious to have her write it down quick and let him sign it
+that she did as he asked----"
+
+"Well, you may depend on it he never wrote it at all--or anyhow, never
+knew what he was signing. Like as not she dragged it out of him some way
+while he was out of his mind or so near dying he didn't know what he was
+about. Besides, they mightta some of 'em forged his name. It's easy to
+copy signatures. Lotsa people do it real good. If I was you I wouldn't
+think another mite about it. If he was a man like you say he is, he
+couldn'ta done a thing like that to his own little girl, not on his
+life! It ain't like real fathers and mothers to. I know, fer I've got a
+mother that's a peach and no mistake! No, you may depend on it, he never
+knew a thing about that, and marrying a guy like that is the last thing
+on earth he'd want you to do."
+
+"Oh, do you really think so? Oh, are you _sure_?" cried Betty, clinging
+to Jane eagerly, the tears raining down her white cheeks. "I've thought
+so a thousand times, but I didn't dare trust myself to decide."
+
+"Yes, I'm sure!" said Jane, gathering her in her arms and hugging her
+tight, just as she would have done with a little sister who had waked up
+in the night with a bad dream. "Now, look here, you stop crying and
+don't you worry another bit. Just tell me the rest if there's any rest,
+so I'll know what to bank on. Who is the other guy, the one you didn't
+mind marryin'? What became of him?"
+
+"Why, that's the queer part," said Betty, troubled again. "He didn't
+seem to be anywhere, and when they carried me into the room back of the
+church and fanned me and got water to bathe my face, a doctor came and
+gave me some medicine and sent them all out, and I asked him to send
+Bessemer to me. I wanted to find out why he hadn't been standing up
+there by the minister the way I expected. I heard the doctor go out and
+ask for Bessemer and I heard my stepmother's voice say, 'Why Bessemer
+isn't here! He's gone down to the shore!' and then somebody said,
+'Hush,' and they shut the door, and I was so frightened that I got up
+and tried all the doors till I found one that led down some stairs, and
+I locked it behind me and ran and found you!"
+
+"You poor little kid!" cried Jane, cuddling her again. "I sure am glad I
+was on the job! But now, tell me, what's your idea? Will they make a
+big noise and come huntin' you?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Betty wearily. "I suppose they will. I _know_ they will,
+in fact. Herbert won't be balked in anything he wants----Bessemer won't
+count. He never counts. I'm sort of sorry for him, though I don't like
+him much. You see they had been making an awful fuss with him, too,
+about some actress down at the shore that he was sending flowers to, and
+I knew he didn't have a very easy time. So when he came in one day and
+asked me why I didn't marry _him_ and settle the whole thing that way, I
+was horrified at first, but I finally thought perhaps that would be the
+best thing to do. He said he wouldn't bother me any, if I wouldn't
+bother him; and we thought perhaps the others would let us alone then.
+But I might have known Herbert wouldn't give in! Bessemer is easily
+led--Herbert could have hired him to go away to-night--or they may have
+_made_ him ask me to marry him. He's like that," sadly. "You can't
+depend on him. I don't know. You see, it was kind of queer about the
+invitations. They came with Herbert's name in them first, and my
+stepmother tried to keep me from seeing them. She said they were late
+and she had them all sent off; but I found one, and when I went to my
+stepmother with it she said it was a mistake. She hadn't meant me to be
+annoyed by seeing it; and she didn't know how it happened; she must have
+misspoken herself--but it had been corrected and they would rush it
+through and send them right from the store this time so there wouldn't
+be any delay. I tried to think it was all right, but it troubled me, for
+I saw that Herbert hadn't given up at all--though he pretended to go
+away, and I hoped I wouldn't have any more trouble--but I might have
+known! Herbert never gave up anything in his life, not even when father
+was living. He always managed to get his way, somehow----"
+
+"Did he love you so much?" Jane asked awesomely.
+
+Betty shuddered:
+
+"Oh, I don't know whether it was love or hate! It was all the same. I
+hate to think about him--he is--_unbearable_, Jane! Why, Jane, once he
+told me if he ever got me in his power he'd break my will or kill me in
+the attempt!"
+
+"Well, now, there, Kid! Don't you think another bit about him, the old
+brute! You just lie down and sleep as easy as if you was miles away.
+They won't any of 'em ever find you here with me, and I've pulled the
+washstand in front of the door, so you needn't be dreaming of anybody
+coming in and finding you. Now go to sleep, and to-morrow I'll sneak you
+away to a place where they can't ever find you. Good night, Kid!" and
+Jane leaned down and kissed the soft hair on the pillow beside her.
+Betty flung her arms about her new-found friend and kissed her tenderly:
+
+"Oh, you've been so good to me! What should I ever have done if I hadn't
+found you. You were like an angel. I think surely God must have sent you
+to help me."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if he did!" said Jane thoughtfully. "An angel in a
+mackintosh! Some angel!"
+
+Jane Carson with her eyes wide open lay staring into the darkness and
+thinking it all over. She did not waste much time marvelling over the
+wonder that it had all happened to her. That would do for afterward when
+there was nothing else to be done about it. Now there must be some plans
+made and she was the one to make them. It was quite plain that the
+wonderful and beautiful Elizabeth Stanhope, the plans for whose wedding
+had been blazoned in the papers for days beforehand, was not at present
+capable of making or carrying out anything effective. Jane was. She knew
+it. She was a born leader and promoter. She liked nothing better than
+to work out a difficult situation. But this was the most difficult
+proposition that she had ever come up against. When her father died and
+her mother was left with the little house and the three younger children
+to support in a small country village, and only plain sewing and now and
+then a boarder to eke out a living for them all, she had sought and
+found, through a summer visitor who had taught her Sunday school class
+for a few weeks, a good position in this big Eastern city. She had made
+good and been promoted until her wages not only kept herself with strict
+economy, but justified her in looking forward to the time when she might
+send for her next younger sister. Her deft fingers kept her meagre
+wardrobe in neatness--and a tolerable deference to fashion, so that she
+had been able to annex the "gentleman friend" and take a little outing
+with him now and then at a moving picture theatre or a Sunday evening
+service. She had met and vanquished the devil on more than one
+battlefield in the course of her experience with different department
+heads; and she was wise beyond her years in the ways of the world. But
+this situation was different. Here was a girl who had been brought up
+"by hand," as she would have said with a sneer a few hours before, and
+she would have despised her for it. She raised up on one elbow and
+leaned over once more to watch the delicate profile of this gentle
+maiden, in the dim fitful light of the city night that came through the
+one little window. There had been something appealing in the beauty and
+frankness of the girl bride, something appalling in the situation she
+had found herself in. Jane Carson didn't know whether she was doing
+right or not to help this stray bride. It made her catch her breath to
+think how she might be bringing all the power of the law and of money
+upon her reckless young head, but she meant to do it, just the same.
+
+Elizabeth Stanhope! What a beautiful name! It fitted right in with all
+the romance Jane had ever dreamed. If she only could write scenarios,
+what a thriller this would make!
+
+Then she lay down and fell to planning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+THE morning dawned, and still no word from the missing bride. But the
+brief guarded sentences which Herbert Hutton had telephoned to the
+newspapers had been somehow sidetracked, and in their place a ghastly
+story had leaked out which some poor, hard-pressed reporter had gleaned
+from the gossip in the church and hurried off to put into type before
+there was time for it to be denied. Hot foot the story had run, and
+great headlines proclaimed the escape of Betty even while the family
+were carefully paving the way for the report of a protracted illness and
+absence, if need be, till they could find trace of her. The sun rose
+brightly and made weird gleaming of the silver wire on which the dying
+roses hung. The air was heavy with their breath, and the rooms in the
+early garish light looked out of place as if some fairy wand had failed
+to break the incantation at the right hour and left a piece of Magicland
+behind. The parlor maid went about uncertainly, scarcely knowing what to
+do and what to leave undone, and the milk cars, and newsboys, and early
+laborers began to make a clatter of every day on the streets. The
+morning paper, flung across the steps with Betty's picture, where
+Betty's reluctant feet had gone a few hours before, seemed to mock at
+life, and upstairs the man that Betty thought she went out to marry, lay
+in a heavy stupor of sleep. Happy Betty, to be resting beneath the
+coarse sheet of the kindly working girl, sleeping the sleep of
+exhaustion and youth in safety, two miles from the rose-bowered rooms!
+
+Long before day had really started in the great city Jane Carson was up
+and at work. She dressed swiftly and silently, then went to her little
+trunk, and from it selected a simple wardrobe of coarse clean garments.
+One needed mending and two buttons were off. She sat by the dingy window
+and strained her eyes in the dawn to make the necessary repairs. She
+hesitated long over the pasteboard suit-box that she drew from under the
+bed. It contained a new dark blue serge dress for which she had saved a
+long time and in which she had intended to appear at church next
+Sabbath. She was divided between her desire to robe the exquisite little
+guest in its pristine folds and her longing to wear it herself. There
+was a sense of justice also which entered into the matter. If that
+elegant wedding dress was to be hers, and all those wonderful silk
+underclothes, which very likely she would never allow herself to wear,
+for they would be out of place on a poor working girl, it was not fair
+to repay their donor in old clothes. She decided to give the runaway
+bride her new blue serge. With just a regretful bit of a sigh she laid
+it out on the foot of the bed, and carefully spread out the tissue
+papers and folded the white satin garments away out of sight, finishing
+the bundle with a thick wrapping of old newspapers from a pile behind
+the door and tying it securely. She added a few pins to make the matter
+more sure, and got out a stub of a pencil and labeled it in large
+letters, "My summer dresses," then shoved it far back under the bed. If
+any seeking detective came he would not be likely to bother with that,
+and he might search her trunk in vain for white satin slippers and
+wedding veils.
+
+Breakfast was next, and she put on her cloak and hurried out for
+supplies for the larder had been heavily depleted the night before to
+provide for her guest. With a tender glance toward the sleeper she
+slipped the key from the lock and placed it in the outside of the door,
+silently locking her guest within. Now there would be no danger of any
+one spiriting her away while she was gone, and no danger that the girl
+might wake up and depart in her absence.
+
+She stopped a newsboy on his way to the subway and bought a paper,
+thrilling at the thought that there might be something in it about the
+girl who lay asleep in her little hall bedroom.
+
+While she waited for her bundles she stole a glance at her paper, and
+there on the front page in big letters ran the heading:
+
+ STANHOPE WEDDING
+ HELD UP AT ALTAR BY
+ UNCONSCIOUS BRIDE
+
+ _Relatives Seek Runaway Girl Who is
+ Thought to be Insane_
+
+She caught her breath and rolled the paper in a little wad, stuffing it
+carelessly into her pocket. She could not read any more of that in
+public. She hastened back to her room.
+
+Betty was still sleeping. Jane stood watching her for a full minute with
+awe in her face. She could not but recognize the difference between
+herself and this fine sweet product of civilization and wealth. With the
+gold curls tossed back like a ripple of sunshine, and a pathetic little
+droop at the corners of her sweet mouth, nothing lovelier could be. Jane
+hurried to the window and turned her back on the bed while she perused
+the paper, her rage rising at the theories put forth. It was even
+hinted that her mother had been insane. Jane turned again and looked
+hard at the young sleeper, and the idea crossed her mind that even she
+might be deceived. Still, she was willing to trust her judgment that
+this girl was entirely sane, and anyhow she meant to help her! She
+stuffed the paper down behind the trunk and began to get breakfast. When
+it was almost ready she gently awoke the sleeper.
+
+Betty started at the light touch on her shoulder and looked wildly
+around at the strange room and stranger face of the other girl. In the
+dim light of the evening she had scarcely got to know Jane's face. But
+in a moment all the happenings of the day before came back, and she sat
+up excitedly.
+
+"I ought to have got away before it was light," she said gripping her
+hands together. "I wonder where I could go, Jane?" It was pleasant to
+call this girl by her first name. Betty felt that she was a tower of
+strength, and so kind.
+
+"I have this ring," she said, slipping off an exquisite diamond and
+holding it out. "Do you suppose there would be any way I could get money
+enough to travel somewhere with this? If I can't I'll have to walk, and
+I can't get far in a day that way."
+
+Betty was almost light-hearted, and smiling. The night had passed and no
+one had come. Perhaps after all she was going to get away without being
+stopped.
+
+Jane's face set grimly.
+
+"I guess there won't be any walking for you. You'll have to travel
+regular. It wouldn't be safe. And you don't want no rich jewelry along
+either. Was that your wedding ring?"
+
+"Oh, no; father gave it to me. It was mother's, but I guess they'd want
+me to use it now. I haven't anything else."
+
+"Of course," said Jane shortly to hide the emotion in her voice. "Now
+eat this while I talk," thrusting a plate of buttered toast and a glass
+of orange marmalade at her, and hastening to pour an inviting cup of
+coffee.
+
+"Now, I been thinking," she said sitting down on the edge of the bed and
+eating bits of the piece of toast she had burned--Betty's was toasted
+beautifully--"I got a plan. I think you better go to Ma. She's got room
+enough for you for a while, and I want my sister to come over and take a
+place I can get fer her. If you was there she could leave. Mebbe you
+could help Ma with the kids. Of course we're poor and you ain't used to
+common things like we have them, but I guess you ain't got much choice
+in your fix. I got a paper this morning. They're huntin' fer you hot
+foot. They say you was temperary insane, an' 'f I was you I'd keep out
+o' their way a while. You lay low an' I'll keep my eye out and let you
+know, I've got a little money under the mattrass I can let you have till
+that ring gets sold. You can leave it with me an' I'll do the best I can
+if you think you can trust me. Of course I'm a stranger, but then, land!
+So are you! We just _gotta_ trust each other. And I'm sending you to my
+mother if you'll go!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, springing up and hugging her impulsively, "you're so
+good! To think I should find somebody just like that right in the street
+when I needed you so. I almost think God did it!"
+
+"Well, mebbe!" said Jane, in her embarrassment turning to hang up a
+skirt that had fallen from its hook. "That's what they say sometimes in
+Chrishun Deavor meetin'. Ever go to Chrishun Deavor? Better go when you
+get out home. They have awful good socials an' ice cream, and you'll
+meet some real nice folks. We've got a peach of a minister, and his wife
+is perfec'ly dandy. I tell you I missed 'em when I came to the city!
+They was always doing something nice fer the young folks."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty, wondering if she might really be going to
+live like other girls. Then the shadow of her danger fell over her once
+more, and her cheek paled.
+
+"If I can only get there safely," she shuddered. "Oh, Jane! You can't
+understand what it would be to have to go back!"
+
+"Well, you're not going back. You're going to Tinsdale, and nobody's
+going to find you ever, unless you want 'em to! See? Now, listen! We
+haven't any time to waste. You oughtta get off on the ten o'clock train.
+I put out some clothes there for yeh. They ain't like yours, but it
+won't do fer you to go dressed like a millionairess. Folks out to
+Tinsdale would suspect yeh right off the bat. You gotta go plain like
+me, and it's this way: You're a friend I picked up in the city whose
+mother is dead and you need country air a while, see? So I sent you home
+to stay with Ma till you got strong again. I'm wirin' Ma. She'll
+understand. She always does. I kinda run Ma anyhow. She thinks the sun
+rises an' sets in me, so she'll do just what I say."
+
+"I'm afraid I oughtn't to intrude," said Betty soberly, taking up the
+coarse, elaborately trimmed lingerie with a curious look, and trying not
+to seem to notice that it was different from any she had ever worn
+before.
+
+"Say! Looka here!" said Jane Carson, facing round from her coffee cup on
+the washstand. "I'm sorry to criticize, but if you could just talk a
+little slang or something. Folks'll never think you belong to me.
+_'Intrude!'_ Now, that sounds stuck up! You oughtta say 'be in the way,'
+or something natural like that. See?"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't," said Betty dubiously, "but I'll try."
+
+"You're all right, Kid," said Jane with compunction in her voice. "Just
+let yourself down a little like I do, and remember you don't wear silk
+onderclothes now. I'm afraid those stockings won't feel very good after
+yours, but you gotta be careful. An' 'f I was you I'd cut my hair off, I
+really would. It's an awful pity, it's so pretty, but it'll grow again.
+How old are you?"
+
+"Almost twenty-one," said Betty thoughtfully. "Just three months more
+and I'll be twenty-one."
+
+"H'm! Of age!" said Jane with a sharp significant look at her, as if a
+new thought had occurred. "Well, you don't look it! You could pass for
+fifteen, especially if you had your hair bobbed. I can do it for you if
+you say so."
+
+"All right," said Betty promptly without a qualm. "I always wanted it
+short. It's an awful nuisance to comb."
+
+"That's the talk!" said Jane. "Say 'awful' a lot, and you'll kinda get
+into the hang of it. It sounds more--well, _natural_, you know; not like
+society talk. Here, sit down and I'll do it quick before you get cold
+feet. I sure do hate to drop them curls, but I guess it's best."
+
+The scissors snipped, snipped, and the lovely strands of bright hair
+fell on the paper Jane had spread for them. Betty sat cropped like a
+sweet young boy. Jane stood back and surveyed the effect through her
+lashes approvingly. She knew the exact angle at which the hair should
+splash out on the cheek to be stylish. She had often contemplated
+cutting her own, only that her mother had begged her not to, and she
+realized that her hair was straight as a die and would never submit to
+being tortured into that alluring wave over the ear and out toward the
+cheekbone. But this sweet young thing was a darling! She felt that the
+daring deed had been a success.
+
+"I got a bottle of stuff to make your hair dark," she remarked. "I guess
+we better put it on. That hair of yours is kinda conspicuous, you know,
+even when it's cut off. It won't do you any harm. It washes off soon."
+And she dashed something on the yellow hair. Betty sat with closed eyes
+and submitted. Then her mentor burnt a cork and put a touch to the
+eyebrows that made a different Betty out of her. A soft smudge of dark
+under her eyes and a touch of talcum powder gave her a sickly complexion
+and when Betty stood up and looked in the glass she did not know
+herself. Jane finished the toilet by a smart though somewhat shabby
+black hat pulled well down over Betty's eyes, and a pair of gray cotton
+gloves, somewhat worn at the fingers. The high-laced boots she put upon
+the girl's feet were two sizes too large, and wobbled frightfully, but
+they did well enough, and there seemed nothing more to be desired.
+
+"Now," said Jane as she pinned on her own hat, "you've gotta have a name
+to go by. I guess you better be Lizzie Hope. It kinda belongs to yeh,
+and yet nobody'd recognize it. You don't need to tell Ma anything you
+don't want to, and you can tell her I'll write a letter to-night all
+about it. Now come on! We gotta go on the trolley a piece. I don't see
+havin' you leave from the General Station. We'll go up to the Junction
+and get the train there."
+
+With an odd feeling that she was bidding good-by to herself forever and
+was about to become somebody else, Betty gave one more glance at the
+slim boylike creature in the little mirror over the washstand and
+followed Jane out of the room, shuffling along in the big high-heeled
+boots, quite unlike the Betty that she was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+WARREN REYBURN laid down his pen and shoved back his office chair
+impatiently, stretching out his long muscular limbs nervously and
+rubbing his hands over his eyes as if to clear them from annoying
+visions.
+
+James Ryan, his office boy and stenographer, watched him furtively from
+one corner of his eye, while his fingers whirled the typewriter on
+through the letter he was typing. James wanted to take his girl to the
+movies that evening and he hadn't had a chance to see her the day
+before. He was wondering if Mr. Reyburn would go out in time for him to
+call her up at her noon hour. He was a very temperamental stenographer
+and understood the moods and tenses of his most temperamental employer
+fully. It was all in knowing how to manage him. James was most
+deferential, and knew when to keep still and not ask questions. This was
+one of the mornings when he went to the dictionary himself when he
+wasn't sure of a word rather than break the ominous silence. Not that
+Mr. Reyburn was a hard master, quite the contrary, but this was James's
+first place straight from his brief course at business school, and he
+was making a big bluff of being an old experienced hand.
+
+There was not much business to be done. This was Warren Reyburn's "first
+place" also in the world of business since finishing his law course, and
+he was making a big bluff at being very busy, to cover up a sore heart
+and an anxious mind. It was being borne in upon him gradually that he
+was not a shouting success in business so far. The rosy dreams that had
+floated near all through his days of hard study had one by one left him,
+until his path was now leading through a murky gray way with little hope
+ahead. Nothing but sheer grit kept him at it, and he began to wonder how
+long he could stick it out if nothing turned up.
+
+True, he might have accepted an offer that even now lay open on his
+desk; a tempting offer, too, from a big corporation who recognized the
+influence of his old family upon their particular line of business; but
+it was a line that his father and his grandfather had scorned to touch,
+and he had grown up with an honest contempt for it. He just could not
+bring himself to wrest the living from the poor and needy, and plunder
+the unsuspecting, and he knew that was what it would be if he closed
+with this offer. Not yet had he been reduced to such depths, he told
+himself, shutting his fine lips in a firm curve. "No, not if he
+starved!"
+
+That was the legitimate worry that ruffled his handsome brow as he sat
+before his desk frowning at that letter. He meant to begin dictation on
+its answer in another five minutes or so, but meantime he was forcing
+himself to go over every point and make it strong and clear to himself,
+so that he should say, "No!" strongly and clearly to the corporation. It
+might do harm to make his reason for declining so plain, but he owed it
+to his self-respect to give it nevertheless, and he meant to do so.
+After all, he had no business so far to harm, so what did it matter? If
+nothing turned up pretty soon to give him a start he would have to
+change his whole plan of life and take up something else where one did
+not have to wait for a reputation before he could have a chance to show
+what was in him.
+
+But underneath the legitimate reason for his annoyance this morning
+there ran a most foolish little fretting, a haunting discomfort.
+
+He had taken his cousin to a wedding the night before because her
+husband had been called away on business, and she had no one to escort
+her. They had been late and the church was crowded. He had had to
+stand, and as he idly looked over the audience he suddenly looked full
+into the great sad eyes of the sweetest little bride he had ever seen.
+He had not been a young man to spend his time over pretty faces,
+although there were one or two nice girls in whom he was mildly
+interested. He had even gone so far as to wonder now and then which of
+them he would be willing to see sitting at his table day after day the
+rest of his life, and he had not yet come to a satisfactory conclusion.
+His cousin often rallied him about getting married, but he always told
+her it would be time enough to think about that when he had an income to
+offer her.
+
+But when he saw that flower-face, his attention was held at once.
+Somehow he felt as if he had not known there was a face like that in all
+the world, so like a child's, with frank yet modest droop to the head,
+and the simplicity of an angel, yet the sadness of a sacrificial
+offering. Unbidden, a great desire sprang up to lift for her whatever
+burden she was bearing, and bring light into those sad eyes. Of course
+it was a passing sensation, but his eyes had traveled involuntarily to
+the front of the church to inspect the handsome forbidding face of the
+bridegroom, and with instant dissatisfaction he looked back to the girl
+once more and watched her come up to the altar, speculating as those
+who love to study humanity are wont to do when they find an interesting
+subject. How had those two types ever happened to come together? The
+man's part in it was plain. He was the kind who go about seeking whom
+they may devour, thought Warren Reyburn. But the woman! How could a
+wise-eyed child like that have been deceived by a handsome face? Well,
+it was all speculation of course, and he had nothing to do with any of
+them. They were strangers to him and probably always would be. But he
+had no conception at that time what a small world he lived in, nor how
+near the big experiences of life lie all about us.
+
+He watched the lovely bride as all the audience watched her until he saw
+her fall, and then he started forward without in the least realizing
+what he was doing. He found himself half way up the side aisle to the
+altar before he came to himself and forced his feet back to where his
+cousin was sitting. Of course he had no right up there, and what could
+he do when there were so many of her friends and relatives about her?
+
+His position near the side door through which they carried her made it
+quite possible for him to look down into her still face as they took her
+to the vestry room, and he found a great satisfaction in seeing that
+she was even more beautiful at close hand than at a distance. He
+wondered afterward why his mind had laid so much stress upon the fact
+that her skin was lovely like a baby's without any sign of cosmetics. He
+told himself that it was merely his delight to learn that there was such
+a type, and that it ran true.
+
+He was therefore not a little disappointed that the minister, after the
+congregation had waited an unconscionable time for the return of the
+bride, came out and announced that owing to her continued collapse the
+ceremony would have to be postponed. The clatter of polite wonder and
+gossip annoyed him beyond measure, and he was actually cross with his
+cousin on the way home when she ranted on about the way girls nowadays
+were brought up, coddled, so that a breath would blow them away. Somehow
+she had not looked like that kind of a girl.
+
+But when the morning papers came out with sensational headlines
+proclaiming that the bride had run away, and suggesting all sorts of
+unpleasant things about her, he felt a secret exultation that she had
+been brave enough to do so. It was as if he had found that her spirit
+was as wise and beautiful as her face had been. His interest in the
+matter exceeded all common sense and he was annoyed and impatient with
+himself more than he cared to own. Never before had a face lured his
+thoughts like this one. He told himself that his business was getting on
+his nerves, and that as soon as he could be sure about one or two little
+matters that he hoped would fall into his hands to transact, he would
+take a few days off and run down to the shore.
+
+Again and again the little white bride came across his vision and
+thoughts, and hindered the courteous but stinging phrases with which he
+had intended to illumine his letter. At last he gave it up and taking
+his hat went out in the keen November air for a walk to clear his brain.
+
+This was James Ryan's opportunity. It was almost twelve o'clock and no
+harm in calling the "forelady" in the cotton blouse department of the
+big factory. He swung to the telephone with alacrity.
+
+"I want to speak with Miss Carson, please. Yes, Miss J. Carson. Is that
+Miss Carson? Oh, hello, Jane, is that you?"
+
+"Yes, it is _Mister_ Ryan," answered Jane sweetly.
+
+"Jane!"
+
+"Well, didn't you 'Miss Carson' me?"
+
+"Give it up, Jane. You win. Say, Jane!"
+
+"Well, Jimmie?"
+
+"That's my girl, say how about that wedding veil? Been thinking any more
+about it?"
+
+There was silence for a moment, then a conscious giggle, the full
+significance of which James Ryan was not in a position to figure out.
+
+"Say, Jimmie, quit your kiddin'! You mustn't say things like that over
+the 'phone."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"'Cause. Folks might listen."
+
+"I should worry! Well, since you say so. How about seein' a show
+together to-night?"
+
+"Fine an' dandy, Jimmie! I'll be ready at the usual time. I gotta go
+now, the boss is comin'. So long, Jimmie!"
+
+"So long, darling!"
+
+But the receiver at the other end hung up with a click, while Jane with
+a smile on her lips thought of the pasteboard box under her bed and
+wondered what Jimmie would say if he could know. For Jane had fully made
+up her mind that Jimmie was not to know. Not at present, anyhow. Some
+time she might tell him if things turned out all right, but she knew
+just what lordly masculine advice and criticism would lie upon James
+Ryan's lips if she attempted to tell him about her strange and wonderful
+guest of the night before. Maybe she was a fool to have trusted a
+stranger that way. Maybe the girl would turn out to be insane or wrong
+somehow, and trouble come, but she didn't believe it; and anyhow, she
+was going to wait, until she saw what happened next before she got
+Jimmie mixed up in it. Besides, the secret wasn't hers to tell. She had
+promised Betty, and she always kept her promises. That was one reason
+why she was so slow in promising to think about a wedding veil in
+response to James Ryan's oft repeated question.
+
+That evening on the way to the movies Jane instituted an investigation.
+
+"Jimmie, what kind of a man is your boss?"
+
+"White man!" said Jimmie promptly.
+
+"Aw! Cut it out, James Ryan! I don't mean how'd s'e look, or what color
+is he; I mean what kind of a _man_ is he?"
+
+"Well, that's the answer. White man! What's the matter of that? I said
+it and I meant it. He's white if there ever was one!"
+
+"Oh, that!" said Miss Carson in scorn. "Of course I know he's a peach.
+If he wasn't you wouldn't be workin' for him. What I mean, is he a
+_snob_?"
+
+"No chance!"
+
+"Well, I saw him _with_ 'em last night. I was passin' that big church
+up Spruce Street and I saw him standin' with his arms folded so----" she
+paused on the sidewalk and indicated his pose. "It was a swell weddin'
+and the place was full up. He had a big white front an' a clawhammer
+coat. I know it was him 'cause I took a good look at him that time you
+pointed him out at church that evenin'. I wondered was he _in with_ them
+swells?"
+
+Her tone expressed scorn and not a little anxiety, as if she had asked
+whether he frequented places of low reputation.
+
+"Oh, if you mean, _could_ he be, why that's a diffrunt thing!" said
+James the wise. "_Sure_, he could be if he wanted, I guess. He's got a
+good family. His uncle's some high muckymuck, and you often see his
+aunts' and cousins' names in the paper giving teas and receptions and
+going places. But he don't seem to go much. I often hear folks ask him
+why he wasn't some place last night, or 'phone to know if he won't come,
+and he always says he can't spare the time, or he can't afford it, or
+something like that."
+
+"Ain't he rich, Jimmie?"
+
+"Well, no, not exactly. He may have some money put away, or left him by
+some one. If he don't have I can't fer the life of me see how he lives.
+But he certainly don't get it in fees. I often wonder where my salary
+comes from, but it always does, regular as the clock."
+
+"Jimmie, doesn't he have _any_ business at all?"
+
+"Oh, yes he has business, but it ain't the paying kind. Fer instance,
+there was a man in to-day trying to get his house back that another man
+took away from him, and my boss _took the case_! He took it _right off
+the bat_ without waiting to see whether the man could pay him anything
+or not! He can't! He's only a poor laboring man, and a rich man stole
+his house. Just out an' out stole it, you know. It's how he got rich.
+Like as not we'll lose it, too, those rich men have so many ways of
+crawling out of a thing and making it look nice to the world. Oh, he'll
+get a fee, of course--twenty-five dollars, perhaps--but what's
+twenty-five dollars, and like as not never get even the whole of that,
+or have to wait for it? Why, it wouldn't keep _me_ in his office long!
+Then there was a girl trying to get hold of the money her own father
+left her, and her uncle frittered away and pertends it cost him all
+that, and _he's_ been supporting _her_! Well, we took that, too, and we
+won't get much out of that even if we do win. Then there come along one
+of these here rich guys with a pocket full of money and a nice slick
+tongue wanting to be protected from the law in some devilment, and _him
+we turned down flat_! That's how it goes in our office. I can't just
+figger out how it's coming out! But he's a good guy, a white man if
+there ever was one!"
+
+"I should say!" responded Jane with shining eyes. "Say, Jimmie, what's
+the matter of us throwin' a little business in his way--real, payin'
+business, I mean?"
+
+"Fat chance!" said Jimmie dryly.
+
+"You never can tell!" answered Jane dreamily. "I'm goin' to think about
+it. Our fact'ry has lawyers sometimes. I might speak to the boss."
+
+"Do!" said Jimmie sarcastically! "And have yer labor for yer pains!
+We'll prob'ly turn _them_ down. Fact'ries are _always_ doing things they
+hadn't ought to."
+
+But Jane was silent and thoughtful, and they were presently lost in the
+charms of Mary Pickford.
+
+The evening papers came out with pictures of Elizabeth Stanhope and her
+bridegroom that was to have been. Jane cut away the bridegroom and
+pasted the bride's picture in the flyleaf of her Bible, then hid it away
+in the bottom of her trunk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+WHEN Betty found herself seated on the day coach of a way train, jogging
+along toward a town she had never seen and away from the scenes and
+people of her childhood, she found herself trembling violently. It was
+as if she had suddenly been placed in an airplane all by herself and
+started off to the moon without any knowledge of her motor power or
+destination. It both frightened and exhilarated her. She wanted to cry
+and she wanted to laugh, but she did neither. Instead she sat demurely
+for the first hour and a half looking out of the window like any
+traveler, scarcely turning her head nor looking at anything in the car.
+It seemed to her that there might be a detective in every seat just
+waiting for her to lift her eyes that he might recognize her. But
+gradually as the time dragged by and the landscape grew monotonous she
+began to feel a little more at her ease. Furtively she studied her
+neighbors. She had seldom traveled in a common car, and it was new to
+her to study all types as she could see them here. She smiled at a dirty
+baby and wished she had something to give it. She studied the careworn
+man and the woman in black who wept behind her veil and would not smile
+no matter how hard the man tried to make her. It was a revelation to her
+that any man would try as hard as that to make a woman smile. She
+watched the Italian family with five children and nine bundles, and
+counted the colors on a smart young woman who got in at a way station.
+Every minute of the day was interesting. Every mile of dreary November
+landscape that whirled by gave her more freedom.
+
+She opened the little shabby handbag that Jane had given her and got out
+the bit of mirror one inch by an inch and a half backed with pasteboard
+on which lingered particles of the original green taffeta lining and
+studied her own strange face, trying to get used to her new self and her
+new name. Jane had written it, Lizzie Hope, on the back of the envelope
+containing the address of Mrs. Carson. It seemed somehow an
+identification card. She studied it curiously and wondered if Lizzie
+Hope was going to be any happier than Betty Stanhope had been. And then
+she fell to thinking over the strange experiences of the last
+twenty-four hours and wondering whether she had done right or not, and
+whether her father would have been disappointed in her, "ashamed of
+her," as her stepmother had said. Somehow Jane had made her feel that
+he would not, and she was more light-hearted than she had been for many
+a day.
+
+Late in the afternoon she began to wonder what Tinsdale would be like.
+In the shabby handbag was her ticket to Tinsdale and eight dollars and a
+half in change. It made her feel richer than she had ever felt in her
+life, although she had never been stinted as to pocket money. But this
+was her very own, for her needs, and nobody but herself to say how she
+should spend either it or her time.
+
+Little towns came in sight and passed, each one with one or two
+churches, a schoolhouse, a lot of tiny houses. Would Tinsdale look this
+way? How safe these places seemed, yet lonely, too! Still, no one would
+ever think of looking for her in a lonely little village.
+
+They passed a big brick institution, and she made out the words, "State
+Asylum," and shuddered inwardly as she thought of what Jane had told her
+about the morning paper. Suppose they should hunt her up and _put her in
+an insane asylum_, just to show the world that it had not been their
+fault that she had run away from her wedding! The thought was appalling.
+She dropped her head on her hand with her face toward the window and
+tried to pretend she was asleep and hide the tears that would come, but
+presently a boy came in at the station with a big basket and she bought
+a ham sandwich and an apple. It tasted good. She had not expected that
+it would. She decided that she must have been pretty hungry and then
+fell to counting her money, aghast that the meager supper had made such
+a hole in her capital. She must be very careful. This might be all the
+money she would have for a very long time, and there was no telling what
+kind of an impossible place she was going to. She might have to get away
+as eagerly as she had come. Jane was all right, but that was not saying
+that her mother and sisters would be.
+
+It was growing dark, and the lights were lit in the car. All the little
+Italian babies had been given drinks of water, and strange things to
+eat, and tumbled to sleep across laps and on seats, anywhere they would
+stick. They looked so funny and dirty and pitiful with their faces all
+streaked with soot and molasses candy that somebody had given them. The
+mother looked tired and greasy and the father was fat and dark, with
+unpleasant black eyes that seemed to roll a great deal. Yet he was kind
+to the babies and his wife seemed to like him. She wondered what kind of
+a home they had, and what relation the young fellow with the shiny dark
+curls bore to them. He seemed to take as much care of the babies as did
+their father and mother.
+
+The lights were flickering out in the villages now and gave a friendly
+inhabited look to the houses. Sometimes when the train paused at
+stations Betty could see people moving back and forth at what seemed to
+be kitchen tables and little children bringing dishes out, all working
+together. It looked pleasant and she wondered if it would be like that
+where she was going. A big lump of loneliness was growing in her throat.
+It was one thing to run away from something that you hated, but it was
+another to jump into a new life where one neither knew nor was known.
+Betty began to shrink inexpressibly from it all. Not that she wanted to
+go back! Oh, no; far from it! But once when they passed a little white
+cemetery with tall dark fir trees waving guardingly above the white
+stones she looked out almost wistfully. If she were lying in one of
+those beside her father and mother how safe and rested she would be. She
+wouldn't have to worry any more. What was it like where father and
+mother had gone? Was it a real place? Or was that just the end when one
+died? Well, if she were sure it was all she would not care. She would be
+willing to just go out and not be. But somehow that didn't seem to be
+the commonly accepted belief. There was always a beyond in most people's
+minds, and a fear of just what Betty didn't know. She was a good deal of
+a heathen, though she did not know that either.
+
+Then, just as she was floundering into a lot of theological mysteries of
+her own discovery the nasal voice of the conductor called out:
+"Tinsdale! Tinsdale!" and she hurried to her feet in something of a
+panic, conscious of her short hair and queer clothes.
+
+Down on the platform she stood a minute trying to get used to her feet,
+they felt so numb and empty from long sitting. Her head swam just a
+little, too, and the lights on the station and in the houses near by
+seemed to dance around her weirdly. She had a feeling that she would
+rather wait until the train was gone before she began to search for her
+new home, and then when the wheels ground and began to turn and the
+conductor shouted "All aboard!" and swung himself up the step as she had
+seen him do a hundred times that afternoon, a queer sinking feeling of
+loneliness possessed her, and she almost wanted to catch the rail and
+swing back on again as the next pair of car steps flung by her.
+
+Then a voice that sounded a little like Jane's said pleasantly in her
+ear: "Is this Lizzie Hope?" and Betty turned with a thrill of actual
+fright to face Nellie Carson and her little sister Emily.
+
+"Bobbie'll be here in a minute to carry your suitcase," said Nellie
+efficiently; "he just went over to see if he could borrow Jake Peter's
+wheelbarrow in case you had a trunk. You didn't bring your trunk? O, but
+you're going to stay, aren't you? I'm goin' up to the city to take a
+p'sition, and Mother'd be awful lonesome. Sometime of course we'll send
+fer them to come, but now the children's little an' the country's better
+fer them. They gotta go to school awhile. You'll stay, won't you?"
+
+"How do you know you'll want me?" laughed Betty, at her ease in this
+unexpected air of welcome.
+
+"Why, of course we'd want you. Jane sent you. Jane wouldn't of sent you
+if you hadn't been a good scout. Jane knows. Besides, I've got two eyes,
+haven't I? I guess I can tell right off."
+
+Emily's shy little hand stole into Betty's and the little girl looked
+up:
+
+"I'm awful glad you come! I think you're awful pretty!"
+
+"Thank you!" said Betty, warmly squeezing the little confiding hand. It
+was the first time in her life that a little child had come close to her
+in this confiding way. Her life had not been among children.
+
+Then Bob whirled up, bareheaded, freckled, whistling, efficient, and
+about twelve years old. He grabbed the suitcase, eyed the stranger with
+a pleasant grin, and stamped off into the darkness ahead of them.
+
+It was a new experience to Betty to be walking down a village street
+with little houses on each side and lights and warmth and heads bobbing
+through the windows. It stirred some memory of long ago, before she
+could scarcely remember. She wondered, had her own mother ever lived in
+a small village?
+
+"That's our church," confided Emily, as they passed a large frame
+building with pointed steeple and belfry. "They're goin' to have a
+entertainment t'morra night, an' we're all goin' and Ma said you cud go
+too."
+
+"Isn't that lovely!" said Betty, feeling a sudden lump like tears in her
+throat. It was just like living out a fairy story. She hadn't expected
+to be taken right in to family life this way.
+
+"But how did you know I was coming on that train?" she asked the older
+girl suddenly. "Jane said she was going to telegraph, but I expected to
+have to hunt around to find the house."
+
+"Oh, we just came down to every train after the telegram came. This is
+the last train to-night, and we were awful scared for fear you wouldn't
+come till morning, an' have to stay on the train all night. Ma says it
+isn't nice for a girl to have to travel alone at night. Ma always makes
+Jane and me go daytimes."
+
+"It was just lovely of you," said Betty, wondering if she was talking
+"natural" enough to please Jane.
+
+"Did you bob you hair 'cause you had a fever?" asked Nellie enviously.
+
+"No," said Betty, "that is, I haven't been very well, and I thought it
+might be good for me," she finished, wondering how many questions like
+that it was going to be hard for her to answer without telling a lie. A
+lie was something that her father had made her feel would hurt him more
+deeply than anything else she could do.
+
+"I just love it," said Nellie enthusiastically. "I wanted to cut mine,
+an' so did Jane, but Ma wouldn't let us. She says God gave us our hair,
+an' we oughtta take care of it."
+
+"That's true, too," said Betty. "I never thought about that. But I guess
+mine will grow again after a while. I think it will be less trouble this
+way. But it's very dirty with traveling. I think I'll have to wash it
+before I put it on a pillow."
+
+That had troubled Betty greatly. She didn't know how to get rid of that
+hair dye before Jane's family got used to having it dark.
+
+"Sure, you can wash it, if you ain't 'fraid of takin' cold. There's lots
+of hot water. Ma thought you'd maybe want to take a bath. We've got a
+big tin bath-tub out in the back shed. Ma bought it off the Joneses when
+they got their porcelain one put into their house. We don't have no
+runnin' water but we have an awful good well. Here's our house. I guess
+Bob's got there first. See, Ma's out on the steps waitin' fer us."
+
+The house was a square wooden affair, long wanting paint, and trimmed
+with little scrollwork around the diminutive front porch. The color was
+indescribable, blending well into the surroundings either day or night.
+It had a cheerful, decent look, but very tiny. There was a small yard
+about it with a picket fence, and a leafless lilac bush. A cheerful
+barberry bush flanked the gate on either side. The front door was open
+into a tiny hall and beyond the light streamed forth from a glass lamp
+set on a pleasant dining-room table covered with a red cloth. Betty
+stepped inside the gate and found herself enveloped in two motherly
+arms, and then led into the light and warmth of the family dining-room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THERE was a kettle of stew on the stove in the kitchen, kept hot from
+supper for Betty, with fresh dumplings just mixed before the train came
+in, and bread and butter with apple sauce and cookies. They made her sit
+right down and eat, before she even took her hat off, and they all sat
+around her and talked while she ate. It made her feel very much at home
+as if somehow she was a real relative.
+
+It came over her once how different all this was from the house which
+she had called home all her life. The fine napery, the cut glass and
+silver, the stately butler! And here was she eating off a stone china
+plate thick enough for a table top, with a steel knife and fork and a
+spoon with the silver worn off the bowl. She could not help wondering
+what her stepmother would have said to the red and white tablecloth, and
+the green shades at the windows. There was an old sofa covered with
+carpet in the room, with a flannel patchwork pillow, and a cat cuddled
+up cosily beside it purring away like a tea-kettle boiling. Somehow,
+poor as it was, it seemed infinitely more attractive than any room she
+had ever seen before, and she was charmed with the whole family. Bobbie
+sat at the other end of the table with his elbows on the table and his
+round eyes on her. When she smiled at him he winked one eye and grinned
+and then wriggled down under the table out of sight.
+
+The mother had tired kind eyes and a firm cheerful mouth like Jane's.
+She took Betty right in as if she had been her sister's child.
+
+"Come, now, get back there, Emily. Don't hang on Lizzie. She'll be tired
+to death of you right at the start. Give her a little peace while she
+eats her supper. How long have you and Jane been friends, Lizzie?" she
+asked, eager for news of her own daughter.
+
+Betty's cheeks flushed and her eyes grew troubled. She was very much
+afraid that being Lizzie was going to be hard work:
+
+"Why, not so very long," she said hesitatingly.
+
+"Are you one of the girls in her factory?"
+
+"Oh, no!" said Betty wildly, wondering what would come next. "We--just
+met--that is--why--_out one evening_!" she finished desperately.
+
+"Oh, I see!" said the mother. "Yes, she wrote about going out sometimes,
+mostly to the movies. And to church. My children always make it a point
+to go to church wherever they are. I brought 'em up that way. I hope you
+go to church."
+
+"I shall love to," said Betty eagerly.
+
+"Is your mother living?" was the next question.
+
+"No," answered Betty. "Mother and father are both dead and I've been
+having rather a hard time. Jane was kind to me when I was in trouble."
+
+"I'll warrant you! That's Jane!" beamed her mother happily. "Jane always
+was a good girl, if I do say so. I knew Jane was at her tricks again
+when she sent me that telegram."
+
+"Ma's got you a place already!" burst out Nellie eagerly.
+
+"Now, Nellie, you said you'd let Ma tell that!" reproached Bob. "You
+never can keep your mouth shut."
+
+"There! There! Bob, don't spoil the evening with anything unkind,"
+warned the mother. "Yes, Lizzie, I got you a position. It just happened
+I had the chance, and I took it, though I don't really b'lieve that
+anythin' in this world just happens, of course. But it did seem
+providential. Mrs. Hathaway wanted somebody to look after her little
+girl. She's only three years old and she is possessed to run away every
+chance she gets. Course I s'pose she's spoiled. Most rich children are.
+Now, my children wouldn't have run away. They always thought too much
+of what I said to make me trouble. But that's neither here nor there.
+She does it, and besides her Ma is an invalid. She had an operation, so
+she has to lie still a good bit, and can't be bothered. She wants
+somebody just to take the little girl out walking and keep her happy in
+the house, an' all."
+
+"How lovely!" exclaimed Betty. "I shall enjoy it, I know."
+
+"She's awful pretty!" declared Emily eagerly. "Got gold curls and blue
+eyes just like you, and she has ever an' ever so many little dresses,
+and wears pink shoes and blue shoes, an' rides a tricycle."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty.
+
+"You'll get good wages," said the mother. "She said she'd give you six
+dollars a week, an' mebbe more, an' you'd get some of your meals."
+
+"Then I can pay my board to you," cried Betty.
+
+"Don't worry about that, child. We'll fix that up somehow. We're awful
+glad to have you come, and I guess we shall like each other real well.
+Now, children, it's awful late. Get to bed. Scat! Lizzie can have her
+bath an' get to bed, too. Come, mornin's half way here already!"
+
+The children said good night and Betty was introduced to the tin bath
+tub and improvised bathroom--a neat little addition to the kitchen
+evidently intended originally for a laundry. She wanted to laugh when
+she saw the primitive makeshifts, but instead the tears came into her
+eyes to think how many luxuries she had taken all her life as a matter
+of course and never realized how hard it was for people who had none. In
+fact it had never really entered her head before that there were people
+who had no bathrooms.
+
+Betty was not exactly accustomed to washing her own hair, and with the
+added problem of the dye it was quite a task; but she managed it at
+last, using all the hot water, to get it so that the rinsing water was
+clear, and her hair felt soft. Then, attired in the same warm nightgown
+she had worn the night before, which Jane had thoughtfully put in the
+suitcase--otherwise filled with old garments she wished to send
+home--Betty pattered upstairs to the little room with the sloping roof
+and the dormer window and crept into bed with Nellie. That young woman
+had purposely stayed awake, and kept Betty as long as she could talk,
+telling all the wonderful things she wanted to know about city life, and
+Betty found herself in deep water sometimes because the city life she
+knew about was so very different from the city life that Jane would
+know. But at last sleep won, and Nellie had to give up because her last
+question was answered with silence. The guest was deep in slumber.
+
+The next morning the children took her over the house, out in the yard,
+showing her everything. Then they had to take her down to the village
+and explain all about the little town and its people. They were crazy
+about Betty's beautiful hair and much disappointed when she would insist
+on wearing her hat. It was a bright sunny morning, not very cold, and
+they told her that nobody wore a hat except to church or to go on the
+train, but Betty had a feeling that her hair might attract attention,
+and in her first waking hours a great shadow of horror had settled upon
+her when she realized that her people would leave no stone unturned to
+find her. It was most important that she should do or be nothing whereby
+she might be recognized. She even thought of getting a cap and apron to
+wear when attending her small charge, but Nellie told her they didn't do
+that in the country and she would be thought stuck up, so she desisted.
+But she drew the blue serge skirt up as high above her waistband as
+possible when she dressed in the morning so that she might look like a
+little girl and no one would suspect her of being a runaway bride. Also
+she had a consultation with herself in the small hours of the morning
+while Nellie was still fast asleep, and settled with her conscience just
+what she would tell about her past and what she would keep to herself.
+There was a certain reserve that any one might have, and if she was
+frank about a few facts no one would be likely to question further.
+
+So next morning she told Mrs. Carson that since her parents' death she
+had lived with a woman who knew her father well, but lately things had
+been growing very unpleasant and she found she had to leave. She had
+left under such conditions that she could not bring away anything that
+belonged to her, so she would have to work and earn some more clothes.
+
+Mrs. Carson looked into her sweet eyes and agreed that it was the best
+thing she could do; they might follow her up and make all sorts of
+trouble for her in her new home if she wrote for her things; and so the
+matter dropped. They were simple folks, who took things at their face
+value and were not over inquisitive.
+
+On the third day there arrived a long letter from Jane in which she gave
+certain suggestions concerning the new member of the family, and ended:
+"Ma, she's got a story, but don't make her tell any more of it than she
+wants. She's awful sensitive about it, and trust me, she's all right!
+She's been through a lot. Just make her feel she's got some folks that
+loves and trusts her."
+
+Ma, wise beyond her generation and experience, said no more, and took
+the little new daughter into her heart. She took the opportunity to
+inform the village gossips that a friend of Jane's had come to rest up
+and get a year's country air, boarding with them; and so the
+amalgamation of Betty Stanhope into the life of the little town began.
+
+The "job" proved to be for only part of the day, so that Betty was free
+most of the mornings to help around the house and take almost a
+daughter's place. That she was a rare girl is proved by the way she
+entered into her new life. It was almost as if she had been born again,
+and entered into a new universe, so widely was her path diverging from
+everything which had been familiar in the old life. So deep had been her
+distress before she came into it that this new existence, despite its
+hard and unaccustomed work, seemed almost like heaven.
+
+It is true there was much bad grammar and slang, but that did not
+trouble Betty. She had been brought up to speak correctly, and it was
+second nature to her, but no one had ever drummed it into her what a
+crime against culture an illiterate way of speaking could be. She never
+got into the way of speaking that way herself, but it seemed a part of
+these people she had come to know and admire so thoroughly, as much as
+for a rose to have thorns, and so she did not mind it. Her other world
+had been so all-wrong for years that the hardships of this one were
+nothing. She watched them patch and sacrifice cheerfully to buy their
+few little plain coarse new things. She marveled at their sweetness and
+content, where those of her world would have thought they could not
+exist under the circumstances.
+
+She learned to make that good stew with carrots and celery and parsley
+and potatoes and the smallest possible amount of meat, that had tasted
+so delicious the night she arrived. She learned the charms of the common
+little bean, and was proud indeed the day she set upon the table a
+luscious pan of her own baking, rich and sweet and brown with their
+coating of molasses well baked through them. She even learned to make
+bread and never let any one guess that she had always supposed it
+something mysterious.
+
+During the week that Nellie was preparing to go to the city, Betty had
+lessons in sewing. Nellie would bring down an old garment, so faded and
+worn that it would seem only fit for the rag-bag. She would rip and
+wash, dye with a mysterious little package of stuff, press, and behold,
+there would come forth pretty breadths of cloth, blue or brown or green,
+or whatever color was desired. It seemed like magic. And then a box of
+paper-patterns would be brought out, and the whole evening would be
+spent in contriving how to get out a dress, with the help of trimmings
+or sleeves of another material. Betty would watch and gradually try to
+help, but she found there were so many strange things to be considered.
+There, for instance, was the up and down of a thing and the right and
+wrong of it. It was exactly like life. And one had to plan not to have
+both sleeves for one arm, and to have the nap of the goods running down
+always. It was as complicated as learning a new language. But at the end
+of the week there came forth two pretty dresses and a blouse. Betty, as
+she sat sewing plain seams and trying to help all she could, kept
+thinking of the many beautiful frocks she had thrown aside in the years
+gone by, and of the rich store of pretty things that she had left when
+she fled. If only Nellie and Jane and little Emily could have them! Ah,
+and if only she herself might have them now! How she needed them! For a
+girl who had always had all she wanted it was a great change to get
+along with this one coarse serge and aprons.
+
+But the sewing and other work had not occupied them so fully that they
+had not had time to introduce Betty into their little world. The very
+next evening after she arrived she had been taken to that wonderful
+church entertainment that the girls had told her about on the way from
+the station, and there she had met the minister's wife and been invited
+to her Sabbath school class.
+
+Betty would not have thought of going if Nellie and her mother had not
+insisted. In fact, she shrank unspeakably from going out into the little
+village world. But it was plain that this was expected of her, and if
+she remained here she must do as they wanted her to do. It was the least
+return she could make to these kind people.
+
+The question of whether or not she should remain began to come to her
+insistently now. The children clamored every day for her to bind herself
+for the winter, and Jane's mother had made her most welcome. She saw
+that they really wanted her; why should she not stay? And yet it did
+seem queer to arrange deliberately to spend a whole year in a poor
+uncultured family. Still, where could she go and hope to remain unknown
+if she attempted to get back into her own class? It was impossible. Her
+mother had just the one elderly cousin whom she had always secretly
+looked to to help her in any time of need, but his failing her and
+sending that telegram without even a good wish in it, just at the last
+minute, too, made her feel it was of no use to appeal to him. Besides,
+that was the first place her stepmother would seek for her. She had many
+good society friends, but none who would stand by her in trouble. No one
+with whom she had ever been intimate enough to confide in. She had been
+kept strangely alone in her little world after all, hedged in by
+servants everywhere. And now that she was suddenly on her own
+responsibility, she felt a great timidity in taking any step alone.
+Sometimes at night when she thought what she had done she was so
+frightened that her heart would beat wildly as if she were running away
+from them all yet. It was like a nightmare that pursued her.
+
+Mrs. Hathaway had sent for her and made arrangements for her to begin
+her work with the little Elise the following week when the present
+governess should leave, and Betty felt that this might prove a very
+pleasant way to earn her living. The Hathaways lived in a great brick
+house away back from the street in grounds that occupied what in the
+city would have been a whole block. There was a high hedge about the
+place so that one could not see the road, and there were flower-beds, a
+great fountain, and a rustic summerhouse. Betty did not see why days
+passed in such a pleasant place would not be delightful in summertime.
+She was not altogether sure whether she would like to have to be a sort
+of servant in the house--and of course these cold fall days she would
+have to be much in the house--but the nursery had a big fireplace in it,
+a long chest under the window where toys were kept, and many comfortable
+chairs. That ought to be pleasant, too. Besides, she was not just out
+looking for pleasant things on this trip. She was trying to get away
+from unbearable ones, and she ought to be very thankful indeed to have
+fallen on such comfort as she had.
+
+There was another element in the Carson home that drew her strongly,
+although she was shy about even thinking of it, and that was the frank,
+outspoken Christianity. "Ma" tempered all her talk with it, adjusted all
+her life to God and what He would think about her actions, spoke
+constantly of what was right and wrong. Betty had never lived in an
+atmosphere where right and wrong mattered. Something sweet and pure like
+an instinct in her own soul had held her always from many of the ways
+of those about her, perhaps the spirit of her sweet mother allowed to be
+one of those who "bear them up, lest at any time they dash their feet
+against a stone." Or it might have been some memory of the teachings of
+her father, whom she adored, and who in his last days often talked with
+her alone about how he and her own mother would want her to live. But
+now, safe and quiet in this shelter of a real home, poor though it was,
+the God-instinct stirred within her, caused her to wonder what He was,
+why she was alive, and if He cared? One could not live with Mrs. Carson
+without thinking something about her God, for He was an ever-present
+help in all her times of need, and she never hesitated to give God the
+glory for all she had achieved, and for all the blessings she had
+received.
+
+The very first Sabbath in the little white church stirred still deeper
+her awakening interest in spiritual things. The minister's wife was a
+sweet-faced woman who called her "my dear" and invited her to come and
+see her, and when she began to teach the lesson Betty found to her
+amazement that it was interesting. She spoke of God in much the same
+familiar way that "Ma" had done, only with a gentler refinement, and
+made the girls very sure that whatever anybody else believed, Mrs.
+Thornley was a very intimate friend of Jesus Christ. Betty loved her at
+once, but so shy was she that the minister's wife never dreamed it, and
+remarked to her husband Sunday night after church, when they were having
+their little, quiet Sabbath talk together, that she was afraid she was
+going to have a hard time winning that little new girl that had come to
+live with Mrs. Carson.
+
+"Somehow I can't get away from the thought that she comes from
+aristocracy somewhere," she added. "It's the way she turns her head, or
+lifts her eyes or the quiet assurance with which she answers. And she
+smiles, Charles, never grins like the rest. She is delicious, but
+somehow I find myself wondering if I have remembered to black my shoes
+and whether my hat is on straight, when she looks at me."
+
+"Well, maybe she's the daughter of some black sheep who has gone down a
+peg, and our Father has sent her here for you to help her back again,"
+said her husband with an adorable look at his helper. "If anyone can do
+it you can."
+
+"I'm not so sure," she said, shaking her head. "She maybe doesn't need
+me. She has Mrs. Carson, remember, and she is a host in herself. If
+anybody can lead her to Christ she can, plain as she is."
+
+"Undoubtedly you were meant to help, too, dear, or she would not have
+been sent to you."
+
+His wife smiled brilliantly a look of thorough understanding: "Oh, I
+know. I'm not going to shirk any but I wish I knew more about her. She
+is so sad and quiet, I can't seem to get at her."
+
+Even at that moment Betty lay in her little cot bed under the roof
+thinking about the minister's wife and what she had said about Christ
+being always near, ready to show what to do, if one had the listening
+heart and the ready spirit. Would Christ tell her what to do, she
+wondered, now right here, if she were to ask him? Would He show her
+whether to stay in this place or seek further to hide herself from the
+world? Would He show her how to earn her living and make her life right
+and sweet as it ought to be.
+
+Then she closed her eyes and whispered softly under the sheltering
+bedclothes, "O Christ, if you are here, please show me somehow and teach
+me to understand."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+WHEN Betty had been in Tinsdale about a month it was discovered that she
+could play the piano. It happened on a rainy Sunday in Sunday school,
+and the regular pianist was late. The superintendent looked about
+helplessly and asked if there was anybody present who could play,
+although he knew the musical ability of everybody in the village. The
+minister's wife had already pleaded a cut finger which was well wrapped
+up in a bandage, and he was about to ask some one to start the tune
+without the piano when Mrs. Thornton leaned over with a sudden
+inspiration to Betty and asked:
+
+"My dear, you couldn't play for us, could you?"
+
+Betty smiled assent, and without any ado went to the instrument, not
+realizing until after she had done so that it would have been better
+policy for her to have remained as much in the background as possible,
+and not to have shown any accomplishments lest people should suspect her
+position. However, she was too new at acting a part to always think of
+these little things, and she played the hymns so well that they gathered
+about her after the hour was over and openly rejoiced that there was
+another pianist in town. The leader of Christian Endeavor asked her to
+play in their meeting sometimes, and Betty found herself quite popular.
+The tallest girl in their class, who had not noticed her before, smiled
+at her and patronized her after she came back from playing the first
+hymn, and asked her where she learned to play so well.
+
+"Oh, I used to take lessons before my father died," she said, realizing
+that she must be careful.
+
+Emily and Bob came home in high feather and told their mother, who had
+not been able to get out that morning, and she beamed on Betty with as
+warm a smile as if she had been her own daughter:
+
+"Now, ain't that great!" she said, and her voice sounded boyish just
+like Jane's. "Why, we'll have to get a pianna. I heard you could get 'em
+cheap in the cities sometimes--old-fashioned ones, you know. I heard
+they have so many old-fashioned ones that they have to burn 'em to get
+rid of 'em, and they even give 'em away sometimes. I wonder, could we
+find out and get hold of one?"
+
+"I guess 'twould cost too much to get it here," said Bob practically.
+"My! I wisht we had one. Say, Lizzie, 'f we had a pianna would you show
+me how to read notes?"
+
+"Of course," said Betty.
+
+"Well, we'll get one somehow! We always do when we need anything
+awfully. Look at the bathtub! Good-night! I'm goin' to earn one myself!"
+declared Bob.
+
+"Mrs. Crosby's gotta get a new one. P'raps she'll sell us her old one
+cheap."
+
+That was the way the music idea started, and nothing else was talked of
+at the table for days but how to get a piano. Then one day Emily came
+rushing home from school all out of breath, her eyes as bright as stars,
+and her cheeks like roses. "Mrs. Barlow came to our school to-day and
+talked to the teacher, and I heard her say she was going away for the
+winter. She's going to store her goods in the Service Company barn, but
+she wants to get somebody to take care of her piano. I stepped right up
+and told her my mother was looking for a piano, and we'd be real careful
+of it, and she's just delighted; and--it's coming to-morrow morning at
+nine o'clock! The man's going to bring it!"
+
+She gasped it out so incoherently that they had to make her tell it over
+twice to get any sense out of it; but when Bob finally understood he
+caught his little sister in his arms and hugged her with a big smacking
+kiss:
+
+"You sure are a little peach, Em'ly!" he shouted. "You're a pippin of
+the pippins! I didn't know you had that much nerve, you kid, you! I sure
+am proud of you! My! Think of havin' a pianna! Say, Betty, I can play
+the base of chopsticks now!"
+
+The next evening when Betty got home from the Hathaways there was the
+piano standing in the big space opposite the windows in the dining-room.
+Ma had elected to have it there rather than in the front room, because
+it might often be too cold in the front room for the children to
+practice, and besides it wouldn't be good for the piano. So the piano
+became a beloved member of the family, and Betty began to give
+instructions in music, wondering at herself that she knew how, for her
+own music had been most desultory, and nobody had ever cared whether she
+practiced or not. She had been allowed to ramble among the great masters
+for the most part unconducted, with the meagerest technique, and her own
+interpretation. She could read well and her sense of time and rhythm
+were natural, else she would have made worse work of it than she did.
+But she forthwith set herself to practicing, realizing that it might yet
+stand her in good stead since she had to earn her living.
+
+Little Emily and Bob stood one on either side and watched her as she
+played, with wondering admiration, and when Betty went to help their
+mother Bob would sit down and try to imitate what she had done. Failing,
+he would fall headlong into the inevitable chopsticks, beating it out
+with the air of a master.
+
+It was the piano that brought to Betty's realization the first real
+meaning of the Sabbath day. Bob came down early and went at the piano as
+usual banging out chopsticks, and a one-fingered arrangement of "The
+Long, Long Trail," while his mother was getting breakfast. Betty was
+making the coffee, proud of the fact that she had learned how. But Bob
+had accomplished only a brief hint of his regular program when the music
+stopped suddenly and Betty glanced through the kitchen door to see Ma
+standing with her hand on her son's shoulder and a look on her face she
+had not seen before: It was quite gentle, but it was decided:
+
+"No, Bob! We won't have that kinda music on Sunday," she said. "This is
+God's day, an' we'll have all we can rightly do to keep it holy without
+luggin' in week-day music to make us forget it. You just get t' work an'
+learn 'Safely Through Another Week,' an' if you can't play it right you
+get Lizzie to teach you."
+
+Bob pouted:
+
+"There ain't nothin' wrong with chopsticks, Ma. 'Tain't got words to
+it."
+
+"Don't make any diffrence. It b'longs to weekdays an' fun, an' anyhow it
+makes you think of other things, an' you can't keep your mind on God.
+That's what Sunday was made fer, to kinda tone us up to God, so's we
+won't get so far away in the week that we won't be any kind of ready for
+heaven some time. An' anyhow, 'tisn't seemly. You better go learn your
+Golden Text, Bob. The minister'll be disappointed if you don't have it
+fine."
+
+Betty stood by the window thoughtfully looking out. Was that what Sunday
+was made for, or was it only a quaint idea of this original woman? She
+wished she knew. Perhaps some time she would know the minister's wife
+well enough to ask. She would have liked to ask Ma more about it, but
+somehow felt shy. But Ma herself was started now, and when she came back
+to the kitchen, as if she felt some explanation was due the new inmate
+of the family, she said:
+
+"I don't know how you feel about it. I know city folks don't always hold
+to the old ways. But it always seemed to me God meant us to stick to
+Sunday, and make it diff'rent from other days. I never would let my
+children go visitin', nor play ball an' we always tried to have
+something good for supper fixed the night before. I heard somebody say a
+long time ago that it says somewhere in the Bible that Sunday was meant
+to be a sign forever between God and folks. The ones that keeps it are
+his'n, an' them as don't aren't. Anyhow, that's the only day we have got
+to kinda find out what's wanted of us. You wouldn't mind just playin'
+hymns and Sunday things t'day, would you?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Betty, interested. "I like it. It sounds so kind of safe,
+and as if God cared. I never thought much about it before. You think God
+really thinks about us and knows what we're doing then, don't you?"
+
+"Why, sure, child. I don't just think, I _know_ He does. Hadn't you
+never got onto that? Why, you poor little ducky, you! O' course He
+does."
+
+"I'd like to feel sure that He was looking out for me," breathed Betty
+wistfully.
+
+"Well, you can!" said Ma, hurrying back to see that her bacon didn't
+burn. "It's easy as rollin' off a log."
+
+"What would I have to do?"
+
+"Why, just b'lieve."
+
+"Believe?" asked Betty utterly puzzled. "Believe what?"
+
+"Why, believe that He'll do it. He said 'Come unto me, an' I will give
+you rest,' an' He said, 'Cast your burden on the Lord,' an' He said
+'Castin' all yer care 'pon Him, fer He careth fer you,' an' a whole lot
+more such things, an' you just got to take it fer straight, an' act on
+it."
+
+"But how could I?" asked Betty.
+
+"Just run right up to your room now, while you're feelin' that way, an'
+kneel down by your bed an' tell Him what you just told me," said Mrs.
+Carson, stirring the fried potatoes with her knife to keep them from
+burning. "It won't take you long, an' I'll tend the coffee. Just you
+tell Him you want Him to take care of you, an' you'll believe what I
+told you He said. It's all in the Bible, an' you can read it for
+yourself, but I wouldn't take the time now. Just run along an' speak it
+out with Him, and, then come down to breakfast."
+
+Betty was standing by the kitchen door, her hand on her heart, as if
+about to do some great wonderful thing that frightened her:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, suppose, maybe, He might not be pleased with me.
+Suppose I've done something that He doesn't like, something that makes
+Him ashamed of me."
+
+"Oh, why, didn't you know He fixed for all that when He sent His Son to
+be the Saviour of the world? We all do wrong things, an' everybody has
+sinned. But ef we're rightly sorry, He'll fergive us, and make us His
+children."
+
+Betty suddenly sat down in a chair near the door:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, I'm not sure I _am_ sorry--at least I know I'm _not_.
+I'm afraid I'd do it all over again if I got in the same situation."
+
+Mrs. Carson stood back from the stove and surveyed her thoughtfully a
+moment:
+
+"Well, then, like's not it wasn't wrong at all, and if it wasn't He
+ain't displeased. You can bank on that. You better go talk it out to
+Him. Just get it off your mind. I'll hold up breakfast a minute while
+you roll it on Him and depend on it he'll show you in plenty of time for
+the next move."
+
+Betty with her cheeks very red and her eyes shining went up to her
+little cot, and with locked door knelt and tried to talk to God for the
+first time in her life. It seemed queer to her, but when she arose and
+hurried back to her duties she had a sense of having a real Friend who
+knew all about her and could look after things a great deal better than
+she could.
+
+That night she went with Bob and Emily to the young people's meeting and
+heard them talk about Christ familiarly as if they knew Him. It was all
+strange and new and wonderful to Betty, and she sat listening and
+wondering. The old question of whether she was pleasing her earthly
+father was merging itself into the desire to please her Heavenly Father.
+
+There were of course many hard and unpleasant things about her new life.
+There were so many things to learn, and she was so awkward at work of
+all kinds! Her hands seemed so small and inadequate when she tried to
+wring clothes or scrub a dirty step. Then, too, her young charge, Elise
+Hathaway, was spoiled and hard to please, and she was daily tried by the
+necessity of inventing ways of discipline for the poor little neglected
+girl which yet would not bring down a protest from her even more
+undisciplined mother. If she had been independent she would not have
+remained with Mrs. Hathaway, for sometimes the child was unbearable in
+her naughty tantrums, and it took all her nerve and strength to control
+her. She would come back to the little gray house too weary even to
+smile, and the keen eye of Ma would look at her wisely and wonder if
+something ought not to be done about it.
+
+Betty felt that she must keep this place, of course, because it was
+necessary for her to be able to pay some board. She could not be
+beholden to the Carsons. And they had been so kind, and were teaching
+her so many things, that it seemed the best and safest place she could
+be in. So the days settled down into weeks, and a pleasant life grew up
+about her, so different from the old one that more and more the
+hallucination was with her that she had become another creature, and the
+old life had gone out forever.
+
+Of course as striking-looking a girl as Betty could not enter into the
+life of a little town even as humbly as through the Carson home, without
+causing some comment and speculation. People began to notice her. The
+church ladies looked after her and remarked on her hair, her complexion,
+and her graceful carriage, and some shook their heads and said they
+should think Mrs. Hathaway would want to know a little more about her
+before she put her only child in her entire charge; and they told weird
+stories about girls they had known or heard of.
+
+Down at the fire-house, which was the real clearing-house of Tinsdale
+for all the gossip that came along and went the rounds, they took up the
+matter in full session several evenings in succession. Some of the
+younger members made crude remarks about Betty's looks, and some of the
+older ones allowed that she was entirely too pretty to be without a
+history. They took great liberties with their surmises. The only two,
+the youngest of them all, who might have defended her, had been
+unconsciously snubbed by her when they tried to be what Bobbie called
+"fresh" with her, and so she was at their mercy. But if she had known it
+she probably would have been little disturbed. They seemed so far
+removed from her two worlds, so utterly apart from herself. It would not
+have occurred to her that they could do her any harm.
+
+One night the fire-house gang had all assembled save one, a little
+shrimp of a good-for-nothing, nearly hairless, toothless, cunning-eyed,
+and given to drink when he could lay lips on any. He had a wide loose
+mouth with a tendency to droop crookedly, and his hands were always
+clammy and limp. He ordinarily sat tilted back against the wall to the
+right of the engine, sucking an old clay pipe. He had a way of often
+turning the conversation to imply some deep mystery known only to
+himself behind the life of almost any one discussed. He often added
+choice embellishments to whatever tale went forth as authentic to go the
+rounds of the village, and he acted the part of a collector of themes
+and details for the evening conversations.
+
+His name was Abijah Gage.
+
+"Bi not come yet?" asked the fire chief settling a straw comfortably
+between his teeth and looking around on the group. "Must be somepin'
+doin'. Don't know when Bi's been away."
+
+"He went up to town this mornin' early," volunteered Dunc Withers.
+"Reckon he was thirsty. Guess he'll be back on the evenin' train. That's
+her comin' in now."
+
+"Bars all closed in the city," chuckled the chief. "Won't get much
+comfort there."
+
+"You bet Bi knows some place to get it. He won't come home thirsty,
+that's sure."
+
+"I donno, they say the lid's down pretty tight."
+
+"Aw, shucks!" sneered Dunc. "Bet I could get all I wanted."
+
+Just then the door opened and Abijah Gage walked in, with a toothless
+grin all around.
+
+"Hello, Bi, get tanked up, did yeh?" greeted the chief.
+
+"Well, naow, an' ef I did, what's that to you?" responded Bi, slapping
+the chief's broad shoulder with a folded newspaper he carried. "You
+don't 'spose I'm goin' to tell, an' get my frien's in trouble?"
+
+"Le's see yer paper, Bi," said Dunc, snatching at it as Bi passed to his
+regular seat.
+
+Bi surrendered his paper with the air of one granting a high favor and
+sank to his chair and his pipe.
+
+"How's crops in the city?" asked Hank Fielder, and Bi's tale was set
+a-going. Bi could talk; that was one thing that always made him welcome.
+
+Dunc was deep in the paper. Presently he turned it over:
+
+"Whew!" he said speculatively. "If that don't look like that little
+lollypop over to Carson's I'll eat my hat! What's her name?"
+
+They all drew around the paper and leaned over Dunc's shoulder squinting
+at the picture, all but Bi, who was lighting his pipe:
+
+"They're as like as two peas!" said one.
+
+"It sure must be her sister!" declared another.
+
+"Don't see no resemblance 'tall," declared the chief, flinging back to
+his comfortable chair. "She's got short hair, an she's only a kid. This
+one's growed up!"
+
+"She might a cut her hair," suggested one.
+
+Bi pricked up his ears, narrowed his cunning eyes, and slouched over to
+the paper, looking at the picture keenly:
+
+"Read it out, Dunc!" he commanded.
+
+"Five thousand dollars reward for information concerning Elizabeth
+Stanhope!"
+
+There followed a description in detail of her size, height, coloring,
+etc.
+
+An inscrutable look overspread Bi's face and hid the cunning in his
+eyes. He slouched to his seat during the reading and tilted back
+comfortably smoking, but he narrowed his eyes to a slit and spoke little
+during the remainder of the evening. They discussed the picture and the
+possibility of the girl in the paper being a relative of the girl at
+Carson's, but as Bi did not come forward with information the subject
+languished. Some one said he had heard the Carson kid call her Lizzie,
+he thought, but he wasn't sure. Ordinarily Bi would have known the full
+name, but Bi seemed to be dozing, and so the matter was finally dropped.
+But the hounds were out and on the scent, and it was well for Betty
+sleeping quietly in her little cot beneath the roof of the humble Carson
+home, that she had committed her all to her heavenly Father before she
+slept.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"WELL, he gave me notice t'day," said James Ryan sadly as Jane and he
+rounded the corner from her boarding-house and turned toward their
+favorite movie theater. "I been expectin' it, an' now it's come!"
+
+Jane stopped short on the sidewalk appalled:
+
+"He gave you notice!" she exclaimed, as if she could not believe it was
+true. "Now, Jimmie! You don't mean it? Did he find any fault? He'd
+better not! B'leeve me, if he did he gets a piece of _my_ mind, even if
+I am a poor workin' girl!"
+
+"Oh, no, he didn't find any fault," said Jimmie cheerfully. "He was
+awful nice! He said he'd recommend me away up high. He's gonta give me
+time every day to hunt a new place, an' he's gonta recommend me to some
+of his rich friends."
+
+"But what's the matter of him keepin' you? Did you ast him that?"
+
+"Oh, he told me right out that things wasn't working the way he hoped
+when he started; the war and all had upset his prospects, and he
+couldn't afford to keep me. He's gonta take an office way down town and
+do his own letters. He says if he ever succeeds in business and I'm free
+to come to him he'll take me back. Oh, he's pleased with me all right!
+He's a peach! He certainly is."
+
+"Jimmie, what d'you tell him?"
+
+"Tell him? There wasn't much for me to tell him, only I was sorry, and I
+thanked him, and I told him I was gonta stick by him as long as I didn't
+have a place. Of course I can't live on air, but seeing he's willing I
+should go out and hunt a place every day, why I ain't that mean that I
+can't write a few letters for him now and then. He don't have that many,
+and it keeps me in practice. I s'pose I've got to get another place but
+I haven't tried yet. I can't somehow bring myself to give him up. I kind
+of wanted to stick in my first place a long time. It doesn't look well
+to be changing."
+
+"Well, if it ain't your fault, you know, when you can't help it,"
+advised Jane.
+
+They were seated in the theater by this time, and the screen claimed
+their attention. It was just at the end of the funny reel, and both
+forgot more serious matters in following the adventures of a dog and a
+bear who were chasing each other through endless halls and rooms, to say
+nothing of bathtubs, and wash boilers, and dining tables, and anything
+that came in their way, with a shock to the people who happened to be
+around when they passed. But suddenly the film ended and the
+announcements for the next week began to flash on the screen.
+
+"We must go to that, sure!" said Jimmie, nudging Jane, as the Mary
+Pickford announcement was put on.
+
+Then immediately afterward came the photograph of a beautiful girl, and
+underneath in great letters:
+
+ FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS' REWARD FOR ACCURATE
+ INFORMATION AS TO THE PRESENT WHEREABOUTS
+ OF ELIZABETH STANHOPE
+
+There followed further particulars and an address and the showing stayed
+on the screen for a full minute.
+
+Jane sat gripping the arms of the seat and trying to still the wild
+excitement that possessed her, while her eyes looked straight into the
+eyes of the little bride whom she had helped to escape on the night of
+her wedding.
+
+Jimmie took out his pencil and wrote down the address in shorthand, but
+Jane did not notice. She was busy thinking what she ought to do.
+
+"What do you s'pose they want her for?" she asked in a breathless
+whisper, as a new feature film began to dawn on the screen.
+
+"Oh, she's mebbe eloped," said the wise young man, "or there might be
+some trouble about property. There mostly is."
+
+Jane said no more, and the pictures began again, but her mind was not
+following them. She was very quiet on the way home, and when Jimmie
+asked her if she had a grouch on she shivered and said, no, she guessed
+she was tired. Then she suddenly asked him what time he was going out to
+hunt for another job. He told her he couldn't be sure. He would call her
+up about noon and let her know. Could she manage to get out a while and
+meet him? She wasn't sure either, but would see when he called her up.
+And so they parted for the night.
+
+The next morning when Reyburn entered his office Jimmie was already
+seated at his typewriter. On Reyburn's desk lay a neatly typed copy of
+the announcement that had been put on the screen the night before.
+
+"What's this, Ryan?" he questioned as he took his seat and drew the
+paper toward him.
+
+"Something I saw last night on the screen at the movies, sir. I thought
+it might be of interest."
+
+"Were you thinking of trying for the reward?" asked Reyburn with a
+comical smile. "What is it, anyway?" And he began to read.
+
+"Oh, no sir!" said Jimmie. "_I_ couldn't, of course; but I thought mebbe
+_you'd_ be able to find out something about her and get all that money.
+That would help you through until you got started in your own business."
+
+"H'm! That's kind of you, Ryan," said the young lawyer, reading the
+paper with a troubled frown. "I'm afraid it's hardly in my line,
+however. I'm not a detective, you know." He laid the paper down and
+looked thoughtfully out of the window.
+
+"Oh, of course not, sir!" Jimmie hastened to apologize. "Only you know a
+lot of society folks in the city, and I thought you might think of some
+way of finding out where she is. I know it isn't up to what you ought to
+be doing, sir, but it wouldn't do any harm. You could work it through
+me, you know, and nobody need ever know 'twas you got the reward. I'd be
+glad to help you out doing all I could, but of course it would take your
+brains to get the information, sir. You see, it would be to my interest,
+because then you could afford to keep me, and--I like you, Mr. Reyburn,
+I certainly do. I would hate to leave you."
+
+"Well, now, I appreciate that, Ryan. It's very thoughtful of you. I
+scarcely think there would be any possibility of my finding out anything
+about this girl, but I certainly appreciate your thoughtfulness. I'll
+make a note of it, and if anything turns up I'll let you know. I don't
+believe, however, that I would care to go after a reward even through
+someone else. You know, I was at that wedding, Ryan!" His eyes were
+dreamily watching the smoke from a distant funnel over the roof-tops in
+line with his desk.
+
+"You were!" said Jimmie, watching his employer with rapt admiration. He
+had no higher ambition than to look like Warren Reyburn and have an
+office of his own.
+
+"Yes, I was there," said Reyburn again, but his tone was so far off that
+Jimmie dared approach no nearer, and resumed the letter he was typing.
+
+About noon Jimmie called up the factory while Reyburn was out to lunch
+and told Jane that he expected to go out at two o'clock. Could she meet
+him and walk a little way with him? Jane said no, she couldn't, but she
+would try and see him the next day, then he could tell her how he had
+"made out."
+
+At exactly five minutes after two, Jane, having watched from a telephone
+booth in a drug store until Jimmie went by, hurried up to Reyburn's
+office and tapped on the door, her heart in her mouth lest he should be
+occupied with some one else and not be able to see her before her few
+minutes of leave which she had obtained from the factory should have
+expired.
+
+Reyburn himself opened the door to her, and treated her as if she had
+been a lady every inch, handing her a chair and speaking quite as if she
+were attired in sealskin and diamonds.
+
+She looked him over with bright eyes of approval. Jane was a born
+sentimentalist, fed on the movies. Not for anything would she have had a
+knight rescue her lady fair who did not look the part. She was entirely
+satisfied with this one. In fact, she was almost tongue-tied with
+admiration for the moment.
+
+Then she rallied to the speech she had prepared:
+
+"Mr. Reyburn," she said, "I came to see you about a matter of very great
+importance. I heard you was a great lawyer, and I've got a friend that's
+in trouble. I thought mebbe you could do something about it. But first,
+I want to ast you a question, an' I want you to consider it perfectly
+confidential!"
+
+Jane took great credit to herself that she had assembled all these words
+and memorized them so perfectly.
+
+"Certainly!" said Reyburn gravely, wondering what kind of a customer he
+had now.
+
+"I don't want you to think I can't pay for it," said Jane, laying down a
+five-dollar bill grandly. "I know you can't afford to waste your
+valuable time even to answer a question."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," said Reyburn heartily. "Let me hear what the
+question is first. There may be no charge."
+
+"No," said Jane hastily, laying the bill firmly on the desk before him.
+"I shan't feel right astin' unless I know it's to be paid for."
+
+"Oh, very well," said Reyburn, taking the bill and laying it to one
+side. "Now, what is the question?"
+
+"Well, Mr. Reyburn, will you please tell me what would anybody want to
+offer a reward, a big reward, like a thousand dollars--or several of
+them,--for information about any one? Could you think of any reason?"
+
+Reyburn started. Reward again! This was uncanny. Probably this girl had
+been to the movies and seen the same picture that Ryan had told him
+about. But he smiled gravely and answered, watching her quizzically the
+while:
+
+"Well, they might love the person that had disappeared," he suggested at
+random.
+
+"Oh, no!" said Jane decidedly. "They didn't! I know that fer a fac'!
+What else could it be?"
+
+"Well, they might have a responsibility!" he said thoughtfully.
+
+"No chance!" said Jane scornfully.
+
+"Couldn't they be anxious, don't you think?"
+
+"Not so's you'd notice it."
+
+"Well, there might be some property to be divided, perhaps."
+
+"I'd thought of that," said Jane, her face growing practical. "It would
+have to be a good deal of property to make them offer a big reward,
+wouldn't it?"
+
+"I should think so," answered Reyburn politely, watching her plain eager
+face amusedly. He could not quite get at her idea in coming to him.
+
+"Would her coming of age have anything to do with it?" put Jane,
+referring to a much folded paper she carried in her hand, as if she had
+a written catechism which she must go through.
+
+"It might." Reyburn was growing interested. This queer visitor evidently
+had thought something out, and was being very cautious.
+
+"I really can't answer very definitely without knowing more of the
+circumstances," he said with sudden alarm lest the girl might take some
+random answer and let serious matters hinge on his word.
+
+"Well, there's just one more," she said, looking down at her paper. "If
+a man was trying to make a girl marry him when she just hated him, could
+anybody make her do it, and would anybody have a right to put her in an
+insane 'sylum or anythin' ef she wouldn't?"
+
+"Why, no, of course not! Where did you ever get such a ridiculous idea?"
+He sat up suddenly, annoyed beyond expression over disturbing
+suggestions that seemed to rise like a bevy of black bats all around the
+borders of his mind.
+
+"See here," he said, sitting up very straight. "I really can't answer
+any more blind questions. I've got to know what I'm talking about. Why,
+I may be saying the most impossible things without knowing it."
+
+"I know," said Jane, looking at him gravely. "I've thought of that, but
+you've said just the things I thought you would. Well, say, if I tell
+you about it can you promise on yer honor you won't ever breathe a word
+of it? Not to nobody? Whether you take the case or not?"
+
+"Why, certainly, you can trust me to look out for any confidence you may
+put in me. If you can't I should prefer that you say nothing more."
+
+"Oh, I c'n trust you all right," said Jane smiling. "I just mean, would
+you be 'lowed to keep it under yer hat?"
+
+"Would I be allowed? What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean would the law let you? You wouldn't _have_ to go an' tell where
+she was or nothin' an' give her away? You'd be 'lowed to keep it on the
+q. t. an' take care of her?"
+
+"You mean would it be right and honorable for me to protect my client?
+Why, certainly."
+
+"Well, I mean you wouldn't get into no trouble if you did."
+
+"Of course not."
+
+"Well, then I'll tell you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+JANE opened a small shabby handbag, and took out a folded newspaper,
+opening it up and spreading it on the desk before him. "There!" she
+said, and then watched his face critically.
+
+Reyburn looked, and found himself looking into Betty's eyes. Only a
+newspaper cut, and poor at that, but wonderfully real and mournful, as
+they had struck him when she lifted them for that swift glance before
+she sank in the church aisle.
+
+"Where did you get this?" he asked, his voice suddenly husky.
+
+"Out o' the mornin' paper." Her tone was low and excited. "Were you
+wanting to try for the reward?" Reyburn asked.
+
+There was a covert sneer in the question from which the girl shrank
+perceptibly. She sprang to her feet, her eyes flashing:
+
+"If that's what you take me for, I better be goin'!" she snapped and
+reached out her hand for the paper. But Reyburn's hand covered the
+paper, and his tone was respectful and apologetic as he said:
+
+"Excuse me, I didn't quite understand, I see. Sit down, please. You and
+I must understand each other or there is no use in our talking. You can
+trust me to keep this conversation entirely to myself, whatever the
+outcome. Will you tell me what it is you want of me?"
+
+Jane subsided into a chair, tears of excitement springing into her eyes.
+
+"Well, you see, it's pretty serious business," she said, making a dab at
+the corner of one eye. "I thought I could trust you, or I wouldn't a
+come. But you gotta take me on trust, too."
+
+"Of course," said Reyburn. "Now, what have you to do with this girl? Do
+you know where she is?"
+
+"I certainly do!" said Jane, "but I ain't a-goin' ta tell until you say
+if there's anything you can do fer her. 'Cause you see, if you can't
+find a way to help her, I've gotta do it myself, an' it might get you
+into trouble somehow fer you to know what you ain't supposed to know."
+
+"I see," said Reyburn, meekly. "Well, what are you going to tell me? Am
+I allowed to ask that?"
+
+Jane grinned.
+
+"Say, you're kiddin' me! I guess you are all right. Well, I'll just tell
+you all about it. One night last November,--you can see the date there
+in the paper, I was goin' home to my boardin' house in Camac Street,
+an' I was passin' the side of that church on 18th an' Spruce, where the
+weddin' was--you know, fer you was there!"
+
+Reyburn looked at her astonished.
+
+"How did you know I was there?"
+
+"I saw you through the window, over against the wall to the street side
+of the altar," said Jane calmly.
+
+"How did you know me?"
+
+"Oh, somebody I know pointed you out once an' said you was goin' to be
+one of the risin' lawyers of the day," she answered nonchalantly, her
+face quite serious.
+
+A flicker of amusement passed like a ray of light through his eyes, but
+his face was entirely grave as he ignored the compliment.
+
+"Go on!"
+
+"I saw there was a weddin' an' I stopped to watch a minute, 'cause I
+expect to get married myself some day, an' I wanted to see how they did
+things. But I couldn't get near the door, an' the windows were all high
+up. I could only see folks who were standing up like you were. So I
+thought I'd go on. I turned the corner and went long-side the church
+listenin' to the music, an' just as I passed a big iron gate at the
+back end of the church somebody grabbed me an' begged me to help 'em. I
+looked round, an' there was the bride, all in her white togs, with the
+prettiest white satin slippers, in the wet an' mud! I tried to get her
+line, but she cried out somebody was comin' back in the passageway, so I
+slipped off my coat an' hat and whisked her into 'em an' clapped my
+rubbers over her satin shoes, and we beat it round the corner. I took
+her to my room, an' gave her some supper. She was all in. Then I put her
+to bed, an' she told me a little bit about it. She didn't tell me much.
+Only that they had been tryin' fer a long time back to make her marry a
+man she hated, an' now they'd almost tricked her into it, an' she'd die
+if she had to do it. She wanted to exchange clothes with me, cause, of
+course, she couldn't get anywhere togged out that way, so we changed
+things, an' I fixed her up. In the mornin' I ran out an' got a paper,
+an' found they was sayin' she was temporary insane, an' stuff like that,
+an' so I saw their game was tryin' to get her in a 'sylum till they
+could make her do what they wanted. I fixed her up an' got her off to a
+place I know where she'd be safe. An' she's got a job an' doin' real
+well. But now they've got this here reward business out everywhere in
+the papers an' the movies, she ain't safe nowhere. An' I want somebody
+that's wiser'n me to take a holt an' do somethin'. I can't pay much, but
+I'll pay a little every month as long's I live ef it takes that long to
+pay yer bill, an' I have a notion she may have some money herself,
+though she didn't say nothin' about it. But there's a ring she left with
+me to sell, to pay fer what I gave her. It oughtta be worth somethin'.
+It looks real. I ain't sold it. I couldn't. I thought she might want it
+sometime----"
+
+But Reyburn interrupted her excitedly.
+
+"Do you mean to say that Miss Stanhope is in the city and you know where
+she is?"
+
+"Now, don't get excited," warned Jane coolly. "I didn't say she was in
+this city, did I? I didn't say where she was, did I? I said she was
+safe."
+
+"But are you aware that you have told me a very strange story? What
+proof can you give me that it is true?"
+
+Jane looked at him indignantly.
+
+"Say, I thought you was goin' to trust me? I have to trust you, don't I?
+Course you don't know who I am, an' I haven't told you, but I've got a
+good p'sition myself, an' I don't go round tellin' privarications! An'
+there's the weddin' dress, an' veil and fixin's! I got them. You can see
+'em if you like,--that is pervided I know what you're up to! I ain't
+taking any chances till I see what you mean to do."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Reyburn, trying to smile assurance once more.
+"You certainly must own this whole thing is enough to make anybody
+doubt."
+
+"Yes, it is," said Jane. "I was some upset myself, havin' a thing like
+that happen to me, a real millionairess bride drop herself down on my
+hands just like that, an' I 'spose it _is_ hard to b'lieve. But I can't
+waste much more time now. I gotta get back to my job. Is there anything
+can be done to keep 'em from gettin' her again?"
+
+"I should most certainly think so," said Reyburn, "but I would have to
+know her side of the story, the whole of it, before I could say just
+what!"
+
+"Well, s'pose you found there wasn't anythin' you could do to help her,
+would you go an' tell on her?"
+
+Reyburn leaned back in his chair and smiled at his unique client:
+
+"I shall have to quote your own language. 'What do you take me for?'"
+
+"A white man!" said Jane suddenly, and showed all her fine teeth in an
+engaging smile. "Say, you're all right. Now, I gotta go. When will you
+tell me what you can do?" She glanced anxiously at her little
+leather-bound wrist watch. It was almost time for Jimmie to return.
+Jimmie mustn't find her here. He wouldn't understand, and what Jimmie
+didn't know wouldn't hurt him.
+
+"Well, this ought to be attended to, at once, if anything is to be
+done," he said eagerly. "Let me see. I have an engagement at five. How
+would seven o'clock do? Could I call at your boarding-house? Would there
+be any place where we could talk uninterrupted?"
+
+"Sure," said Jane, rising. "I'll get my landlady to let me have her
+settin' room fer an hour."
+
+"Meantime, I'll think it over and try to plan something."
+
+Jane started down the long flights of stairs, not daring to trust to the
+elevator, lest she should come face to face with Jimmie and have to
+explain.
+
+Reyburn stood with his back to the room, his hands in his pockets,
+frowning and looking out the window, when Jimmie entered a moment later.
+
+"I hope I'm not late, sir?" he said anxiously, as he hung up his hat and
+sat down at his typewriter. "I had to wait. The man was out."
+
+"Oh, that's all right, Ryan," said his employer, obviously not listening
+to his explanation. "I'm going out now, Ryan. I may not be back this
+afternoon. Just see that everything is all right."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+Reyburn went out, then opened the door and put his head back in the
+room.
+
+"I may have to go out of town to-night, Ryan. I'm not sure. Something
+has come up. If I'm not in to-morrow, could you--would you mind just
+staying here all day and looking after things? I may need you. Of course
+you'll lock up and leave the card out when you go to lunch."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+"I'll keep in touch with you in case I'm delayed," and Reyburn was off
+again. When the elevator had clanked down to the next floor Jimmie went
+to the window and looked dreamily out over the roofs of the city:
+
+"Aw!" he breathed joyously. "Now I'll bet he's going to do something
+about that reward!"
+
+Reyburn hurried down the street to the office of an old friend where he
+had a bit of business as an excuse, and asked a few casual questions
+when he was done. Then he went on to a telephone booth and called up a
+friend of his mother's, with whom he had a brief gossip, ostensibly to
+give a message from his mother, contained in her last letter to him.
+None of the questions that he asked were noticeable. He merely led the
+conversation into certain grooves. The lady was an old resident and well
+known in the higher social circles. She knew all there was to know about
+everybody and she loved to tell it. She never dreamed that he had any
+motive in leading her on.
+
+He dropped into a bank and asked a few questions, called up an address
+they gave him and made another inquiry, then dropped around to his
+cousin's home for a few minutes, where he allowed her to tell all she
+knew about the Stanhope wedding they had attended together, and the
+different theories concerning the escaped bride. Quite casually he asked
+if she knew whether the bride had property of her own, if so who were
+her guardians. His cousin thought she knew a lot, but, sifting it down,
+he discovered that it was nearly all hearsay or surmise.
+
+When he reached Jane Carson's boarding house he found that young woman
+ensconced in a tiny room, nine by twelve, a faded ingrain carpet on the
+floor, a depressed looking bed lounge against the bleary wall-paper,
+beneath crayon portraits of the landlady's dead husband and sons. There
+was a rocking-chair, a trunk, a cane-seat chair, and an oil stove turned
+up to smoking point in honor of the caller, but there was little room
+left for the caller. On the top of the trunk reposed a large pasteboard
+box securely tied.
+
+Jane, after a shy greeting, untied the strings and opened the cover,
+having first carefully slipped the bolt of the door.
+
+"You can't be too careful," she said. "You never can tell."
+
+Reyburn stood beside her and looked in a kind of awe at the glistening
+white, recognized the thick texture of the satin, the rare quality of
+the rose-point lace with which it was adorned, caught the faint
+fragrance of faded orange blossoms wafting from the filmy mist of the
+veil as Jane lifted it tenderly; then leaned over and touched a finger
+to the pile of whiteness, reverently, as though he were paying a tribute
+at a lovely shrine.
+
+Jane even unwrapped the little slippers, one at a time, and folded them
+away again, and they said no word until it was all tied back in its
+papers, Reyburn assisting with the strings.
+
+"Now, ef you don't mind waitin' a minute I guess it would be safer to
+put it away now," she said as she slipped the bolt and ran upstairs.
+
+She was back in a minute and sat down opposite to him, drawing out from
+the neck of her blouse a ribbon with a heavy glittering circlet at its
+end.
+
+"Here's the ring." She laid it in his palm. He took it, wondering, a
+kind of awe still upon him that he should be thus handling the intimate
+belongings of that little unknown bride whom he had seen lying
+unconscious in a strange church a few short months before. How strange
+that all this should have come to him when many wiser, more nearly
+related, were trying their best to get some clue to the mystery!
+
+He lifted the ring toward the insufficient gas jet to make out the
+initials inside, and copied them down in his note-book.
+
+"Take good care of that. It is valuable," he said as he handed it back
+to her.
+
+"Mebbe I better give it to you," she half hesitated.
+
+"You've taken pretty good care of it so far," he said. "I guess you've a
+better right to it than I. Only don't let anybody know you've got it.
+Now, I've been making inquiries, and I've found out a few things, but
+I've about come to the conclusion that I can't do much without seeing
+the lady. Do you suppose she would see me? Is she very far away?"
+
+"When do you want to go?" asked Jane.
+
+"At once," he answered decidedly. "There's no time to waste if she is
+really in danger, as you think."
+
+Jane's eyes glittered with satisfaction.
+
+"There's a train at ten-thirty. You'll get there in the morning. I've
+written it all down here on a paper so you can't make any mistakes. I've
+written her a letter so she'll understand and tell you everythin'. I'll
+wire Ma, too, so she'll let you see her. Ma might not size you up
+right."
+
+Reyburn wondered at the way he accepted his orders from this coolly
+impudent girl, but he liked her in spite of himself.
+
+In a few minutes more he was out in the street again, hurrying to his
+own apartment, where he put together a few necessities in a bag and went
+to the train.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+IT was one of those little ironies of fate that are spoken about so
+much, that when Warren Reyburn alighted from the train in Tinsdale
+Abijah Gage should be supporting one corner of the station, and
+contributing a quid now and then to the accumulations of the week
+scattered all about his feet.
+
+He spotted the stranger at once and turned his cunning little eyes upon
+him, making it obvious that he was bulging with information. It was,
+therefore, quite natural, when Reyburn paused to take his bearings, that
+Bi should speak up and inquire if he was looking for some one. Reyburn
+shook his head and passed on, but Bi was not to be headed off so easily
+as that. He shuffled after him:
+
+"Say!" he said, pointing to a shackley horse and buckboard that stood
+near, belonging to a pal over at the freight house. "Ef you want a lift
+I'll take you along."
+
+"Thank you, no," said Reyburn, smiling; "I'm not going far."
+
+"Say!" said Bi again as he saw his quarry about to disappear. "You name
+ain't Bains, is it?"
+
+"No!" said Reyburn, quite annoyed by the persistent old fellow.
+
+"From New York?" he hazarded cheerfully.
+
+"No," answered Reyburn, turning to go. "You must excuse me. I'm in a
+hurry."
+
+"That's all right," said Bi contentedly. "I'll walk a piece with you. I
+was lookin' fer a doctor to take down to see a sick child. A doctor from
+New York. You ain't by any chance a doctor, are you?" Bi eyed the big
+leather bag inquiringly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn, laughing in spite of his annoyance. "I'm only a
+lawyer." And with a bound he cleared the curb and hurried off down the
+street, having now recognized the direction described in Jane's diagram
+of Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage looked after him with twinkling eyes of dry mirth, and
+slowly sauntered after him, watching him until he entered the little
+unpainted gate of the Carson house and tapped at the old gray door. Then
+Bi lunged across the street and entered a path that ran along the
+railroad track for a few rods, curving suddenly into a stretch of vacant
+lots. On a convenient fence rail with a good outlook toward the west end
+of the village he ensconced himself and set about whittling a whistle
+from some willow stalks. He waited until he saw Bobbie Carson hurry off
+toward Hathaway's house and return with Lizzie Hope; waited hopefully
+until the stranger finally came out of the house again, touching his hat
+gracefully to the girl as she stood at the open door. Then he hurried
+back to the station again, and was comfortably settled on a tub of
+butter just arrived by freight, when Reyburn reached there. He was much
+occupied with his whistle, and never seemed to notice, but not a
+movement of the stranger escaped him, and when the Philadelphia express
+came by, and the stranger got aboard the parlor car, old Bi Gage swung
+his lumbering length up on the back platform of the last car. The hounds
+were hot on the trail now.
+
+It was several years since Bi Gage had been on so long a journey, but he
+managed to enjoy the trip, and kept in pretty good touch with the parlor
+car, although he was never in evidence. If anybody had told Warren
+Reyburn as he let himself into his apartment late that night that he was
+being followed, he would have laughed and told them it was an
+impossibility. When he came out to the street the next morning and swung
+himself into a car that would land him at his office, he did not see the
+lank flabby figure of the toothless Bi standing just across the block,
+and keeping tab on him from the back platform, nor notice that he slid
+into the office building behind him and took the same elevator up,
+crowding in behind two fat men and effacing himself against the wall of
+the cage. Reyburn was reading his paper, and did not look up. The figure
+slid out of the elevator after him and slithered into a shadow, watching
+him, slipping softly after, until sure which door he took, then waited
+silently until sure that the door was shut. No one heard the slouching
+footsteps come down the marble hall. Bi Gage always wore rubbers when he
+went anywhere in particular. He had them on that morning. He took
+careful note of the name on the door: "_Warren Reyburn_,
+Attorney-at-Law," and the number. Then he slid down the stairs as
+unobserved as he had come, and made his way to a name and number on a
+bit of paper from his pocket which he consulted in the shelter of a
+doorway.
+
+When Warren Reyburn started on his first trip to Tinsdale his mind was
+filled with varying emotions. He had never been able to quite get away
+from the impression made upon him by that little white bride lying so
+still amid her bridal finery, and the glowering bridegroom above her. It
+epitomized for him all the unhappy marriages of the world, and he felt
+like starting out somehow in hot pursuit of that bridegroom and making
+him answer for the sadness of his bride. Whenever the matter had been
+brought to his memory he had always been conscious of the first gladness
+he had felt when he knew she had escaped. It could not seem to him
+anything but a happy escape, little as he knew about any of the people
+who played the principal parts in the little tragedy he had witnessed.
+
+Hour after hour as he sat in the train and tried to sleep or tried to
+think he kept wondering at himself that he was going on this "wild goose
+chase," as he called it in his innermost thoughts. Yet he knew he had to
+go. In fact, he had known it from the moment James Ryan had shown him
+the advertisement. Not that he had ever had any idea of trying for that
+horrible reward. Simply that his soul had been stirred to its most
+knightly depths to try somehow to protect her in her hiding. Of course,
+it had been a mere crazy thought then, with no way of fulfilment, but
+when the chance had offered of really finding her and asking if there
+was anything she would like done, he knew from the instant it was
+suggested that he was going to do it, even if he lost every other
+business chance he ever had or expected to have, even if it took all his
+time and every cent he could borrow. He knew he had to try to find that
+girl! The thought that the only shelter between her and the great awful
+world lay in the word of an untaught girl like Jane Carson filled him
+with terror for her. If that was true, the sooner some one of
+responsibility and sense got to her the better. The questions he had
+asked of various people that afternoon had revealed more than he had
+already guessed of the character of the bridegroom to whom he had taken
+such a strong dislike on first sight.
+
+Thus he argued the long night through between the fitful naps he caught
+when he was not wondering if he should find her, and whether he would
+know her from that one brief sight of her in church. How did he know but
+this was some game put up on him to get him into a mix-up? He must go
+cautiously, and on no account do anything rash or make any promises
+until he had first found out all about her.
+
+When morning dawned he was in a state of perturbation quite unusual for
+the son and grandson of renowned lawyers noted for their calmness and
+poise under all circumstances. This perhaps was why the little incident
+with Abijah Gage at the station annoyed him so extremely. He felt he was
+doing a questionable thing in taking this journey at all. He certainly
+did not intend to reveal his identity or business to this curious old
+man.
+
+The little gray house looked exactly as Jane had described it, and as he
+opened the gate and heard the rusty chain that held it clank he had a
+sense of having been there before.
+
+He was pleasantly surprised, however, when the door was opened by Emily,
+who smiled at him out of shy blue eyes, and stood waiting to see what he
+wanted. It was like expecting a viper and finding a flower. Somehow he
+had not anticipated anything flower-like in Jane's family. The mother,
+too, was a surprise when she came from her ironing, and, pushing her
+wavy gray hair back from a furrowed brow lifted intelligent eyes that
+reminded him of Jane, to search his face. Ma did not appear flustered.
+She seemed to be taking account of him and deciding whether or not she
+would be cordial to him.
+
+"Yes, I had a telegram from Jane this morning," she was scanning his
+eyes once more to see whether there was a shadow of what she called
+"shiftiness" in them. "Come in," she added grudgingly.
+
+He was not led into the dining-room, but seated on one of the best
+varnished chairs in the "parlor," as they called the little unused front
+room. He felt strangely ill at ease and began to be convinced that he
+was on the very wildest of wild goose chases. To think of expecting to
+find Elizabeth Stanhope in a place like this! If she ever had been here
+she certainly must have flown faster than she had from the church on her
+wedding night.
+
+So, instead of beginning as he had planned, to put a list of logically
+prepared keen questions to a floundering and suspecting victim, he found
+the clear eyes of Ma looking into his unwaveringly and the wise tongue
+of Ma putting him through a regular orgy of catechism before she would
+so much as admit that she had ever heard of a girl named Lizzie Hope.
+Then he bethought him of her daughter's letter and handed it over for
+her to read.
+
+"Well," she admitted at last, half satisfied, "she isn't here at
+present. I sent her away when I found you was comin'. I wasn't sure I'd
+let you see her at all if I didn't like your looks."
+
+"That's right, Mrs. Carson," he said heartily, with real admiration in
+his voice. "I'm glad she has some one so careful to look out for her.
+Your daughter said she was in a good safe place, and I begin to see she
+knew what she was talking about."
+
+Then the strong look around Ma's lips settled into the sweeter one, and
+she sent Bob after the girl.
+
+"Are you a friend of hers?" she asked, watching him keenly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn. "I've never seen her but once. She doesn't know me
+at all."
+
+"Are you a friend of her--family?"
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+"Or any of her friends or relations?" Ma meant to be comprehensive.
+
+"No. I'm sorry I am not. I am a rather recent comer to the city where
+she made her home, I understand."
+
+Ma looked at him thoughtfully for a moment. It wouldn't have been called
+a stare, it was too kindly for that, but Reyburn thought to himself that
+he would not have liked to have borne her scrutiny if he had anything to
+conceal, for he felt as if she might read the truth in his eyes.
+
+"Are you--please excuse me for askin'--but are you a member of any
+church?"
+
+Reyburn flushed, and wanted to laugh, but was embarrassed in spite of
+himself:
+
+"Why, yes--I'm a member," he said slowly, then with a frank lifting of
+his eyes to her troubled gaze, "I united with the church when I was a
+mere kid, but I'm afraid I'm not much of a member. I really am not what
+you'd call 'working' at it much nowadays. I go to morning service
+sometimes, but that's about all. I don't want to be a hypocrite."
+
+He wondered as he spoke why he took the trouble to answer the woman so
+fully. Her question was in a way impertinent, much like the way her
+daughter talked. Yet she seemed wholly unconscious of it.
+
+"I know," she assented sorrowfully. "There's lots of them in the church.
+We have 'em, too, even in our little village. But still, after all, you
+can't help havin' confidence more in them that has 'named the name' than
+in them that has not."
+
+Reyburn looked at her curiously and felt a sudden infusion of respect
+for her. She was putting the test of her faith to him, and he knew by
+the little stifled sigh that he had been found wanting.
+
+"I s'pose lawyers don't have much time to think about being Christians,"
+she apologized for him.
+
+He felt impelled to be frank with her:
+
+"I'm afraid I can't urge that excuse. Unfortunately I have a good deal
+of time on my hands now. I've just opened my office and I'm waiting for
+clients."
+
+"Where were you before that? You did not just get through studying?"
+
+He saw she was wondering whether he was wise enough to help her protege.
+
+"No, I spent the last three years in France."
+
+"Up at the front?" The pupils of her eyes dilated eagerly.
+
+"Yes, in every drive," he answered, wondering that a woman of this sort
+should be so interested now that the war was over.
+
+"And you came back safe!" she said slowly, looking at him with a kind of
+wistful sorrow in her eyes. "My boy was shot the first day he went over
+the top."
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," said Reyburn gently, a sudden tightness in his throat.
+
+"But it was all right." She flashed a dazzling smile at him through the
+tears that came into her eyes. "It wasn't as if he wasn't ready. Johnny
+was always a good boy, an' he joined church when he was fourteen, an'
+always kep' his promises. He used to pray every night just as faithful,
+an' read his Bible. I've got the little Testament he carried all
+through. His chaplain sent it to me. It's got a bullet hole through it,
+and blood-marks, but it's good to me to look at, 'cause I know Johnny's
+with his Saviour. He wasn't afraid to die. He said to me before he left,
+he says: 'Ma, if anythin' happens to me it's all right. You know, Ma, I
+ain't forgettin' what you taught me, an' I ain't forgettin' Christ is
+with me.'"
+
+Mrs. Carson wiped her eyes furtively, and tried to look cheerful.
+Reyburn wished he knew how to comfort her.
+
+"It makes a man feel mean," he said at last, trying to fit his toe into
+the pattern of the ingrain carpet, "to come home alive and whole when so
+many poor fellows had to give their lives. I've often wondered how I
+happened to get through."
+
+She looked at him tenderly:
+
+"Perhaps your Heavenly Father brought you back to give you more chance
+to do things for Him, an' get ready to die when your time comes."
+
+There was something startling to this self-composed city chap in hearing
+a thing like this from the lips of the mother whose beloved son was gone
+forever beyond her teaching but had "been ready." Reyburn looked at her
+steadily, soberly, and then with a queer constriction in his throat he
+looked down at the floor thoughtfully and said:
+
+"Perhaps He did."
+
+"Well, I can't help bein' glad you're a church member, anyhow," said
+Mrs. Carson, rising to look out of the window. "She needs a Christian to
+help her, an' I'd sooner trust a Christian. If you really meant it when
+you joined church you've got somethin' to fall back on anyhow. Here she
+comes. I'll just go an' tell her you're in here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+BETTY, her eyes wide with fear, her face white as a lily, appeared like
+a wraith at the parlor door and looked at him. It gave Reyburn a queer
+sensation, as if a picture one had been looking at in a story book
+should suddenly become alive and move and stare at one. As he rose and
+came forward he still seemed to see like a dissolving view between them
+the little huddled bride on the floor of the church. Then he suddenly
+realized that she was trembling.
+
+"Please don't be afraid of me, Miss Stanhope," he said gently. "I have
+only come to help you, and if after you have talked with me you feel
+that you would rather I should have nothing to do with your affairs I
+will go away and no one in the world shall be the wiser for it. I give
+you my word of honor."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, toppling into a chair near by. "I--guess--I'm not
+afraid of you. I just didn't know who you might be----!" She stopped,
+caught her breath and tried to laugh, but it ended sorrily, almost in a
+sob.
+
+"Well, I don't wonder," said Reyburn, trying to find something
+reassuring to say. "The truth is, I was rather upset about you. I
+didn't quite know who you might turn out to be, you see!"
+
+"Oh!" Betty's hand slipped up to her throat, and her lips quivered as
+she tried to smile.
+
+"Please don't feel that way," he said, "or I'll go away at once." He was
+summoning all his courage and hoping she wasn't going to break down and
+cry. How little she was, and sweet! Her eyes pleaded, just as they did
+in that one look in the church. How could anybody be unkind to her?
+
+"I'm quite all right," said Betty with a forced smile, siting up very
+straight.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better introduce myself," he said, trying to speak in a
+very commonplace tone. "I'm just a lawyer that your friend Miss Jane
+Carson sent out to see if I could be of any service to you. It may
+possibly make things a little easier for you if I explain that while I
+never had heard of you before, and have no possible connection with your
+family or friends, I happened to be at your wedding!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a little agonized breath.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Bryce Cochrane?" he asked.
+
+Betty could not have got any whiter, but her eyes seemed to blanch a
+trifle.
+
+"A little," she said in a very small voice.
+
+"Well, she is my cousin."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty again.
+
+"Her husband was unable to accompany her to the wedding, and so I went
+in his place to escort Isabel. I knew nothing of your affairs either
+before or after the wedding, until this announcement was brought to my
+notice, and Miss Carson called on me."
+
+Betty took the paper in her trembling fingers, and looked into her own
+pictured eyes. Then everything seemed to swim before her for a moment.
+She pressed her hand against her throat and set her white lips firmly,
+looking up at the stranger with a sudden terror and comprehension.
+
+"You want to get that five thousand dollars!" she said, speaking the
+words in a daze of trouble. "Oh, I haven't got five thousand dollars!
+Not now! But perhaps I could manage to get it if you would be good
+enough to wait just a little, till I can find a way. Oh, if you knew
+what it means to me!"
+
+Warren Reyburn sprang to his feet in horror, a flame of anger leaping
+into his eyes.
+
+"Five thousand dollars be hanged!" he said fiercely. "Do I look like
+that kind of a fellow? It may seem awfully queer to you for an utter
+stranger to be butting into your affairs like this unless I did have
+some ulterior motive, but I swear to you that I have none. I came out
+here solely because I saw that you were in great likelihood of being
+found by the people from whom you had evidently run away. Miss Stanhope,
+I stood where I could watch your face when you came up the aisle at your
+wedding, and something in your eyes just before you dropped made me wish
+I could knock that bridegroom down and take care of you somehow until
+you got that hurt look out of your face. I know it was rather ridiculous
+for an utter stranger to presume so far, but when I saw that the sleuths
+were out after you, and when the knowledge of your whereabouts was put
+into my hands without the seeking, I wouldn't have been a man if I
+hadn't come and offered my services. I'm not a very great lawyer, nor
+even a very rising one, as your Miss Carson seems to think, but I'm a
+man with a soul to protect a woman who is in danger, and if that's you,
+I'm at your service. If not, you've only to say so and I'll take the
+next train home and keep my mouth shut!"
+
+He took his watch out and looked at it hastily, although he had not the
+slightest idea what it registered, nor what time the next train for home
+left. He looked very tall and strong and commanding as he stood in his
+dignity waiting for her answer, and Betty looked up like a little child
+and trusted him.
+
+"Oh! Please forgive me!" she cried. "I've been so frightened ever since
+Bob came after me. I couldn't think you had come for any good, because I
+didn't know any one in the world who would want to help me."
+
+"Certainly!" said Warren Reyburn with a lump in his throat, sitting down
+quickly to hide his emotion. "Please consider me a friend, and command
+me."
+
+"Thank you," said Betty taking a deep breath and trying to crowd back
+the tears. "I'm afraid there isn't any way to help me, but I'm glad to
+have a friend, and I'm sorry I was so rude."
+
+"You weren't rude, and that was a perfectly natural conclusion from my
+blundering beginning," he protested, looking at the adorable waves of
+hair that framed her soft cheeks. "But there is always a way to help
+people when they are in trouble, and I'm here to find out what it is. Do
+you think you could trust me enough to tell me what it's all about? Miss
+Carson didn't seem to know much or else she didn't feel free to say."
+
+"I didn't tell her much," said Betty, lifting her sea-blue eyes. "She
+was a stranger, too, you know."
+
+"Well, she's a mighty good friend of yours, I'll say, and she's acted
+in a very wise manner. She took more precautions than an old detective
+would have done. She told me only that some one was trying to make you
+marry a man you did not wish to marry. Is that correct?"
+
+Betty shivered involuntarily and a wave of color went over her white
+face.
+
+"It sounds queer," she said, "as if I hadn't any character or force
+myself, but you don't understand. No one would understand unless they
+knew it all, and had been through it for years. At first I didn't quite
+understand it myself. I'd better tell you the story. I thought I never
+could tell any one, because they were my father's family, and I know he
+would shrink so from having it known, but I'm sure he wouldn't blame me
+now."
+
+"He certainly would not blame you, Miss Stanhope. I have heard that your
+father was a wonderful man, with high principles. I feel sure he would
+justify you in appealing to some one who was willing to advise you in a
+strait like this. You know no woman need ever marry any man against her
+will."
+
+"Not if it were her father's dying wish?"
+
+"Certainly not. Miss Stanhope, did your father love you?"
+
+"Oh, I'm sure he did. He was the most wonderful father! I've often
+thought that he would never have asked it of me if he had realized----"
+
+"Did he ever during his lifetime seem to wish you to be unhappy?"
+
+"Never! That was the strange part of it. But you see he didn't know how
+I felt. I think I'd better tell you all about it."
+
+"That would be the better way, if it won't be too hard for you."
+
+Betty clasped her small hands together tightly and began:
+
+"My own mother died when I was quite a little girl, so father and I were
+a great deal to each other. He used to look after my lessons himself,
+and was always very careful what kind of teachers I had. He was mother
+and father both to me. When I was ten years old my governess died
+suddenly while father was away on a business trip, and one of our
+neighbors was very kind to me, coming in and looking after the servants
+and everything and keeping me over at her house for a few days till
+father got back. She had a widowed sister visiting her, a rather young
+woman who was very beautiful. At least I thought she was beautiful then,
+and she made a great pet of me, so that I grew fond of her, although I
+had not liked her at first.
+
+"After father came home she used to slip over every day to see me while
+he was at his business, and he was grateful to her for making me happy.
+Then he found out that she was in trouble, had lost her money or
+something, and wanted to get a position teaching. He arranged to have
+her teach me, and so she came to our house to stay.
+
+"Somehow after that I never seemed to see so much of my father as I used
+to do, for she was always there, but at first I didn't care, because she
+was nice to me, and always getting up things to keep me busy and happy.
+She would make my father buy expensive toys and books and games for me,
+and fine clothes, and so of course I was pleased. In about a year my
+father married her, and at first it seemed very beautiful to me to have
+a real mother, but little by little I began to see that she preferred to
+be alone with my father and did not want me around so much. It was very
+hard to give up the companionship of my father, but my stepmother kept
+me busy with other things, so that I really didn't think much about it
+while it was first happening.
+
+"But one day there came a letter. I remember it came while we were at
+breakfast, and my father got very white and stern when he read it, and
+handed it over to my mother and asked whether it was true, and then she
+began to cry and sent me from the table. I found out a few days after
+that that my stepmother had two sons, both older than myself, and that
+she had not told my father. It was through some trouble they had got
+into at school which required quite a large sum of money to cover
+damages that my father discovered it, and he was terribly hurt that she
+should have concealed it from him. I learned all this from the servants,
+who talked when they thought I was not within hearing. There were days
+and days when my father scarcely spoke at the table, and when he looked
+at me it made a pain go through my heart, he looked so stern and sad. My
+stepmother stayed a great deal in her room and looked as if she had been
+crying. But after a few weeks things settled down a good deal as they
+had been, only that my father never lost that sad troubled look. There
+was some trouble about my stepmother's sons, too, for there was a great
+deal of argument between her and my father, of which I only heard
+snatches, and then one day they came home to stay with us. Something had
+happened at the school where they were that they could not stay any
+longer. I can remember distinctly the first night they ate dinner with
+us. It seemed to me that it was like a terrific thunderstorm that never
+quite broke. Everybody was trying to be nice and polite, but underneath
+it all there was a kind of lightning of all kinds of feelings, hurt
+feelings and wrong ones and right ones all mixed up.
+
+"Only the two boys didn't seem to feel it much. They sort of took things
+for granted, as if that had always been their home, and they didn't act
+very polite. It seemed to trouble my father, who looked at them so
+severely that it almost choked me, and I couldn't go on eating my
+dinner. He didn't seem like my dear father when he looked like that. I
+always used to watch my father, and he seemed to make the day for me. If
+he was sad, then I was sad; and if he was glad then I was happy all
+over, until one day my stepmother noticed me and said: 'See, dear little
+Elizabeth is trembling. You ought not to speak that way before her,
+Charles.' And then father looked at me, and all suddenly I learned to
+smile when I didn't feel like it. I smiled back to him just to let him
+know it didn't matter what he did, I would love him anyhow!"
+
+During the recital Reyburn had sat with courteous averted gaze as though
+he would not trouble her with more of his presence than was absolutely
+necessary. Now he gave her a swift glance.
+
+Betty's eyes were off on distance, and she was talking from the depths
+of her heart, great tears welling into her eyes. All at once she
+remembered the stranger:
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said, and brushed her hand across her eyes. "I
+haven't gone over it to any one ever, and I forgot you would not be
+interested in details."
+
+"Please don't mind me. I am interested in every detail you are good
+enough to give me. It all makes the background of the truth, you know,
+and that is what I am after," said Reyburn, deeply touched. "I think you
+are wonderful to tell me all this. I shall regard it most sacredly."
+
+Betty flashed a look of gratitude at him, and noticed the sympathy in
+his face. It almost unnerved her, but she went on:
+
+"The oldest boy was named Bessemer, and he wasn't very good-looking. He
+was very tall and awkward, and always falling over things. He had little
+pale eyes, and hardly any chin. His teeth projected, too, and his hair
+was light and very straight and thin. His mother didn't seem to love him
+very much, even when he was a little boy. She bullied him and found
+fault with him continually, and quite often I felt very sorry for him,
+although I wasn't naturally attracted to him. He wasn't really
+unpleasant to me. We got along very nicely, although I never had much to
+do with him. There wasn't much to him.
+
+"The other brother, Herbert, was handsome like his mother, only dark,
+with black curly hair, black wicked eyes, and a big, loose, cruel mouth.
+His mother just idolized him, and he knew it. He could make her do
+anything on earth. He used to force Bessemer into doing wrong things,
+too, things that he was afraid to do himself, because he knew father
+would not be so hard on Bessemer as on him. For father had taken a great
+dislike to Herbert, and it was no wonder. He seemed to have no idea at
+all that he was not owner of the house. He took anything he pleased for
+his own use, even father's most sacred possessions, and broke them in a
+fit of anger, too, sometimes, without ever saying he was sorry. He
+talked very disrespectfully of father and to him, and acted so to the
+servants that they gave notice and left. Every few days there would be a
+terrible time over something Herbert had done. Once I remember he went
+to the safe and got some money out that belonged to father and went off
+and spent it in some dreadful way that made father very angry. Of course
+I was still only a little girl, and I did not know all that went on.
+Father was very careful that I should not know. He guarded me more than
+ever, but he always looked sad when he came to kiss me good-night.
+
+"Herbert took especial delight in tormenting me," she went on with a sad
+far-away look in her eyes as if she were recalling unpleasant memories.
+She did not see the set look on Reyburn's face nor notice his low
+exclamation of anger. She went steadily on: "He found out that I did not
+like June-bugs, and once he caught hundreds of them and locked me into a
+room with them with all the lights turned on. I was almost frightened to
+death, but it cured me of being afraid of June-bugs." A little smile
+trembled out on Betty's lips. "Just because I wouldn't give him the
+satisfaction of letting him hear me scream." She finished. "Then he
+caught a snake and put it in my room, and he put a lot of burdocks in my
+hat so they would get in my hair. Foolish things those were, of course,
+but he was a constant nightmare to me. Sometimes he would tie a wire
+across the passages in the upper hall where I had to pass to my room,
+and when I fell my hands went down against a lot of slimy toads in the
+dark, for he always somehow managed to have the light go out just as I
+fell. There were hundreds of things like that, but I needn't multiply
+them. That's the kind of boy he was. And because he discovered that my
+father loved me very much, and because he knew my father disliked him,
+he spent much time in trying to torment me in secret. I couldn't tell my
+father, because he always looked so sad whenever there was trouble, and
+there was sure to be trouble between him and my stepmother if my father
+found out that Herbert had done anything wrong. One day my father came
+upon us just as Herbert had caught me and was trying to cut my curls
+off. I didn't care about the curls, but I knew my father did. I began to
+scream. Herbert gripped me so I thought I would die with the pain,
+putting his big strong fingers around my throat and choking me so I
+could not make any noise."
+
+Reyburn clenched his hands until the knuckles went white and uttered an
+exclamation, but Betty did not notice:
+
+"There was a terrible time then, and I was sent away to a school, a good
+many miles from home, where I stayed for several years. Father always
+came up to see me every week end, for a few hours at least, and we had
+wonderful times together. Sometimes in vacation he would bring my
+stepmother along and she would bring me beautiful presents and smile and
+pet me, and say she missed me so much and she wished I would ask my
+father to let me come back and go to school in the city. But I never
+did, because I was afraid of Herbert. As I grew older I used to have an
+awful horror of him. But finally one vacation father and mother both
+came up and said they wanted me at home. My stepmother went to my room
+with me and told me I needn't be afraid of Herbert any more, that he was
+quite grown up and changed and would be good to me, and that it would
+please my father to have all his family together happily again. I
+believed her and I told father I would like to go. He looked very happy,
+and so I went home. Herbert had been away at school himself most of the
+time, and so had Bessemer, although they had been in trouble a good many
+times, so the servants told me, and had to change to new schools. They
+were both away when I got home. I had a very happy time for three weeks,
+only that I never saw father alone once. My stepmother was always there.
+But she was kind and I tried not to mind. Then all of a sudden one night
+I woke up and heard voices, and I knew that the boys were back from the
+camp to which they had been sent. I didn't sleep much the rest of the
+night, but in the morning I made up my mind that it was only a little
+while before I could go back to school, and I would be nice to the boys
+and maybe they wouldn't trouble me.
+
+"I found that it was quite true that Herbert had grown up and changed.
+He didn't want to torment me any more, he wanted to make love to me,
+and I was only a child yet. I wasn't quite fifteen. It filled me with
+horror, and after he had caught me in the dark--he always loved to get
+people in the dark--and tried to kiss me, I asked father to let me go
+back to school at once. I can remember how sad he looked at me as if I
+had cut him to the heart when I asked him."
+
+During this part of the tale Reyburn sat with stern countenance, his
+fingers clenched around the arms of the chair in which he sat, but he
+held himself quiet and listened with compressed lips, watching every
+expression that flitted across the sweet pale face.
+
+"That was the last time I was at home with my father," she said, trying
+to control her quivering lips. "He took me back to school, and he came
+three times to see me, though not so often as before. The last time he
+said beautiful things to me about trying to live a right life and being
+kind to those about me, and he asked me to forgive him if he had ever
+done anything to hurt me in any way. Of course I said he hadn't. And
+then he said he hoped I wouldn't feel too hard at him for marrying again
+and bringing those boys into my life. I told him it was all right, that
+some day they would grow up and go away and he and I would live together
+again! And he said some awful words about them under his breath. But he
+asked me to forgive him again and kissed me and went away.
+
+"He was taken very sick when he got home, and they never let me know
+until he was dead. Of course I went home to the funeral, but I didn't
+stay; I couldn't. I went back to school alone. My stepmother had been
+very kind, but she said she knew it was my father's wish that I should
+finish my school year. When vacation came she was traveling for her
+health. She wrote me a beautiful letter telling me how she missed me,
+and how much she needed me now in her bereavement, and how she hoped
+another summer would see us together; but she stayed abroad two years
+and the third year she went to California. I was sent to another school,
+and because I was not asked about it and there didn't seem anything else
+to do, I went. Every time I would suggest doing something else my
+stepmother would write and say how sorry she was she could not give her
+consent, but my father had left very explicit directions about me and
+she was only trying to carry out his wishes. She knew me well enough to
+be sure I would want to do anything he wished for me. And I did, of
+course."
+
+Reyburn gave her a look of sympathy and getting up began to pace the
+little room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+"IT was not until last spring that she sent for me to come home," went
+on Betty, "and was very effusive about how much she needed me and how
+she was so much better, and meant to be a real mother to me now, helping
+me see the world and have a good time. She took me from one summer
+resort to another. Of course it was pleasant after having been shut up
+in school all those years, but she kept me close with her all the time,
+and I met only the people she chose to have me meet. All the time she
+kept talking about 'dear Herbert' and telling how wonderful he was and
+how he had grown to be 'such a dear boy.' Finally he arrived and began
+the very first evening he was with us to coax me to marry him. At first
+he was very courteous and waited upon me whenever I stirred, and I
+almost thought his mother was right about his being changed. But when I
+told him that I did not love him and could not ever marry him I caught a
+look on his face like an angry snarl, and I heard him tell his mother I
+was a crazy little fool, and that he would break my neck for me after he
+got me good and married. Then his mother began to come to me and cry
+and tell me how dear Herbert was almost heart-broken, that he would
+never lift up his head again, and that I would send him to ruin. It was
+simply awful, and I didn't know how to endure it. I began to wonder
+where I could go. Of course I had never been brought up to do anything,
+so I could not very well expect to go out into the world and make my
+living."
+
+"Didn't you have any money at all?" interrupted Reyburn suddenly.
+
+"Oh, yes," she said, looking up as if she had just remembered his
+presence. "I had always plenty of spending money, but if I went away
+where they couldn't find me, why, of course, I would have to give that
+up."
+
+"Why, where did your money come from? Was it an allowance from your
+stepmother, or did your father leave it to you, or what?"
+
+"I'm not just sure," said Betty, with troubled brow. "I never really
+knew much about the money affairs. When I asked, they always put me off
+and said that I was too young to be bothered with business yet, I would
+be told all about it when I came of age. My stepmother harped a great
+deal on keeping me young as long as possible. She said it was my
+father's wish that I should be relieved of all care until I came of
+age. But there were some trustees in Boston. I know that, because I had
+to write to them, about once or twice a year. My stepmother was most
+particular about that. I think they were old friends of my own mother,
+though I don't know when I learned that. Father told me once that mother
+had left me enough to keep me comfortably even without what he would
+leave me, so I'm sure I shall have enough to repay you if I could once
+get it."
+
+"Don't worry about me!" he exclaimed. "It seems so terrible for you to
+have been alone in a situation like that! Wasn't there any one you could
+appeal to for help?"
+
+"No, not any one whom I thought it would be right to tell. You see, in a
+way it was my father's honor. She was his wife, and I'm sure he loved
+her--at least at first--and she really was very good to me, except when
+it was a question of her son."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't agree with you there!" he said sternly. "I think she
+was a clever actress. But excuse me. Go on, please."
+
+"At last, when things had got so bad that I thought I must run away
+somewhere, my stepmother came into my room one morning and locked the
+door. She had been weeping, and she looked very sweet and pitiful. She
+said she had something to tell me. She had tried not to have to do it,
+for she was afraid it would grieve me and might make me have hard
+feelings against my father. I told her that was impossible. Then she
+told me that my father on his deathbed had called her to him and told
+her that it was his wish that I should marry one of her sons, and he
+wanted her to tell me. He felt that he had wronged them by hating them
+for my sake and he felt that I could make it all right by marrying one
+of them. My stepmother said that when she saw how infatuated dear
+Herbert was with me she hoped that she would be spared having to tell
+me, but now that I was treating him so she felt bound to deliver the
+message. Then she handed me a paper which said virtually the same thing
+which she had told me, and was signed by my father in his own
+handwriting."
+
+"Was the paper written or printed?" interrupted Reyburn.
+
+"I think it was typewritten, but the signature was papa's. There could
+be no mistake about that, and he wouldn't have signed something he
+didn't mean." Betty sighed as if it were a subject she had worn into her
+heart by much sorrowful thought.
+
+"It might be quite possible for him to have done that under influence
+or delirium, or when he was too sick to realize."
+
+"Oh, do you think so?" Betty caught at the hope. "It seems so awful to
+go against papa's last request."
+
+"There is nothing awful but the idea of your being tied to that--beast!"
+said Reyburn with unexpected fervor. Betty looked at him gratefully and
+went on:
+
+"I was simply appalled. I couldn't think, and I made my stepmother go
+away and leave me for a little while, but things got blacker and blacker
+and I thought I was going crazy. I couldn't marry Herbert even to please
+my father. The next day Bessemer arrived. He had been worrying his
+mother a lot about money, and when he arrived I couldn't help hearing
+what they said to him. They charged him with all sort of dreadful
+things. They called him a disgrace, and threatened to let him be
+arrested, and a great many more such things. Finally his mother ended up
+by telling him she never had loved him and that if he made any more
+trouble about money she would cut him off without a cent. I was sitting
+upstairs in my room with my windows open, and all their talk floated
+right up to me. It made me feel sick, and yet I felt sorry for Bessemer,
+for lately whenever he had been around he had been kind to me, and
+sometimes I had stayed near him to get rid of Herbert. We often talked
+over our troubles together and sympathized with one another. He felt
+sorry for me, but he was weak himself and couldn't see any way out for
+either of us.
+
+"They had pretty stormy times all that day. Late in the afternoon
+Herbert and Bessemer went to their mother's room and were closeted with
+her for two hours, after which Herbert went away in the car with his
+suitcase and bags as if he were not coming back soon. I watched him from
+my window, and in great relief went down to take a little walk, for I
+had stayed closely in my room all day trying to plan what to do. One
+thing that held me from running away was that it would be such a
+disgrace to the family, and I knew my father would have felt it so
+keenly. That was always the great trouble when the boys got into scrapes
+at college, my father would groan and say he felt disgraced to be so
+conspicuous before the world. So I hesitated to do what would have been
+a sorrow to him had he been alive.
+
+"Half an hour later I was sitting alone in the twilight on one of the
+porches, and Bessemer came out and sat down beside me.
+
+"He looked so sort of homely and lonesome that I put my hand on his arm
+and told him I was awfully sorry for him, and suddenly he turned around
+and said:
+
+"'Say, Betty, why don't you marry _me_? Then they can't say a word to
+either of us. Your father's wishes will be carried out and Herb'll have
+to whistle.'
+
+"At first I was horrified, but we talked a long time about it, and he
+told me how lonely he had always been, and how nobody had ever loved
+him, and he knew he wasn't attractive, and all that; and then he said
+that if I married him we would go away and live by ourselves and he
+would let me do just as I wanted to. He wouldn't bother me about
+anything. If I didn't love him he would keep out of my sight, and things
+like that, till I got very sorry for him, and began to think that
+perhaps after all it was the best thing that would ever come for either
+of us. So I said I would.
+
+"It surprised me a little that my stepmother took it so calmly when we
+told her. She cried a little, but did it very prettily, and kissed
+Bessemer, and told him he was fortunate. Then she kissed me and said I
+was a darling, and that she would be so happy if it only weren't for
+poor dear Herbert.
+
+"But after that they began to rush things for a grand wedding, and I let
+them do it because I didn't see anything else in the world for me."
+
+Betty raised her eyes and encountered the clear grave gaze of Reyburn
+fixed on her, and the color flew into her cheeks:
+
+"I know you think I'm dreadful," she said, shrinking. "I've thought so
+myself a thousand times, but truly I didn't realize then what an awful
+thing it would be to marry a man I didn't love. I only wanted to hurry
+up and get it done before Herbert came home. They said he had been
+called away by important business and might be at home any day. I gave
+my consent to everything they wanted to do, and they fixed it all just
+as they pleased. One thing that happened upset me terribly. When the
+wedding invitations came home my stepmother carried them off to her
+room. I was too sad to pay much attention anyway. But the next morning I
+happened to be down in the kitchen looking over the papers that the maid
+had taken down from the waste baskets to search for a missing letter and
+there in the pile I found one of the invitations partly addressed and
+flung aside, and the invitation was still in the envelope. I pulled it
+out with a ghastly kind of curiosity to see how I looked on paper, and
+there it read, Mrs. Charles Garland Stanhope invites you to be present
+at the marriage of her daughter Elizabeth to _Mr. Herbert Hutton_!
+
+"My heart just stood still. With the paper in my hand I rushed up to my
+stepmother's room and demanded to know what that meant. She smiled and
+said she was so sorry I had been annoyed that way, that that was a
+mistake, the invitations had come wrongly engraved and she had had to
+send them back and have them done over again. She was afraid I might be
+superstitious about it, so she hadn't told me. She was very gentle and
+sweet and tried to soothe me, and called me 'Betty,' the name my father
+always had for me, and at last I went back to my room feeling quite
+comfortable. She had said she always felt troubled for poor Bessemer,
+that nobody could love him right, he was so homely, and now I was going
+to make everything right by marrying him. She was going to try to forget
+what I had done to poor dear Herbert, and just be happy about Bessemer.
+She talked so nicely that I kissed her, a thing I hadn't done in years,
+not since she was first married to father. But somehow the shock of
+seeing Herbert's name on the invitation stayed with me, and I began to
+feel gloomier about it all and to wonder if perhaps I had done right.
+The last day I was terribly depressed and when I got to the church that
+night it suddenly came to me that perhaps after all I was not going to
+be free at all as I had hoped, but was just tying myself up to them all
+for life. I was thinking that as I walked up the aisle, and my throat
+had a big lump in it the way it always does when I am frightened, and
+then I looked up hoping a glimpse of poor Bessemer's face would steady
+me and he wasn't there at all! And right over me, waiting beside the
+minister, to marry me stood _Herbert_! My knees just gave way under me,
+and everything got black so I couldn't go on another step, nor even
+stand up. I had to drop. I wasn't unconscious as you all thought--I
+heard everything that went on, but I couldn't do anything about it.
+
+"After they had carried me into the other room and given me things to
+drink, and I could get my breath again I saw it all clearly. Herbert
+hadn't given up at all. He meant to marry me anyway. He had had the
+invitations printed with his name on purpose and they probably hadn't
+been changed at all. Everybody in that great church out there was
+_expecting_ me to marry Herbert Hutton, and I _was not going to do it_!
+I didn't quite know how I was going to stop it, but I knew I had to! You
+see I was brought up to think a great deal about what people would think
+of me if I did anything out of the usual, and it seemed to me I had
+disgraced myself forever by dropping down in the aisle. I knew Herbert
+well enough to be sure he would carry that wedding through now if he had
+to hold me up in his arms till the ceremony was over, and I was
+desperate. I would have given everything I had in the world if the floor
+had opened and swallowed me up then, but of course I knew wild thoughts
+like that wouldn't get me anywhere, so I just shut my eyes and tried to
+think of a way; and then I asked them all to go out a minute and let me
+be quiet. The doctor who had come out of the church told them to go. I
+shall always bless that man, whoever he was! Then when they were gone I
+opened a door that had a key in it, and I locked it behind me and ran
+away down some stairs and out a passage that led to the street. That
+girl, Jane Carson, was passing and she put her own coat on me and took
+me to her room and sent me here. Oh, it's been so good to get here! Do
+you think they can take me away against my will?"
+
+"Certainly not!" said the young man. "Not without some foul play, but I
+don't intend to give them any chance for that. By the way, when do you
+come of age?"
+
+"In three weeks," said Betty, looking troubled. "Why, would I be safe
+after I was of age?"
+
+"You certainly would not be under their guardianship any longer," said
+the young lawyer, "and they would have no right to control your actions,
+unless of course you were incapacitated somehow and unfit to manage your
+own affairs."
+
+Betty looked troubled.
+
+"I've thought sometimes, ever since I saw that paper in which they
+hinted that I was temporarily insane, that they might try to shut me up
+in an insane asylum. Herbert wouldn't stop at anything. Could he do
+that?"
+
+"They would have to get a doctor to swear that you were mentally
+unsound," said Reyburn, looking troubled. "Does he really love you, do
+you think or does he only want to get you in his power for some reason?"
+
+"It is more like that," said Betty sorrowfully, "he couldn't really love
+anybody but himself."
+
+"Well, don't you worry. I'm going at the case at once, and I'll put
+those people where they'll have to walk a chalk line before many hours
+are over. The first thing I must do is to see those trustees of yours.
+Can you give me the names and addresses?"
+
+He got out his fountain pen, and Betty told him all he wanted to know,
+that is, all she knew herself, and then suddenly it was train time and
+he hurried away. On the steps he paused and said in a low tone:
+
+"Are you perfectly comfortable with these people for a few days until I
+can get you better accommodations where you will be safe?"
+
+"Entirely," said Betty eagerly. "I wouldn't want to go elsewhere."
+
+"But it must be very hard for one like you to be thrown constantly with
+illiterate, uncultured people."
+
+Betty smiled dreamily:
+
+"I don't think they are exactly uncultured," she said slowly.
+"They--well, you see, they make a friend of God, and somehow I think
+that makes a difference. Don't you think it would?"
+
+"I should think it would," said Warren Reyburn reverently with a light
+in his eyes. "I think, perhaps, if you don't mind my saying it, that
+you, too, have been making a friend of God."
+
+"I've been trying to," said Betty softly, with a shy glow on her face
+that he remembered all the way back to the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+CANDACE CAMERON paced her little gabled room restively, with face
+growing redder and more excited at every step. For several weeks now she
+had been virtually a prisoner--albeit a willing enough one--in the house
+of Stanhope. But the time had come when she felt that she must do
+something.
+
+She had gone quietly enough about a proscribed part of the house, doing
+little helpful things, making herself most useful to the madam, slipping
+here and there with incredible catlike tread for so plump a body,
+managing to overhear important conversations, and melting away like a
+wraith before her presence was discovered. She had made herself so
+unobtrusive as to be almost forgotten by all save the maid Marie, who
+had been set to watch her; and she had learned that if she went to bed
+quite early in the evening, Marie relaxed her watch and went down to the
+servants' quarters, or even sometimes went out with a lover for a while,
+that is, if the madam herself happened to be out also. On several such
+occasions she had made valuable tours of investigation through the
+madam's desk and private papers.
+
+That she was overstepping her privileges as a servant in the house went
+without saying, but she silenced her Scotch conscience, which until this
+period of her existence had always kept her strictly from meddling with
+other people's affairs, by declaring over and over again to herself that
+she was doing perfectly right because she was doing it for the sake of
+"that poor wee thing that was being cheated of her rights."
+
+Several weeks had passed since her sudden re-establishment in the
+family, and the reports of Betty, so hastily readjusted and refurbished
+to harmonize with the newspaper reports, had not been any more
+satisfying. Mrs. Stanhope had explained to the servants the day after
+the excitement that Miss Betty had become temporarily deranged, and
+later that she had escaped from the private hospital where she had been
+taken, and they were doing all in their power to find her. In reply to
+Candace's gimlet-like questions she had given the name of a hospital
+where she said Betty had been taken at first, and everything seemed
+altogether plausible. But as the days went by and the horror of her
+absence grew into the soul of the lonely woman whose care Betty had been
+for years, Candace became more and more restive and suspicious. It was
+these suspicions which sent her on her investigations, and made her
+uncannily wise to pry open secret locks and cover all trace of her
+absence after she had gleaned what knowledge she sought.
+
+On this particular evening her excitement was due to having come across
+some correspondence bearing the signature of a man to whom a certain
+letter had been addressed, which had been entrusted to her charge by
+Betty's dying father and taken from her by his wife. For years she had
+been worried about that, and yet she had no absolute reason to doubt
+that the madam had not sent it to its destination, except as she knew
+its contents and read Mrs. Stanhope's character beneath the excellent
+camouflage. But to-night, even the briefest glance through the bundle of
+letters showed plainly that those men in Boston never knew the master's
+wishes, or at least, if they knew them, they were utterly disregarding
+them.
+
+Aroused on one point, her suspicions began to extend further. Where was
+Betty? Did her stepmother know, and was she somewhere suffering, alone,
+perhaps being neglected because she had not done as they wanted her to
+do? If the stepmother was capable of destroying a letter, was she
+perhaps not also capable of putting Betty out of the way? There were
+points of detail which of course did not harmonize with any such theory
+as this. Candace was no logician, but she was keen enough to feel that
+something was wrong. As for that theory of Betty's insanity she scouted
+it with a harsh laugh whenever it was mentioned in her hearing.
+Betty--keen, sweet, trusting little Betty _insane_! Nonsense! It was
+unthinkable. If she was in an asylum anywhere she was there without
+warrant, and it behoved her faithful old nurse to find a way out for
+her. This she meant to do against all odds, for she was thoroughly
+aroused now.
+
+She went to the window and looked down into the lighted street. Over
+there not four blocks away rose the steeple of the church where Betty
+had gone to be married! Around the corner was the great brick pile of
+the hospital where her stepmother said she had been taken from the
+church, and from which she was believed by the other servants to have
+escaped.
+
+Standing thus looking out into the light-starred city, Candace began to
+form a plan, her plump tightly garmented chest rising and falling
+excitedly as she thought it all out. It was up to her to find out what
+had become of Betty. But how was she to get away without being
+suspected? Somehow she must do it. She knew perfectly the address that
+had been on that letter. She had written it down carefully from memory
+as soon as it had been taken away from her. She must go to Boston and
+find that man to whom it had been written, and discover whether he had
+ever received it. But she could not go until she found out certainly
+whether or not Betty had ever really escaped from the hospital. Who knew
+but that she was shut up there yet, and the madam telling this tale all
+about and advertising with a five thousand dollar reward! In the movies,
+too! Such a disgrace on the family! How the master would have writhed at
+the publicity of his beloved daughter--"poor wee thing!"
+
+Candace turned from the window with her lips set, and tiptoeing to the
+door, listened. Yes, it was Aileen who was coming lightly up the stairs,
+singing in a low tone. It was Aileen's evening out. That meant that
+Marie would be more than usually active on the upper floor. She must
+manage it before Aileen left and Marie was called upstairs, or there
+would be no opportunity to get away without Marie seeing her.
+
+Hastily she gathered her silk dress, her cloak and her apoplectic hat
+into a bundle with her purse and her gloves, and tied them into an old
+apron, with the strings hanging free. Then stealthily opening the
+window, she dropped them out into the kitchen area below, close to the
+region of the ash cans. It was a risk, of course, but one must take some
+chances, and the servants would all be in the kitchen just now, laughing
+and talking. They would scarcely have heard it fall.
+
+She listened a tense instant, then closed the window, and possessing
+herself of a few little things, gathered hastily about the room, which
+she could stuff in her pockets, she opened her door softly, closed it
+behind her, and trotted off down the stairs just as if she were going
+about her ordinary duty. Listening a minute outside the kitchen door she
+slipped stealthily down the cellar stairs, and tiptoed over to the area
+door where the ashman took out the ashes. Softly slipping the bolt she
+opened the door and drew in her bundle. Then standing within, she
+quickly slipped the black silk over her housemaid's gown, donned her
+coat and hat and gloves, and sallied forth. A moment more and she was in
+the next street with the consciousness that she "might have done the
+like any time sooner, if she'd wanted, in spite of that little spy-cat
+Marie."
+
+"If I want to go back I'll just say I went after my insurance book," she
+chuckled to herself as she sped down the street in the direction of the
+hospital.
+
+Arrived at the big building she asked to see the list of patients taken
+in on the day of Betty's wedding, and succeeded in getting a pretty
+accurate description of each one, sufficient at least to satisfy her
+that Betty was not among them. Then she asked a few more bold questions,
+and came away fully convinced that Betty had never been in that
+hospital.
+
+By this time it was nine o'clock, and she meant to take the evening
+train for Boston, which left, she was sure, somewhere near midnight. She
+took a trolley to her old lodgings where she had been since Mrs.
+Stanhope had sent her away the first time, and hastily packed a small
+hand bag with a few necessities, made a few changes in her garments,
+then went to see a fellow lodger whom she knew well, and where she felt
+sure she could easily get a check cashed, for she had a tidy little bank
+account of her own, and was well known to be reliable.
+
+Having procured the necessary funds, she made her way to the station and
+found that she had still an hour to spare before the Boston train left.
+
+Settled down at last in the back seat of a common car, she made herself
+as comfortable as her surroundings would allow, and gave herself up to
+planning the campaign that was before her.
+
+Canny Candace did not go at once to the office of the brothers, James
+and George McIntyre, though she looked them up in the telephone book the
+very first thing when the train arrived in Boston even before she had
+had a bite to eat, and her cup of tea which meant more to her than the
+"bite." She reasoned that they would be busy in the early hours and not
+be able to give her their undivided attention. She had not lived out all
+her life for nothing. She knew the ways of the world, and she had very
+strict ideas about the best ways of doing everything. So it happened
+that when she was at last shown into the office of the McIntyres, Warren
+Reyburn who had traveled to Boston on the sleeper of the same train that
+she had taken the night before, was just arising from an earnest
+conference with the two men. With her first glance, as the three emerged
+from the inner office, Candace saw that the two elder gentlemen were
+much disturbed and it flitted through her mind that she had come at an
+inopportune moment. Then her quick eye took in the younger man and her
+little alert head cocked to one side with a questioning attitude. Where
+had she seen him before? Candace had the kind of a mind that kept people
+and events card-indexed even to the minutest detail, and it didn't take
+many seconds for her to place Warren Reyburn back in the church at the
+wedding, standing against the wall with his arms folded. She had noticed
+him particularly because he was so courteous to a little old lady who
+came in too late to get a seat. She had studied him as he stood there,
+waiting for the wedding march, and she had thought how handsome he
+looked and how fine it would have been if her wee Betty had been getting
+a man like that in place of the weak-faced Bessemer Hutton. She had
+watched to see who he was with, and felt deep satisfaction when she
+noticed him lean over and speak to Mrs. Bryce Cochrane as if he belonged
+to her. He wasn't her husband, because she knew Mr. Cochrane, who had
+been a favorite with Mr. Stanhope and much at the house. This man might
+be Mrs. Cochrane's brother "or the likes," and she had pleased herself
+watching him till Betty arrived and took all her thoughts. So now she
+stood with her little round head in its hectic hat tilted interestedly
+to one side, watching, ears on the keen to catch any word, for all the
+world like a "bit brown sparrow" saucily perched on another man's
+window, where it really had no right to be.
+
+At last one of the McIntyre's shook hands gravely with the younger man,
+and the other one attended him to the door, talking in low tones. The
+McIntyre thus set at liberty, turned questioningly toward the stranger,
+who was not slow in getting to her feet and coming forward.
+
+"You will maybe be Mr. James McIntyre?" she asked, lifting her sea-blue
+eyes set in her apple-red face, and fixing her firm little lips in
+dignity. Candace was a servant and knew her place, but she felt the
+importance of her mission, and meant to have no disrespect done to it.
+
+"I am Mr. George McIntyre," the gentleman replied, and, indicating the
+man at the door, "Mr. James McIntyre will be at liberty in a moment, but
+perhaps I will do as well?"
+
+Candace cocked a glance toward the elderly back at the door; and then
+returned her look to Mr. George:
+
+"You'll maybe be knowing Mr. Charles Stanhope?" she propounded, as if
+she were giving him a riddle, and her blue eyes looked him through and
+through:
+
+"Oh, surely, surely! He was a very close friend! You--knew him?"
+
+"I was Miss Betty's nurse who cooked the griddle cakes for you the
+morning after the funeral----" she said, and waited with breathless
+dignity to see how he would take it.
+
+"Oh! Is that so!" He beamed on her kindly. "Yes, yes, I remember those
+cakes. They were delicious! And what can I do for you? Just sit down.
+Why, bless me, I don't know but that your coming may be very opportune!
+Can you tell me anything of Miss Betty?"
+
+Candace pressed her lips together with a knowing smile as much as to say
+she might tell volumes if it were wise, and she cast a glance at the
+other brother who was shaking hands now with his visitor and promising
+to meet him a little later:
+
+"Yon man'll be knowing a bit, too, I'll be thinking," she hazarded
+nodding toward Reyburn as he left. "He was at the wedding, I'm most
+sure----!"
+
+The elder McIntyre gave her a quick glance and signalled to his brother
+to come near:
+
+"This is Miss Stanhope's nurse, the one who cooked breakfast for us at
+the time of the funeral," he said, and to Candace, "This is Mr. James
+McIntyre."
+
+Candace fixed him with another of her inquisitive little glances:
+
+"I've some bit papers put by that I thought ye might like to see," she
+said with a cautious air. "I've kept them fer long because I thought
+they might be wanted sometime, yet I've never dared bring them to your
+notice before lest I would be considered meddlin', and indeed I wasn't
+sure but you had them already. Will you please to look over them papers
+and see if you've ever seen them before?" She drew forth an envelope
+from her bag and handed it to them. "It's a bit letter that Mr. Stanhope
+wrote the day he was dyin' an' then copied and give to me to mail, and
+his lady took it away, sayin' she would attend to it. What I want to
+know is, did ye ever get the letter? If ye did it's all right and none
+of my business further, an' I'll go on my way back home again and think
+no more about it; but if ye didn't then there it is, an' you ought to
+see it, that's sure!"
+
+The two men drew eagerly together and studied the trembling lines:
+
+"It's his writing all right," murmured one, under his breath, and the
+brother nodded gravely:
+
+"You say that this was the original of a letter that was given to you to
+mail to us?"
+
+Candace nodded.
+
+"It's what he wrote first, and got ink on it, an' then wrote it over. I
+can't say what changes he made, as I didn't read it, but this he gave to
+me to burn, and before I gets it burned my lady comes in and takes the
+letter from me while he was sleepin'; and so I hid the bit papers,
+thinkin' they might be a help to wee Betty sometime. And oh, can ye
+tell me anything of my little Lady Betty? Is she safe? Did she come to
+you for refuge? You needn't be afraid to tell me. I'll never breathe a
+word----!"
+
+The two brothers exchanged quick glances of warning and the elder man
+spoke:
+
+"My good woman, we appreciate your coming, and these papers may prove
+very useful to us. We hope to be able to clear up this matter of Miss
+Stanhope's disappearance very soon. She did not come to us, however, and
+she is not here. But if you will step into the room just beyond and wait
+for a little while we may be able to talk this matter over with you."
+
+Very courteously he ushered the plump, apprehensive little woman into
+the next room and established her in an easy leather chair with a
+quantity of magazines and newspapers about her, but she kept her little
+head cocked anxiously on one side, and watched the door like a dog whose
+master has gone in and shut the way behind him; and she never sat back
+in her chair nor relaxed one iota during the whole of the two hours that
+she had to wait before she was called at last to the inner office where
+she found the handsome young man whom she remembered seeing at the
+wedding.
+
+She presently found that Reyburn was as keen as he was handsome, but if
+she hadn't remembered him at the wedding as a friend of that nice Mrs.
+Cochrane, she never would have made it as easy as she did for him to
+find out things from her, for she could be canny herself on occasion if
+she tried, and she did not trust everybody.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+THE mysterious disappearance of Candace from the Stanhope house caused
+nothing short of a panic. Herbert and his mother held hourly wrangles,
+and frantically tried one thing and then another. Day after day the
+responses came in from the advertisements they had caused to be put
+forth. Everyone was hot-foot for the reward, but so far little of
+encouragement had been brought out. More and more the young man was
+fixing his mind on the idea that Candace had something to do with
+Betty's disappearance, so he was leaving no stone unturned to find the
+nurse as well as the girl. To this end he insisted on seeing personally
+and cross-examining every person who came claiming to have a clue to the
+lost girl.
+
+That morning, at about the same hour when Candace walked into the office
+of the McIntyre Brothers in Boston, James, the butler, much against his
+dignity, was ushering a curious person into the presence of the son of
+the house. James showed by every line of his noble figure that he
+considered this duty beneath his dignity, and that it was only because
+the occasion was unusual that he tolerated it for a moment, but the man
+who ambled observantly behind him, stretching his neck to see everything
+that was to be seen in this part of the great house, that he might tell
+about it at the fire-house, failed to get the effect. He was wondering
+why in thunder such rich people as these seemed to be, couldn't afford
+carpets big enough to cover their whole floors, instead of just having
+skimpy little bits of pieces dropped around here and there, that made
+you liable to skid all over the place if you stepped on one of them
+biasly.
+
+Herbert Hutton lifted his head and watched Abijah Gage slouch into the
+room. He measured him keenly and remained silent while Abijah opened up.
+There had been many other applicants for that reward that day, with
+stories cunningly woven, and facts, substantiated by witnesses, in one
+case a whole family brought along to swear to the fabrication; but as
+yet Herbert had not found a promising clue to his missing bride, and the
+time was going by. In a few days it would be too late, and his
+undisciplined spirit raged within him. It was not only his bride he
+wanted, it was her fortune, which was worth any trouble he might take;
+and every day, every hour, every minute now, it was slipping, slipping,
+slipping from his eager grasp.
+
+Abijah was a little overawed in the presence of this insolent man of the
+world, but he felt he had, for almost the first time in his life, Truth
+on his side, and he was strong in the power of it. With a cunning equal
+to the one that matched him he dealt out his information bit by bit,
+giving only enough at a time to make his victim sure it was the real
+thing this time; and then he halted stubbornly and would say no more
+until that five thousand dollars was signed and sealed over to him. They
+had a long argument, but in the end Bi won, and was given certain
+documents which he was satisfied would stand in court. A little later
+the telephone in Reyburn's office rang sharply, and when Jimmie Ryan
+responded a voice that he had never heard before asked for Mr. Warren
+Reyburn.
+
+"He's out of town," Jimmie replied.
+
+"How soon will he be back?" The voice was like a snarl.
+
+"I'm not quite sure. He's called to Boston on business," swelled Jimmie
+loyally.
+
+An oath ripped over the wire, and Jimmie raged within and quailed. Was
+his idol then losing a great case?
+
+"He might be back in a few hours," insinuated Jimmie. "Who shall I say
+called up if he should have me over long distance?"
+
+"You needn't say anybody! I'll call up again," growled the voice, and
+the man hung up.
+
+Jimmie sat for a long time in blissful reverie. "He's getting there!" he
+whispered to himself. "He'll get the big cases yet, and I can keep my
+first place. I must see Jane to-night and tell her."
+
+Meanwhile, back at Tinsdale improvements had been going on at the
+Carsons'. Bob, always handy with tools, had been putting in a tank over
+the bathtub. They had one at the house on the hill, only it was run by a
+windmill. Bob had a friend who was a plumber's son, and from him had
+obtained some lengths of second-hand water-pipe and an old faucet. He
+had conceived the idea of a tank on the roof, and his first plan had
+been only a rainwater tank, but gradually as his vision widened he
+included a force pump in the outfit of desires. He hung around the
+plumber's until they unearthed an old force pump somewhat out of repair,
+and for a few days' assisting the plumber Bob acquired it, together with
+after-hour help to put it into operation. The next object was a tank,
+which seemed at first to represent the impossible; but the grocer at
+last offered a suggestion in the shape of several large empty hogsheads
+which he readily accepted at the price of four Saturdays' work in the
+store.
+
+All Bob's extra time was put into these improvements, and he was as
+excited every night when it grew dark and he was forced to come to
+supper because he couldn't see any longer to work, as if he had been
+building an airship.
+
+The day the hogsheads were marshaled and connected and the force pump
+sent its first stream into them was a great occasion. The family
+assembled in the yard, with Elise Hathaway, who had been allowed to come
+over for a few minutes with Betty. Bob and his plumber friend pumped,
+and Emily climbed to the attic window, which overlooked the row of
+hogsheads, ranged so that the water would flow from one to the other,
+and acted as pilot to the new enterprise. As the first stream from the
+force pump, which Bob had lavishly painted red, crept its way up the
+pipes and began to wet the bottom of the first and highest hogshead
+Emily gave a little squeal of delight and shouted "It's come! It's come!
+The water's come!" and the family below fairly held their breath with
+the wonder of it. Not that such a thing could be, but that their own
+freckled, grinning Bob should have been able to achieve it.
+
+There was an elaborate system of tin conductors which conveyed the waste
+water from the bathtub out through a hole in the wall of the little
+laundry bathroom, and distributed it along the garden beds wherever its
+controller desired to irrigate. Thus the system became practical as well
+as a luxury. There was also an arrangement of gutter pipes for carrying
+off any surplus water from the hogsheads, so saving the Carson house
+from possible inundation at any time of heavy storms.
+
+After the plumbing was finished Bob painted the laundry neatly inside
+with beautiful white paint and robin's-egg blue for the ceiling, and
+Betty told him it almost made one think of going swimming in the ocean.
+Next he began to talk about a shower bath. Betty told him what one was
+like and he began to spend more days down at the plumber's asking
+questions and picking up odd bits of pipe, making measurements, and
+doing queer things to an old colander for experiment's sake. The day
+that Warren Reyburn came for the first time Bob had the shower part
+finished and ready to erect, and the next day saw it complete with a rod
+for the rubber curtain that Betty had promised to make for him. He and
+she were planning how they would make further improvements on the house
+before Jane and Nellie should come home for their summer vacation week.
+Betty had thoroughly entered into the life of the little household now,
+and was a part of it. She saved her own small wages, and grudged all
+she had to spend for necessary clothes, that she might contribute
+further to the comfort and beauty of the general home.
+
+After Warren Reyburn's visit the last barrier between Betty and Ma
+seemed to be broken down. As soon as she had closed the door she flew
+into the other room and flung her arms around Ma's neck, bursting into
+soft weeping on her motherly shoulder. Ma had done a rapid turning act
+when she heard her coming, for in truth she had been peeping behind the
+green window-shade to watch the handsome stranger go down the street,
+but she would have dropped the iron on her foot and pretended to be
+picking it up rather than let Betty suspect her interest in the visitor.
+
+"Oh, mother," she murmured in Mrs. Carson's willing ear, "I have been so
+frightened----"
+
+"I know, dearie!" soothed the mother, quite as if she had been her own.
+"I know!"
+
+"But he was very kind," she said lifting her head with an April effect
+of tears. "He's going to try to fix things for me so that I don't need
+ever to be afraid of any one making trouble for me any more. You see, I
+sort of ran away. There was somebody I was afraid of who troubled me a
+great deal."
+
+"Yes, dearie, I thought as much," said Ma. "Jane kind of gave me to
+understand there was something like that. I'm real glad there's
+somebody goin' to look into your affairs an' fix things right for you. I
+knew you was restless an' worried. Now it'll get all straightened out.
+He's got a nice face. I trusted him first off. He's a church member, an'
+that's somethin'. They ain't all spiritual, but they're mostly clean an'
+just an' kindly, when they're anythin' at all but just plain hypocrites,
+which, thank the Lord, there ain't so many as some would have us
+believe. Now wash your face, dearie, an' run back to your place so you
+can come home early, for we're goin' to have the old hen with dumplin's
+for supper to celebrate."
+
+That was one charming thing about that household: they celebrated every
+blessed little trifle that came into their lives, so that living with
+them was like a procession of beautiful thanksgivings.
+
+It was while Betty was eating the gala "hen," delicious in its festive
+gravy and dumplings, that she looked off across the little dining-room
+to the dark window with its twinkling village lights in the distance and
+thought of the stranger. A dark fear flashed across her sweet face and
+sparkled in the depths of her eyes for just an instant. Was it perhaps
+the distant bay of the hounds on her trail, coming nearer every moment?
+Then she remembered the heavenly Father and her new-found faith, and
+turned back to the cheery little room and the children's pleasant
+clatter, resolved to forget the fear and to trust all to Him who cared
+for her. Perhaps he had sent the pleasant stranger, and the thought
+brought a quiet little smile to settle about her lips. She laughed with
+Bob and Emily at how they had got wet with a sudden unexpected shower
+from the new bath while they were arranging the curtain on the rod, and
+Emily had turned the faucet on without knowing it. The patient-eyed
+mother watched them all and was satisfied.
+
+How good it is that we cannot hear all the noises of the earth at the
+same time, nor know of every danger that lurks near as we are passing
+by! We grumble a great deal that God does not send us as much as we
+think he might, but we give scarce a thought to our escape from the many
+perils, lying close as our very breath, of which we never even dream.
+
+At that moment, as they sat quietly eating their happy meal, a deadly
+particular peril was headed straight for Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage and Herbert Hutton boarded the evening train for Tinsdale
+together and entered the sleeper. Abijah shuffled behind, carrying the
+bags, a most extraordinary and humiliating position for him. He had
+never been known to carry anything, not even himself if he could help
+it, since the day his mother died and ceased to force him to carry in
+wood and water for her at the end of a hickory switch. He glanced
+uneasily round with a slight cackle of dismay as he arrived in the
+unaccustomed plush surroundings and tried to find some place to dump his
+load. But the well-groomed Herbert strode down the long aisle unnoticing
+and took possession of the section he had secured as if he owned the
+road.
+
+"You can sit there!" he ordered Bi with a condescending motion, dropping
+into his own seat and opening a newspaper.
+
+Bi sat down on the edge of the seat, and held on to the arm in a
+gingerly way as if he were afraid to trust himself to anything so
+different. He looked furtively up and down the car, eyed the porter, who
+ignored him contemptuously and finally came back and demanded his
+sleeper ticket with a lordliness that Bi did not feel he could take from
+a negro. But somehow the ticket got tangled in his pocket, and Bi had a
+hard time finding it, which deepened his indignation at the porter.
+
+"I ain't takin' no sass from no one. My seat's paid fer all right," he
+said distinctly for the enlightenment of the other passengers, and
+Herbert Hutton reached out a discreet arm and dropped something in the
+porter's hand which sent him on his way and left Bi snorting audibly
+after him.
+
+"You'd better shut up!" growled the dictator to Bi. "We don't want to be
+conspicuous, you know. If you can't hold your tongue and act as if you
+had ever traveled before, I'll get off this train at the next station
+and you can whistle for your reward. Do you understand?"
+
+Bi dropped his toothless lower jaw a trifle and his little eyes grew
+narrow. This was no way to manage affable Bi. He loved a good visit, and
+he had counted on one all the way to Tinsdale. He had no idea of sitting
+silent.
+
+"I understand," he drawled, "an' I'll be gormed ef I'll agree. I ain't
+told you yet where we get off, an' I don't have to ef I don't wantta. Ef
+you can't treat me like a gen'l'man you know where you can get off, an'
+I ain't havin' to state it."
+
+Herbert Hutton drew his arrogant brows in a frown of annoyance, and
+whirled around to placate his guide:
+
+"Now see here, you old popinjay, what's got into you?"
+
+"No, sir, I ain't nobody's papa," babbled Bi, seeing he had scored a
+point. "I have enough to do to support myself without any family."
+
+"That's all right, have it your own way, only shut up or we'll have
+somebody listening. Have a cigar. Take two. But you can't smoke 'em in
+here, you'll have to go to the smoking-room. Wait! I'll see if we can
+get the drawing-room."
+
+The porter appeared and the change was effected, to the great
+disappointment of Bi, who kept continually poking his head out to get a
+glimpse of the fine ladies. He would much have preferred staying out in
+the main car and getting acquainted with people. His cunning had
+departed with the need. He had put things in the hands of this surly
+companion, and now he meant to have a good time and something to tell
+the gang about when he got home.
+
+About midnight the train drew into a station and Herbert Hutton roused
+himself and looked out of the window. Bi, whose cunning had returned,
+followed his example. Suddenly he leaned forward excitedly and tapped
+the glass with a long finger:
+
+"That's him! That's the guy," he whispered excitedly as another train
+drew in and passengers began to hurry down the platform and across to
+the waiting sleeper.
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Sartin!"
+
+"You mean the one with the coat over his arm, and the two men behind?"
+He stopped short with an exclamation.
+
+Bi looked up cunningly. Now what was up? He saw a thunder-cloud on the
+face of his companion.
+
+With embellishments Herbert Hutton asked if Bi had ever seen the two
+tall gray-haired men who were walking with their prey.
+
+Bi narrowed his eyes and denied any knowledge, but perceived there were
+more sides than two to the enigma. Now, what could he figure out of
+those two guys? Were there more rewards to be offered? If so, he was a
+candidate. He wondered what chance there was of getting away from H. H.
+and sauntering through the train. He found, however, a sudden
+willingness on the part of his companion to vanish and let him do the
+scout work for the rest of the night.
+
+With a sense of being on a vacation and a chance at catching big fish Bi
+swung out through the train. Bumping down among the now curtained
+berths, adjusting his long form to the motion of the express, lurching
+to right and to left as they went round a curve, falling over an
+occasional pair of shoes and bringing down lofty reproaches from the
+sleepy porter, he penetrated to the day coaches and at last located his
+quarry.
+
+They were sitting in a double seat, the younger man facing the two older
+ones, and had evidently been unable to get sleepers. Bi hung around the
+water-cooler at the far end of the car until he had laid out his plans;
+then he sauntered up to the vacant seat behind the three men and dropped
+noiselessly into its depths, drawing his hat down well over his face,
+and apparently falling into instant slumber, with a fair sample of
+Tinsdale snoring brought in at moderate distances.
+
+The conversation was earnest, in well-modulated voices, and hard to
+follow connectedly, for the men knew how to talk without seeming to the
+outside world to be saying anything intelligible. Occasionally a
+sentence would come out clear cut in an interval of the rhythm of the
+train, but for the most part Bi could make little or nothing of it.
+
+"In all the years we've been trustees of that estate we haven't seen her
+but twice," said one of the older men; "once at her father's second
+marriage, and again at his funeral. Then we only saw her at a distance.
+Her stepmother said she was too grief-stricken to speak with any one,
+and it was by the utmost effort she could be present at the service."
+
+"She looked very frail and young," said the other old man; "and her
+hair--I remember her hair!"
+
+Bi changed his position cautiously and tried to peer over the back of
+his seat, but the voices were crowded together now, and the younger man
+was talking earnestly. He could not catch a syllable. "Trustees!" That
+word stayed with him. "Estate" was another promising one, and the fact
+that her hair had been remembered. He nodded his old head sagaciously,
+and later when the three men settled back in their seats more
+comfortably with their eyes closed he slid back to the water-cooler and
+so on through the sleeper to the drawing-room.
+
+Hutton was sleeping the sleep of the unjust, which means that he woke at
+the slightest breath, and Bi's breath was something to wake a heavier
+sleeper. So they sat and planned as the train rushed on through the
+night. Now and again Bi took a pilgrimage up to the day coach and back
+to report the three travelers still asleep.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the train slowed down, and finally came
+to a thrashing halt, waking the sleepers uncomfortably and making them
+conscious of crunching feet in the cinders outside, and consulting
+voices of trainmen busy with a hammer underneath the car somewhere. Then
+they drowsed off to sleep again and the voices and hammering blended
+comfortably into their dreams.
+
+The passengers in the day coach roused, looked at their watches,
+stretched their cramped limbs, squinted out to see if anything serious
+was the matter, and settled into a new position to sleep once more.
+
+Bi, stretched for the nonce upon the long couch of the drawing-room
+while his superior occupied the more comfortable berth, roused to
+instant action, slipped out to the platform and took his bearings. He
+had lived in that part of the country all his life and he knew where
+they ought to be by that time. Yes, there was the old saw mill down by
+Hague's Crossing, and the steeple over by the soft maple grove just
+beyond Fox Glove. It would not be a long walk, and they had a garage at
+Fox Glove!
+
+He sauntered along the cinder path; discovered that the trouble with the
+engine was somewhat serious, requiring to wait for help, took a glimpse
+into the day coach ahead to assure himself that the three men were still
+safely asleep, and sauntered back to the drawing-room.
+
+His entrance roused the sleeper, who was on the alert instantly.
+
+"Say, we got a hot box an' a broken engyne!" Bi announced. "It'll take
+us some time. We ain't fur from Fox Glove. We could santer over an' git
+a car an' beat 'em to it!"
+
+"We could?" said Hutton. "You sure? No chances, mind you!"
+
+"Do it easy. Those guys are asleep. They won't get to the Junction 'fore
+ten o'clock, mebbe later, an' they can't possibly get to our place 'fore
+'leven."
+
+"Lead the way!" ordered Hutton, cramming himself into his coat and hat.
+
+"Better slide down on the other side," whispered Bi as they reached the
+platform. "We kin go back round the train an' nobody'll notice."
+
+As if they were only come out to see what was the matter they idled
+along the length of the train around out of sight, slid down the bank,
+took a shortcut across a meadow to a road, and were soon well on their
+way to Fox Glove in the early cool of the spring morning, a strangely
+mated couple bent on mischief.
+
+Back on the cinder track the express waited, dreamily indifferent, with
+a flagman ahead and behind to guard its safety, and while men slept the
+enemy took wings and flew down the white morning road to Tinsdale, but
+no one ran ahead with a little red flag to the gray cottage where slept
+Betty, to warn her, though perchance an angel with a flaming sword stood
+invisibly to guard the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+BOB had just finished feeding the chickens when the automobile drew up
+at the door, and he hurried around the house to see who it might be. He
+was rather looking for the return of that nice lawyer again. He felt the
+family expected him some time soon. Perhaps he would be to breakfast and
+mother would want some fresh eggs.
+
+They had dropped Bi at the edge of the village and there were only
+Hutton and the driver who had brought them. Bi had no mind to get mixed
+up in this affair too openly. He valued his standing in his home town,
+and did not wish to lose it. He had an instinct that what he was doing
+might make him unpopular if it became known. Besides, he had another ax
+to grind.
+
+Bob did not like the looks of the strange dark man who got out of the
+car and came into the yard with the air of a thrashing machine bolting
+into whatever came in his way. He stood sturdily and waited until he was
+asked who lived there, and admitted with a stingy "yes" that it was Mrs.
+Carson's house. A thundering knock on the front door followed, and the
+other man in the car got out and came into the yard behind the first.
+
+"Well, you needn't take the door down," snapped Bob, and scuttled around
+the house to warn his mother, aware that he had been rude, and glad of
+it.
+
+It was Betty who came to the door, for Ma was frying bacon and eggs for
+breakfast, and Bob hadn't been quite soon enough. She started back with
+a scream, and eluding the hand that reached for her arm, fairly flew
+back to the kitchen, taking refuge behind Mrs. Carson, with her eyes
+wild with fear and her hand on her heart, while Hutton strode after her.
+
+Mrs. Carson wheeled around with her knife in her hand and faced him:
+
+"What do you mean by coming into my house this way, I'd like to know?"
+she demanded angrily, putting her arm around Betty.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Hutton, a poor apology for courtesy slipping
+into his manner. "I don't suppose you know it, but that is my wife you
+are harboring there, and she ran away from home several months ago! I
+have just discovered her whereabouts and have come to take her away!"
+
+Ma straightened up with the air of a queen and a judge, while Betty
+stifled a scream and in a small voice full of terror cried: "It isn't
+true, Mrs. Carson, it isn't true! Oh, _mother_, don't let him take me!"
+
+Mrs. Carson pushed Betty behind her, the knife still in her other hand,
+and answered with dignity:
+
+"You've made a big mistake, Mr. Herbert Hutton; this isn't your wife at
+all. I know all about you."
+
+Hutton put on a look of instant suavity.
+
+"Oh, of course, madam, she has told you that, but I'm sorry to have to
+tell you that she is not in her right mind. She made her escape from the
+insane asylum."
+
+"Oh, rats!" shouted Bob, and vanished out the kitchen door, slamming it
+behind him.
+
+Emily, frightened and white, stood just outside, and he nearly knocked
+her over in his flight. He pulled her along with him, whispering in her
+ear excitedly:
+
+"You beat it down to the fire gong and hit it for all you're worth!
+Quick!"
+
+Emily gave him one frightened look and sprang to action. Her little feet
+sped down the path to the lot where hung the big fire gong, like two
+wild rabbits running for their life, and in a moment more the loud whang
+of alarm rang through the little town, arousing the "gang" and greatly
+disconcerting Bi, who was craning his neck at the station and watching
+the fast-growing speck down the railroad track. That sure was the train
+coming already. How had they made it so soon?
+
+But Bob was on his stomach in the road scuttling the ship that was to
+have carried away the princess. The chauffeur was fully occupied in the
+house, for he had been ordered to follow and be ready to assist in
+carrying away an insane person, and he had no thought for his car at
+present. It was an ugly job, and one that he didn't like, but he was
+getting big pay, and such things had to be done.
+
+Bob's knife was sharp. He always kept it in good condition. It did many
+of the chores about the house, and was cunning in its skill. It cut
+beautiful long punctures in the four tires, until there was no chance at
+all of that car's going on its way for some time to come. Then he
+squirmed his way out on the opposite side from the house, slid along by
+the fence to the side door, around to the back like a flash and without
+an instant's hesitation hauled up his elaborate system of drainage. He
+stuck the longest conductor pipe through the open window of the old
+laundry, clutched at the sill and swung inside, drawing the pipe in
+after him.
+
+The altercation in the kitchen had reached white heat. Hutton's suavity
+was fast disappearing behind a loud angry tone. He had about sized up
+Ma and decided to use force.
+
+It was a tense moment when Bob, his hasty arrangements made, silently
+swung open the laundry door in full range of the uninvited guests and
+waited for the psychological moment. Mrs. Carson had dropped her knife
+and seized the smoking hot frying-pan of bacon as a weapon. She was cool
+and collected, but one could see in her eyes the little devil of battle
+that sometimes sat in Bob's eyes as she swung the frying-pan back for a
+blow. Suddenly out flashed a cold steel eye, menacing, unanswerable,
+looking straight into her own.
+
+At that instant, unannounced and unobserved, through the laundry door
+lumbered a long ugly tin conductor pipe, and the deluge began. Straight
+into the eyes of the would-be husband it gushed, battering swashingly
+down on the cocked revolver, sending it harmlessly to the floor, where
+it added to the confusion by going off with a loud report, and sending
+the chauffeur to the shelter of the parlor. Bob never knew how near he
+came to killing some one by his hasty service, and Ma never had the
+heart to suggest it. Instead she acted promptly and secured the weapon
+before the enemy had time to recover from his shock.
+
+Bob, in the laundry, standing on a chair mounted on a board across the
+bathtub, sturdily held his wobbling conductor pipe and aimed it straight
+to the mark. Of course he knew that even a well-filled phalanx of
+hogsheads could not hold the enemy forever, but he was counting on the
+fire company to arrive in time to save the day.
+
+Gasping, clawing the air, ducking, diving here and there to escape the
+stream, Herbert Hutton presented a spectacle most amusing and satisfying
+to Bob's boy mind.
+
+"Beat it, Lizzie, beat it! Beat it!" he shouted above the noise of the
+pouring waters. But Betty, white with horror, seemed to have frozen to
+the spot. She could not have moved if she had tried, and her brain
+refused to order her to try. She felt as if the end of everything had
+come and she were paralyzed.
+
+Down the street with dash and flourish, licking up excitement like a
+good meal, dashed the gang, the fire chief ostentatiously arraying
+himself in rubber coat and helmet as he stood on the side of the engine,
+while the hysterical little engine bell banged away, blending with the
+sound of the bell of the incoming train at the station. Bi, with his
+mouth stretched wide, and one foot holding him for the train while the
+other urged toward the fire and excitement, vibrated on the platform, a
+wild figure of uncertainty. Where Duty and Inclination both called,
+Cupidity still had the upper hand.
+
+For once Bi did not have to act a part as he stood watching the three
+travelers descend from the train. The excitement in his face was real
+and his gestures were quite natural, even the ones made by his one and
+only long waving top-lock of gray hair that escaped all bounds as his
+hat blew off with the suction of the train. Bi rushed up to the three
+men wildly:
+
+"Say, was you goin' down to Carson's house after that Hope girl?" he
+demanded loudly.
+
+The three men surveyed him coldly, and the young one gave him a decided
+shove:
+
+"That will do, my friend," he said firmly. "We don't need any of your
+assistance."
+
+"But I got a line on this thing you'll want to know," he insisted,
+hurrying alongside. "There's a guy down there in a car goin' to take her
+away. He ain't been gone long, but you won't find her 'thout my help.
+He's goin' to take her to a insane institution. I let on I was helpin'
+him an' I found out all about it."
+
+"What's all this?" said Reyburn, wheeling about and fixing the old
+fellow with a muscular young shake that made his toothless jaws chatter.
+"How long ago did he go? What kind of a looking man was he?"
+
+"Lemme go!" whined Bi, playing to make time, one cunning eye down the
+road. "I ain't as young as I used to be, an' I can't stand gettin'
+excited. I got a rig here a purpose, an' I'll take you all right down,
+an' then ef he's gone, an' I s'pose he must be, 'cause your train was
+late, why, we'll foller."
+
+"Well, quick, then!" said Reyburn, climbing into the shackley spring
+wagon that Bi indicated, the only vehicle in view. The two trustees
+climbed stiffly and uncertainly into the back seat as if they felt they
+were risking their lives, and Bi lumbered rheumatically into the
+driver's place and took up the lines. It appeared that the only living
+thing in Tinsdale that wasn't awake and keen to go to the fire was that
+horse, and Bi had to do quite a little urging with the stump of an old
+whip. So, reluctantly, they joined the procession toward the Carson
+house.
+
+As the stream from the hogshead gurgled smaller, and the victim writhed
+out of its reach and began to get his bearings, suddenly the outside
+kitchen door burst open and a crew of rubber-coated citizens sprang in,
+preceded by a generous stream of chemicals which an ardent young member
+of the company set free indiscriminately in his excitement. It struck
+the right man squarely in the middle and sent him sprawling on the
+floor.
+
+Bob dropped the conductor pipe in exhausted relief and flew to the scene
+of action. It had been fearful to be held from more active service so
+long. Emily, outside, could be seen dancing up and down excitedly and
+directing the procession, with frightened shouts, "In there! In the
+kitchen! Quick!" as the neighbors and townsmen crowded in and filled the
+little kitchen demanding to know where the fire was.
+
+Mrs. Carson with dignity stepped forward to explain:
+
+"There ain't any fire, friends, an' I don't know how you all come to get
+here, but I reckon the Lord sent you. You couldn't a-come at a better
+moment. We certainly was in some trouble, an' I'll be obliged to you all
+if you'll just fasten that man up so't he can't do any more harm. He
+came walkin' in here tryin' to take away a member of my family by force,
+an' he pointed this at me!"
+
+She lifted the incriminating weapon high where they could all see.
+
+Herbert Hutton, struggling to his feet in the crowd, began to understand
+that this was no place for him, and looked about for an exit, but none
+presented itself. The chauffeur had vanished and was trying to make out
+what had happened to his car.
+
+Hutton, brought to bay, turned on the crowd like a snarling animal,
+although the effect was slightly spoiled by his drabbled appearance, and
+roared out insolently:
+
+"The woman doesn't know what she's talking about, men; she's only
+frightened. I came here after my wife, and I intend to take her away
+with me! She escaped from an insane asylum some time ago, and we've been
+looking for her ever since. This woman is doing a very foolish and
+useless thing in resisting me, for the law can take hold of her, of
+course."
+
+The crowd wavered and looked uncertainly at Mrs. Carson and at Betty
+cowering horrified behind her, and Hutton saw his advantage:
+
+"Men," he went on, "there is one of your own townsmen who knows me and
+can vouch for me. A Mr. Gage. Abijah Gage. If you will just look him
+up--he was down at the station a few minutes ago. He knows that all I am
+saying is true!"
+
+A low sound like a rumble went over the little audience and they seemed
+to bunch together and look at one another while some kind of an
+understanding traveled from eye to eye. An articulate syllable, "Bi!"
+breathed in astonishment, and then again "Bi!" in contempt. Public
+opinion, like a panther crouching, was forming itself ready to spring,
+when suddenly a new presence was felt in the room. Three strangers had
+appeared and somehow quietly gotten into the doorway. Behind them,
+stretching his neck and unable to be cautious any longer, appeared Bi's
+slouching form. Crouching Public Opinion caught sight of him and showed
+its teeth, but was diverted by the strangers.
+
+Then suddenly, from the corner behind Ma, slipped Betty with
+outstretched hands, like a lost thing flying to its refuge, straight to
+the side of the handsome young stranger.
+
+He put out his hands and drew her to his side with a protecting motion,
+and she whispered:
+
+"Tell, them, please; oh, make them understand."
+
+Then Reyburn, with her hand still protectingly in his, spoke:
+
+"What that man has just said is a lie!"
+
+Hutton looked up, went deadly white and reeled as he saw the two elderly
+men.
+
+The crowd drew a united breath and stood straighter, looking relieved.
+Bi blanched, but did not budge. Whatever happened he was in with both
+crowds. Reyburn continued:
+
+"I carry papers in my pocket which give authority to arrest him. If the
+sheriff is present will he please take charge of him. His name is
+Herbert Hutton, and he is charged with trying to make this lady marry
+him under false pretenses in order to get control of her property. She
+is not his wife, for she escaped before the ceremony was performed. I
+know, for I was present. These two gentlemen with me are the trustees of
+her estate."
+
+Estate!
+
+The neighbors looked at Betty respectfully.
+
+Bi dropped his jaw perceptibly and tried to figure out how that would
+affect him. The sheriff stepped forward to magnify his office, and the
+silence was impressive, almost reverent. In the midst of it broke Bob's
+practical suggestion:
+
+"Shut him in the coal shed. It's got a padlock an' is good an' strong.
+He can't kick it down."
+
+Then the law began to take its course, the fire gang stepped out, and
+Mrs. Carson set to work to clean up. In the midst of it all Reyburn
+looked down at Betty, and Betty looked up at Reyburn, and they
+discovered in some happy confusion that they still had hold of hands.
+They tried to cover their embarrassment by laughing, but something had
+been established between them that neither could forget.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE days that followed were full of bliss and peace to Betty. With
+Hutton safely confined in the distant city, and a comfortable sum of her
+accumulated allowance in the Tinsdale bank, with a thorough
+understanding between herself and her trustees and the knowledge that
+her estate was large enough to do almost anything in reason that she
+wished to do with it, and would be hers in three weeks, life began to
+take on a different look to the poor storm-tossed child. The days in the
+Carson home were all Thanksgivings now, and every member of the family
+was as excited and happy as every other member. There were arguments
+long and earnest between Betty and her benefactor as to how much she
+might in reason be allowed to do for the family now that she had plenty
+of money, but in the end Betty won out, declaring that she had wished
+herself on this family in her distress, and they took her as a man does
+when he marries, for better for worse. Now that the worse had passed by
+she was theirs for the better, and she intended to exercise the
+privilege of a daughter of the house for the rest of her natural life.
+
+Bi Gage was worried. He was still trying to get something out of the
+estate for his part in the exercises, and he vibrated between Tinsdale
+and Warren Reyburn's office working up his case. The five-thousand-dollar
+reward was as yet unpaid, and the papers he held didn't seem to impress
+the functionaries nearly so much as he had expected. It began to look as
+though Bi had missed his chances in life once more, and when he took his
+old seat in the fire-house and smoked, he said very little. Popular
+Opinion was still crouching with her eye in his direction and it
+behooved him to walk cautiously and do nothing to offend. So while he
+smoked he cogitated in his cunning little brain, and hatched out a plan
+by which he might get in with the heiress later, perhaps, when things
+had quieted down a little and she had her money.
+
+Betty received a pitiful letter from her stepmother, trying to explain
+away her part in the affair and professing to be so relieved at the news
+that Betty was still alive and well that she cared nothing about
+anything else, not even the fact that poor dear Herbert was landed in
+jail, or that the fortune which she had schemed so long to keep in her
+own power was wrested from her so ignominiously. She begged Betty to
+come back to their home and "be happy again together."
+
+But Betty was so happy where she was that she could afford to be
+generous and try to forget her wrongs. She wrote a decent little note
+gently but firmly declining to come "home" ever again, making it quite
+plain that she was no longer deceived by honeyed phrases, and closing
+with a request that if in future any communication might be necessary it
+should be made through her lawyer, Mr. Warren Reyburn.
+
+This same Warren Reyburn had returned to his city office in a very much
+exalted state of mind. He could not get away from that little hand of
+Betty's that had been laid so tremblingly and confidingly in his; and
+yet how could he, a poverty-stricken lawyer with absolutely no prospects
+at all, ever dare to think of her, a lady of vast estates. Still, there
+was some comfort in the fact that he had still some business to transact
+for her, and would have to return to Tinsdale again. He might at least
+see her once more. So he solaced himself on his return trip, feeling
+that he had done some good work, and that he would have a pleasant
+report to give to Jane Carson when he called upon her, as he meant to do
+the next day.
+
+He arrived at home to find James Ryan in a great state of excitement. A
+pile of mail had arrived, and he had memorized the return addresses on
+the outside of all the envelopes. One was from a big corporation, and
+another bore a name widely spoken of in the circles of the world of
+finance, Jimmie in close council with Jane Carson, had decided that it
+must be from that person who called up twice on the 'phone and swore
+such terrible oaths when he found that Reyburn was away.
+
+Jimmie hovered nervously about, putting things to rights, while Reyburn
+read his mail. He had come to the smallest envelope of all, a plain
+government envelope now, and nothing had developed. Jimmie saw his first
+place fast slipping away from him and his heart grew heavy with fear.
+Perhaps after all nothing good had turned up yet.
+
+Suddenly Reyburn sprang up and came toward him with an open letter,
+holding out his hand in a joyous greeting:
+
+"Read that, Ryan! We're made at last, and I shan't have to let you go
+after all!"
+
+Ryan read, the letters dancing before his delighted eyes, every one
+wearing an orange blossom on its brow. It was from an old established
+and influential firm, asking Reyburn to take full charge of all their
+law business, and saying they had been referred to him by two old
+friends in Boston, who by the way were Betty's two trustees.
+
+"Come on, Ryan, come out to lunch with me! We've got to celebrate," said
+Reyburn. "I have a hunch somehow that you have been the one that brought
+me this good luck. You and a Miss Jane Carson. You both share alike, I
+guess, but you were the first with your five-thousand-dollar reward
+story."
+
+"Jane Carson!" said Jimmie mystified. "Why, _she's_ my _girl_!"
+
+"Your girl?" said Reyburn, a queer look coming in his eyes. "You don't
+say! Well, you're in some luck, boy, with a girl like that! And, by the
+way, next time you see her, ask her to show you her wedding dress!"
+
+And not another word would Reyburn tell him, though he recurred
+frequently to the subject during the very excellent lunch which they had
+together in friendly companionship.
+
+They spent the afternoon composing the brief and comprehensive letter in
+response to the momentous one of the morning, and in the evening
+together they sought out Jane Carson, Reyburn staying only long enough
+to outline the ending of the Elizabeth Stanhope story, while Jimmie
+remained to hear the beginning, and get a glimpse of the wedding gown,
+which Reyburn assured Jane he was sure she need never return. He said he
+thought if the owner of it was married ever in the future she would be
+likely to want a gown that had no unpleasant associations.
+
+Great excitement prevailed in Tinsdale as the weeks went by. Betty had
+bought the lots either side of the Carson house, and wonderful
+improvements were in progress. A windmill was being erected and water
+pipes laid scientifically. Workmen arrived, some of them from the
+village, some from the city. Extensive excavations went on about the old
+house, and stone arrived. It began to be whispered about that "Miss
+Stanhope," as Betty was now called, was going to build the house all
+over and all of stone.
+
+The work went forward rapidly as work can go when there is money enough
+behind it, and the family, living in the little old part of the house,
+and still using the faithful tin bath-tub and shower of Bob's
+manufacture, now looked forward to real bathrooms on the bedroom floor,
+with tiled floors and porcelain fittings. Large windows cropped out on
+the new walls that were going up, a wide stone chimney and porches. A
+charming little stone affair in the back yard that went up so quietly it
+was hardly noticed until it was done suddenly became the home of a big
+gray car that arrived in town one morning. Betty gave up her position at
+the Hathaways so that she could have more time to superintend the work
+and see that it was just as she wanted it, and she and Bob spent hours
+going over the plans together, he making many wise suggestions. Mrs.
+Hathaway called her "Miss Stanhope" with elaborate ceremony, and made
+Elise kiss her whenever she met her.
+
+Betty went to a near-by town and bought some pretty clothes, and a lot
+of things for Ma and Emily and Bob. A beautiful new piano came by
+express and took the place of Mrs. Barlow's tinpanny one.
+
+Then Betty went up to the city and bought more things, furniture and
+silver and curtains and rugs, and brought Jane back with her to take a
+rest and see the little old house once more before it became the big new
+house, and stay until she was ready to be married; for Betty was
+determined to have the house ready for Jane's wedding.
+
+When all the new beautiful things began to arrive Betty told Ma that she
+had taken her in when she was poor and homeless and absolutely
+penniless, and now all these things were her reward, and Betty couldn't
+do enough ever to thank her for what she had done for her. They had
+offered a five-thousand-dollar reward for news of her, and Ma had done
+more than ten thousand and thousands of thousands of dollars' worth of
+holding back news about her, and she was never going to get done giving
+her her reward.
+
+Of course Betty brought Nellie home, too, and established her in a
+lovely new room just fit for a young girl, and began to pet her and fix
+her up with pretty things as any loving sister might do if she had money
+of her own.
+
+All this time Reyburn had much business to transact in Tinsdale, for
+Betty had asked him to look after all the little details about the
+building for her, and he had to come down every week-end and look things
+over to see that she was not being cheated. And once he brought Jimmie
+down with him for Ma to look over and approve and they had a wonderful
+time with the two best hens in the hen-coop for dinner. Ryan
+incidentally gave his approval to Betty.
+
+During these visits Reyburn was making great strides in the wisdom and
+the knowledge of the love of God. One could not be in that family over
+Sunday and not feel the atmosphere of a Christian home. Even Jimmie felt
+it and said he liked it; that he wanted his house to be that way when
+he had one. He went obediently to church with Jane, and marveled at the
+way social classes were getting all muddled up in his world.
+
+The Christmas time was coming on when the house finally got itself
+completed and was ready for living, and with holly and mistletoe and
+laurel they made it gay for the wedding. Betty spent several days with
+Jane in New York picking out Jane's "trooso" things, and then a few more
+days doing some shopping of her own, and at last the wedding day
+arrived.
+
+Nobody thought it queer, though Jimmie felt just the least bit shy when
+the two trustees of Betty's estate arrived the night before from Boston
+and incorporated themselves into the wedding party. Ma seemed to think
+it was all right, so nobody said anything about it.
+
+But after the ceremony when Jane and Jimmie were happily married, Jane
+looking very young and pretty indeed in Betty's old wedding gown, veil
+and slippers and all, and standing under the holly bell in the laurel
+arch to be congratulated just as it had been arranged, there suddenly
+came a hush over everybody. Jane noticed for the first time that Betty
+was not anywhere in the room. Then everybody's eyes went to the wide
+staircase, and here came Betty trailing down the stairs on the arm of
+Reyburn, wearing still the little white organdie she had worn a few
+minutes before as a bridesmaid, only she had thrown aside the
+rose-colored sash and put over her brow a simple tulle veil, and her
+arms were full of little pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley.
+
+Up they walked in front of the minister just where the others had stood,
+and were married with the same sweet simple service, and everybody was
+so surprised and delighted and excited and breathless that Bob simply
+couldn't stand it. He slipped into the little music room where the piano
+had been installed, turned a handspring on the floor, and then sat down
+and played chopsticks on the piano with all the pedals on, till Ma had
+to send Emily in to stop him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
+
+Repeated book title was removed.
+
+Page 30, "posible" changed to "possible" (the feathers as possible)
+
+Page 36, "Pood" changed to "Poor" (Poor soul! Candy!)
+
+Page 71, "beter" changed to "better" (you better go to)
+
+Page 77, "ominious" changed to "ominous" (the ominous silence)
+
+Page 90, repeated word "an" removed from text. Original read (by an an
+inch and)
+
+Page 121, "hrurrying" changed to "hurrying" (said Ma, hurrying)
+
+Page 131, "wante" changed to "wanted" (I kind of wanted)
+
+Page 131, "l" changed to "look". The space was there it just was not
+printed. (It doesn't look)
+
+Page 131, as above, "wh" changed to "when you" (you know, when you)
+
+Page 196, "suspicians" changed to "suspicions" (these suspicions which)
+
+Page 199, "tiptoing" changed to "tiptoeing" (and tiptoeing to the door)
+
+Page 220, "disapointment" changed to "disappointment" (great
+disappointment of Bi)
+
+
+
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Exit Betty, by Grace Livingston Hill</title>
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Exit Betty, by Grace Livingston Hill</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Exit Betty</p>
+<p>Author: Grace Livingston Hill</p>
+<p>Release Date: December 25, 2009 [eBook #30759]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXIT BETTY***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Emmy,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 345px;">
+<img src="images/cover01.jpg" width="345" height="500" alt="Exit Betty Cover" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><span class="smcap">Books By</span><br />
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Grace Livingston Hill Books">
+<tr><td align='left'>April Gold</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Happiness Hill</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Beloved Stranger</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Honor Girl</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bright Arrows</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Kerry</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Christmas Bride</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Marigold</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Crimson Roses</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Miranda</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Duskin</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Mystery of Mary</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Found Treasure</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Partners</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A Girl to Come Home To</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Rainbow Cottage</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Red Signal</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>White Orchids</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Silver Wings</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Tryst</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Strange Proposal</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Through These Fires</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Street of the City</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>All Through the Night</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Gold Shoe</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Astra</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Homing</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Blue Ruin</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Job's Niece</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Challengers</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Man of the Desert</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Coming Through the Rye</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>More Than Conqueror</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Daphne Deane</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A New Name</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Enchanted Barn</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Patch of Blue</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Girl from Montana</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ransom</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Rose Galbraith</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Witness</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Sound of the Trumpet</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Sunrise</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Tomorrow About This Time</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Amorelle</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Head of the House</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ariel Custer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>In Tune with Wedding Bells</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chance of a Lifetime</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Maris</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Crimson Mountain</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Out of the Storm</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Exit Betty</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mystery Flowers</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Prodigal Girl</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Girl of the Woods</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Re-Creations</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The White Flower</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Matched Pearls</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Time of the Singing of Birds</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ladybird</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Substitute Guest</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Beauty for Ashes</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stranger Within the Gates</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Best Man</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Spice Box</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>By Way of the Silverthorns</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Seventh Hour</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Dawn of the Morning</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Search</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Brentwood</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cloudy Jewel</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Voice in the Wilderness</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><div class='bbox'>
+<h1>EXIT BETTY</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>AUTHOR OF<br />
+
+MARCIA SCHUYLER, THE SEARCH,<br />
+DAWN OF THE MORNING, <span class="smcap">Etc.</span><br />
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><big>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</big><br />
+
+PUBLISHERS NEW YORK</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='copyright'><br />Made in the United States of America</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class='copyright'>COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE CHRISTIAN HERALD<br />
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>EXIT BETTY</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII</b></a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> crowd gave way and the car glided smoothly
+up to the curb at the canopied entrance to the church.
+The blackness of the wet November night was upon
+the street. It had rained at intervals all day.</p>
+
+<p>The pavements shone wetly like new paint in
+the glimmer of the street lights, and rude shadows
+gloomed in every cranny of the great stone building.</p>
+
+<p>Betty, alone in the midst of her bridal finery,
+shrank back from the gaze of the curious onlookers,
+seeming very small like a thing of the air caught in
+a mesh of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>She had longed all day for this brief respite from
+everyone, but it had passed before she could concentrate
+her thoughts. She started forward, a flame
+of rose for an instant in her white cheeks, but gone as
+quickly. Her eyes reminded one of the stars among
+the far-away clouds on a night of fitful storm with
+only glimpses of their beauty in breaks of the overcast
+sky. Her small hands gripped one another excitedly,
+and the sweet lips were quivering.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A white-gloved hand reached out to open the car
+door, and other hands caught and cared for the billow
+of satin and costly lace with which she was surrounded,
+as if it, and not she, were the important one.</p>
+
+<p>They led her up the curtained way, where envious
+eyes peeped through a furtive rip in the canvas, or
+craned around an opening to catch a better glimpse
+of her loveliness, one little dark-eyed foreigner even
+reached out a grimy, wondering finger to the silver
+whiteness of her train; but she, all unknowing, trod
+the carpeted path as in a dream.</p>
+
+<p>The wedding march was just beginning. She
+caught the distant notes, felt the hush as she approached
+the audience, and wondered why the ordeal
+seemed so much greater now that she was actually
+come to the moment. If she had known it would be
+like this&mdash;! Oh, why had she given in!</p>
+
+<p>The guests had risen and were stretching their
+necks for the first vision of her. The chaplet of
+costly blossoms sat upon her brow and bound her
+wedding veil floating mistily behind, but the lovely
+head was bowed, not lifted proudly as a bride's
+should be, and the little white glove that rested on
+the arm of the large florid cousin trembled visibly.
+The cousin was almost unknown until a few hours
+before. His importance overpowered her. She<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+drooped her eyes and tried not to wish for the quiet,
+gray-haired cousin of her own mother. It was so
+strange for him to have failed her at the last moment,
+when he had promised long ago to let nothing
+hinder him from giving her away if she should ever
+be married. His telegram, "Unavoidably detained,"
+had been received but an hour before. He seemed
+the only one of her kind, and now she was all alone.
+All the rest were like enemies, although they professed
+deep concern for her welfare; for they were
+leagued together against all her dearest wishes, until
+she had grown weary in the combat.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a frightened glance behind as if some
+intangible thing were following her. Was it a
+hounding dread that after all she would not be free
+after marriage?</p>
+
+<p>With measured tread she passed the long white-ribboned
+way, under arches that she never noticed,
+through a sea of faces that she never saw, to the
+altar smothered in flowers and tropical ferns. It
+seemed interminable. Would it never end? They
+paused at last, and she lifted frightened eyes to the
+florid cousin, and then to the face of her bridegroom!</p>
+
+<p>It was a breathless moment, and but for the deep
+tones of the organ now hushing for the ceremony,
+one of almost audible silence. No lovelier bride had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+trod those aisles in many a long year; so exquisite,
+so small, so young&mdash;and so exceeding rich! The
+guests were entranced, and every eye was greedily
+upon her as the white-robed minister advanced with
+his open book.</p>
+
+<p>"Beloved, we are met together to-night to join
+this man&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>At that word they saw the bride suddenly, softly
+sink before them, a little white heap at the altar, with
+the white face turned upward, the white eyelids
+closed, the long dark lashes sweeping the pretty
+cheek, the wedding veil trailing mistily about her
+down the aisle, and her big bouquet of white roses
+and maiden-hair ferns clasped listlessly in the white-gloved
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment no one stirred, so sudden, so unexpected
+it was. It all seemed an astonishing part
+of the charming spectacle. The gaping throng with
+startled faces stood and stared. Above the huddled
+little bride stood the bridegroom, tall and dark and
+frowning, an angry red surging through his handsome
+face. The white-haired minister, with two red
+spots on his fine scholarly cheeks, stood grave with
+troubled dignity, as though somehow he meant to
+hold the little still bride responsible for this unseemly
+break in his beautiful service. The organ died away<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+with a soft crash of the keys and pedals as if they
+too leaped up to see; the scent of the lilies swept sickeningly
+up in a great wave on the top of the silence.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment all was confusion. The minister
+stooped, the best man sprang into the aisle and lifted
+the flower-like head. Some one produced a fan, and
+one of the ushers hurried for a glass of water. A
+physician struggled from his pew across the sittings
+of three stout dowagers, and knelt, with practiced
+finger on the little fluttering pulse. The bride's stepmother
+roused to solicitous and anxious attention.
+The organ came smartly up again in a hopeless tangle
+of chords and modulations, trying to get its poise
+once more. People climbed upon their seats to see,
+or crowded out in the aisle curiously and unwisely
+kind, and in the way. Then the minister asked the
+congregation to be seated; and amid the rustle of
+wedding finery into seats suddenly grown too narrow
+and too low, the ushers gathered up the little inert
+bride and carried her behind the palms across a hall
+and into the vestry room. The stepmother and a
+group of friends hurried after, and the minister requested
+the people to remain quietly seated for a few
+minutes. The organ by this time had recovered its
+poise and was playing soft tender melodies, but the
+excited audience was not listening:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I thought she looked ghastly when she came
+in," declared the mother of three frowsy daughters.
+"It's strange she didn't put on some rouge."</p>
+
+<p>"Um-mm! What a pity! I suppose she isn't
+strong! What did her own mother die of?" murmured
+another speculatively, preparing to put forth
+a theory before any one else got ahead of her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! The poor child!" sympathized a romantic
+friend. "They've been letting her do too much!
+Didn't they make a handsome couple? I'm crazy to
+see them come marching down the aisle. They surely
+wouldn't put off the wedding just for a faint,
+would they?"</p>
+
+<p>And all over the church some woman began to tell
+how her sister's child, or her brother's niece, or her
+nephew's aunt had fainted just before her wedding
+or during it, till it began to seem quite a common performance,
+and one furnishing a unique and interesting
+part of the program for a wedding ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile on a couch in the big gloomy vestry
+room lay Betty with a group of attendants about her.
+Her eyes were closed, and she made no move. She
+swallowed the aromatic ammonia that some one produced,
+and she drew her breath a little less feebly,
+but she did not open her eyes, nor respond when
+they spoke to her.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her stepmother stooped over finally and spoke
+in her ear:</p>
+
+<p>"Elizabeth Stanhope! sit up and control yourself!"
+she said sharply in a low tone. "You are
+making a spectacle of yourself that you can never
+get over. Your father would be ashamed of you if
+he were here!"</p>
+
+<p>It was the one argument that had been held
+a successful lash over her poor little quivering heart
+for the last five years, and Betty flashed open her
+sorrowful eyes and looked around on them with a
+troubled concentration as if she were just taking in
+what had happened:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so tired!" she said in a little weary voice.
+"Won't you just let me get my breath a minute?"</p>
+
+<p>The physician nodded emphatically toward the
+door and motioned them out:</p>
+
+<p>"She'll be all right in just a minute. Step outside
+and give her a chance to get calm. She's only
+worn out with excitement."</p>
+
+<p>She opened her eyes and looked furtively about
+the room. There was no one there, and the door was
+closed. She could hear them murmuring in low
+tones just beyond it. She looked wildly about her
+with a frantic thought of escape. The two windows
+were deeply curtained, giving a narrow glimpse of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+blank wall. She sprang softly to her feet and looked
+out. There was a stone pavement far below. She
+turned silently and tried a door. It opened into a
+closet overflowing with musty hymn-books. She
+closed it quickly and slipped back to her couch just
+in time as the door opened and the doctor came back.
+She could catch a glimpse of the others through the
+half open door, anxiously peering in. She gathered
+all her self-control and spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm all right now, Doctor," she said quite
+calmly. "Would you just ask them to send Bessemer
+here a minute?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly." The doctor turned courteously and
+went back to the door, half closing it and making
+her request in a low tone. Then her stepmother's
+excited sibilant whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"Bessemer! Why, he isn't here! He went
+down to the shore last night."</p>
+
+<p>"Sh-h-h!" came another voice, and the door
+was shut smartly.</p>
+
+<p>Betty's eyes grew wide with horror as she lay
+staring at the closed door, and a cold numbness
+seemed to envelop her, clutching at her throat, her
+heart and threatening to overwhelm her.</p>
+
+<p>Bessemer not here! What could it mean? Her
+mind seemed unable to grasp and analyze the nameless<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+fear that awaited her outside that door. In a
+moment more they would all swarm in and surround
+her, and begin to clamor for her to go back into that
+awful church&mdash;and <i>she could not</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">ever</span>! She would
+far rather die!</p>
+
+<p>She sprang to her feet again and glided noiselessly
+to the only remaining uninvestigated door in
+the room. If this was another closet she would
+shut herself inside and stay till she died. She had
+read tales of people dying in a small space from
+lack of air. At least, if she did not die she could
+stay here till she had time to think. There was a
+key in the lock. Her fingers closed around it and
+drew it stealthily from the keyhole, as she slid
+through the door, drawing her rich draperies ruthlessly
+after. Her fingers were trembling so that she
+scarcely could fit the key in the lock again and
+turn it, and every click of the metal, every creak of
+the door, sounded like a gong in her ears. Her heart
+was fluttering wildly and the blood seemed to be
+pouring in torrents behind her ear-drums. She could
+not be sure whether there were noises in the room she
+had just left or not. She put her hand over her
+heart, turned with a sickening dread to look about her
+prison, and behold, it was not a closet at all, but a
+dark landing to a narrow flight of stone steps that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+wound down out of sight into the shadows. With
+a shudder she gathered her white impediment about
+her and crept down the murky way, frightened, yet
+glad to creep within the friendly darkness.</p>
+
+<p>There were unmistakable sounds of footsteps
+overhead now, and sharp exclamations. A hand
+tried the door above and rattled it violently. For an
+instant her heart beat frightfully in her throat at the
+thought that perhaps after all she had not succeeded
+in quite locking it, but the door held, and she flew on
+blindly down the stairs, caring little where they led
+only so that she might hide quickly before they found
+the janitor and pried that door open.</p>
+
+<p>The stairs ended in a little hall and a glass door.
+She fumbled wildly with the knob. It was locked,
+but there was a key! It was a large one and stuck,
+and gave a great deal of trouble in turning. Her
+fingers seemed so weak!</p>
+
+<p>Above the noises grew louder. She fancied the
+door was open and the whole churchful of people
+were after her. She threw her full weight with fear
+in the balance, and the key turned. She wrenched
+it out of the rusty keyhole, slid out shutting the door
+after her, and stooping, fitted in the key again. With
+one more Herculean effort she locked it and
+stood up, trembling so that she could scarcely keep<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+her balance. At least she was safe for a moment
+and could get her breath. But where could she go?
+She looked about her. High walls arose on either
+hand, with a murky sky above. A stone walk filled
+the space between and ran down the length of the
+church to a big iron gate. The lights of the street
+glistened fitfully on the puddles of wet in the depressions
+of the paving-stones. The street looked quiet,
+and only one or two people were passing. Was that
+gate locked also, and if so could she ever climb it,
+or break through? Somehow she must! She shuddered
+at the thought of what would happen if she did
+not get away at once. She strained at the buttons
+on her soft white gloves and pulled the fingers off,
+slipping her hands out and letting the glove hands
+hang limp at her wrists. Then with a quick glance
+backward at a flicker of light that appeared wavering
+beyond the glass door, she gathered her draperies
+again and fled down the long stone walk. Silently,
+lightly as a ghost she passed, and crouched at the
+gate as she heard footsteps, her heart beating so
+loudly it seemed like a bell calling attention to her.
+An old man was shuffling past, and she shrank
+against the wall, yet mindful of the awful glass door
+back at the end of the narrow passage. If they should
+come now she could not hope to elude them!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She stooped and studied the gate latch. Yes, it
+was a spring lock, and had no key in it. Stealthily
+she tried it and found to her relief that it swung open.
+She stepped around it and peered out. The gateway
+was not more than a hundred feet from the brightly
+lighted corner of the main avenue where rows of
+automobiles were lined up waiting for the wedding
+ceremony to be over. She could see the chauffeurs
+walking back and forth and chatting together. She
+could hear the desultory wandering of the organ,
+too, from the partly open window near by. A faint
+sickening waft of lily sweetness swept out, mingled
+with a dash of drops from the maple tree on the
+sidewalk. In a panic she stepped forth and drew
+back again, suddenly realizing for the first time what
+it would be to go forth into the streets clad in her
+wedding garments? How could she do it and get
+away? It could not be done!</p>
+
+<p>Down the street, with a backward, wistful glance
+at the church, hurried a large woman with a market
+basket. Her curious eyes shone in the evening light
+and darkness of the street. There was something
+about her face that made Betty know instantly that
+this woman would love to tell how she had seen her,
+would gather a crowd in no time and pursue her.
+She shrank farther back, and then waited in awful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+fear and tried to listen again. Was that a rattling
+at the glass door? She must get away no matter
+what happened! Where? Was there an alleyway
+or anything across the block? Could she hope to
+cross the street between the shadows unnoticed?</p>
+
+<p>She looked out fearfully once more. A girl of
+her own age was approaching around the corner,
+paddling along in rubbers, and a long coat. She
+was chewing gum. Betty could see the outline of a
+strong good-natured jaw working contentedly as she
+was silhouetted against the light. She had her hands
+in her pockets, and a little dark hat worn boyishly
+on the back of her head, and she was humming a
+popular song. Betty had slipped behind the half
+open gate again and was watching her approach, her
+desperation driving her to thoughts that never would
+have entered her mind at another time. Suddenly,
+as the girl passed directly in front of the gate, Betty
+leaned forward and plucked at her sleeve:</p>
+
+<p>"Wait!" she said sharply; and then, with a pitiful
+pleading in her voice, "Won't you help me just
+a minute, please?"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> girl came to a standstill abruptly and faced
+about, drawing away just a hair's-breadth from the
+detaining hand, and surveying her steadily, the boyish
+expression in her eyes changing to an amused calculation
+such as one would fancy a cowboy held
+up on his native plains by a stray lamb might
+have worn.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the little old idea!" asked the girl
+coldly, her eyes narrowing as she studied the other
+girl in detail and attempted to classify her into the
+known and unknown quantities of her world. Her
+face was absolutely expressionless as far as any sign
+of interest or sympathy was concerned. It was like
+a house with the door still closed and a well-trained
+butler in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>"I've got to get away from here at once before
+anybody sees me," whispered Betty excitedly, with a
+fearful glance behind her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want me to call a cab for you?"
+sneered the girl on the sidewalk, with an envious
+glance at the white satin slippers.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no! Never!" cried Betty, wringing her
+hands in desperation. "I want you to show me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+somewhere to go out of sight, and if you will
+I'd like you to walk a block or so with me so I
+won't be so&mdash;so conspicuous! I'm so frightened
+I don't know which way to go."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want to go at all for?" asked
+the girl bluntly, with the look of an inquisitor, and
+the intolerance of the young for its contemporary
+of another social class.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I <i>must!</i>" said Betty with terror in her
+voice. "They're coming! Listen! Oh, help me
+quick! I can't wait to explain!"</p>
+
+<p>Betty dashed out of the gate and would have
+started up the street but that a strong young arm
+came out like a flash and a firm young fist gripped her
+arm like a vise. The girl's keen ears had caught
+a sound of turning key and excited voices, and her
+quick eyes pierced the darkness of the narrow court
+and measured the distance back.</p>
+
+<p>"Here! You can't go togged out like that!"
+she ordered in quite a different tone. She flung off
+her own long coat and threw it around the shrinking
+little white figure, then knelt and deftly turned up
+the long satin draperies out of sight and fixed them
+firmly with a pin extracted from somewhere about
+her person. Quickly she stood up and pulled off her
+rubbers, her eye on the long dark passageway whence<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+came now the decided sound of a forcibly opened
+door and footsteps.</p>
+
+<p>"Put these on, quick!" she whispered, lifting
+first one slippered foot and then the other and supporting
+the trembling Betty in her strong young
+arms, while she snapped on the rubbers.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, she jerked the rakish hat from her own
+head, crammed it down hard over the orange-wreathed
+brow and gave her strange prot&eacute;g&eacute;e a
+hasty shove.</p>
+
+<p>"Now beat it around that corner and wait till I
+come!" she whispered, and turning planted herself
+in an idle attitude just under the church window,
+craning her neck and apparently listening to the
+music. A second later an excited usher, preceded by
+the janitor, came clattering down the passageway.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen any one go out of this gate
+recently?" asked the usher.</p>
+
+<p>The girl, hatless and coatless in the chill November
+night, turned nonchalantly at the question, surveyed
+the usher coolly from the point of his patent
+leather shoes to the white gardenia in his buttonhole,
+gave his features a cursory glance, and then shook
+her head.</p>
+
+<p>"There might have been an old woman come out
+a while back. Dressed in black, was she? I wasn't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+paying much attention. I think she went down the
+avenoo," she said, and stretched her neck again,
+standing on her tiptoes to view the wedding guests.
+Her interest suddenly became real, for she spied a
+young man standing in the church, in full view of
+the window, back against the wall with his arms
+folded, a fine handsome young man with pleasant
+eyes and a head like that of a young nobleman, and
+she wanted to make sure of his identity. He looked
+very much like the young lawyer whose office boy
+was her "gentleman friend." Just to make sure she
+gave a little spring from the sidewalk that brought
+her eyes almost on a level with the window and gave
+her a brief glimpse, enough to see his face quite
+clearly; then she turned with satisfaction to see that
+the janitor and the usher had gone back up the
+passageway, having slammed the gate shut. Without
+more ado the girl wheeled and hurried down
+the street toward the corner where Betty crouched
+behind a tree trunk, watching fearfully for
+her coming.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw! You don't need to be that scared!" said
+the girl, coming up. "They've gone back. I threw
+'em off the scent. Come on! We'll go to my room
+and see what to do. Don't talk! Somebody might
+recognize your voice. Here, we'll cut through this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+alley and get to the next block. It's further away
+and not so many folks passing."</p>
+
+<p>Silently they hurried through the dark alley and
+down the next street, Betty holding the long cloak
+close that no gleam of her white satin might shine
+out and give away her secret, her heart beating
+like a trip hammer in her breast, her eyes filled with
+unshed tears, the last words of her stepmother ringing
+in her ears. Was she making her father
+ashamed? Her dear dead father! Was she doing
+the wrong thing? So long that thought had held
+her! But she could not go back now. She had
+taken an irrevocable step.</p>
+
+<p>Her guide turned another corner abruptly and
+led her up some stone steps to the door of a tall,
+dingy brick house, to which she applied a latchkey.</p>
+
+<p>The air of the gloomy hall was not pleasant. The
+red wall-paper was soiled and torn, and weird
+shadows flickered from the small gas taper that
+blinked from the ceiling. There were suggestions
+of old dinners, stale fried potatoes and pork in all
+the corners, and one moving toward the stairs seemed
+to stir them up and set them going again like
+old memories.</p>
+
+<p>The stairs were bare and worn by many feet,
+and not particularly clean. Betty paused in dismay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+then hurried on after her hostess, who was mounting
+up, one, two, three flights, to a tiny hall bedroom
+at the back. A fleeting fear that perhaps the place
+was not respectable shot through her heart, but her
+other troubles were so great that it found no lodgment.
+Panting and trembling she arrived at the top
+and stood looking about her in the dark, while the
+other girl found a match and lighted another wicked
+little flickering gas-burner.</p>
+
+<p>Then her hostess drew her into the room and
+closed and locked the door. As a further precaution
+she climbed upon a chair and pushed the transom
+shut.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," she said with a sigh of evident relief,
+"we're safe! No one can hear you here, and you
+can say what you please. But first we'll get this coat
+and hat off and see what's the damage."</p>
+
+<p>As gently as if she were undressing a baby the
+girl removed the hat and coat from her guest, and
+shook out the wonderful shining folds of satin. It
+would have been a study for an artist to have
+watched her face as she worked, smoothing out
+wrinkles, shaking the lace down and uncrushing it,
+straightening a bruised orange-blossom, and putting
+everything in place. It was as if she herself were an
+artist restoring a great masterpiece, so silently and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+absorbedly she worked, her eyes full of a glad wonder
+that it had come to her once to be near and
+handle anything so rare and costly. The very touch
+of the lace and satin evidently thrilled her; the breath
+of the exotic blossoms was nectar as she drew it in.</p>
+
+<p>Betty was still panting from her climb, still
+trembling from her flight, and she stood obedient and
+meek while the other girl pulled and shook and
+brushed and patted her into shape again. When
+all was orderly and adjusted about the crumpled
+bride, the girl stood back as far as the limits of the
+tiny room allowed and surveyed the finished picture.</p>
+
+<p>"There now! You certainly do look great!
+That there band of flowers round your forehead
+makes you look like some queen. 'Coronet'&mdash;ain't
+that what they call it? I read that once in a story
+at the Public Library. Say! Just to think I should
+pick that up in the street! Good night! I'm glad
+I came along just then instead o' somebody else!
+This certainly is some picnic! Well, now, give us
+your dope. It must've been pretty stiff to make you
+cut and run from a show like the one they got up for
+you! Come, tune up and let's hear the tale. I rather
+guess I'm entitled to know before the curtain goes up
+again on this little old stage!"</p>
+
+<p>The two tears that had been struggling with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+Betty for a long time suddenly appeared in her eyes
+and drowned them out, and in dismay she brought
+out a faint little sorry giggle of apology and amusement
+and dropped on the tiny bed, which filled up a
+good two-thirds of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night!" exclaimed the hostess in alarm,
+springing to catch her. "Don't drop down that
+way in those glad rags! You'll finish 'em! Come,
+stand up and we'll get 'em off. You look all in. I'd
+oughta known you would be!" She lifted Betty
+tenderly and began to remove her veil and unfasten
+the wonderful gown. It seemed to her much like
+helping an angel remove her wings for a nap. Her
+eyes shone with genuine pleasure as she handled the
+hooks deftly.</p>
+
+<p>"But I've nothing else to put on!" gurgled
+Betty helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have!" said the other girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Betty with a sudden thought. "I
+wonder! Would you be willing to exchange clothes?
+Have you perhaps got some things you don't need
+that I could have, and I'll give you mine for them?
+I don't suppose perhaps a wedding dress would be
+very useful unless you're thinking of getting married
+soon, but you could make it over and use it for
+the foundation of an evening dress&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The other girl was carefully folding the white
+satin skirt at the moment, but she stopped with it
+in her arms and sat down weakly on the foot of the
+bed with it all spread out in her lap and looked at
+her guest in wonder:</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean you <i>wantta give it up!</i>" she
+said in an awed tone. "You don't mean you would
+be willing to take some of my old togs for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly would!" cried Betty eagerly. "I
+never want to see these things again! <i>I hate</i> them!
+And besides, I want to get away somewhere. I can't
+go in white satin! You know that! But I don't like
+to take anything of yours that you might need. Do
+you think these things would be worth anything
+to you? You weren't thinking of getting married
+yourself some time soon, were you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I might," said the other girl, looking self-conscious.
+"I got a gentleman friend. But I wasn't
+expectin' to get in on any trooso like this!" She
+let her finger move softly over the satin hem as if
+she had been offered a plume of the angel's wing.
+"Sure, I'll take it off you if I've got anything you're
+satisfied to have in exchange. I wouldn't mind
+havin' it to keep jest to look at now and then and
+know it's mine. It'd be somethin' to live for, jest to
+know you had that dress in the house!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Betty, without any warning even to
+herself, dropped upon her knees beside the diminutive
+bed and began to weep. It seemed somehow
+so touching that a thing like a mere dress could make
+a girl glad like that. All the troubles of the days
+that were past went over her in a great wave of
+agony, and overwhelmed her soul. In soft silk and
+lace petticoat and camisole with her pretty white arms
+and shoulders shaking with great sobs she buried
+her face in the old patchwork quilt that her hostess
+had brought from her village home, and gave way
+to a grief that had been long in growing. The other
+girl now thoroughly alarmed, laid the satin on a chair
+and went over to the little stranger, gathering her
+up in a strong embrace, and gradually lifting her to
+the bed.</p>
+
+<p>"You poor little Kid, you! I oughtta known
+better! You're just all in! You ben gettin' ready
+to be married, and something big's been troubling
+you, and I bet they never gave you any lunch&mdash;er
+else you wouldn't eat it,&mdash;and you're jest natcheraly
+all in. Now you lie right here an' I'll make you
+some supper. My name's Jane Carson, and I've got
+a good mother out to Ohio, and a nice home if I'd
+had sense enough to stay in it; only I got a chance
+to make big money in a fact'ry. But I know what 'tis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+to be lonesome, an' I ain't hard-hearted, if I do
+know how to take care of misself. There! There!"</p>
+
+<p>She smoothed back the lovely hair that curled
+in golden tendrils where the tears had wet it.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, now, you needn't be afraid! Nobody'll
+getcha here! I know how to bluff 'em. Even if
+a policeman should come after yeh, I'd get around
+him somehow, and I don't care what you've done or
+ain't done, I'll stand by yeh. I'm not one to turn
+against anybody in distress. My mother always
+taught me that. After you've et a bite and had a
+cup of my nice tea with cream and sugar in it you'll
+feel better, and we'll have a real chin-fest and hear
+all about it. Now, you just shut your eyes and wait
+till I make that tea."</p>
+
+<p>Jane Carson thumped up the pillow scientifically
+to make as many of the feathers as <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'posible'">possible</ins> and
+shifted the little flower-head upon it. Then she
+hurried to her small washstand and took a little iron
+contrivance from the drawer, fastening it on the
+sickly gas-jet. She filled a tiny kettle with water
+from a faucet in the hall and set it to boil. From
+behind a curtain in a little box nailed to the wall she
+drew a loaf of bread, a paper of tea and a sugar-bowl.
+A cup and saucer and other dishes appeared from
+a pasteboard box under the washstand. A small<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+shelf outside the tiny window yielded a plate of butter,
+a pint bottle of milk, and two eggs. She drew
+a chair up to the bed, put a clean handkerchief on it,
+and spread forth her table. In a few minutes the
+fragrance of tea and toast pervaded the room,
+and water was bubbling happily for the eggs. As
+cosily as if she had a chum to dine with her she sat
+down on the edge of the bed and invited her guest to
+supper. As she poured the tea she wondered what
+her co-laborers at the factory would think if they
+knew she had a real society lady visiting her. It
+wasn't every working girl that had a white satin
+bride thrust upon her suddenly this way. It was
+like a fairy story, having a strange bride lying on
+her bed, and everything a perfect mystery about her.
+She eyed the white silk ankles and dainty slippers
+with satisfaction. Think of wearing underclothes
+made of silk and real lace!</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Betty as if never before in all her
+life had she tasted anything so delicious as that tea
+and toast and soft boiled egg cooked by this wonderful
+girl on a gaslight and served on a chair. She
+wanted to cry again over her gladness at being here.
+It didn't seem real after all the trouble she had
+been through. It couldn't last! Oh, of course it
+couldn't last!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This thought came as she swallowed the last bite
+of toast, and she sat up suddenly!</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to be doing something quick!" she
+said in sudden panic. "It is getting late and I must
+get away. They'll be watching the trains, perhaps.
+I ought to have gone at once. But I don't know
+where I can go. Give me some old things, please.
+I must get dressed at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Lie down first and tell me who you are and
+what it's all about. I can't do a thing for you till
+I know. I've got to go into this with my eyes open or
+I won't stir one step," she declared stubbornly.</p>
+
+<p>Betty looked at her with wide eyes of trouble
+and doubt. Then the doubt suddenly cleared away,
+and trust broke through.</p>
+
+<p>"I can trust you, I'm sure! You've been so
+good to me! But it seems dreadful to tell things
+about my family, even to one who has been so kind.
+My father would be so hurt&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Your father? Where is your father? Why
+didn't he take care of you and keep you from getting
+into such big trouble, I'd like to know?"</p>
+
+<p>The blue eyes clouded with tears again.</p>
+
+<p>"My father died five years ago," she said, "but
+I've always tried to do as he would want to have
+me do. Only&mdash;this&mdash;I <i>couldn't</i>."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"H'm!" said Jane Carson. "Then he prob'ly
+wouldn't of wanted you to. Suppose you take the
+rest of those togs off. I'll find you a warm nightgown
+and we'll get to bed. It's turning cold here.
+They take the heat off somewhere about six o'clock in
+the evening, and it gets like ice up here sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>Jane shivered and went to her small trunk, from
+which she produced a coarse but clean flanellete nightgown,
+and Betty, who had never worn anything
+but a dainty lingerie one before in all her life, crept
+into it thankfully and cuddled down with a warm
+feeling that she had found a real friend. It was
+curious why she did not shrink from this poor girl,
+but she did not, and everything looked clean and nice.
+Besides, this was a wonderful haven of refuge in her
+dire necessity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meanwhile</span>, in the stately mansion that Betty
+had called home, a small regiment of servants hastened
+with the last tasks in preparation for the
+guests that were soon expected to arrive. The great
+rooms had become a dream of paradise, with silver
+rain and white lilies in a mist of soft green depending
+from the high ceilings. In the midst of all, a
+fairy bower of roses and tropical ferns created a
+nook of retirement where everyone might catch a
+glimpse of the bride and groom from any angle in
+any room. The spacious vistas stretched away from
+an equally spacious hallway, where a wide and
+graceful staircase curved up to a low gallery, smothered
+in flowers and palms and vines; and even so
+early the musicians were taking their places and tuning
+their instruments. On the floor above, where
+room after room shone in beauty, with costly furnishings,
+and perfect harmonies, white-capped maids
+flitted about, putting last touches to dressing tables
+and pausing to gossip as they passed one another:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, 'twill all be over soon," sighed one, a
+wan-faced girl with discontented eyes. "Ain't it
+kind of a pity, all this fuss just for a few minutes?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, an' glad I'll be!" declared another, a fresh
+young Irish girl with a faint, pretty brogue. "I
+don't like the look of my Lady Betty. A pretty fuss
+Candace her old nurse would be makin' if she was
+here the night! I guess the madam knew what she
+was about when she give her her walkin' ticket!
+Candace never could bear them two bys, and <i>him</i> was
+the worse of the two, she always said."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, a sight of good it would do for old
+Candace to make a fuss!" said the discontented one.
+"And anyhow, he's as handsome as the devil, and
+she's got money enough, so she oughtn't complain."</p>
+
+<p>"Money ain't everything!" sniffed Aileen. "I
+wouldn't marry a king if I wasn't crazy about him!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you're young!" sneered Marie with disdain.
+"Wait till your looks go! You don't know
+what you'd take up with!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well I'd never take up with the likes of <i>him!</i>"
+returned the Irish girl grandly, "and what's more
+he knows it!" She tossed her head meaningfully
+and was about to sail away on her own business
+when a stir below stairs attracted their attention.
+A stout, elderly woman, dressed in a stiff new black
+silk and an apoplectic hat, came panting up the
+stairs looking furtively from side to side, as if she
+wished to escape before anyone recognized her:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It's Candace!" exclaimed Aileen. "As I live!
+Now what d'ye wantta know about that! Poor
+soul! <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Pood'">Poor</ins> soul! Candy! Oh!&mdash;Candy! What
+iver brought ye here the night? This is no place for
+the loikes of you. You better beat it while
+the beatin' is good if ye know which side yer
+bread's buthered!"</p>
+
+<p>But the old nurse came puffing on, her face
+red and excited:</p>
+
+<p>"Is she here? Has she come, yet, my poor wee
+Betty?" she besought them eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Betty's at the church now gettin' married!"
+announced Marie uppishly, "and you'd best
+be gettin' out of here right away, for the wedding
+party's due to arrive any minute now and madam'll
+be very angry to have a servant as doesn't belong
+snoopin' round at such a time!"</p>
+
+<p>"Be still, Marie! For shame!" cried Aileen.
+"You've no need to talk like that to a self-respectin'
+woman as has been in this house more years than
+you have been weeks! Come along, Candace, and
+I'll slip you in my room and tell you all about it
+when I can get away long enough. You see, Miss
+Betty's being married&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But she's <i>not!</i>" cried Candace wildly. "I
+was at the church myself. Miss Betty sent me the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+word to be sure and come, and where to sit and all,
+so she'd see me; and I went, and she come up the
+aisle as white as a lily and dropped right there
+before the poolpit, just like a little white lamb that
+couldn't move another step, all of a heap in her
+pretty things! And they stopped the ceremony and
+everybody got up, and they took her away, and we
+waited till bime-by the minister said the bride
+wasn't well enough to proceed with the ceremony
+and would they all go home, and I just slipped out
+before the folks got their wraps on and took a
+side street with wings to my feet and got up here!
+Haven't they brought her home yet, the poor wee
+thing? I been thinkin' they might need me yet,
+for many's the time I've brought her round by
+my nursin'."</p>
+
+<p>The two maids looked wildly at one another,
+their glances growing into incredulity, the eyebrows
+of Marie moving toward her well-dressed hair with a
+lofty disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you'd better come with me, Candy," said
+Aileen drawing the excited old servant along the
+hall to the back corridor gently. "I guess there's
+some mistake somewheres; anyway, you better stay
+in my room till you see what happens. We haven't
+heard anything yet, and they'd likely send word<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+pretty soon if there's to be any change in the program.
+You say she fell&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>But just then sounds of excitement came distantly
+up to them and Aileen hastened back to the
+gallery to listen. It was the voice of Madam Stanhope
+angrily speaking to her youngest son:</p>
+
+<p>"You must get Bessemer on the 'phone at once
+and order him home! I told you it was a great mistake
+sending him away. If he had been standing
+there, where she could see him, everything would
+have gone through just as we planned it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Aw! Rot! Mother. Can't you shut up? I
+know what I'm about and I'm going to call up another
+detective. Bessemer may go to the devil for
+all I care! How do you know but he has, and taken
+her with him? The first thing to do is to get that
+girl back! You ought to have had more sense than to
+show your whole hand to my brother. You might
+have known he'd take advantage&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Hutton slammed into the telephone
+booth under the stairs and Madam Stanhope was
+almost immediately aware of the staring servants
+who were trying not to seem to have listened.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanhope stood in the midst of the beautiful
+empty rooms and suddenly realized her position.
+Her face froze into the haughty lines with which her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+menage was familiar, and she was as coldly beautiful
+in her exquisite heliotrope gown of brocaded velvet
+and chiffon with the glitter of jewels about her
+smooth plump neck, and in her carefully marcelled
+black hair as if she were quietly awaiting the bridal
+party instead of facing defeat and mortification:</p>
+
+<p>"Aileen, you may get Miss Betty's room ready
+to receive her. She has been taken ill and will be
+brought home as soon as she is able to be moved,"
+she announced, without turning an eyelash. "Put
+away her things, and get the bed ready!" One could
+see that she was thinking rapidly. She was a woman
+who had all her life been equal to an emergency, but
+never had quite such a tragic emergency been thrust
+upon her to camouflage before.</p>
+
+<p>"James!" catching the eye of the butler, "there
+will be no reception to-night, of course, and you
+will see that the hired people take their things away
+as soon as possible, and say that I will agree to
+whatever arrangements they see fit to make, within
+reason, of course. Just use your judgment, James,
+and by the way, there will be telephone calls, of
+course, from our friends. Say that Miss Betty is
+somewhat better, and the doctor hopes to avert a
+serious nervous breakdown, but that she needs entire
+rest and absolute quiet for a few days. Say that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+and nothing more, do you understand, James?"</p>
+
+<p>The butler bowed his thorough understanding
+and Madam Stanhope sailed nobly up the flower-garlanded
+staircase, past the huddled musicians, to
+her own apartment. Aileen, with a frightened
+glance, scuttled past the door as she was closing it:</p>
+
+<p>"Aileen, ask Mr. Herbert to come to my room
+at once when he has finished telephoning, and when
+Mr. Bessemer arrives send him to me at once!"
+Then the door closed and the woman was alone with
+her defeat, and the placid enameled features melted
+into an angry snarl like an animal at bay. In a
+moment more Herbert stormed in.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all your fault, mother!" he began, with
+an oath. "If you hadn't dragged Bessemer into
+this thing I'd have had her fixed. I had her just
+about where I wanted her, and another day would
+have broken her in. She's scared to death of insane
+asylums, and I told her long ago that it would be
+dead easy to put a woman in one for life. If I had
+just hinted at such a thing she'd have married me
+as meek as a lamb!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here, Bertie," flared his mother
+excitedly, "you've got to stop blaming me! Haven't
+I given in to you all your life, and now you say
+it's all my fault the least little thing that happens!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+It was for your sake that I stopped you; you know
+it was. You couldn't carry out any such crazy
+scheme. Betty's almost of age, and if those trustees
+should find out what you had threatened, you would
+be in jail for life, and goodness knows what would
+become of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Trustees! How would the trustees find it out?"</p>
+
+<p>"Betty might tell them."</p>
+
+<p>"Betty might <i>not</i> tell them, not if she was <i>my
+wife!</i>" He bawled out the words in a way that
+boded no blissful future to the one who should
+have the misfortune to become his wife. "I think
+I'd have her better trained than that. As for you,
+Mother, you're all off, as usual! What do you
+think could possibly happen to <i>you?</i> You're always
+saying you do everything for me, but when it comes
+right down to brass tacks I notice you're pretty much
+of a selfish coward on your own account."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the baffled woman faced her angry
+uncontrolled son in speechless rage, then gathered
+command of the situation once more, an inscrutable
+expression on her hard-lined face. Her voice took
+on an almost pitiful reproach as she spoke in a
+low, even tone that could hardly fail to bring the
+instant attention of her spoiled son:</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie, you don't know what you're talking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+about!" she said, and there was a strained white
+look of fear about her mouth and eyes as she spoke.
+"I'm going to tell you, in this great crisis, what I
+did for you, what I risked that you might enjoy
+the luxury which you have had for the last five years.
+Listen! The day before Mr. Stanhope died he
+wrote a letter to the trustees of Betty's fortune giving
+very explicit directions about her money and
+her guardianship, tying things up so that not one
+cent belonging to her should pass through my hands,
+which would have left us with just my income as
+the will provided, and would have meant comparative
+poverty for us all except as Betty chose to be
+benevolent. I kept a strict watch on all his movements
+those last few days, of course, and when I
+found he had given Candace a letter to mail, I told
+her I would look after it, and I brought it up to my
+room and read it, for I suspected just some such
+thing as he had done. He was very fussy about
+Betty and her rights, you remember, and he had
+always insisted that this was Betty's house, her
+mother's wedding present from the grandfather,
+and therefore not ours at all, except through Betty's
+bounty. I was determined that we should not be
+turned out of here, and that you should not have
+to go without the things you wanted while that child<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+had everything and far more than she needed. So
+I burned the letter! Now, do you see what the
+mother you have been blaming has done for you?"</p>
+
+<p>But the son looked back with hard glittering eyes
+and a sneer on his handsome lustful lips:</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you did it about as much for your
+own sake as mine, didn't you?" he snarled. "And
+I don't see what that's got to do with it, anyway.
+Those trustees don't know what they missed if they
+never got the letter, and you've always kept in with
+them, you say, and made them think you were crazy
+about the girl. They pay you Betty's allowance till
+she's of age, don't they? They can't lay a finger
+on you. You're a fool to waste my time talking
+about a little thing like that when we ought to be
+planning a way to get hold of that girl before the
+trustees find out about it. If we don't get her fixed
+before she's of age we shall be in the soup as far as
+the property is concerned. Isn't that so? Well, then,
+we've got to get her good and married&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you only had let her marry Bessemer
+quietly," whimpered his mother, "and not have
+brought in all this deception. It will look so terrible
+if it ever comes out. I shall never be able to hold
+up my head in society again&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>"There you are again! Thinking of yourself&mdash;&mdash;!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+sneered the dutiful son, getting up and
+stamping about her room like a wild man. "I tell
+you, Mother, that girl is <i>mine</i>, and I won't have
+Bessemer or anybody else putting in a finger. <i>She's
+mine!</i> I told her so a long time ago, and she knows
+it! She can't get away from me, and it's going to
+go the harder with her because she's tried. I'm
+never going to forgive her making a fool out of me
+before all those people! I'll get her yet! Little fool!"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert was well on his way into one of those fits
+of uncontrollable fury that had always held his
+mother in obedience to his slightest whim since the
+days when he used to lie on the floor and scream
+himself black in the face and hold his breath till she
+gave in; and the poor woman, wrought to the highest
+pitch of excitement already by the tragic events
+of the evening, which were only the climax of long
+weeks of agitation, anxiety and plotting, dropped
+suddenly into her boudoir chair and began to weep.</p>
+
+<p>But this new manifestation on the part of his
+usually pliable mother only seemed to infuriate the
+young man. He walked up to her, and seizing her
+by the shoulder, shook her roughly:</p>
+
+<p>"Cut that out!" he said hoarsely. "This is no
+time to cry. We've got to make some kind of a plan.
+Don't you see we'll have the hounds of the press at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+our heels in a few hours? Don't you see we've got
+to make a plan and stick to it?"</p>
+
+<p>His mother looked up, regardless for once of the
+devastation those few tears had made of her carefully
+groomed face, a new terror growing in
+her eyes:</p>
+
+<p>
+"I've told James to answer all telephone calls and say that Betty is doing as
+well as could be expected, <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">but that the
+doctor says she must have perfect</span> quiet to save her from a nervous
+breakdown&mdash;&mdash;" she answered him coldly. "I'm not quite a fool if you
+do think so&mdash;&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's all right for to-night, but what'll
+we say to-morrow if we don't find her&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! She'll come back," said the stepmother
+confidently. "She can't help it. Why, where would
+she go? She hasn't a place on earth since she's lost
+confidence in that cousin of her mother's because
+he didn't come to her wedding. She hasn't an idea
+that he never got her note asking him to give her
+away. Thank heaven I got hold of that before it
+reached the postman! If that old granny had been
+here we should have had trouble indeed. I had an
+experience with him once just before I married
+Betty's father, and I never want to repeat it. But
+we must look out what gets in the papers!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It's rather late for that, I suspect. The bloodhounds
+'ill be around before many minutes and you
+better think up what you want said. But I'm not so
+sure she wouldn't go there, and we better tell the
+detectives that. What's the old guy's address? I'll
+call him up long distance and say she was on a motoring
+trip and intended to stop there if she had time.
+I'll ask if she's reached there yet."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good idea, although I'm sure she was
+too hurt about it to go to him. She cried all the
+afternoon. It's a wonder she didn't look frightful!
+But that's Betty! Cry all day and come out looking
+like a star without any paint either. It's a pity somebody
+that would have appreciated it couldn't have
+had her complexion."</p>
+
+<p>"That's you all over, Mother, talking about
+frivolous things when everything's happening at
+once. You're the limit! I say, you'd better be getting
+down to business! I've thought of another
+thing. How about that old nurse, Candace? Betty
+used to be crazy about her? What became of her?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanhope's face hardened, and anxiety grew
+in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"She might have gone to her, although I don't
+believe she knows where she is. I'm sure I don't.
+I sent her away just before we began to get ready for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+the wedding. I didn't dare have her here. She
+knows too much and takes too much upon herself.
+I wouldn't have kept her so long, only she knew I
+took the trustee's letter, and she was very impudent
+about it once or twice, so that I didn't really dare
+to let her go until just a few days ago. I thought
+things would all be over here before she could do any
+harm, and Betty would be of age and have her money
+in her own right, and being your wife, of course there
+wouldn't be any more trouble about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you better find out what's become of
+her!" said the young man with darkening face. "<i>She</i>
+ought to be locked up somewhere! She's liable to
+make no end of trouble! You can't tell what she's
+stirred up already! Ring for a servant and find out
+if they know where she is. Ten to one that's where
+Betty is."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanhope, with startled face, stepped to the
+bell and summoned Aileen:</p>
+
+<p>"Aileen, have you any idea where we could find
+Miss Betty's old nurse, Candace?" she asked in a
+soothing tone, studying the maid's countenance. "I
+think it might be well to send for her in case Miss
+Betty needs her. She was so much attached to her!"</p>
+
+<p>Aileen lifted startled eyes to her mistress' face.
+There was reserve and suspicion in her glance:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why, she was here a few minutes ago," she
+said guardedly. "It seems Miss Betty sent her an
+invitation, and when Miss Betty took sick she was
+that scared she ran out of the church and come here
+to find out how she was. She might not have gone
+yet. I could go see."</p>
+
+<p>"Here! Was she here?" Mrs. Stanhope turned
+her head to her son and her eyes said: "That's
+strange!" but she kept her face well under control.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you might go and see if you can find her,
+Aileen, and if you do, tell her I would like to see
+her a moment."</p>
+
+<p>Aileen went away on her errand and Mrs. Stanhope
+turned to her son:</p>
+
+<p>"Betty can't have gone to her unless there was
+some collusion. But in any case I think we had
+better keep her here until we know something."</p>
+
+<p>Quick trotting steps were heard hurrying along
+the hall and a little jerky knock announced unmistakably
+the presence of Candace.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanhope surveyed the little red-faced
+creature coolly and sharply:</p>
+
+<p>"Candace, you have broken one of my express
+commands in returning here without permission from
+me, but seeing it was done in kindness I will overlook
+it this time and let you stay. You may be useful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+if they bring my daughter home to-night and I
+presume she will be very glad to see you. Just now
+she is&mdash;umm&mdash;&mdash;" she glanced furtively at her son,
+and lifting her voice a trifle, as if to make her statement
+more emphatic&mdash;"she is at a private hospital
+near the church where they took her till she should
+be able to come home. It will depend on her condition
+whether they bring her to-night or to-morrow
+or in a few days. Meantime, if you like you may go
+up to your old room and wait until I send for you.
+I shall have news soon and will let you know. Don't
+go down to the servant's quarters, I wish to have you
+where I can call you at a moment's notice."</p>
+
+<p>Candace gave her ex-mistress a long, keen suspicious
+stare, pinned her with a glance as steely as
+her own for an instant, in search of a possible ulterior
+motive, and then turning on her little fat heel,
+vanished like a small fast racer in the direction of
+her old room.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Mrs. Stanhope, turning with a
+sigh of relief, "she's safe! I'll set Marie to watch
+her and if there's anything going on between those
+two Marie will find it out."</p>
+
+<p>But Herbert Hutton was already sitting at his
+mother's desk with the telephone book and calling
+up Long Distance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All the long hours when he had expected to have
+been standing under the rose bower downstairs in
+triumph with his bride, Herbert Hutton sat at that
+telephone in his mother's boudoir alternately raging
+at his mother and shouting futile messages over the
+'phone. The ancient cousin of Betty's mother was
+discovered to be seriously ill in a hospital and unable
+to converse even through the medium of his
+nurse, so there was nothing to be gained there.
+Messages to the public functionaries in his town
+developed no news. Late into the night, or rather
+far toward the morning, Bessemer was discovered
+at a cabaret where his persistent mother and brother
+had traced him, too much befuddled with his evening's
+carouse to talk connectedly. He declared
+Betty was a good old girl, but she might go to
+thunder for all he cared; he knew a girl "worth
+twice of her."</p>
+
+<p>His mother turned with disgust from his babbling
+voice, convinced that he knew nothing of
+Betty's whereabouts. Nevertheless, by means of a
+financial system of threats and rewards which she
+had used on him successfully for a number of years,
+she succeeded in impressing upon him the necessity
+of coming home at once, and just as the pink was
+beginning to dawn in the gray of the morning, Bessemer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+drove up in a hired car, and stumbled noisily
+into the house, demanding to know where the wedding
+was. He wanted to kiss the bride.</p>
+
+<p>Candace, still in her stiff black silk, stood in the
+shadowy hall, as near as she dared venture, and
+listened, with her head thoughtfully on one side.
+Betty in her note about the wedding had said she was
+going to be married to Bessemer. But Bessemer
+didn't sound like a bridegroom. Had Bessemer run
+away then, or what? But some things looked queer.
+She remembered that Aileen had spoken as if Herbert
+was the bridegroom, but she had taken it for a
+mere slip of the tongue and thought nothing of it.
+When Aileen next came that way, she asked her if
+she happened to have got hold of one of the invitations,
+and Aileen, with her finger on her lips, nodded,
+and presently returned with something under
+her apron:</p>
+
+<p>"I slipped it from the waste-basket," she said,
+"and Miss Betty got a holt of it, and there was a
+tremenjus fuss about something, I couldn't make
+out what; but I heard the missus say it was all a mistake
+as she gave the order over the 'phone, and she
+must have misspoke herself, but anyhow she thought
+she'd destroyed them all and given a rush order and
+they would be all right and sent out in plenty of time.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+So she sticks this back in the waste-basket and orders
+me to take the basket down and burn it, but I keeps
+this out and hides it well. I couldn't see nothin' the
+matter with it, can you?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's <i>all</i> the matter with it!" declared the
+angry nurse as she glared at the name of Herbert
+Hutton thoughtfully, and read between the lines
+more than she cared to tell.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Not</span> two miles away, Betty lay safe and warm in
+the flanellette nightgown, and watched Jane Carson
+turn out the light and open the window. A light
+leaped up from the street and made a friendly spot
+of brightness on the opposite wall, and Betty had a
+sense of cosiness that she had not felt since she was
+in boarding school with a roommate.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Jane, climbing into bed and pulling
+up the covers carefully lest she should let the cold in
+on her guest, "let's hear!&mdash;You warm enough?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a curious tenderness in her voice as if
+she had brought home a young princess and must
+guard her carefully.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, perfectly!" said Betty, giving a little nervous
+shiver. "And I'm so glad to be here safe away
+from them all! Oh, I've needed some one to advise
+with <i>so</i> much! I haven't had a soul since they sent
+my old nurse away because she dared to take my
+part sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Betty buried her face in the pillow and
+began to sob and Jane reached out quick gentle arms
+and gathered her in a close comforting embrace.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+In a moment more Betty had gained control of herself
+and began to explain:</p>
+
+<p>"You see," she said, catching her breath bravely,
+"they were determined I should marry a man I
+can't <i>endure</i>, and when I wouldn't they tried to <i>trick</i>
+me into it anyway. I never suspected until I got
+into the church and looked around and couldn't see
+Bessemer anywhere; only the other one with his
+evil eyes gloating over me, and then I knew! They
+thought they would get me there before all that
+church full of people and I wouldn't dare do anything.
+But when I realized it, I just dropped right
+down in the aisle. I couldn't stand up, I was
+so frightened."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't understand," said Jane. "Were
+there <i>two</i> men?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," sighed Betty, "there were two."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, where was the other one, the one you
+<i>wanted</i> to marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know&mdash;&mdash;" said Betty with a half sob
+in her voice. "That's just what frightened me.
+You see they were my stepmother's two sons,
+and it was my father's dying wish that I should
+marry one of them. I didn't really <i>want</i> to
+marry Bessemer, but I simply <i>loathed</i> Herbert,
+the younger one, who was so determined to marry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+me. I was terribly afraid of him. He had been
+frightfully cruel to me when I was a child and when
+he grew up he was always tormenting me; and then
+when he tried to make love to me he was so repulsive
+that I couldn't bear to look at him. It really made
+me sick to think of ever marrying him. Oh&mdash;I
+<i>couldn't</i>&mdash;no matter who asked me. So Bessemer
+and I decided to get married to stop the trouble.
+They were always nagging him, too, and I was kind
+of sorry for him."</p>
+
+<p>"But why should you marry anybody you didn't
+want to, I'd like to know!" exclaimed Jane in horror.
+"This is a free country and nobody ever makes
+people marry anybody they don't like any more.
+Why didn't you just beat it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought about that a good many times," said
+Betty, pressing her tired eyes with her cold little
+fingers, "but I couldn't quite bring myself to do it.
+In the first place, I didn't know where to go, nor
+what to do. They never would let me learn to do
+anything useful, so I couldn't have got any work;
+and anyhow I had a feeling that it wouldn't be possible
+to get away where Herbert couldn't find me if
+he wanted to. He's that way. He always gets what
+he wants, no matter whom it hurts. He's <i>awful</i>&mdash;Jane&mdash;really!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was a pitiful note in her voice that appealed
+to the mother in Jane, and she stooped over her guest
+and patted her comfortingly on the shoulder:</p>
+
+<p>"You poor little kid," she said tenderly, "you
+must have been worried something awful, but still I
+don't get you; what was the idea in sticking around
+and thinking you <i>had</i> to marry somebody you didn't
+like? You coulda gone to some one and claimed
+pertection. You could uv appealed to the p'lice if
+worst came to worst&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! But Jane I couldn't! That would have
+brought our family into disgrace, and father would
+have felt so <i>dreadfully</i> about it if he had been alive!
+I couldn't quite bring myself, either, to go against
+his dying request. We had always been so much
+to each other, Daddy and I. Besides, I didn't mind
+<i>Bessemer</i> so <i>much</i>&mdash;he was always kind&mdash;though we
+never had much to do with each other&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't think I'd have stopped around
+long to please a father that didn't care any more for
+me than to want me to marry somebody I felt that
+way about!" said Jane, indignantly. "I haven't
+much use for a father like that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but he wasn't like that!" said Betty, rising
+up in her eagerness and looking at Jane through
+her shining curls that were falling all about her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+eager, troubled young face, "and he did love me,
+Jane, he loved me better than anything else in the
+whole world! That was why I was willing to sacrifice
+almost anything to please him."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be darned!" said Jane Carson, sitting
+up squarely in bed and staring at the spot of
+light on the wall. "That gets my goat! How could
+a man love you and yet want to torment you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see, Jane, he hadn't been very fond
+of them when they were boys"&mdash;she spoke it with
+dignity and a little gasp as if she were committing
+a breach of loyalty to explain, but realized that it was
+necessary&mdash;"and he felt when he was dying that
+he wanted to make reparation, so he thought if
+I should marry one of them it would show them that
+he had forgiven them&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It&mdash;may&mdash;be&mdash;so," drawled Jane slowly, nodding
+her head deliberately with each word, "but&mdash;I
+don't see it that <i>way!</i> What kind of a man was this
+father of yours, anyway?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a wonderful man, Jane!" Betty eagerly
+hastened to explain. "He was all the world to me,
+and he used to come up to school week-ends and
+take me on beautiful trips and we had the best times
+together, and he would tell me about my own
+dear mother&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Betty's hand grasped Jane's convulsively and
+her voice died out, in a sudden sob. Jane's hand
+went quickly to the bright head on the pillow:</p>
+
+<p>"There! there!" she whispered tenderly, "don't
+take on so, I didn't mean anything. I was just trying
+to dope it out; get it through my bean what in
+thunder&mdash;&mdash;! Say! Did <i>he</i> <span class="smcap">tell</span> <i>you</i> he wanted
+you to marry those guys?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, he left word&mdash;it was his dying
+request."</p>
+
+<p>"Who'd he request it to?"</p>
+
+<p>"My stepmother."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm! I thought so! How'd you know he
+did? How'd you know but she was lyin'?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Betty sorrowfully, "she wasn't lying,
+she showed me the paper it was written on. There
+couldn't be any mistake. And his name was signed
+to it, his dear hand-writing, just as he always wrote
+it with the little quirl to the S that wasn't like anybody
+else. It went through me just like a knife
+when I saw it, that my dear father should have asked
+me to do what was so very very hard for me to think
+of. It was so much harder to have it come that way.
+If he had only asked me himself and we could have
+talked it over, perhaps he would have helped me to
+be strong enough to do it, but to have <i>her</i> have to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+<i>tell me!</i> She felt that herself. She tried to be kind,
+I think. She said she wanted to have him wake me
+up and tell me himself, but she saw his strength
+was going and he was so anxious to have her write
+it down quick and let him sign it that she did as
+he asked&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you may depend on it he never wrote
+it at all&mdash;or anyhow, never knew what he was signing.
+Like as not she dragged it out of him some
+way while he was out of his mind or so near dying
+he didn't know what he was about. Besides, they
+mightta some of 'em forged his name. It's easy to
+copy signatures. Lotsa people do it real good. If
+I was you I wouldn't think another mite about it. If
+he was a man like you say he is, he couldn'ta done
+a thing like that to his own little girl, not on his life!
+It ain't like real fathers and mothers to. I know, fer
+I've got a mother that's a peach and no mistake!
+No, you may depend on it, he never knew a thing
+about that, and marrying a guy like that is the last
+thing on earth he'd want you to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do you really think so? Oh, are you
+<i>sure?</i>" cried Betty, clinging to Jane eagerly, the
+tears raining down her white cheeks. "I've thought
+so a thousand times, but I didn't dare trust myself
+to decide."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I'm sure!" said Jane, gathering her in her
+arms and hugging her tight, just as she would have
+done with a little sister who had waked up in the
+night with a bad dream. "Now, look here, you
+stop crying and don't you worry another bit. Just
+tell me the rest if there's any rest, so I'll know what
+to bank on. Who is the other guy, the one you didn't
+mind marryin'? What became of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that's the queer part," said Betty,
+troubled again. "He didn't seem to be anywhere,
+and when they carried me into the room back of the
+church and fanned me and got water to bathe my
+face, a doctor came and gave me some medicine and
+sent them all out, and I asked him to send Bessemer
+to me. I wanted to find out why he hadn't been
+standing up there by the minister the way I expected.
+I heard the doctor go out and ask for Bessemer
+and I heard my stepmother's voice say, 'Why Bessemer
+isn't here! He's gone down to the shore!'
+and then somebody said, 'Hush,' and they shut the
+door, and I was so frightened that I got up and
+tried all the doors till I found one that led down
+some stairs, and I locked it behind me and ran and
+found you!"</p>
+
+<p>"You poor little kid!" cried Jane, cuddling her
+again. "I sure am glad I was on the job! But<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+now, tell me, what's your idea? Will they make a
+big noise and come huntin' you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes!" said Betty wearily. "I suppose they
+will. I <i>know</i> they will, in fact. Herbert won't be
+balked in anything he wants&mdash;&mdash;Bessemer won't
+count. He never counts. I'm sort of sorry for him,
+though I don't like him much. You see they had
+been making an awful fuss with him, too, about
+some actress down at the shore that he was sending
+flowers to, and I knew he didn't have a very easy
+time. So when he came in one day and asked me
+why I didn't marry <i>him</i> and settle the whole thing
+that way, I was horrified at first, but I finally
+thought perhaps that would be the best thing to do.
+He said he wouldn't bother me any, if I wouldn't
+bother him; and we thought perhaps the others would
+let us alone then. But I might have known Herbert
+wouldn't give in! Bessemer is easily led&mdash;Herbert
+could have hired him to go away to-night&mdash;or they
+may have <i>made</i> him ask me to marry him. He's
+like that," sadly. "You can't depend on him. I
+don't know. You see, it was kind of queer about
+the invitations. They came with Herbert's name in
+them first, and my stepmother tried to keep me
+from seeing them. She said they were late and she
+had them all sent off; but I found one, and when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+I went to my stepmother with it she said it was a
+mistake. She hadn't meant me to be annoyed by
+seeing it; and she didn't know how it happened; she
+must have misspoken herself&mdash;but it had been corrected
+and they would rush it through and send them
+right from the store this time so there wouldn't
+be any delay. I tried to think it was all right, but
+it troubled me, for I saw that Herbert hadn't given
+up at all&mdash;though he pretended to go away, and I
+hoped I wouldn't have any more trouble&mdash;but I
+might have known! Herbert never gave up anything
+in his life, not even when father was living.
+He always managed to get his way, somehow&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Did he love you so much?" Jane asked
+awesomely.</p>
+
+<p>Betty shuddered:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know whether it was love or hate!
+It was all the same. I hate to think about him&mdash;he
+is&mdash;<i>unbearable</i>, Jane! Why, Jane, once he told me
+if he ever got me in his power he'd break my will
+or kill me in the attempt!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, now, there, Kid! Don't you think another
+bit about him, the old brute! You just lie
+down and sleep as easy as if you was miles away.
+They won't any of 'em ever find you here with me,
+and I've pulled the washstand in front of the door,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+so you needn't be dreaming of anybody coming in
+and finding you. Now go to sleep, and to-morrow
+I'll sneak you away to a place where they can't ever
+find you. Good night, Kid!" and Jane leaned down
+and kissed the soft hair on the pillow beside her.
+Betty flung her arms about her new-found friend
+and kissed her tenderly:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you've been so good to me! What should
+I ever have done if I hadn't found you. You were
+like an angel. I think surely God must have sent
+you to help me."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't wonder if he did!" said Jane
+thoughtfully. "An angel in a mackintosh!
+Some angel!"</p>
+
+<p>Jane Carson with her eyes wide open lay staring
+into the darkness and thinking it all over. She did
+not waste much time marvelling over the wonder that
+it had all happened to her. That would do for
+afterward when there was nothing else to be done
+about it. Now there must be some plans made and
+she was the one to make them. It was quite plain
+that the wonderful and beautiful Elizabeth Stanhope,
+the plans for whose wedding had been blazoned in
+the papers for days beforehand, was not at present
+capable of making or carrying out anything effective.
+Jane was. She knew it. She was a born leader and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+promoter. She liked nothing better than to work
+out a difficult situation. But this was the most difficult
+proposition that she had ever come up against.
+When her father died and her mother was left with
+the little house and the three younger children to
+support in a small country village, and only plain
+sewing and now and then a boarder to eke out a living
+for them all, she had sought and found, through
+a summer visitor who had taught her Sunday school
+class for a few weeks, a good position in this big
+Eastern city. She had made good and been promoted
+until her wages not only kept herself with strict
+economy, but justified her in looking forward to the
+time when she might send for her next younger sister.
+Her deft fingers kept her meagre wardrobe in
+neatness&mdash;and a tolerable deference to fashion, so
+that she had been able to annex the "gentleman
+friend" and take a little outing with him now and
+then at a moving picture theatre or a Sunday evening
+service. She had met and vanquished the devil on
+more than one battlefield in the course of her experience
+with different department heads; and she was
+wise beyond her years in the ways of the world.
+But this situation was different. Here was a girl
+who had been brought up "by hand," as she would
+have said with a sneer a few hours before, and she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+would have despised her for it. She raised up on
+one elbow and leaned over once more to watch the
+delicate profile of this gentle maiden, in the dim fitful
+light of the city night that came through the one little
+window. There had been something appealing in the
+beauty and frankness of the girl bride, something
+appalling in the situation she had found herself in.
+Jane Carson didn't know whether she was doing
+right or not to help this stray bride. It made her
+catch her breath to think how she might be bringing
+all the power of the law and of money upon her reckless
+young head, but she meant to do it, just the same.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth Stanhope! What a beautiful name!
+It fitted right in with all the romance Jane had ever
+dreamed. If she only could write scenarios, what a
+thriller this would make!</p>
+
+<p>Then she lay down and fell to planning.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> morning dawned, and still no word from
+the missing bride. But the brief guarded sentences
+which Herbert Hutton had telephoned to the newspapers
+had been somehow sidetracked, and in their
+place a ghastly story had leaked out which some
+poor, hard-pressed reporter had gleaned from the
+gossip in the church and hurried off to put into type
+before there was time for it to be denied. Hot foot
+the story had run, and great headlines proclaimed
+the escape of Betty even while the family were carefully
+paving the way for the report of a protracted
+illness and absence, if need be, till they could find
+trace of her. The sun rose brightly and made weird
+gleaming of the silver wire on which the dying roses
+hung. The air was heavy with their breath, and the
+rooms in the early garish light looked out of place as
+if some fairy wand had failed to break the incantation
+at the right hour and left a piece of Magicland
+behind. The parlor maid went about uncertainly,
+scarcely knowing what to do and what to leave
+undone, and the milk cars, and newsboys, and early
+laborers began to make a clatter of every day on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+streets. The morning paper, flung across the steps
+with Betty's picture, where Betty's reluctant feet
+had gone a few hours before, seemed to mock at
+life, and upstairs the man that Betty thought she
+went out to marry, lay in a heavy stupor of sleep.
+Happy Betty, to be resting beneath the coarse sheet
+of the kindly working girl, sleeping the sleep of exhaustion
+and youth in safety, two miles from the
+rose-bowered rooms!</p>
+
+<p>Long before day had really started in the great
+city Jane Carson was up and at work. She dressed
+swiftly and silently, then went to her little trunk,
+and from it selected a simple wardrobe of coarse
+clean garments. One needed mending and two buttons
+were off. She sat by the dingy window and
+strained her eyes in the dawn to make the necessary
+repairs. She hesitated long over the pasteboard
+suit-box that she drew from under the bed. It
+contained a new dark blue serge dress for which she
+had saved a long time and in which she had intended
+to appear at church next Sabbath. She was divided
+between her desire to robe the exquisite little guest
+in its pristine folds and her longing to wear it herself.
+There was a sense of justice also which entered into
+the matter. If that elegant wedding dress was to be
+hers, and all those wonderful silk underclothes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+which very likely she would never allow herself
+to wear, for they would be out of place on a poor
+working girl, it was not fair to repay their donor in
+old clothes. She decided to give the runaway bride
+her new blue serge. With just a regretful bit of a
+sigh she laid it out on the foot of the bed, and
+carefully spread out the tissue papers and folded the
+white satin garments away out of sight, finishing the
+bundle with a thick wrapping of old newspapers from
+a pile behind the door and tying it securely. She
+added a few pins to make the matter more sure,
+and got out a stub of a pencil and labeled it in large
+letters, "My summer dresses," then shoved it far
+back under the bed. If any seeking detective came
+he would not be likely to bother with that, and he
+might search her trunk in vain for white satin
+slippers and wedding veils.</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast was next, and she put on her cloak and
+hurried out for supplies for the larder had been
+heavily depleted the night before to provide for her
+guest. With a tender glance toward the sleeper she
+slipped the key from the lock and placed it in the
+outside of the door, silently locking her guest within.
+Now there would be no danger of any one spiriting
+her away while she was gone, and no danger that the
+girl might wake up and depart in her absence.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She stopped a newsboy on his way to the subway
+and bought a paper, thrilling at the thought that
+there might be something in it about the girl who lay
+asleep in her little hall bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>While she waited for her bundles she stole a
+glance at her paper, and there on the front page in big
+letters ran the heading:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<span class="smcap">Stanhope Wedding<br />
+Held Up at Altar by<br />
+Unconscious Bride</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Relatives Seek Runaway Girl Who is<br />
+Thought to be Insane</i><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>She caught her breath and rolled the paper in a
+little wad, stuffing it carelessly into her pocket. She
+could not read any more of that in public. She
+hastened back to her room.</p>
+
+<p>Betty was still sleeping. Jane stood watching
+her for a full minute with awe in her face. She
+could not but recognize the difference between herself
+and this fine sweet product of civilization and
+wealth. With the gold curls tossed back like a
+ripple of sunshine, and a pathetic little droop at the
+corners of her sweet mouth, nothing lovelier could
+be. Jane hurried to the window and turned her
+back on the bed while she perused the paper, her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+rage rising at the theories put forth. It was even
+hinted that her mother had been insane. Jane turned
+again and looked hard at the young sleeper, and the
+idea crossed her mind that even she might be deceived.
+Still, she was willing to trust her judgment
+that this girl was entirely sane, and anyhow she
+meant to help her! She stuffed the paper down
+behind the trunk and began to get breakfast. When
+it was almost ready she gently awoke the sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>Betty started at the light touch on her shoulder
+and looked wildly around at the strange room and
+stranger face of the other girl. In the dim light of
+the evening she had scarcely got to know Jane's face.
+But in a moment all the happenings of the day before
+came back, and she sat up excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to have got away before it was light,"
+she said gripping her hands together. "I wonder
+where I could go, Jane?" It was pleasant to call
+this girl by her first name. Betty felt that she was a
+tower of strength, and so kind.</p>
+
+<p>"I have this ring," she said, slipping off an exquisite
+diamond and holding it out. "Do you suppose
+there would be any way I could get money
+enough to travel somewhere with this? If I can't
+I'll have to walk, and I can't get far in a day
+that way."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Betty was almost light-hearted, and smiling. The
+night had passed and no one had come. Perhaps
+after all she was going to get away without
+being stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Jane's face set grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess there won't be any walking for you.
+You'll have to travel regular. It wouldn't be safe.
+And you don't want no rich jewelry along either.
+Was that your wedding ring?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no; father gave it to me. It was mother's,
+but I guess they'd want me to use it now. I haven't
+anything else."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Jane shortly to hide the emotion
+in her voice. "Now eat this while I talk,"
+thrusting a plate of buttered toast and a glass of
+orange marmalade at her, and hastening to pour an
+inviting cup of coffee.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I been thinking," she said sitting down
+on the edge of the bed and eating bits of the piece
+of toast she had burned&mdash;Betty's was toasted beautifully&mdash;"I
+got a plan. I think you <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'beter'">better</ins> go to Ma.
+She's got room enough for you for a while, and I
+want my sister to come over and take a place I can
+get fer her. If you was there she could leave. Mebbe
+you could help Ma with the kids. Of course we're
+poor and you ain't used to common things like we<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+have them, but I guess you ain't got much
+choice in your fix. I got a paper this morning.
+They're huntin' fer you hot foot. They say you
+was temperary insane, an' 'f I was you I'd keep out
+o' their way a while. You lay low an' I'll keep my eye
+out and let you know, I've got a little money under
+the mattrass I can let you have till that ring gets sold.
+You can leave it with me an' I'll do the best I can
+if you think you can trust me. Of course I'm a
+stranger, but then, land! So are you! We just
+<i>gotta</i> trust each other. And I'm sending you to my
+mother if you'll go!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Betty, springing up and hugging her
+impulsively, "you're so good! To think I should
+find somebody just like that right in the street when
+I needed you so. I almost think God did it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, mebbe!" said Jane, in her embarrassment
+turning to hang up a skirt that had fallen from
+its hook. "That's what they say sometimes in
+Chrishun Deavor meetin'. Ever go to Chrishun
+Deavor? Better go when you get out home. They
+have awful good socials an' ice cream, and you'll
+meet some real nice folks. We've got a peach of a
+minister, and his wife is perfec'ly dandy. I tell you
+I missed 'em when I came to the city! They was
+always doing something nice fer the young folks."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"How interesting!" said Betty, wondering if she
+might really be going to live like other girls. Then
+the shadow of her danger fell over her once more,
+and her cheek paled.</p>
+
+<p>"If I can only get there safely," she shuddered.
+"Oh, Jane! You can't understand what it would
+be to have to go back!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're not going back. You're going to
+Tinsdale, and nobody's going to find you ever, unless
+you want 'em to! See? Now, listen! We haven't
+any time to waste. You oughtta get off on the ten
+o'clock train. I put out some clothes there for yeh.
+They ain't like yours, but it won't do fer you to go
+dressed like a millionairess. Folks out to Tinsdale
+would suspect yeh right off the bat. You gotta go
+plain like me, and it's this way: You're a friend I
+picked up in the city whose mother is dead and you
+need country air a while, see? So I sent you home to
+stay with Ma till you got strong again. I'm wirin'
+Ma. She'll understand. She always does. I kinda
+run Ma anyhow. She thinks the sun rises an' sets
+in me, so she'll do just what I say."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I oughtn't to intrude," said Betty
+soberly, taking up the coarse, elaborately trimmed
+lingerie with a curious look, and trying not to seem
+to notice that it was different from any she had
+ever worn before.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Say! Looka here!" said Jane Carson, facing
+round from her coffee cup on the washstand. "I'm
+sorry to criticize, but if you could just talk a little
+slang or something. Folks'll never think you belong
+to me. <i>'Intrude!'</i> Now, that sounds stuck up! You
+oughtta say 'be in the way,' or something natural
+like that. See?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I don't," said Betty dubiously, "but
+I'll try."</p>
+
+<p>"You're all right, Kid," said Jane with compunction
+in her voice. "Just let yourself down a little
+like I do, and remember you don't wear silk onderclothes
+now. I'm afraid those stockings won't feel
+very good after yours, but you gotta be careful. An'
+'f I was you I'd cut my hair off, I really would. It's
+an awful pity, it's so pretty, but it'll grow again.
+How old are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Almost twenty-one," said Betty thoughtfully.
+"Just three months more and I'll be twenty-one."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm! Of age!" said Jane with a sharp significant
+look at her, as if a new thought had occurred.
+"Well, you don't look it! You could pass for fifteen,
+especially if you had your hair bobbed. I can
+do it for you if you say so."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Betty promptly without a
+qualm. "I always wanted it short. It's an awful
+nuisance to comb."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That's the talk!" said Jane. "Say 'awful' a
+lot, and you'll kinda get into the hang of it. It
+sounds more&mdash;well, <i>natural</i>, you know; not like society
+talk. Here, sit down and I'll do it quick before
+you get cold feet. I sure do hate to drop them curls,
+but I guess it's best."</p>
+
+<p>The scissors snipped, snipped, and the lovely
+strands of bright hair fell on the paper Jane had
+spread for them. Betty sat cropped like a sweet
+young boy. Jane stood back and surveyed the effect
+through her lashes approvingly. She knew the exact
+angle at which the hair should splash out on the cheek
+to be stylish. She had often contemplated cutting
+her own, only that her mother had begged her not to,
+and she realized that her hair was straight as a die
+and would never submit to being tortured into that
+alluring wave over the ear and out toward the cheekbone.
+But this sweet young thing was a darling!
+She felt that the daring deed had been a success.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a bottle of stuff to make your hair dark,"
+she remarked. "I guess we better put it on. That
+hair of yours is kinda conspicuous, you know, even
+when it's cut off. It won't do you any harm. It
+washes off soon." And she dashed something on the
+yellow hair. Betty sat with closed eyes and submitted.
+Then her mentor burnt a cork and put a
+touch to the eyebrows that made a different Betty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+out of her. A soft smudge of dark under her eyes
+and a touch of talcum powder gave her a sickly
+complexion and when Betty stood up and looked in
+the glass she did not know herself. Jane finished
+the toilet by a smart though somewhat shabby black
+hat pulled well down over Betty's eyes, and a pair
+of gray cotton gloves, somewhat worn at the fingers.
+The high-laced boots she put upon the girl's feet
+were two sizes too large, and wobbled frightfully,
+but they did well enough, and there seemed nothing
+more to be desired.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Jane as she pinned on her own hat,
+"you've gotta have a name to go by. I guess you
+better be Lizzie Hope. It kinda belongs to yeh, and
+yet nobody'd recognize it. You don't need to tell
+Ma anything you don't want to, and you can tell
+her I'll write a letter to-night all about it. Now come
+on! We gotta go on the trolley a piece. I don't
+see havin' you leave from the General Station. We'll
+go up to the Junction and get the train there."</p>
+
+<p>With an odd feeling that she was bidding
+good-by to herself forever and was about to become
+somebody else, Betty gave one more glance at the
+slim boylike creature in the little mirror over the
+washstand and followed Jane out of the room, shuffling
+along in the big high-heeled boots, quite unlike
+the Betty that she was.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Warren Reyburn</span> laid down his pen and shoved
+back his office chair impatiently, stretching out his
+long muscular limbs nervously and rubbing his
+hands over his eyes as if to clear them from annoying
+visions.</p>
+
+<p>James Ryan, his office boy and stenographer,
+watched him furtively from one corner of his eye,
+while his fingers whirled the typewriter on through
+the letter he was typing. James wanted to take
+his girl to the movies that evening and he hadn't
+had a chance to see her the day before. He was
+wondering if Mr. Reyburn would go out in time for
+him to call her up at her noon hour. He was a very
+temperamental stenographer and understood the
+moods and tenses of his most temperamental employer
+fully. It was all in knowing how to manage
+him. James was most deferential, and knew when
+to keep still and not ask questions. This was one
+of the mornings when he went to the dictionary
+himself when he wasn't sure of a word rather than
+break the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'ominious'">ominous</ins> silence. Not that Mr. Reyburn
+was a hard master, quite the contrary, but this was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+James's first place straight from his brief course at
+business school, and he was making a big bluff of
+being an old experienced hand.</p>
+
+<p>There was not much business to be done. This
+was Warren Reyburn's "first place" also in the
+world of business since finishing his law course, and
+he was making a big bluff at being very busy, to cover
+up a sore heart and an anxious mind. It was being
+borne in upon him gradually that he was not a shouting
+success in business so far. The rosy dreams that
+had floated near all through his days of hard study
+had one by one left him, until his path was now leading
+through a murky gray way with little hope ahead.
+Nothing but sheer grit kept him at it, and he began
+to wonder how long he could stick it out if nothing
+turned up.</p>
+
+<p>True, he might have accepted an offer that even
+now lay open on his desk; a tempting offer, too, from
+a big corporation who recognized the influence of his
+old family upon their particular line of business;
+but it was a line that his father and his grandfather
+had scorned to touch, and he had grown up with
+an honest contempt for it. He just could not bring
+himself to wrest the living from the poor and needy,
+and plunder the unsuspecting, and he knew that was
+what it would be if he closed with this offer. Not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+yet had he been reduced to such depths, he told himself,
+shutting his fine lips in a firm curve. "No, not
+if he starved!"</p>
+
+<p>That was the legitimate worry that ruffled his
+handsome brow as he sat before his desk frowning
+at that letter. He meant to begin dictation on its
+answer in another five minutes or so, but meantime
+he was forcing himself to go over every point and
+make it strong and clear to himself, so that he should
+say, "No!" strongly and clearly to the corporation.
+It might do harm to make his reason for declining
+so plain, but he owed it to his self-respect to give
+it nevertheless, and he meant to do so. After all,
+he had no business so far to harm, so what did it
+matter? If nothing turned up pretty soon to give
+him a start he would have to change his whole plan
+of life and take up something else where one did not
+have to wait for a reputation before he could have
+a chance to show what was in him.</p>
+
+<p>But underneath the legitimate reason for his
+annoyance this morning there ran a most foolish little
+fretting, a haunting discomfort.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken his cousin to a wedding the night
+before because her husband had been called away
+on business, and she had no one to escort her. They
+had been late and the church was crowded. He had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+had to stand, and as he idly looked over the audience
+he suddenly looked full into the great sad eyes of the
+sweetest little bride he had ever seen. He had not
+been a young man to spend his time over pretty faces,
+although there were one or two nice girls in whom
+he was mildly interested. He had even gone so far
+as to wonder now and then which of them he would
+be willing to see sitting at his table day after day
+the rest of his life, and he had not yet come to a satisfactory
+conclusion. His cousin often rallied him
+about getting married, but he always told her it
+would be time enough to think about that when he
+had an income to offer her.</p>
+
+<p>But when he saw that flower-face, his attention
+was held at once. Somehow he felt as if he had
+not known there was a face like that in all the world,
+so like a child's, with frank yet modest droop to the
+head, and the simplicity of an angel, yet the sadness
+of a sacrificial offering. Unbidden, a great desire
+sprang up to lift for her whatever burden she was
+bearing, and bring light into those sad eyes. Of
+course it was a passing sensation, but his eyes had
+traveled involuntarily to the front of the church to
+inspect the handsome forbidding face of the bridegroom,
+and with instant dissatisfaction he looked
+back to the girl once more and watched her come up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+to the altar, speculating as those who love to study
+humanity are wont to do when they find an interesting
+subject. How had those two types ever happened
+to come together? The man's part in it was plain.
+He was the kind who go about seeking whom they
+may devour, thought Warren Reyburn. But the
+woman! How could a wise-eyed child like that
+have been deceived by a handsome face? Well, it
+was all speculation of course, and he had nothing
+to do with any of them. They were strangers to him
+and probably always would be. But he had no conception
+at that time what a small world he lived in,
+nor how near the big experiences of life lie all
+about us.</p>
+
+<p>He watched the lovely bride as all the audience
+watched her until he saw her fall, and then he
+started forward without in the least realizing what
+he was doing. He found himself half way up the
+side aisle to the altar before he came to himself and
+forced his feet back to where his cousin was sitting.
+Of course he had no right up there, and what could
+he do when there were so many of her friends and
+relatives about her?</p>
+
+<p>His position near the side door through which
+they carried her made it quite possible for him to
+look down into her still face as they took her to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+vestry room, and he found a great satisfaction in
+seeing that she was even more beautiful at close
+hand than at a distance. He wondered afterward
+why his mind had laid so much stress upon the fact
+that her skin was lovely like a baby's without any
+sign of cosmetics. He told himself that it was
+merely his delight to learn that there was such a
+type, and that it ran true.</p>
+
+<p>He was therefore not a little disappointed that
+the minister, after the congregation had waited an
+unconscionable time for the return of the bride, came
+out and announced that owing to her continued collapse
+the ceremony would have to be postponed. The
+clatter of polite wonder and gossip annoyed him beyond
+measure, and he was actually cross with his
+cousin on the way home when she ranted on about
+the way girls nowadays were brought up, coddled,
+so that a breath would blow them away. Somehow
+she had not looked like that kind of a girl.</p>
+
+<p>But when the morning papers came out with sensational
+headlines proclaiming that the bride had
+run away, and suggesting all sorts of unpleasant
+things about her, he felt a secret exultation that she
+had been brave enough to do so. It was as if he
+had found that her spirit was as wise and beautiful
+as her face had been. His interest in the matter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+exceeded all common sense and he was annoyed and
+impatient with himself more than he cared to own.
+Never before had a face lured his thoughts like this
+one. He told himself that his business was getting
+on his nerves, and that as soon as he could be sure
+about one or two little matters that he hoped would
+fall into his hands to transact, he would take a few
+days off and run down to the shore.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again the little white bride came
+across his vision and thoughts, and hindered the
+courteous but stinging phrases with which he had
+intended to illumine his letter. At last he gave it
+up and taking his hat went out in the keen November
+air for a walk to clear his brain.</p>
+
+<p>This was James Ryan's opportunity. It was
+almost twelve o'clock and no harm in calling the
+"forelady" in the cotton blouse department of the
+big factory. He swung to the telephone with alacrity.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to speak with Miss Carson, please.
+Yes, Miss J. Carson. Is that Miss Carson? Oh,
+hello, Jane, is that you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is <i>Mister</i> Ryan," answered Jane sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>"Jane!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, didn't you 'Miss Carson' me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give it up, Jane. You win. Say, Jane!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Jimmie?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That's my girl, say how about that wedding
+veil? Been thinking any more about it?"</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a moment, then a conscious
+giggle, the full significance of which James Ryan
+was not in a position to figure out.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Jimmie, quit your kiddin'! You mustn't
+say things like that over the 'phone."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause. Folks might listen."</p>
+
+<p>"I should worry! Well, since you say so. How
+about seein' a show together to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fine an' dandy, Jimmie! I'll be ready at the
+usual time. I gotta go now, the boss is comin'. So
+long, Jimmie!"</p>
+
+<p>"So long, darling!"</p>
+
+<p>But the receiver at the other end hung up with
+a click, while Jane with a smile on her lips thought
+of the pasteboard box under her bed and wondered
+what Jimmie would say if he could know. For Jane
+had fully made up her mind that Jimmie was not to
+know. Not at present, anyhow. Some time she might
+tell him if things turned out all right, but she knew
+just what lordly masculine advice and criticism
+would lie upon James Ryan's lips if she attempted
+to tell him about her strange and wonderful guest
+of the night before. Maybe she was a fool to have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+trusted a stranger that way. Maybe the girl would
+turn out to be insane or wrong somehow, and trouble
+come, but she didn't believe it; and anyhow, she
+was going to wait, until she saw what happened next
+before she got Jimmie mixed up in it. Besides, the
+secret wasn't hers to tell. She had promised Betty,
+and she always kept her promises. That was one
+reason why she was so slow in promising to think
+about a wedding veil in response to James Ryan's oft
+repeated question.</p>
+
+<p>That evening on the way to the movies Jane
+instituted an investigation.</p>
+
+<p>"Jimmie, what kind of a man is your boss?"</p>
+
+<p>"White man!" said Jimmie promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw! Cut it out, James Ryan! I don't mean
+how'd s'e look, or what color is he; I mean what
+kind of a <i>man</i> is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's the answer. White man! What's
+the matter of that? I said it and I meant it. He's
+white if there ever was one!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that!" said Miss Carson in scorn. "Of
+course I know he's a peach. If he wasn't you
+wouldn't be workin' for him. What I mean, is he
+a <i>snob?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"No chance!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I saw him <i>with</i> 'em last night. I was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+passin' that big church up Spruce Street and I saw
+him standin' with his arms folded so&mdash;&mdash;" she paused
+on the sidewalk and indicated his pose. "It was a
+swell weddin' and the place was full up. He had a
+big white front an' a clawhammer coat. I know
+it was him 'cause I took a good look at him that
+time you pointed him out at church that evenin'. I
+wondered was he <i>in with</i> them swells?"</p>
+
+<p>Her tone expressed scorn and not a little anxiety,
+as if she had asked whether he frequented places
+of low reputation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if you mean, <i>could</i> he be, why that's a diffrunt
+thing!" said James the wise. "<i>Sure</i>, he could
+be if he wanted, I guess. He's got a good family.
+His uncle's some high muckymuck, and you often see
+his aunts' and cousins' names in the paper giving teas
+and receptions and going places. But he don't seem
+to go much. I often hear folks ask him why he
+wasn't some place last night, or 'phone to know if he
+won't come, and he always says he can't spare the
+time, or he can't afford it, or something like that."</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't he rich, Jimmie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no, not exactly. He may have some
+money put away, or left him by some one. If he
+don't have I can't fer the life of me see how he lives.
+But he certainly don't get it in fees. I often wonder<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+where my salary comes from, but it always does,
+regular as the clock."</p>
+
+<p>"Jimmie, doesn't he have <i>any</i> business at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes he has business, but it ain't the paying
+kind. Fer instance, there was a man in to-day
+trying to get his house back that another man took
+away from him, and my boss <i>took the case!</i> He
+took it <i>right off the bat</i> without waiting to see
+whether the man could pay him anything or not!
+He can't! He's only a poor laboring man, and a rich
+man stole his house. Just out an' out stole it, you
+know. It's how he got rich. Like as not we'll lose
+it, too, those rich men have so many ways of crawling
+out of a thing and making it look nice to the world.
+Oh, he'll get a fee, of course&mdash;twenty-five dollars,
+perhaps&mdash;but what's twenty-five dollars, and like as
+not never get even the whole of that, or have to wait
+for it? Why, it wouldn't keep <i>me</i> in his office long!
+Then there was a girl trying to get hold of the money
+her own father left her, and her uncle frittered away
+and pertends it cost him all that, and <i>he's</i> been supporting
+<i>her!</i> Well, we took that, too, and we won't
+get much out of that even if we do win. Then there
+come along one of these here rich guys with a
+pocket full of money and a nice slick tongue wanting
+to be protected from the law in some devilment, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+<i>him we turned down flat!</i> That's how it goes in our
+office. I can't just figger out how it's coming out!
+But he's a good guy, a white man if there ever
+was one!"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say!" responded Jane with shining
+eyes. "Say, Jimmie, what's the matter of us throwin'
+a little business in his way&mdash;real, payin' business,
+I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fat chance!" said Jimmie dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"You never can tell!" answered Jane dreamily.
+"I'm goin' to think about it. Our fact'ry has lawyers
+sometimes. I might speak to the boss."</p>
+
+<p>"Do!" said Jimmie sarcastically! "And have
+yer labor for yer pains! We'll prob'ly turn <i>them</i>
+down. Fact'ries are <i>always</i> doing things they hadn't
+ought to."</p>
+
+<p>But Jane was silent and thoughtful, and they
+were presently lost in the charms of Mary Pickford.</p>
+
+<p>The evening papers came out with pictures of
+Elizabeth Stanhope and her bridegroom that was to
+have been. Jane cut away the bridegroom and
+pasted the bride's picture in the flyleaf of her Bible,
+then hid it away in the bottom of her trunk.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Betty found herself seated on the day
+coach of a way train, jogging along toward a town
+she had never seen and away from the scenes and
+people of her childhood, she found herself trembling violently.
+It was as if she had suddenly been
+placed in an airplane all by herself and started
+off to the moon without any knowledge of her motor
+power or destination. It both frightened and exhilarated her.
+She wanted to cry and she wanted to
+laugh, but she did neither. Instead she sat demurely
+for the first hour and a half looking out of the window like any
+traveler, scarcely turning her head nor
+looking at anything in the car. It seemed to her that
+there might be a detective in every seat just waiting
+for her to lift her eyes that he might recognize her.
+But gradually as the time dragged by and the landscape
+grew monotonous she began to feel a little more
+at her ease. Furtively she studied her neighbors.
+She had seldom traveled in a common car, and it was
+new to her to study all types as she could see them
+here. She smiled at a dirty baby and wished she had
+something to give it. She studied the careworn man<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+and the woman in black who wept behind her veil and
+would not smile no matter how hard the man tried
+to make her. It was a revelation to her that any
+man would try as hard as that to make a woman
+smile. She watched the Italian family with five
+children and nine bundles, and counted the colors on
+a smart young woman who got in at a way station.
+Every minute of the day was interesting. Every
+mile of dreary November landscape that whirled
+by gave her more freedom.</p>
+
+<p>She opened the little shabby handbag that Jane
+had given her and got out the bit of mirror one
+inch by <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'an an'">an</ins> inch and a half backed with pasteboard
+on which lingered particles of the original
+green taffeta lining and studied her own strange
+face, trying to get used to her new self and her new
+name. Jane had written it, Lizzie Hope, on the back
+of the envelope containing the address of Mrs. Carson.
+It seemed somehow an identification card. She
+studied it curiously and wondered if Lizzie Hope
+was going to be any happier than Betty Stanhope had
+been. And then she fell to thinking over the strange
+experiences of the last twenty-four hours and wondering
+whether she had done right or not, and
+whether her father would have been disappointed
+in her, "ashamed of her," as her stepmother had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+said. Somehow Jane had made her feel that he
+would not, and she was more light-hearted than she
+had been for many a day.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the afternoon she began to wonder what
+Tinsdale would be like. In the shabby handbag
+was her ticket to Tinsdale and eight dollars and a
+half in change. It made her feel richer than she
+had ever felt in her life, although she had never
+been stinted as to pocket money. But this was her
+very own, for her needs, and nobody but herself to
+say how she should spend either it or her time.</p>
+
+<p>Little towns came in sight and passed, each one
+with one or two churches, a schoolhouse, a lot of
+tiny houses. Would Tinsdale look this way? How
+safe these places seemed, yet lonely, too! Still, no
+one would ever think of looking for her in a lonely
+little village.</p>
+
+<p>They passed a big brick institution, and she made
+out the words, "State Asylum," and shuddered inwardly
+as she thought of what Jane had told her
+about the morning paper. Suppose they should hunt
+her up and <i>put her in an insane asylum</i>, just to show
+the world that it had not been their fault that she
+had run away from her wedding! The thought was
+appalling. She dropped her head on her hand with
+her face toward the window and tried to pretend<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+she was asleep and hide the tears that would come,
+but presently a boy came in at the station with a big
+basket and she bought a ham sandwich and an apple.
+It tasted good. She had not expected that it would.
+She decided that she must have been pretty hungry
+and then fell to counting her money, aghast that the
+meager supper had made such a hole in her capital.
+She must be very careful. This might be all the
+money she would have for a very long time, and
+there was no telling what kind of an impossible place
+she was going to. She might have to get away as
+eagerly as she had come. Jane was all right, but
+that was not saying that her mother and sisters
+would be.</p>
+
+<p>It was growing dark, and the lights were lit in the
+car. All the little Italian babies had been given drinks
+of water, and strange things to eat, and tumbled to
+sleep across laps and on seats, anywhere they would
+stick. They looked so funny and dirty and pitiful
+with their faces all streaked with soot and molasses
+candy that somebody had given them. The mother
+looked tired and greasy and the father was fat and
+dark, with unpleasant black eyes that seemed to roll
+a great deal. Yet he was kind to the babies and his
+wife seemed to like him. She wondered what kind
+of a home they had, and what relation the young<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+fellow with the shiny dark curls bore to them. He
+seemed to take as much care of the babies as did
+their father and mother.</p>
+
+<p>The lights were flickering out in the villages now
+and gave a friendly inhabited look to the houses.
+Sometimes when the train paused at stations Betty
+could see people moving back and forth at what
+seemed to be kitchen tables and little children bringing
+dishes out, all working together. It looked pleasant
+and she wondered if it would be like that where
+she was going. A big lump of loneliness was growing
+in her throat. It was one thing to run away from
+something that you hated, but it was another to jump
+into a new life where one neither knew nor was
+known. Betty began to shrink inexpressibly from
+it all. Not that she wanted to go back! Oh, no;
+far from it! But once when they passed a little
+white cemetery with tall dark fir trees waving guardingly
+above the white stones she looked out almost
+wistfully. If she were lying in one of those beside
+her father and mother how safe and rested she
+would be. She wouldn't have to worry any more.
+What was it like where father and mother had gone?
+Was it a real place? Or was that just the end when
+one died? Well, if she were sure it was all she
+would not care. She would be willing to just go<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+out and not be. But somehow that didn't seem to
+be the commonly accepted belief. There was always
+a beyond in most people's minds, and a fear of just
+what Betty didn't know. She was a good deal of
+a heathen, though she did not know that either.</p>
+
+<p>Then, just as she was floundering into a lot of
+theological mysteries of her own discovery the nasal
+voice of the conductor called out: "Tinsdale! Tinsdale!"
+and she hurried to her feet in something of a
+panic, conscious of her short hair and queer clothes.</p>
+
+<p>Down on the platform she stood a minute trying
+to get used to her feet, they felt so numb and empty
+from long sitting. Her head swam just a little, too,
+and the lights on the station and in the houses near
+by seemed to dance around her weirdly. She had a
+feeling that she would rather wait until the train was
+gone before she began to search for her new home,
+and then when the wheels ground and began to turn
+and the conductor shouted "All aboard!" and swung
+himself up the step as she had seen him do a hundred
+times that afternoon, a queer sinking feeling of loneliness
+possessed her, and she almost wanted to catch
+the rail and swing back on again as the next pair
+of car steps flung by her.</p>
+
+<p>Then a voice that sounded a little like Jane's
+said pleasantly in her ear: "Is this Lizzie Hope?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+and Betty turned with a thrill of actual fright to
+face Nellie Carson and her little sister Emily.</p>
+
+<p>"Bobbie'll be here in a minute to carry your
+suitcase," said Nellie efficiently; "he just went over
+to see if he could borrow Jake Peter's wheelbarrow
+in case you had a trunk. You didn't bring your
+trunk? O, but you're going to stay, aren't you?
+I'm goin' up to the city to take a p'sition, and
+Mother'd be awful lonesome. Sometime of course
+we'll send fer them to come, but now the children's
+little an' the country's better fer them. They gotta
+go to school awhile. You'll stay, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know you'll want me?" laughed
+Betty, at her ease in this unexpected air of welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course we'd want you. Jane sent you.
+Jane wouldn't of sent you if you hadn't been a good
+scout. Jane knows. Besides, I've got two eyes,
+haven't I? I guess I can tell right off."</p>
+
+<p>Emily's shy little hand stole into Betty's and the
+little girl looked up:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm awful glad you come! I think you're
+awful pretty!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you!" said Betty, warmly squeezing
+the little confiding hand. It was the first time in her
+life that a little child had come close to her in this
+confiding way. Her life had not been among children.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Bob whirled up, bareheaded, freckled,
+whistling, efficient, and about twelve years old. He
+grabbed the suitcase, eyed the stranger with a
+pleasant grin, and stamped off into the darkness
+ahead of them.</p>
+
+<p>It was a new experience to Betty to be walking
+down a village street with little houses on each side
+and lights and warmth and heads bobbing through
+the windows. It stirred some memory of long ago,
+before she could scarcely remember. She wondered,
+had her own mother ever lived in a small village?</p>
+
+<p>"That's our church," confided Emily, as they
+passed a large frame building with pointed steeple
+and belfry. "They're goin' to have a entertainment
+t'morra night, an' we're all goin' and Ma said you
+cud go too."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that lovely!" said Betty, feeling a sudden
+lump like tears in her throat. It was just like living
+out a fairy story. She hadn't expected to be taken
+right in to family life this way.</p>
+
+<p>"But how did you know I was coming on that
+train?" she asked the older girl suddenly. "Jane
+said she was going to telegraph, but I expected to
+have to hunt around to find the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we just came down to every train after the
+telegram came. This is the last train to-night, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+we were awful scared for fear you wouldn't come
+till morning, an' have to stay on the train all night.
+Ma says it isn't nice for a girl to have to travel
+alone at night. Ma always makes Jane and me
+go daytimes."</p>
+
+<p>"It was just lovely of you," said Betty, wondering
+if she was talking "natural" enough to
+please Jane.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you bob you hair 'cause you had a fever?"
+asked Nellie enviously.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Betty, "that is, I haven't been very
+well, and I thought it might be good for me," she
+finished, wondering how many questions like that it
+was going to be hard for her to answer without telling
+a lie. A lie was something that her father had
+made her feel would hurt him more deeply than
+anything else she could do.</p>
+
+<p>"I just love it," said Nellie enthusiastically. "I
+wanted to cut mine, an' so did Jane, but Ma wouldn't
+let us. She says God gave us our hair, an' we
+oughtta take care of it."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true, too," said Betty. "I never thought
+about that. But I guess mine will grow again after a
+while. I think it will be less trouble this way. But
+it's very dirty with traveling. I think I'll have to
+wash it before I put it on a pillow."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That had troubled Betty greatly. She didn't
+know how to get rid of that hair dye before Jane's
+family got used to having it dark.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, you can wash it, if you ain't 'fraid of
+takin' cold. There's lots of hot water. Ma thought
+you'd maybe want to take a bath. We've got a big
+tin bath-tub out in the back shed. Ma bought it off
+the Joneses when they got their porcelain one put
+into their house. We don't have no runnin' water
+but we have an awful good well. Here's our house.
+I guess Bob's got there first. See, Ma's out on the
+steps waitin' fer us."</p>
+
+<p>The house was a square wooden affair, long
+wanting paint, and trimmed with little scrollwork
+around the diminutive front porch. The color was
+indescribable, blending well into the surroundings
+either day or night. It had a cheerful, decent look,
+but very tiny. There was a small yard about it
+with a picket fence, and a leafless lilac bush. A
+cheerful barberry bush flanked the gate on either
+side. The front door was open into a tiny hall and
+beyond the light streamed forth from a glass lamp
+set on a pleasant dining-room table covered with a
+red cloth. Betty stepped inside the gate and found
+herself enveloped in two motherly arms, and then
+led into the light and warmth of the family
+dining-room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was a kettle of stew on the stove in the
+kitchen, kept hot from supper for Betty, with fresh
+dumplings just mixed before the train came in, and
+bread and butter with apple sauce and cookies. They
+made her sit right down and eat, before she even
+took her hat off, and they all sat around her and
+talked while she ate. It made her feel very much
+at home as if somehow she was a real relative.</p>
+
+<p>It came over her once how different all this was
+from the house which she had called home all her
+life. The fine napery, the cut glass and silver, the
+stately butler! And here was she eating off a stone
+china plate thick enough for a table top, with a steel
+knife and fork and a spoon with the silver worn
+off the bowl. She could not help wondering what
+her stepmother would have said to the red and white
+tablecloth, and the green shades at the windows.
+There was an old sofa covered with carpet in the
+room, with a flannel patchwork pillow, and a cat
+cuddled up cosily beside it purring away like a tea-kettle
+boiling. Somehow, poor as it was, it seemed
+infinitely more attractive than any room she had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+ever seen before, and she was charmed with the
+whole family. Bobbie sat at the other end of the
+table with his elbows on the table and his round eyes
+on her. When she smiled at him he winked one eye
+and grinned and then wriggled down under the table
+out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>The mother had tired kind eyes and a firm cheerful
+mouth like Jane's. She took Betty right in as if
+she had been her sister's child.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, now, get back there, Emily. Don't hang
+on Lizzie. She'll be tired to death of you right at
+the start. Give her a little peace while she eats
+her supper. How long have you and Jane been
+friends, Lizzie?" she asked, eager for news of her
+own daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Betty's cheeks flushed and her eyes grew troubled.
+She was very much afraid that being Lizzie was
+going to be hard work:</p>
+
+<p>"Why, not so very long," she said hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you one of the girls in her factory?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" said Betty wildly, wondering what
+would come next. "We&mdash;just met&mdash;that is&mdash;why&mdash;<i>out
+one evening!</i>" she finished desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see!" said the mother. "Yes, she wrote
+about going out sometimes, mostly to the movies.
+And to church. My children always make it a point<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+to go to church wherever they are. I brought 'em
+up that way. I hope you go to church."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall love to," said Betty eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Is your mother living?" was the next question.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Betty. "Mother and father
+are both dead and I've been having rather a hard
+time. Jane was kind to me when I was in trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll warrant you! That's Jane!" beamed her
+mother happily. "Jane always was a good girl, if
+I do say so. I knew Jane was at her tricks again
+when she sent me that telegram."</p>
+
+<p>"Ma's got you a place already!" burst out
+Nellie eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Nellie, you said you'd let Ma tell that!"
+reproached Bob. "You never can keep your
+mouth shut."</p>
+
+<p>"There! There! Bob, don't spoil the evening
+with anything unkind," warned the mother. "Yes,
+Lizzie, I got you a position. It just happened I had
+the chance, and I took it, though I don't really
+b'lieve that anythin' in this world just happens, of
+course. But it did seem providential. Mrs. Hathaway
+wanted somebody to look after her little girl.
+She's only three years old and she is possessed to
+run away every chance she gets. Course I s'pose
+she's spoiled. Most rich children are. Now, my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+children wouldn't have run away. They always
+thought too much of what I said to make me trouble.
+But that's neither here nor there. She does it, and
+besides her Ma is an invalid. She had an operation,
+so she has to lie still a good bit, and can't be
+bothered. She wants somebody just to take the little
+girl out walking and keep her happy in the house,
+an' all."</p>
+
+<p>"How lovely!" exclaimed Betty. "I shall enjoy
+it, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"She's awful pretty!" declared Emily eagerly.
+"Got gold curls and blue eyes just like you, and she
+has ever an' ever so many little dresses, and wears
+pink shoes and blue shoes, an' rides a tricycle."</p>
+
+<p>"How interesting!" said Betty.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll get good wages," said the mother. "She
+said she'd give you six dollars a week, an' mebbe
+more, an' you'd get some of your meals."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I can pay my board to you," cried Betty.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry about that, child. We'll fix that up
+somehow. We're awful glad to have you come, and
+I guess we shall like each other real well. Now,
+children, it's awful late. Get to bed. Scat! Lizzie
+can have her bath an' get to bed, too. Come, mornin's
+half way here already!"</p>
+
+<p>The children said good night and Betty was introduced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+to the tin bath tub and improvised bathroom&mdash;a
+neat little addition to the kitchen evidently intended
+originally for a laundry. She wanted to
+laugh when she saw the primitive makeshifts, but
+instead the tears came into her eyes to think how
+many luxuries she had taken all her life as a matter
+of course and never realized how hard it was for
+people who had none. In fact it had never really
+entered her head before that there were people who
+had no bathrooms.</p>
+
+<p>Betty was not exactly accustomed to washing
+her own hair, and with the added problem of the dye
+it was quite a task; but she managed it at last, using
+all the hot water, to get it so that the rinsing water
+was clear, and her hair felt soft. Then, attired in
+the same warm nightgown she had worn the night
+before, which Jane had thoughtfully put in the suitcase&mdash;otherwise
+filled with old garments she wished
+to send home&mdash;Betty pattered upstairs to the little
+room with the sloping roof and the dormer window
+and crept into bed with Nellie. That young woman
+had purposely stayed awake, and kept Betty as long
+as she could talk, telling all the wonderful things she
+wanted to know about city life, and Betty found herself
+in deep water sometimes because the city life
+she knew about was so very different from the city<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+life that Jane would know. But at last sleep won,
+and Nellie had to give up because her last question
+was answered with silence. The guest was deep
+in slumber.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning the children took her over the
+house, out in the yard, showing her everything. Then
+they had to take her down to the village and explain
+all about the little town and its people. They were
+crazy about Betty's beautiful hair and much disappointed
+when she would insist on wearing her hat.
+It was a bright sunny morning, not very cold, and
+they told her that nobody wore a hat except to
+church or to go on the train, but Betty had a feeling
+that her hair might attract attention, and in her
+first waking hours a great shadow of horror had
+settled upon her when she realized that her people
+would leave no stone unturned to find her. It was
+most important that she should do or be nothing
+whereby she might be recognized. She even thought
+of getting a cap and apron to wear when attending
+her small charge, but Nellie told her they didn't do
+that in the country and she would be thought stuck
+up, so she desisted. But she drew the blue serge
+skirt up as high above her waistband as possible
+when she dressed in the morning so that she might
+look like a little girl and no one would suspect her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+of being a runaway bride. Also she had a consultation
+with herself in the small hours of the morning
+while Nellie was still fast asleep, and settled with
+her conscience just what she would tell about her
+past and what she would keep to herself. There was
+a certain reserve that any one might have, and if
+she was frank about a few facts no one would be
+likely to question further.</p>
+
+<p>So next morning she told Mrs. Carson that since
+her parents' death she had lived with a woman who
+knew her father well, but lately things had been
+growing very unpleasant and she found she had to
+leave. She had left under such conditions that she
+could not bring away anything that belonged to
+her, so she would have to work and earn some
+more clothes.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson looked into her sweet eyes and
+agreed that it was the best thing she could do; they
+might follow her up and make all sorts of trouble
+for her in her new home if she wrote for her things;
+and so the matter dropped. They were simple folks,
+who took things at their face value and were not
+over inquisitive.</p>
+
+<p>On the third day there arrived a long letter from
+Jane in which she gave certain suggestions concerning
+the new member of the family, and ended: "Ma,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+she's got a story, but don't make her tell any more
+of it than she wants. She's awful sensitive about
+it, and trust me, she's all right! She's been through
+a lot. Just make her feel she's got some folks that
+loves and trusts her."</p>
+
+<p>Ma, wise beyond her generation and experience,
+said no more, and took the little new daughter into
+her heart. She took the opportunity to inform the
+village gossips that a friend of Jane's had come to
+rest up and get a year's country air, boarding with
+them; and so the amalgamation of Betty Stanhope
+into the life of the little town began.</p>
+
+<p>The "job" proved to be for only part of the
+day, so that Betty was free most of the mornings
+to help around the house and take almost a daughter's
+place. That she was a rare girl is proved by the
+way she entered into her new life. It was almost as
+if she had been born again, and entered into a new
+universe, so widely was her path diverging from
+everything which had been familiar in the old life.
+So deep had been her distress before she came into it
+that this new existence, despite its hard and unaccustomed
+work, seemed almost like heaven.</p>
+
+<p>It is true there was much bad grammar and
+slang, but that did not trouble Betty. She had been
+brought up to speak correctly, and it was second<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+nature to her, but no one had ever drummed it into
+her what a crime against culture an illiterate way
+of speaking could be. She never got into the way of
+speaking that way herself, but it seemed a part of
+these people she had come to know and admire so
+thoroughly, as much as for a rose to have thorns,
+and so she did not mind it. Her other world had
+been so all-wrong for years that the hardships of this
+one were nothing. She watched them patch and
+sacrifice cheerfully to buy their few little plain coarse
+new things. She marveled at their sweetness and
+content, where those of her world would have
+thought they could not exist under the circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>She learned to make that good stew with carrots
+and celery and parsley and potatoes and the smallest
+possible amount of meat, that had tasted so delicious
+the night she arrived. She learned the charms of the
+common little bean, and was proud indeed the day
+she set upon the table a luscious pan of her own baking,
+rich and sweet and brown with their coating
+of molasses well baked through them. She even
+learned to make bread and never let any one
+guess that she had always supposed it something
+mysterious.</p>
+
+<p>During the week that Nellie was preparing to
+go to the city, Betty had lessons in sewing. Nellie<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+would bring down an old garment, so faded and
+worn that it would seem only fit for the rag-bag.
+She would rip and wash, dye with a mysterious little
+package of stuff, press, and behold, there would come
+forth pretty breadths of cloth, blue or brown or
+green, or whatever color was desired. It seemed like
+magic. And then a box of paper-patterns would be
+brought out, and the whole evening would be spent
+in contriving how to get out a dress, with the help
+of trimmings or sleeves of another material. Betty
+would watch and gradually try to help, but she found
+there were so many strange things to be considered.
+There, for instance, was the up and down of a thing
+and the right and wrong of it. It was exactly like
+life. And one had to plan not to have both sleeves
+for one arm, and to have the nap of the goods running
+down always. It was as complicated as learning
+a new language. But at the end of the week there
+came forth two pretty dresses and a blouse. Betty,
+as she sat sewing plain seams and trying to help all
+she could, kept thinking of the many beautiful frocks
+she had thrown aside in the years gone by, and of the
+rich store of pretty things that she had left when she
+fled. If only Nellie and Jane and little Emily could
+have them! Ah, and if only she herself might have
+them now! How she needed them! For a girl who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+had always had all she wanted it was a great change
+to get along with this one coarse serge and aprons.</p>
+
+<p>But the sewing and other work had not occupied
+them so fully that they had not had time to introduce
+Betty into their little world. The very next
+evening after she arrived she had been taken to
+that wonderful church entertainment that the girls
+had told her about on the way from the station, and
+there she had met the minister's wife and been invited
+to her Sabbath school class.</p>
+
+<p>Betty would not have thought of going if Nellie
+and her mother had not insisted. In fact, she shrank
+unspeakably from going out into the little village
+world. But it was plain that this was expected of
+her, and if she remained here she must do as they
+wanted her to do. It was the least return she could
+make to these kind people.</p>
+
+<p>The question of whether or not she should remain
+began to come to her insistently now. The children
+clamored every day for her to bind herself for the
+winter, and Jane's mother had made her most welcome.
+She saw that they really wanted her; why
+should she not stay? And yet it did seem queer
+to arrange deliberately to spend a whole year in a
+poor uncultured family. Still, where could she go
+and hope to remain unknown if she attempted to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+get back into her own class? It was impossible. Her
+mother had just the one elderly cousin whom she
+had always secretly looked to to help her in any
+time of need, but his failing her and sending that
+telegram without even a good wish in it, just at the
+last minute, too, made her feel it was of no use to
+appeal to him. Besides, that was the first place her
+stepmother would seek for her. She had many good
+society friends, but none who would stand by her in
+trouble. No one with whom she had ever been intimate
+enough to confide in. She had been kept
+strangely alone in her little world after all, hedged
+in by servants everywhere. And now that she was
+suddenly on her own responsibility, she felt a great
+timidity in taking any step alone. Sometimes at
+night when she thought what she had done she was
+so frightened that her heart would beat wildly as if
+she were running away from them all yet. It was
+like a nightmare that pursued her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hathaway had sent for her and made
+arrangements for her to begin her work with the
+little Elise the following week when the present
+governess should leave, and Betty felt that this might
+prove a very pleasant way to earn her living. The
+Hathaways lived in a great brick house away back
+from the street in grounds that occupied what in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+city would have been a whole block. There was a
+high hedge about the place so that one could not see
+the road, and there were flower-beds, a great fountain,
+and a rustic summerhouse. Betty did not see
+why days passed in such a pleasant place would not
+be delightful in summertime. She was not altogether
+sure whether she would like to have to be a
+sort of servant in the house&mdash;and of course these
+cold fall days she would have to be much in the house&mdash;but
+the nursery had a big fireplace in it, a long
+chest under the window where toys were kept, and
+many comfortable chairs. That ought to be pleasant,
+too. Besides, she was not just out looking for pleasant
+things on this trip. She was trying to get away
+from unbearable ones, and she ought to be very
+thankful indeed to have fallen on such comfort as
+she had.</p>
+
+<p>There was another element in the Carson home
+that drew her strongly, although she was shy about
+even thinking of it, and that was the frank, outspoken
+Christianity. "Ma" tempered all her talk
+with it, adjusted all her life to God and what He
+would think about her actions, spoke constantly of
+what was right and wrong. Betty had never lived
+in an atmosphere where right and wrong mattered.
+Something sweet and pure like an instinct in her own<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+soul had held her always from many of the ways of
+those about her, perhaps the spirit of her sweet
+mother allowed to be one of those who "bear them
+up, lest at any time they dash their feet against
+a stone." Or it might have been some memory of
+the teachings of her father, whom she adored, and
+who in his last days often talked with her alone
+about how he and her own mother would want her
+to live. But now, safe and quiet in this shelter of a
+real home, poor though it was, the God-instinct
+stirred within her, caused her to wonder what He
+was, why she was alive, and if He cared? One could
+not live with Mrs. Carson without thinking something
+about her God, for He was an ever-present
+help in all her times of need, and she never hesitated
+to give God the glory for all she had achieved, and
+for all the blessings she had received.</p>
+
+<p>The very first Sabbath in the little white church
+stirred still deeper her awakening interest in spiritual
+things. The minister's wife was a sweet-faced
+woman who called her "my dear" and invited her
+to come and see her, and when she began to teach
+the lesson Betty found to her amazement that it was
+interesting. She spoke of God in much the same
+familiar way that "Ma" had done, only with a
+gentler refinement, and made the girls very sure that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+whatever anybody else believed, Mrs. Thornley was
+a very intimate friend of Jesus Christ. Betty loved
+her at once, but so shy was she that the minister's
+wife never dreamed it, and remarked to her husband
+Sunday night after church, when they were having
+their little, quiet Sabbath talk together, that she was
+afraid she was going to have a hard time winning
+that little new girl that had come to live with
+Mrs. Carson.</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow I can't get away from the thought
+that she comes from aristocracy somewhere," she
+added. "It's the way she turns her head, or lifts
+her eyes or the quiet assurance with which she answers.
+And she smiles, Charles, never grins like the
+rest. She is delicious, but somehow I find myself
+wondering if I have remembered to black my shoes
+and whether my hat is on straight, when she looks
+at me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, maybe she's the daughter of some black
+sheep who has gone down a peg, and our Father has
+sent her here for you to help her back again," said
+her husband with an adorable look at his helper. "If
+anyone can do it you can."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not so sure," she said, shaking her head.
+"She maybe doesn't need me. She has Mrs. Carson,
+remember, and she is a host in herself. If anybody<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+can lead her to Christ she can, plain as she is."</p>
+
+<p>"Undoubtedly you were meant to help, too, dear,
+or she would not have been sent to you."</p>
+
+<p>His wife smiled brilliantly a look of thorough
+understanding: "Oh, I know. I'm not going to shirk
+any but I wish I knew more about her. She is so
+sad and quiet, I can't seem to get at her."</p>
+
+<p>Even at that moment Betty lay in her little cot
+bed under the roof thinking about the minister's wife
+and what she had said about Christ being always
+near, ready to show what to do, if one had the listening
+heart and the ready spirit. Would Christ tell
+her what to do, she wondered, now right here, if
+she were to ask him? Would He show her whether
+to stay in this place or seek further to hide herself
+from the world? Would He show her how to earn
+her living and make her life right and sweet as it
+ought to be.</p>
+
+<p>Then she closed her eyes and whispered softly
+under the sheltering bedclothes, "O Christ, if you
+are here, please show me somehow and teach me
+to understand."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Betty had been in Tinsdale about a month
+it was discovered that she could play the piano. It
+happened on a rainy Sunday in Sunday school, and
+the regular pianist was late. The superintendent
+looked about helplessly and asked if there was anybody
+present who could play, although he knew the
+musical ability of everybody in the village. The minister's
+wife had already pleaded a cut finger which
+was well wrapped up in a bandage, and he was about
+to ask some one to start the tune without the piano
+when Mrs. Thornton leaned over with a sudden
+inspiration to Betty and asked:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, you couldn't play for us, could you?"</p>
+
+<p>Betty smiled assent, and without any ado went to
+the instrument, not realizing until after she had done
+so that it would have been better policy for her to
+have remained as much in the background as possible,
+and not to have shown any accomplishments
+lest people should suspect her position. However,
+she was too new at acting a part to always think
+of these little things, and she played the hymns so
+well that they gathered about her after the hour<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+was over and openly rejoiced that there was another
+pianist in town. The leader of Christian Endeavor
+asked her to play in their meeting sometimes, and
+Betty found herself quite popular. The tallest girl
+in their class, who had not noticed her before, smiled
+at her and patronized her after she came back from
+playing the first hymn, and asked her where she
+learned to play so well.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I used to take lessons before my father
+died," she said, realizing that she must be careful.</p>
+
+<p>Emily and Bob came home in high feather and
+told their mother, who had not been able to get out
+that morning, and she beamed on Betty with as warm
+a smile as if she had been her own daughter:</p>
+
+<p>"Now, ain't that great!" she said, and her
+voice sounded boyish just like Jane's. "Why, we'll
+have to get a pianna. I heard you could get 'em
+cheap in the cities sometimes&mdash;old-fashioned ones,
+you know. I heard they have so many old-fashioned
+ones that they have to burn 'em to get rid of 'em,
+and they even give 'em away sometimes. I wonder,
+could we find out and get hold of one?"</p>
+
+<p>"I guess 'twould cost too much to get it here,"
+said Bob practically. "My! I wisht we had one.
+Say, Lizzie, 'f we had a pianna would you show me
+how to read notes?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Betty.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we'll get one somehow! We always do
+when we need anything awfully. Look at the bathtub!
+Good-night! I'm goin' to earn one myself!"
+declared Bob.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crosby's gotta get a new one. P'raps
+she'll sell us her old one cheap."</p>
+
+<p>That was the way the music idea started, and
+nothing else was talked of at the table for days but
+how to get a piano. Then one day Emily came rushing
+home from school all out of breath, her eyes as
+bright as stars, and her cheeks like roses. "Mrs.
+Barlow came to our school to-day and talked to the
+teacher, and I heard her say she was going away for
+the winter. She's going to store her goods in the
+Service Company barn, but she wants to get somebody
+to take care of her piano. I stepped right up
+and told her my mother was looking for a piano, and
+we'd be real careful of it, and she's just delighted;
+and&mdash;it's coming to-morrow morning at nine o'clock!
+The man's going to bring it!"</p>
+
+<p>She gasped it out so incoherently that they had
+to make her tell it over twice to get any sense out of
+it; but when Bob finally understood he caught his
+little sister in his arms and hugged her with a
+big smacking kiss:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You sure are a little peach, Em'ly!" he shouted.
+"You're a pippin of the pippins! I didn't know you
+had that much nerve, you kid, you! I sure am proud
+of you! My! Think of havin' a pianna! Say,
+Betty, I can play the base of chopsticks now!"</p>
+
+<p>The next evening when Betty got home from
+the Hathaways there was the piano standing in
+the big space opposite the windows in the dining-room.
+Ma had elected to have it there rather than
+in the front room, because it might often be too cold
+in the front room for the children to practice, and
+besides it wouldn't be good for the piano. So the
+piano became a beloved member of the family, and
+Betty began to give instructions in music, wondering
+at herself that she knew how, for her own music had
+been most desultory, and nobody had ever cared
+whether she practiced or not. She had been allowed
+to ramble among the great masters for the most
+part unconducted, with the meagerest technique, and
+her own interpretation. She could read well and
+her sense of time and rhythm were natural, else she
+would have made worse work of it than she did.
+But she forthwith set herself to practicing, realizing
+that it might yet stand her in good stead since she
+had to earn her living.</p>
+
+<p>Little Emily and Bob stood one on either side and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+watched her as she played, with wondering admiration,
+and when Betty went to help their mother Bob
+would sit down and try to imitate what she had done.
+Failing, he would fall headlong into the inevitable
+chopsticks, beating it out with the air of a master.</p>
+
+<p>It was the piano that brought to Betty's realization
+the first real meaning of the Sabbath day. Bob
+came down early and went at the piano as usual
+banging out chopsticks, and a one-fingered arrangement
+of "The Long, Long Trail," while his mother
+was getting breakfast. Betty was making the coffee,
+proud of the fact that she had learned how. But
+Bob had accomplished only a brief hint of his regular
+program when the music stopped suddenly and Betty
+glanced through the kitchen door to see Ma standing
+with her hand on her son's shoulder and a look on
+her face she had not seen before: It was quite gentle,
+but it was decided:</p>
+
+<p>"No, Bob! We won't have that kinda music on
+Sunday," she said. "This is God's day, an' we'll
+have all we can rightly do to keep it holy without
+luggin' in week-day music to make us forget it.
+You just get t' work an' learn 'Safely Through Another
+Week,' an' if you can't play it right you get
+Lizzie to teach you."</p>
+
+<p>Bob pouted:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There ain't nothin' wrong with chopsticks, Ma.
+'Tain't got words to it."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't make any diffrence. It b'longs to weekdays
+an' fun, an' anyhow it makes you think of other
+things, an' you can't keep your mind on God. That's
+what Sunday was made fer, to kinda tone us up to
+God, so's we won't get so far away in the week that
+we won't be any kind of ready for heaven some time.
+An' anyhow, 'tisn't seemly. You better go learn
+your Golden Text, Bob. The minister'll be disappointed
+if you don't have it fine."</p>
+
+<p>Betty stood by the window thoughtfully looking
+out. Was that what Sunday was made for, or was it
+only a quaint idea of this original woman? She
+wished she knew. Perhaps some time she would
+know the minister's wife well enough to ask. She
+would have liked to ask Ma more about it, but somehow
+felt shy. But Ma herself was started now, and
+when she came back to the kitchen, as if she felt
+some explanation was due the new inmate of the
+family, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know how you feel about it. I know
+city folks don't always hold to the old ways. But it
+always seemed to me God meant us to stick to Sunday,
+and make it diff'rent from other days. I never
+would let my children go visitin', nor play ball an'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+we always tried to have something good for supper
+fixed the night before. I heard somebody say a
+long time ago that it says somewhere in the Bible that
+Sunday was meant to be a sign forever between God
+and folks. The ones that keeps it are his'n, an' them
+as don't aren't. Anyhow, that's the only day we
+have got to kinda find out what's wanted of us. You
+wouldn't mind just playin' hymns and Sunday things
+t'day, would you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," said Betty, interested. "I like it. It
+sounds so kind of safe, and as if God cared. I never
+thought much about it before. You think God really
+thinks about us and knows what we're doing then,
+don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sure, child. I don't just think, I <i>know</i> He
+does. Hadn't you never got onto that? Why, you
+poor little ducky, you! O' course He does."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to feel sure that He was looking out for
+me," breathed Betty wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can!" said Ma, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'hrurrying'">hurrying</ins> back to
+see that her bacon didn't burn. "It's easy as rollin'
+off a log."</p>
+
+<p>"What would I have to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, just b'lieve."</p>
+
+<p>"Believe?" asked Betty utterly puzzled. "Believe
+what?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why, believe that He'll do it. He said 'Come
+unto me, an' I will give you rest,' an' He said, 'Cast
+your burden on the Lord,' an' He said 'Castin' all
+yer care 'pon Him, fer He careth fer you,' an' a
+whole lot more such things, an' you just got to take
+it fer straight, an' act on it."</p>
+
+<p>"But how could I?" asked Betty.</p>
+
+<p>"Just run right up to your room now, while
+you're feelin' that way, an' kneel down by your bed
+an' tell Him what you just told me," said Mrs. Carson,
+stirring the fried potatoes with her knife to
+keep them from burning. "It won't take you long,
+an' I'll tend the coffee. Just you tell Him you want
+Him to take care of you, an' you'll believe what I
+told you He said. It's all in the Bible, an' you can
+read it for yourself, but I wouldn't take the time now.
+Just run along an' speak it out with Him, and, then
+come down to breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>Betty was standing by the kitchen door, her hand
+on her heart, as if about to do some great wonderful
+thing that frightened her:</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mrs. Carson, suppose, maybe, He might
+not be pleased with me. Suppose I've done something
+that He doesn't like, something that makes
+Him ashamed of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, why, didn't you know He fixed for all that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+when He sent His Son to be the Saviour of the
+world? We all do wrong things, an' everybody
+has sinned. But ef we're rightly sorry, He'll fergive
+us, and make us His children."</p>
+
+<p>Betty suddenly sat down in a chair near the door:</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mrs. Carson, I'm not sure I <i>am</i> sorry&mdash;at
+least I know I'm <i>not</i>. I'm afraid I'd do it all over
+again if I got in the same situation."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson stood back from the stove and surveyed
+her thoughtfully a moment:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, like's not it wasn't wrong at all,
+and if it wasn't He ain't displeased. You can bank
+on that. You better go talk it out to Him. Just
+get it off your mind. I'll hold up breakfast a minute
+while you roll it on Him and depend on it he'll
+show you in plenty of time for the next move."</p>
+
+<p>Betty with her cheeks very red and her eyes shining
+went up to her little cot, and with locked door
+knelt and tried to talk to God for the first time in
+her life. It seemed queer to her, but when she arose
+and hurried back to her duties she had a sense of
+having a real Friend who knew all about her and
+could look after things a great deal better than
+she could.</p>
+
+<p>That night she went with Bob and Emily to the
+young people's meeting and heard them talk about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+Christ familiarly as if they knew Him. It was all
+strange and new and wonderful to Betty, and she sat
+listening and wondering. The old question of
+whether she was pleasing her earthly father was
+merging itself into the desire to please her Heavenly
+Father.</p>
+
+<p>There were of course many hard and unpleasant
+things about her new life. There were so many
+things to learn, and she was so awkward at work
+of all kinds! Her hands seemed so small and inadequate
+when she tried to wring clothes or scrub a dirty
+step. Then, too, her young charge, Elise Hathaway,
+was spoiled and hard to please, and she was daily
+tried by the necessity of inventing ways of discipline
+for the poor little neglected girl which yet would
+not bring down a protest from her even more undisciplined
+mother. If she had been independent she
+would not have remained with Mrs. Hathaway, for
+sometimes the child was unbearable in her naughty
+tantrums, and it took all her nerve and strength
+to control her. She would come back to the little
+gray house too weary even to smile, and the keen eye
+of Ma would look at her wisely and wonder if something
+ought not to be done about it.</p>
+
+<p>Betty felt that she must keep this place, of course,
+because it was necessary for her to be able to pay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+some board. She could not be beholden to the Carsons.
+And they had been so kind, and were teaching
+her so many things, that it seemed the best and safest
+place she could be in. So the days settled down
+into weeks, and a pleasant life grew up about her,
+so different from the old one that more and more
+the hallucination was with her that she had
+become another creature, and the old life had gone
+out forever.</p>
+
+<p>Of course as striking-looking a girl as Betty could
+not enter into the life of a little town even as humbly
+as through the Carson home, without causing some
+comment and speculation. People began to notice
+her. The church ladies looked after her and remarked
+on her hair, her complexion, and her graceful
+carriage, and some shook their heads and said
+they should think Mrs. Hathaway would want to
+know a little more about her before she put her only
+child in her entire charge; and they told weird
+stories about girls they had known or heard of.</p>
+
+<p>Down at the fire-house, which was the real clearing-house
+of Tinsdale for all the gossip that came
+along and went the rounds, they took up the matter
+in full session several evenings in succession. Some
+of the younger members made crude remarks about
+Betty's looks, and some of the older ones allowed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+that she was entirely too pretty to be without a history.
+They took great liberties with their surmises.
+The only two, the youngest of them all, who might
+have defended her, had been unconsciously snubbed
+by her when they tried to be what Bobbie called
+"fresh" with her, and so she was at their mercy.
+But if she had known it she probably would have been
+little disturbed. They seemed so far removed from
+her two worlds, so utterly apart from herself. It
+would not have occurred to her that they could do her
+any harm.</p>
+
+<p>One night the fire-house gang had all assembled
+save one, a little shrimp of a good-for-nothing,
+nearly hairless, toothless, cunning-eyed, and given to
+drink when he could lay lips on any. He had a wide
+loose mouth with a tendency to droop crookedly,
+and his hands were always clammy and limp. He
+ordinarily sat tilted back against the wall to the right
+of the engine, sucking an old clay pipe. He had a
+way of often turning the conversation to imply some
+deep mystery known only to himself behind the life
+of almost any one discussed. He often added choice
+embellishments to whatever tale went forth as authentic
+to go the rounds of the village, and he acted
+the part of a collector of themes and details for the
+evening conversations.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His name was Abijah Gage.</p>
+
+<p>"Bi not come yet?" asked the fire chief settling
+a straw comfortably between his teeth and looking
+around on the group. "Must be somepin' doin'.
+Don't know when Bi's been away."</p>
+
+<p>"He went up to town this mornin' early," volunteered
+Dunc Withers. "Reckon he was thirsty.
+Guess he'll be back on the evenin' train. That's her
+comin' in now."</p>
+
+<p>"Bars all closed in the city," chuckled the chief.
+"Won't get much comfort there."</p>
+
+<p>"You bet Bi knows some place to get it. He
+won't come home thirsty, that's sure."</p>
+
+<p>"I donno, they say the lid's down pretty tight."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, shucks!" sneered Dunc. "Bet I could
+get all I wanted."</p>
+
+<p>Just then the door opened and Abijah Gage
+walked in, with a toothless grin all around.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Bi, get tanked up, did yeh?" greeted
+the chief.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, naow, an' ef I did, what's that to you?"
+responded Bi, slapping the chief's broad shoulder
+with a folded newspaper he carried. "You don't
+'spose I'm goin' to tell, an' get my frien's in trouble?"</p>
+
+<p>"Le's see yer paper, Bi," said Dunc, snatching
+at it as Bi passed to his regular seat.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Bi surrendered his paper with the air of one granting
+a high favor and sank to his chair and his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>"How's crops in the city?" asked Hank Fielder,
+and Bi's tale was set a-going. Bi could talk; that was
+one thing that always made him welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Dunc was deep in the paper. Presently he turned
+it over:</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" he said speculatively. "If that don't
+look like that little lollypop over to Carson's I'll eat
+my hat! What's her name?"</p>
+
+<p>They all drew around the paper and leaned over
+Dunc's shoulder squinting at the picture, all but Bi,
+who was lighting his pipe:</p>
+
+<p>"They're as like as two peas!" said one.</p>
+
+<p>"It sure must be her sister!" declared another.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't see no resemblance 'tall," declared the
+chief, flinging back to his comfortable chair. "She's
+got short hair, an she's only a kid. This one's
+growed up!"</p>
+
+<p>"She might a cut her hair," suggested one.</p>
+
+<p>Bi pricked up his ears, narrowed his cunning
+eyes, and slouched over to the paper, looking at the
+picture keenly:</p>
+
+<p>"Read it out, Dunc!" he commanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Five thousand dollars reward for information
+concerning Elizabeth Stanhope!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There followed a description in detail of her size,
+height, coloring, etc.</p>
+
+<p>An inscrutable look overspread Bi's face and hid
+the cunning in his eyes. He slouched to his seat during
+the reading and tilted back comfortably smoking,
+but he narrowed his eyes to a slit and spoke
+little during the remainder of the evening. They
+discussed the picture and the possibility of the girl in
+the paper being a relative of the girl at Carson's,
+but as Bi did not come forward with information the
+subject languished. Some one said he had heard
+the Carson kid call her Lizzie, he thought, but he
+wasn't sure. Ordinarily Bi would have known the
+full name, but Bi seemed to be dozing, and so the
+matter was finally dropped. But the hounds were
+out and on the scent, and it was well for Betty
+sleeping quietly in her little cot beneath the roof of
+the humble Carson home, that she had committed her
+all to her heavenly Father before she slept.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Well</span>, he gave me notice t'day," said James
+Ryan sadly as Jane and he rounded the corner from
+her boarding-house and turned toward their favorite
+movie theater. "I been expectin' it, an' now
+it's come!"</p>
+
+<p>Jane stopped short on the sidewalk appalled:</p>
+
+<p>"He gave you notice!" she exclaimed, as if
+she could not believe it was true. "Now, Jimmie!
+You don't mean it? Did he find any fault? He'd
+better not! B'leeve me, if he did he gets a piece of
+<i>my</i> mind, even if I am a poor workin' girl!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, he didn't find any fault," said Jimmie
+cheerfully. "He was awful nice! He said he'd
+recommend me away up high. He's gonta give me
+time every day to hunt a new place, an' he's gonta
+recommend me to some of his rich friends."</p>
+
+<p>"But what's the matter of him keepin' you?
+Did you ast him that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he told me right out that things wasn't
+working the way he hoped when he started; the war
+and all had upset his prospects, and he couldn't afford
+to keep me. He's gonta take an office way down<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+town and do his own letters. He says if he ever
+succeeds in business and I'm free to come to him
+he'll take me back. Oh, he's pleased with me all
+right! He's a peach! He certainly is."</p>
+
+<p>"Jimmie, what d'you tell him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him? There wasn't much for me to tell
+him, only I was sorry, and I thanked him, and I told
+him I was gonta stick by him as long as I didn't have
+a place. Of course I can't live on air, but seeing he's
+willing I should go out and hunt a place every day,
+why I ain't that mean that I can't write a few letters
+for him now and then. He don't have that many,
+and it keeps me in practice. I s'pose I've got to get
+another place but I haven't tried yet. I can't somehow
+bring myself to give him up. I kind of <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'wante '">wanted</ins>
+to stick in my first place a long time. It doesn't <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'l '">look</ins>
+well to be changing."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if it ain't your fault, you know, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'wh '">when you</ins>
+can't help it," advised Jane.</p>
+
+<p>They were seated in the theater by this time, and
+the screen claimed their attention. It was just at the
+end of the funny reel, and both forgot more serious
+matters in following the adventures of a dog and a
+bear who were chasing each other through endless
+halls and rooms, to say nothing of bathtubs, and
+wash boilers, and dining tables, and anything that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+came in their way, with a shock to the people who
+happened to be around when they passed. But
+suddenly the film ended and the announcements for
+the next week began to flash on the screen.</p>
+
+<p>"We must go to that, sure!" said Jimmie,
+nudging Jane, as the Mary Pickford announcement
+was put on.</p>
+
+<p>Then immediately afterward came the photograph
+of a beautiful girl, and underneath in
+great letters:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<span class="smcap">Five Thousand Dollars' Reward for Accurate<br />
+Information as to the Present Whereabouts<br />
+of Elizabeth Stanhope</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>There followed further particulars and an address
+and the showing stayed on the screen for a
+full minute.</p>
+
+<p>Jane sat gripping the arms of the seat and trying
+to still the wild excitement that possessed her, while
+her eyes looked straight into the eyes of the little
+bride whom she had helped to escape on the night
+of her wedding.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmie took out his pencil and wrote down the
+address in shorthand, but Jane did not notice. She
+was busy thinking what she ought to do.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you s'pose they want her for?" she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+asked in a breathless whisper, as a new feature film
+began to dawn on the screen.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, she's mebbe eloped," said the wise young
+man, "or there might be some trouble about property.
+There mostly is."</p>
+
+<p>Jane said no more, and the pictures began again,
+but her mind was not following them. She was very
+quiet on the way home, and when Jimmie asked her
+if she had a grouch on she shivered and said, no, she
+guessed she was tired. Then she suddenly asked him
+what time he was going out to hunt for another job.
+He told her he couldn't be sure. He would call her
+up about noon and let her know. Could she manage
+to get out a while and meet him? She wasn't sure
+either, but would see when he called her up. And
+so they parted for the night.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning when Reyburn entered his
+office Jimmie was already seated at his typewriter.
+On Reyburn's desk lay a neatly typed copy of the
+announcement that had been put on the screen the
+night before.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this, Ryan?" he questioned as he took
+his seat and drew the paper toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"Something I saw last night on the screen at
+the movies, sir. I thought it might be of interest."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you thinking of trying for the reward?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+asked Reyburn with a comical smile. "What is it,
+anyway?" And he began to read.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no sir!" said Jimmie. "<i>I</i> couldn't, of
+course; but I thought mebbe <i>you'd</i> be able to find out
+something about her and get all that money. That
+would help you through until you got started in your
+own business."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm! That's kind of you, Ryan," said the
+young lawyer, reading the paper with a troubled
+frown. "I'm afraid it's hardly in my line, however.
+I'm not a detective, you know." He laid the paper
+down and looked thoughtfully out of the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course not, sir!" Jimmie hastened to
+apologize. "Only you know a lot of society folks
+in the city, and I thought you might think of some
+way of finding out where she is. I know it isn't up
+to what you ought to be doing, sir, but it wouldn't
+do any harm. You could work it through me, you
+know, and nobody need ever know 'twas you got
+the reward. I'd be glad to help you out doing all I
+could, but of course it would take your brains to get
+the information, sir. You see, it would be to my
+interest, because then you could afford to keep me,
+and&mdash;I like you, Mr. Reyburn, I certainly do. I
+would hate to leave you."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, now, I appreciate that, Ryan. It's very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+thoughtful of you. I scarcely think there would be
+any possibility of my finding out anything about this
+girl, but I certainly appreciate your thoughtfulness.
+I'll make a note of it, and if anything turns up I'll
+let you know. I don't believe, however, that I would
+care to go after a reward even through someone else.
+You know, I was at that wedding, Ryan!" His eyes
+were dreamily watching the smoke from a distant
+funnel over the roof-tops in line with his desk.</p>
+
+<p>"You were!" said Jimmie, watching his employer
+with rapt admiration. He had no higher ambition
+than to look like Warren Reyburn and have
+an office of his own.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was there," said Reyburn again, but his
+tone was so far off that Jimmie dared approach no
+nearer, and resumed the letter he was typing.</p>
+
+<p>About noon Jimmie called up the factory while
+Reyburn was out to lunch and told Jane that he expected
+to go out at two o'clock. Could she meet him
+and walk a little way with him? Jane said no, she
+couldn't, but she would try and see him the next
+day, then he could tell her how he had "made out."</p>
+
+<p>At exactly five minutes after two, Jane, having
+watched from a telephone booth in a drug store
+until Jimmie went by, hurried up to Reyburn's office
+and tapped on the door, her heart in her mouth lest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+he should be occupied with some one else and not be
+able to see her before her few minutes of leave
+which she had obtained from the factory should
+have expired.</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn himself opened the door to her, and
+treated her as if she had been a lady every inch, handing
+her a chair and speaking quite as if she were
+attired in sealskin and diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>She looked him over with bright eyes of approval.
+Jane was a born sentimentalist, fed on the movies.
+Not for anything would she have had a knight rescue
+her lady fair who did not look the part. She
+was entirely satisfied with this one. In fact, she was
+almost tongue-tied with admiration for the moment.</p>
+
+<p>Then she rallied to the speech she had prepared:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Reyburn," she said, "I came to see you
+about a matter of very great importance. I heard
+you was a great lawyer, and I've got a friend that's
+in trouble. I thought mebbe you could do something
+about it. But first, I want to ast you a question, an'
+I want you to consider it perfectly confidential!"</p>
+
+<p>Jane took great credit to herself that she had
+assembled all these words and memorized them
+so perfectly.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly!" said Reyburn gravely, wondering
+what kind of a customer he had now.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I don't want you to think I can't pay for it,"
+said Jane, laying down a five-dollar bill grandly.
+"I know you can't afford to waste your valuable
+time even to answer a question."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's all right," said Reyburn heartily.
+"Let me hear what the question is first. There may
+be no charge."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Jane hastily, laying the bill firmly
+on the desk before him. "I shan't feel right astin'
+unless I know it's to be paid for."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well," said Reyburn, taking the bill
+and laying it to one side. "Now, what is
+the question?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Reyburn, will you please tell me
+what would anybody want to offer a reward, a big
+reward, like a thousand dollars&mdash;or several of them,&mdash;for
+information about any one? Could you think
+of any reason?"</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn started. Reward again! This was uncanny.
+Probably this girl had been to the movies
+and seen the same picture that Ryan had told him
+about. But he smiled gravely and answered, watching
+her quizzically the while:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they might love the person that had
+disappeared," he suggested at random.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" said Jane decidedly. "They didn't!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+I know that fer a fac'! What else could it be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they might have a responsibility!" he
+said thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No chance!" said Jane scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't they be anxious, don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so's you'd notice it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there might be some property to be
+divided, perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd thought of that," said Jane, her face growing
+practical. "It would have to be a good deal of
+property to make them offer a big reward,
+wouldn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should think so," answered Reyburn politely,
+watching her plain eager face amusedly. He could
+not quite get at her idea in coming to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Would her coming of age have anything to do
+with it?" put Jane, referring to a much folded paper
+she carried in her hand, as if she had a written catechism
+which she must go through.</p>
+
+<p>"It might." Reyburn was growing interested.
+This queer visitor evidently had thought something
+out, and was being very cautious.</p>
+
+<p>"I really can't answer very definitely without
+knowing more of the circumstances," he said with
+sudden alarm lest the girl might take some random
+answer and let serious matters hinge on his word.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, there's just one more," she said, looking
+down at her paper. "If a man was trying to make a
+girl marry him when she just hated him, could anybody
+make her do it, and would anybody have a right
+to put her in an insane 'sylum or anythin' ef
+she wouldn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no, of course not! Where did you ever
+get such a ridiculous idea?" He sat up suddenly,
+annoyed beyond expression over disturbing suggestions
+that seemed to rise like a bevy of black bats all
+around the borders of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"See here," he said, sitting up very straight. "I
+really can't answer any more blind questions. I've
+got to know what I'm talking about. Why, I may
+be saying the most impossible things without knowing
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I know," said Jane, looking at him gravely.
+"I've thought of that, but you've said just the things
+I thought you would. Well, say, if I tell you about
+it can you promise on yer honor you won't ever
+breathe a word of it? Not to nobody? Whether
+you take the case or not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, certainly, you can trust me to look out
+for any confidence you may put in me. If you
+can't I should prefer that you say nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I c'n trust you all right," said Jane smiling.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+"I just mean, would you be 'lowed to keep it under
+yer hat?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would I be allowed? What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean would the law let you? You wouldn't
+<i>have</i> to go an' tell where she was or nothin' an' give
+her away? You'd be 'lowed to keep it on the q. t. an'
+take care of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean would it be right and honorable for
+me to protect my client? Why, certainly."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I mean you wouldn't get into no trouble
+if you did."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then I'll tell you."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jane</span> opened a small shabby handbag, and took
+out a folded newspaper, opening it up and spreading
+it on the desk before him. "There!" she said, and
+then watched his face critically.</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn looked, and found himself looking into
+Betty's eyes. Only a newspaper cut, and poor at
+that, but wonderfully real and mournful, as they
+had struck him when she lifted them for that swift
+glance before she sank in the church aisle.</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you get this?" he asked, his voice
+suddenly husky.</p>
+
+<p>"Out o' the mornin' paper." Her tone was low
+and excited. "Were you wanting to try for the
+reward?" Reyburn asked.</p>
+
+<p>There was a covert sneer in the question from
+which the girl shrank perceptibly. She sprang to
+her feet, her eyes flashing:</p>
+
+<p>"If that's what you take me for, I better be
+goin'!" she snapped and reached out her hand for
+the paper. But Reyburn's hand covered the paper,
+and his tone was respectful and apologetic as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, I didn't quite understand, I see.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+Sit down, please. You and I must understand each
+other or there is no use in our talking. You can
+trust me to keep this conversation entirely to myself,
+whatever the outcome. Will you tell me what it is
+you want of me?"</p>
+
+<p>Jane subsided into a chair, tears of excitement
+springing into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see, it's pretty serious business," she
+said, making a dab at the corner of one eye. "I
+thought I could trust you, or I wouldn't a come.
+But you gotta take me on trust, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Reyburn. "Now, what have
+you to do with this girl? Do you know where
+she is?"</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly do!" said Jane, "but I ain't a-goin'
+ta tell until you say if there's anything you can
+do fer her. 'Cause you see, if you can't find a way
+to help her, I've gotta do it myself, an' it might get
+you into trouble somehow fer you to know what you
+ain't supposed to know."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said Reyburn, meekly. "Well, what are
+you going to tell me? Am I allowed to ask that?"</p>
+
+<p>Jane grinned.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, you're kiddin' me! I guess you are all
+right. Well, I'll just tell you all about it. One
+night last November,&mdash;you can see the date there in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+the paper, I was goin' home to my boardin' house
+in Camac Street, an' I was passin' the side of that
+church on 18th an' Spruce, where the weddin' was&mdash;you
+know, fer you was there!"</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn looked at her astonished.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know I was there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw you through the window, over against
+the wall to the street side of the altar," said
+Jane calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, somebody I know pointed you out once an'
+said you was goin' to be one of the risin' lawyers of
+the day," she answered nonchalantly, her face
+quite serious.</p>
+
+<p>A flicker of amusement passed like a ray of light
+through his eyes, but his face was entirely grave as
+he ignored the compliment.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on!"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw there was a weddin' an' I stopped to
+watch a minute, 'cause I expect to get married myself
+some day, an' I wanted to see how they did things.
+But I couldn't get near the door, an' the windows
+were all high up. I could only see folks who were
+standing up like you were. So I thought I'd go on.
+I turned the corner and went long-side the church
+listenin' to the music, an' just as I passed a big<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+iron gate at the back end of the church somebody
+grabbed me an' begged me to help 'em. I looked
+round, an' there was the bride, all in her white togs,
+with the prettiest white satin slippers, in the wet an'
+mud! I tried to get her line, but she cried out
+somebody was comin' back in the passageway, so I
+slipped off my coat an' hat and whisked her into 'em
+an' clapped my rubbers over her satin shoes, and we
+beat it round the corner. I took her to my room, an'
+gave her some supper. She was all in. Then I put
+her to bed, an' she told me a little bit about it. She
+didn't tell me much. Only that they had been tryin'
+fer a long time back to make her marry a man she
+hated, an' now they'd almost tricked her into it, an'
+she'd die if she had to do it. She wanted to exchange
+clothes with me, cause, of course, she couldn't
+get anywhere togged out that way, so we changed
+things, an' I fixed her up. In the mornin' I ran out
+an' got a paper, an' found they was sayin' she was
+temporary insane, an' stuff like that, an' so I saw
+their game was tryin' to get her in a 'sylum till
+they could make her do what they wanted. I fixed
+her up an' got her off to a place I know where she'd
+be safe. An' she's got a job an' doin' real well.
+But now they've got this here reward business out
+everywhere in the papers an' the movies, she ain't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+safe nowhere. An' I want somebody that's wiser'n
+me to take a holt an' do somethin'. I can't pay much,
+but I'll pay a little every month as long's I live ef
+it takes that long to pay yer bill, an' I have a notion
+she may have some money herself, though she didn't
+say nothin' about it. But there's a ring she left
+with me to sell, to pay fer what I gave her. It
+oughtta be worth somethin'. It looks real. I ain't
+sold it. I couldn't. I thought she might want
+it sometime&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Reyburn interrupted her excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say that Miss Stanhope is in
+the city and you know where she is?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, don't get excited," warned Jane coolly.
+"I didn't say she was in this city, did I? I didn't
+say where she was, did I? I said she was safe."</p>
+
+<p>"But are you aware that you have told me a very
+strange story? What proof can you give me that it
+is true?"</p>
+
+<p>Jane looked at him indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, I thought you was goin' to trust me? I
+have to trust you, don't I? Course you don't know
+who I am, an' I haven't told you, but I've got a good
+p'sition myself, an' I don't go round tellin' privarications!
+An' there's the weddin' dress, an' veil and
+fixin's! I got them. You can see 'em if you like,&mdash;that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+is pervided I know what you're up to! I ain't
+taking any chances till I see what you mean to do."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," said Reyburn, trying to
+smile assurance once more. "You certainly must
+own this whole thing is enough to make anybody
+doubt."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is," said Jane. "I was some upset
+myself, havin' a thing like that happen to me, a real
+millionairess bride drop herself down on my hands
+just like that, an' I 'spose it <i>is</i> hard to b'lieve. But
+I can't waste much more time now. I gotta get back
+to my job. Is there anything can be done to keep
+'em from gettin' her again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should most certainly think so," said Reyburn,
+"but I would have to know her side of the
+story, the whole of it, before I could say just what!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, s'pose you found there wasn't anythin'
+you could do to help her, would you go an' tell
+on her?"</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn leaned back in his chair and smiled at his
+unique client:</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have to quote your own language. 'What
+do you take me for?'"</p>
+
+<p>"A white man!" said Jane suddenly, and showed
+all her fine teeth in an engaging smile. "Say, you're
+all right. Now, I gotta go. When will you tell me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+what you can do?" She glanced anxiously at her
+little leather-bound wrist watch. It was almost
+time for Jimmie to return. Jimmie mustn't find her
+here. He wouldn't understand, and what Jimmie
+didn't know wouldn't hurt him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this ought to be attended to, at once,
+if anything is to be done," he said eagerly. "Let
+me see. I have an engagement at five. How would
+seven o'clock do? Could I call at your boarding-house?
+Would there be any place where we could
+talk uninterrupted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," said Jane, rising. "I'll get my landlady
+to let me have her settin' room fer an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Meantime, I'll think it over and try to plan
+something."</p>
+
+<p>Jane started down the long flights of stairs, not
+daring to trust to the elevator, lest she should come
+face to face with Jimmie and have to explain.</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn stood with his back to the room, his
+hands in his pockets, frowning and looking out the
+window, when Jimmie entered a moment later.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope I'm not late, sir?" he said anxiously,
+as he hung up his hat and sat down at his typewriter.
+"I had to wait. The man was out."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's all right, Ryan," said his employer,
+obviously not listening to his explanation. "I'm<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+going out now, Ryan. I may not be back this afternoon.
+Just see that everything is all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn went out, then opened the door and put
+his head back in the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I may have to go out of town to-night, Ryan.
+I'm not sure. Something has come up. If I'm not in
+to-morrow, could you&mdash;would you mind just staying
+here all day and looking after things? I may need
+you. Of course you'll lock up and leave the card
+out when you go to lunch."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll keep in touch with you in case I'm delayed,"
+and Reyburn was off again. When the elevator had
+clanked down to the next floor Jimmie went to the
+window and looked dreamily out over the roofs of
+the city:</p>
+
+<p>"Aw!" he breathed joyously. "Now I'll bet
+he's going to do something about that reward!"</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn hurried down the street to the office
+of an old friend where he had a bit of business
+as an excuse, and asked a few casual questions when
+he was done. Then he went on to a telephone booth
+and called up a friend of his mother's, with whom
+he had a brief gossip, ostensibly to give a message
+from his mother, contained in her last letter to him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+None of the questions that he asked were noticeable.
+He merely led the conversation into certain grooves.
+The lady was an old resident and well known in the
+higher social circles. She knew all there was to
+know about everybody and she loved to tell it. She
+never dreamed that he had any motive in leading
+her on.</p>
+
+<p>He dropped into a bank and asked a few questions,
+called up an address they gave him and made
+another inquiry, then dropped around to his cousin's
+home for a few minutes, where he allowed her to tell
+all she knew about the Stanhope wedding they had
+attended together, and the different theories concerning
+the escaped bride. Quite casually he asked
+if she knew whether the bride had property of her
+own, if so who were her guardians. His cousin
+thought she knew a lot, but, sifting it down, he discovered
+that it was nearly all hearsay or surmise.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached Jane Carson's boarding house
+he found that young woman ensconced in a tiny
+room, nine by twelve, a faded ingrain carpet on
+the floor, a depressed looking bed lounge against the
+bleary wall-paper, beneath crayon portraits of the
+landlady's dead husband and sons. There was a
+rocking-chair, a trunk, a cane-seat chair, and an oil
+stove turned up to smoking point in honor of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+caller, but there was little room left for the caller.
+On the top of the trunk reposed a large pasteboard
+box securely tied.</p>
+
+<p>Jane, after a shy greeting, untied the strings and
+opened the cover, having first carefully slipped the
+bolt of the door.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't be too careful," she said. "You
+never can tell."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn stood beside her and looked in a kind
+of awe at the glistening white, recognized the thick
+texture of the satin, the rare quality of the rose-point
+lace with which it was adorned, caught the
+faint fragrance of faded orange blossoms wafting
+from the filmy mist of the veil as Jane lifted it
+tenderly; then leaned over and touched a finger to
+the pile of whiteness, reverently, as though he were
+paying a tribute at a lovely shrine.</p>
+
+<p>Jane even unwrapped the little slippers, one at a
+time, and folded them away again, and they said no
+word until it was all tied back in its papers, Reyburn
+assisting with the strings.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, ef you don't mind waitin' a minute I
+guess it would be safer to put it away now," she said
+as she slipped the bolt and ran upstairs.</p>
+
+<p>She was back in a minute and sat down opposite
+to him, drawing out from the neck of her blouse a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+ribbon with a heavy glittering circlet at its end.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's the ring." She laid it in his palm. He
+took it, wondering, a kind of awe still upon him that
+he should be thus handling the intimate belongings
+of that little unknown bride whom he had seen lying
+unconscious in a strange church a few short months
+before. How strange that all this should have come
+to him when many wiser, more nearly related, were
+trying their best to get some clue to the mystery!</p>
+
+<p>He lifted the ring toward the insufficient gas jet
+to make out the initials inside, and copied them down
+in his note-book.</p>
+
+<p>"Take good care of that. It is valuable," he
+said as he handed it back to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Mebbe I better give it to you," she half
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"You've taken pretty good care of it so far,"
+he said. "I guess you've a better right to it than
+I. Only don't let anybody know you've got it. Now,
+I've been making inquiries, and I've found out a
+few things, but I've about come to the conclusion
+that I can't do much without seeing the lady. Do
+you suppose she would see me? Is she very
+far away?"</p>
+
+<p>"When do you want to go?" asked Jane.</p>
+
+<p>"At once," he answered decidedly. "There's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+no time to waste if she is really in danger, as
+you think."</p>
+
+<p>Jane's eyes glittered with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a train at ten-thirty. You'll get there
+in the morning. I've written it all down here on a
+paper so you can't make any mistakes. I've written
+her a letter so she'll understand and tell you everythin'.
+I'll wire Ma, too, so she'll let you see her.
+Ma might not size you up right."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn wondered at the way he accepted his
+orders from this coolly impudent girl, but he liked
+her in spite of himself.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes more he was out in the street
+again, hurrying to his own apartment, where he put
+together a few necessities in a bag and went to
+the train.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was one of those little ironies of fate that are
+spoken about so much, that when Warren Reyburn
+alighted from the train in Tinsdale Abijah Gage
+should be supporting one corner of the station, and
+contributing a quid now and then to the accumulations
+of the week scattered all about his feet.</p>
+
+<p>He spotted the stranger at once and turned his
+cunning little eyes upon him, making it obvious that
+he was bulging with information. It was, therefore,
+quite natural, when Reyburn paused to take his bearings,
+that Bi should speak up and inquire if he was
+looking for some one. Reyburn shook his head and
+passed on, but Bi was not to be headed off so easily
+as that. He shuffled after him:</p>
+
+<p>"Say!" he said, pointing to a shackley horse and
+buckboard that stood near, belonging to a pal over
+at the freight house. "Ef you want a lift I'll take
+you along."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, no," said Reyburn, smiling; "I'm
+not going far."</p>
+
+<p>"Say!" said Bi again as he saw his quarry about
+to disappear. "You name ain't Bains, is it?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No!" said Reyburn, quite annoyed by the persistent
+old fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"From New York?" he hazarded cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Reyburn, turning to go. "You
+must excuse me. I'm in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," said Bi contentedly. "I'll
+walk a piece with you. I was lookin' fer a doctor
+to take down to see a sick child. A doctor from New
+York. You ain't by any chance a doctor, are you?"
+Bi eyed the big leather bag inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Reyburn, laughing in spite of his
+annoyance. "I'm only a lawyer." And with a
+bound he cleared the curb and hurried off down
+the street, having now recognized the direction described
+in Jane's diagram of Tinsdale.</p>
+
+<p>Abijah Gage looked after him with twinkling
+eyes of dry mirth, and slowly sauntered after him,
+watching him until he entered the little unpainted
+gate of the Carson house and tapped at the old gray
+door. Then Bi lunged across the street and entered
+a path that ran along the railroad track for a few
+rods, curving suddenly into a stretch of vacant lots.
+On a convenient fence rail with a good outlook
+toward the west end of the village he ensconced himself
+and set about whittling a whistle from some
+willow stalks. He waited until he saw Bobbie Carson<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+hurry off toward Hathaway's house and return
+with Lizzie Hope; waited hopefully until the stranger
+finally came out of the house again, touching his hat
+gracefully to the girl as she stood at the open door.
+Then he hurried back to the station again, and
+was comfortably settled on a tub of butter just
+arrived by freight, when Reyburn reached there.
+He was much occupied with his whistle, and never
+seemed to notice, but not a movement of the stranger
+escaped him, and when the Philadelphia express came
+by, and the stranger got aboard the parlor car, old
+Bi Gage swung his lumbering length up on the back
+platform of the last car. The hounds were hot on
+the trail now.</p>
+
+<p>It was several years since Bi Gage had been on so
+long a journey, but he managed to enjoy the trip,
+and kept in pretty good touch with the parlor car,
+although he was never in evidence. If anybody had
+told Warren Reyburn as he let himself into his apartment
+late that night that he was being followed, he
+would have laughed and told them it was an impossibility.
+When he came out to the street the next
+morning and swung himself into a car that would
+land him at his office, he did not see the lank flabby
+figure of the toothless Bi standing just across the
+block, and keeping tab on him from the back platform,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+nor notice that he slid into the office building
+behind him and took the same elevator up, crowding
+in behind two fat men and effacing himself against
+the wall of the cage. Reyburn was reading his paper,
+and did not look up. The figure slid out of the elevator
+after him and slithered into a shadow, watching
+him, slipping softly after, until sure which door he
+took, then waited silently until sure that the door
+was shut. No one heard the slouching footsteps
+come down the marble hall. Bi Gage always wore
+rubbers when he went anywhere in particular. He
+had them on that morning. He took careful note
+of the name on the door: "<i>Warren Reyburn</i>, Attorney-at-Law,"
+and the number. Then he slid down
+the stairs as unobserved as he had come, and made
+his way to a name and number on a bit of paper
+from his pocket which he consulted in the shelter
+of a doorway.</p>
+
+<p>When Warren Reyburn started on his first trip
+to Tinsdale his mind was filled with varying emotions.
+He had never been able to quite get away from
+the impression made upon him by that little white
+bride lying so still amid her bridal finery, and the
+glowering bridegroom above her. It epitomized for
+him all the unhappy marriages of the world, and he
+felt like starting out somehow in hot pursuit of that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+bridegroom and making him answer for the sadness
+of his bride. Whenever the matter had been brought
+to his memory he had always been conscious of the
+first gladness he had felt when he knew she had
+escaped. It could not seem to him anything but a
+happy escape, little as he knew about any of the
+people who played the principal parts in the little
+tragedy he had witnessed.</p>
+
+<p>Hour after hour as he sat in the train and tried
+to sleep or tried to think he kept wondering at himself
+that he was going on this "wild goose chase,"
+as he called it in his innermost thoughts. Yet he
+knew he had to go. In fact, he had known it
+from the moment James Ryan had shown him the
+advertisement. Not that he had ever had any idea
+of trying for that horrible reward. Simply that
+his soul had been stirred to its most knightly depths
+to try somehow to protect her in her hiding. Of
+course, it had been a mere crazy thought then, with
+no way of fulfilment, but when the chance had
+offered of really finding her and asking if there was
+anything she would like done, he knew from the
+instant it was suggested that he was going to do it,
+even if he lost every other business chance he ever
+had or expected to have, even if it took all his time
+and every cent he could borrow. He knew he had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+to try to find that girl! The thought that the only
+shelter between her and the great awful world lay
+in the word of an untaught girl like Jane Carson
+filled him with terror for her. If that was true, the
+sooner some one of responsibility and sense got to
+her the better. The questions he had asked of
+various people that afternoon had revealed more
+than he had already guessed of the character of the
+bridegroom to whom he had taken such a strong
+dislike on first sight.</p>
+
+<p>Thus he argued the long night through between
+the fitful naps he caught when he was not wondering
+if he should find her, and whether he would
+know her from that one brief sight of her in church.
+How did he know but this was some game put up
+on him to get him into a mix-up? He must go cautiously,
+and on no account do anything rash or
+make any promises until he had first found out all
+about her.</p>
+
+<p>When morning dawned he was in a state of perturbation
+quite unusual for the son and grandson
+of renowned lawyers noted for their calmness and
+poise under all circumstances. This perhaps was
+why the little incident with Abijah Gage at the station
+annoyed him so extremely. He felt he was doing
+a questionable thing in taking this journey at all.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+He certainly did not intend to reveal his identity or
+business to this curious old man.</p>
+
+<p>The little gray house looked exactly as Jane
+had described it, and as he opened the gate and heard
+the rusty chain that held it clank he had a sense
+of having been there before.</p>
+
+<p>He was pleasantly surprised, however, when the
+door was opened by Emily, who smiled at him out
+of shy blue eyes, and stood waiting to see what he
+wanted. It was like expecting a viper and finding
+a flower. Somehow he had not anticipated anything
+flower-like in Jane's family. The mother, too, was
+a surprise when she came from her ironing, and,
+pushing her wavy gray hair back from a furrowed
+brow lifted intelligent eyes that reminded him of
+Jane, to search his face. Ma did not appear flustered.
+She seemed to be taking account of him and
+deciding whether or not she would be cordial to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I had a telegram from Jane this morning,"
+she was scanning his eyes once more to
+see whether there was a shadow of what she
+called "shiftiness" in them. "Come in," she
+added grudgingly.</p>
+
+<p>He was not led into the dining-room, but seated
+on one of the best varnished chairs in the "parlor,"
+as they called the little unused front room. He felt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+strangely ill at ease and began to be convinced that
+he was on the very wildest of wild goose chases. To
+think of expecting to find Elizabeth Stanhope in a
+place like this! If she ever had been here she certainly
+must have flown faster than she had from the
+church on her wedding night.</p>
+
+<p>So, instead of beginning as he had planned, to
+put a list of logically prepared keen questions to a
+floundering and suspecting victim, he found the clear
+eyes of Ma looking into his unwaveringly and the
+wise tongue of Ma putting him through a regular
+orgy of catechism before she would so much as admit
+that she had ever heard of a girl named Lizzie Hope.
+Then he bethought him of her daughter's letter and
+handed it over for her to read.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she admitted at last, half satisfied, "she
+isn't here at present. I sent her away when I found
+you was comin'. I wasn't sure I'd let you see her at
+all if I didn't like your looks."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, Mrs. Carson," he said heartily,
+with real admiration in his voice. "I'm glad she has
+some one so careful to look out for her. Your
+daughter said she was in a good safe place, and I
+begin to see she knew what she was talking about."</p>
+
+<p>Then the strong look around Ma's lips settled
+into the sweeter one, and she sent Bob after the girl.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Are you a friend of hers?" she asked, watching
+him keenly.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Reyburn. "I've never seen her but
+once. She doesn't know me at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you a friend of her&mdash;family?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!"</p>
+
+<p>"Or any of her friends or relations?" Ma meant
+to be comprehensive.</p>
+
+<p>"No. I'm sorry I am not. I am a rather
+recent comer to the city where she made her home,
+I understand."</p>
+
+<p>Ma looked at him thoughtfully for a moment.
+It wouldn't have been called a stare, it was too
+kindly for that, but Reyburn thought to himself
+that he would not have liked to have borne her
+scrutiny if he had anything to conceal, for he felt
+as if she might read the truth in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you&mdash;please excuse me for askin'&mdash;but are
+you a member of any church?"</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn flushed, and wanted to laugh, but was
+embarrassed in spite of himself:</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes&mdash;I'm a member," he said slowly,
+then with a frank lifting of his eyes to her troubled
+gaze, "I united with the church when I was a mere
+kid, but I'm afraid I'm not much of a member. I
+really am not what you'd call 'working' at it much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+nowadays. I go to morning service sometimes, but
+that's about all. I don't want to be a hypocrite."</p>
+
+<p>He wondered as he spoke why he took the trouble
+to answer the woman so fully. Her question was in
+a way impertinent, much like the way her daughter
+talked. Yet she seemed wholly unconscious of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I know," she assented sorrowfully. "There's
+lots of them in the church. We have 'em, too, even
+in our little village. But still, after all, you can't
+help havin' confidence more in them that has 'named
+the name' than in them that has not."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn looked at her curiously and felt a sudden
+infusion of respect for her. She was putting the test
+of her faith to him, and he knew by the little stifled
+sigh that he had been found wanting.</p>
+
+<p>"I s'pose lawyers don't have much time to think
+about being Christians," she apologized for him.</p>
+
+<p>He felt impelled to be frank with her:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't urge that excuse. Unfortunately
+I have a good deal of time on my hands now.
+I've just opened my office and I'm waiting for clients."</p>
+
+<p>"Where were you before that? You did not
+just get through studying?"</p>
+
+<p>He saw she was wondering whether he was wise
+enough to help her protege.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I spent the last three years in France."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Up at the front?" The pupils of her eyes
+dilated eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, in every drive," he answered, wondering
+that a woman of this sort should be so interested
+now that the war was over.</p>
+
+<p>"And you came back safe!" she said slowly,
+looking at him with a kind of wistful sorrow in her
+eyes. "My boy was shot the first day he went over
+the top."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm sorry," said Reyburn gently, a sudden
+tightness in his throat.</p>
+
+<p>"But it was all right." She flashed a dazzling
+smile at him through the tears that came into her
+eyes. "It wasn't as if he wasn't ready. Johnny
+was always a good boy, an' he joined church when he
+was fourteen, an' always kep' his promises. He used
+to pray every night just as faithful, an' read his
+Bible. I've got the little Testament he carried all
+through. His chaplain sent it to me. It's got a bullet
+hole through it, and blood-marks, but it's good to me
+to look at, 'cause I know Johnny's with his Saviour.
+He wasn't afraid to die. He said to me before he
+left, he says: 'Ma, if anythin' happens to me it's all
+right. You know, Ma, I ain't forgettin' what you
+taught me, an' I ain't forgettin' Christ is with me.'"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson wiped her eyes furtively, and tried<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+to look cheerful. Reyburn wished he knew how to
+comfort her.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes a man feel mean," he said at last, trying
+to fit his toe into the pattern of the ingrain carpet,
+"to come home alive and whole when so many
+poor fellows had to give their lives. I've often wondered
+how I happened to get through."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him tenderly:</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps your Heavenly Father brought you
+back to give you more chance to do things for Him,
+an' get ready to die when your time comes."</p>
+
+<p>There was something startling to this self-composed
+city chap in hearing a thing like this from the
+lips of the mother whose beloved son was gone forever
+beyond her teaching but had "been ready."
+Reyburn looked at her steadily, soberly, and then
+with a queer constriction in his throat he looked
+down at the floor thoughtfully and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps He did."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I can't help bein' glad you're a church
+member, anyhow," said Mrs. Carson, rising to look
+out of the window. "She needs a Christian to help
+her, an' I'd sooner trust a Christian. If you really
+meant it when you joined church you've got somethin'
+to fall back on anyhow. Here she comes. I'll
+just go an' tell her you're in here."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Betty</span>, her eyes wide with fear, her face white
+as a lily, appeared like a wraith at the parlor door and
+looked at him. It gave Reyburn a queer sensation,
+as if a picture one had been looking at in a story
+book should suddenly become alive and move and
+stare at one. As he rose and came forward he still
+seemed to see like a dissolving view between them the
+little huddled bride on the floor of the church. Then
+he suddenly realized that she was trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't be afraid of me, Miss Stanhope,"
+he said gently. "I have only come to help you, and
+if after you have talked with me you feel that you
+would rather I should have nothing to do with your
+affairs I will go away and no one in the world shall
+be the wiser for it. I give you my word of honor."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Betty, toppling into a chair near
+by. "I&mdash;guess&mdash;I'm not afraid of you. I just
+didn't know who you might be&mdash;&mdash;!" She stopped,
+caught her breath and tried to laugh, but it ended
+sorrily, almost in a sob.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't wonder," said Reyburn, trying to
+find something reassuring to say. "The truth is,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+I was rather upset about you. I didn't quite know
+who you might turn out to be, you see!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" Betty's hand slipped up to her throat,
+and her lips quivered as she tried to smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't feel that way," he said, "or I'll
+go away at once." He was summoning all his courage
+and hoping she wasn't going to break down and
+cry. How little she was, and sweet! Her eyes
+pleaded, just as they did in that one look in the
+church. How could anybody be unkind to her?</p>
+
+<p>"I'm quite all right," said Betty with a forced
+smile, siting up very straight.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I'd better introduce myself," he said,
+trying to speak in a very commonplace tone. "I'm
+just a lawyer that your friend Miss Jane Carson sent
+out to see if I could be of any service to you. It
+may possibly make things a little easier for you if
+I explain that while I never had heard of you before,
+and have no possible connection with your family or
+friends, I happened to be at your wedding!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Betty with a little agonized breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know Mrs. Bryce Cochrane?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Betty could not have got any whiter, but her
+eyes seemed to blanch a trifle.</p>
+
+<p>"A little," she said in a very small voice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, she is my cousin."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Betty again.</p>
+
+<p>"Her husband was unable to accompany her to
+the wedding, and so I went in his place to escort
+Isabel. I knew nothing of your affairs either before
+or after the wedding, until this announcement was
+brought to my notice, and Miss Carson called on me."</p>
+
+<p>Betty took the paper in her trembling fingers,
+and looked into her own pictured eyes. Then everything
+seemed to swim before her for a moment. She
+pressed her hand against her throat and set her white
+lips firmly, looking up at the stranger with a sudden
+terror and comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>"You want to get that five thousand dollars!"
+she said, speaking the words in a daze of trouble.
+"Oh, I haven't got five thousand dollars! Not
+now! But perhaps I could manage to get it if you
+would be good enough to wait just a little, till I can
+find a way. Oh, if you knew what it means to me!"</p>
+
+<p>Warren Reyburn sprang to his feet in horror, a
+flame of anger leaping into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Five thousand dollars be hanged!" he said
+fiercely. "Do I look like that kind of a fellow? It
+may seem awfully queer to you for an utter stranger
+to be butting into your affairs like this unless I did
+have some ulterior motive, but I swear to you that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+I have none. I came out here solely because I
+saw that you were in great likelihood of being found
+by the people from whom you had evidently run
+away. Miss Stanhope, I stood where I could watch
+your face when you came up the aisle at your wedding,
+and something in your eyes just before you
+dropped made me wish I could knock that bridegroom
+down and take care of you somehow until
+you got that hurt look out of your face. I know it
+was rather ridiculous for an utter stranger to presume
+so far, but when I saw that the sleuths were
+out after you, and when the knowledge of your
+whereabouts was put into my hands without the
+seeking, I wouldn't have been a man if I hadn't
+come and offered my services. I'm not a very great
+lawyer, nor even a very rising one, as your Miss Carson
+seems to think, but I'm a man with a soul to
+protect a woman who is in danger, and if that's you,
+I'm at your service. If not, you've only to say so
+and I'll take the next train home and keep my
+mouth shut!"</p>
+
+<p>He took his watch out and looked at it hastily,
+although he had not the slightest idea what it registered,
+nor what time the next train for home left.
+He looked very tall and strong and commanding as
+he stood in his dignity waiting for her answer, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+Betty looked up like a little child and trusted him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Please forgive me!" she cried. "I've
+been so frightened ever since Bob came after me. I
+couldn't think you had come for any good, because
+I didn't know any one in the world who would want
+to help me."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly!" said Warren Reyburn with a lump
+in his throat, sitting down quickly to hide his emotion.
+"Please consider me a friend, and command
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Betty taking a deep breath
+and trying to crowd back the tears. "I'm afraid
+there isn't any way to help me, but I'm glad to have
+a friend, and I'm sorry I was so rude."</p>
+
+<p>"You weren't rude, and that was a perfectly
+natural conclusion from my blundering beginning,"
+he protested, looking at the adorable waves of hair
+that framed her soft cheeks. "But there is always
+a way to help people when they are in trouble, and
+I'm here to find out what it is. Do you think you
+could trust me enough to tell me what it's all about?
+Miss Carson didn't seem to know much or else she
+didn't feel free to say."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't tell her much," said Betty, lifting her
+sea-blue eyes. "She was a stranger, too, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she's a mighty good friend of yours, I'll<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+say, and she's acted in a very wise manner. She
+took more precautions than an old detective would
+have done. She told me only that some one was
+trying to make you marry a man you did not wish to
+marry. Is that correct?"</p>
+
+<p>Betty shivered involuntarily and a wave of color
+went over her white face.</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds queer," she said, "as if I hadn't any
+character or force myself, but you don't understand.
+No one would understand unless they knew it all,
+and had been through it for years. At first I didn't
+quite understand it myself. I'd better tell you the
+story. I thought I never could tell any one, because
+they were my father's family, and I know he would
+shrink so from having it known, but I'm sure he
+wouldn't blame me now."</p>
+
+<p>"He certainly would not blame you, Miss Stanhope.
+I have heard that your father was a wonderful
+man, with high principles. I feel sure he would
+justify you in appealing to some one who was willing
+to advise you in a strait like this. You know no
+woman need ever marry any man against her will."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if it were her father's dying wish?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not. Miss Stanhope, did your father
+love you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm sure he did. He was the most wonderful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+father! I've often thought that he would never
+have asked it of me if he had realized&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Did he ever during his lifetime seem to wish
+you to be unhappy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never! That was the strange part of it. But
+you see he didn't know how I felt. I think I'd better
+tell you all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be the better way, if it won't be
+too hard for you."</p>
+
+<p>Betty clasped her small hands together tightly
+and began:</p>
+
+<p>"My own mother died when I was quite a little
+girl, so father and I were a great deal to each other.
+He used to look after my lessons himself, and was
+always very careful what kind of teachers I had. He
+was mother and father both to me. When I was
+ten years old my governess died suddenly while
+father was away on a business trip, and one of our
+neighbors was very kind to me, coming in and looking
+after the servants and everything and keeping
+me over at her house for a few days till father got
+back. She had a widowed sister visiting her, a
+rather young woman who was very beautiful. At
+least I thought she was beautiful then, and she made
+a great pet of me, so that I grew fond of her, although
+I had not liked her at first.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"After father came home she used to slip over
+every day to see me while he was at his business, and
+he was grateful to her for making me happy. Then
+he found out that she was in trouble, had lost her
+money or something, and wanted to get a position
+teaching. He arranged to have her teach me, and so
+she came to our house to stay.</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow after that I never seemed to see so
+much of my father as I used to do, for she was always
+there, but at first I didn't care, because she was nice
+to me, and always getting up things to keep me busy
+and happy. She would make my father buy expensive
+toys and books and games for me, and fine
+clothes, and so of course I was pleased. In about
+a year my father married her, and at first it seemed
+very beautiful to me to have a real mother, but little
+by little I began to see that she preferred to be alone
+with my father and did not want me around so much.
+It was very hard to give up the companionship of
+my father, but my stepmother kept me busy with
+other things, so that I really didn't think much about
+it while it was first happening.</p>
+
+<p>"But one day there came a letter. I remember
+it came while we were at breakfast, and my father got
+very white and stern when he read it, and handed it
+over to my mother and asked whether it was true,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+and then she began to cry and sent me from the table.
+I found out a few days after that that my stepmother
+had two sons, both older than myself, and that she
+had not told my father. It was through some
+trouble they had got into at school which required
+quite a large sum of money to cover damages that
+my father discovered it, and he was terribly hurt
+that she should have concealed it from him. I
+learned all this from the servants, who talked when
+they thought I was not within hearing. There were
+days and days when my father scarcely spoke at the
+table, and when he looked at me it made a pain go
+through my heart, he looked so stern and sad. My
+stepmother stayed a great deal in her room and
+looked as if she had been crying. But after a few
+weeks things settled down a good deal as they had
+been, only that my father never lost that sad troubled
+look. There was some trouble about my stepmother's
+sons, too, for there was a great deal of argument
+between her and my father, of which I only heard
+snatches, and then one day they came home to stay
+with us. Something had happened at the school
+where they were that they could not stay any longer.
+I can remember distinctly the first night they ate
+dinner with us. It seemed to me that it was like a
+terrific thunderstorm that never quite broke. Everybody<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+was trying to be nice and polite, but underneath
+it all there was a kind of lightning of all kinds
+of feelings, hurt feelings and wrong ones and right
+ones all mixed up.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the two boys didn't seem to feel it much.
+They sort of took things for granted, as if that had
+always been their home, and they didn't act very
+polite. It seemed to trouble my father, who looked
+at them so severely that it almost choked me, and I
+couldn't go on eating my dinner. He didn't seem
+like my dear father when he looked like that. I
+always used to watch my father, and he seemed to
+make the day for me. If he was sad, then I was sad;
+and if he was glad then I was happy all over, until
+one day my stepmother noticed me and said: 'See,
+dear little Elizabeth is trembling. You ought not to
+speak that way before her, Charles.' And then father
+looked at me, and all suddenly I learned to smile
+when I didn't feel like it. I smiled back to him just
+to let him know it didn't matter what he did, I
+would love him anyhow!"</p>
+
+<p>During the recital Reyburn had sat with courteous
+averted gaze as though he would not trouble
+her with more of his presence than was absolutely
+necessary. Now he gave her a swift glance.</p>
+
+<p>Betty's eyes were off on distance, and she was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+talking from the depths of her heart, great tears
+welling into her eyes. All at once she remembered
+the stranger:</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," she said, and brushed her
+hand across her eyes. "I haven't gone over it to
+any one ever, and I forgot you would not be interested
+in details."</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't mind me. I am interested in every
+detail you are good enough to give me. It all makes
+the background of the truth, you know, and that is
+what I am after," said Reyburn, deeply touched.
+"I think you are wonderful to tell me all this. I
+shall regard it most sacredly."</p>
+
+<p>Betty flashed a look of gratitude at him, and
+noticed the sympathy in his face. It almost unnerved
+her, but she went on:</p>
+
+<p>"The oldest boy was named Bessemer, and he
+wasn't very good-looking. He was very tall and
+awkward, and always falling over things. He had
+little pale eyes, and hardly any chin. His teeth
+projected, too, and his hair was light and very
+straight and thin. His mother didn't seem to love
+him very much, even when he was a little boy. She
+bullied him and found fault with him continually,
+and quite often I felt very sorry for him, although I
+wasn't naturally attracted to him. He wasn't really<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+unpleasant to me. We got along very nicely,
+although I never had much to do with him. There
+wasn't much to him.</p>
+
+<p>"The other brother, Herbert, was handsome like
+his mother, only dark, with black curly hair, black
+wicked eyes, and a big, loose, cruel mouth. His
+mother just idolized him, and he knew it. He could
+make her do anything on earth. He used to force
+Bessemer into doing wrong things, too, things that
+he was afraid to do himself, because he knew father
+would not be so hard on Bessemer as on him. For
+father had taken a great dislike to Herbert, and it
+was no wonder. He seemed to have no idea at all
+that he was not owner of the house. He took anything
+he pleased for his own use, even father's most
+sacred possessions, and broke them in a fit of anger,
+too, sometimes, without ever saying he was sorry.
+He talked very disrespectfully of father and to him,
+and acted so to the servants that they gave notice
+and left. Every few days there would be a terrible
+time over something Herbert had done. Once I remember
+he went to the safe and got some money out
+that belonged to father and went off and spent it in
+some dreadful way that made father very angry. Of
+course I was still only a little girl, and I did not know
+all that went on. Father was very careful that I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+should not know. He guarded me more than ever,
+but he always looked sad when he came to kiss
+me good-night.</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert took especial delight in tormenting
+me," she went on with a sad far-away look in her
+eyes as if she were recalling unpleasant memories.
+She did not see the set look on Reyburn's face nor
+notice his low exclamation of anger. She went
+steadily on: "He found out that I did not like June-bugs,
+and once he caught hundreds of them and
+locked me into a room with them with all the lights
+turned on. I was almost frightened to death, but it
+cured me of being afraid of June-bugs." A little
+smile trembled out on Betty's lips. "Just because
+I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of letting him
+hear me scream." She finished. "Then he caught a
+snake and put it in my room, and he put a lot of
+burdocks in my hat so they would get in my hair.
+Foolish things those were, of course, but he was a
+constant nightmare to me. Sometimes he would tie
+a wire across the passages in the upper hall where I
+had to pass to my room, and when I fell my hands
+went down against a lot of slimy toads in the dark,
+for he always somehow managed to have the light go
+out just as I fell. There were hundreds of things
+like that, but I needn't multiply them. That's the
+kind of boy he was. And because he discovered that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+my father loved me very much, and because he knew
+my father disliked him, he spent much time in trying
+to torment me in secret. I couldn't tell my father,
+because he always looked so sad whenever there was
+trouble, and there was sure to be trouble between him
+and my stepmother if my father found out that Herbert
+had done anything wrong. One day my father
+came upon us just as Herbert had caught me and
+was trying to cut my curls off. I didn't care about
+the curls, but I knew my father did. I began to
+scream. Herbert gripped me so I thought I would
+die with the pain, putting his big strong fingers
+around my throat and choking me so I could not
+make any noise."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn clenched his hands until the knuckles
+went white and uttered an exclamation, but Betty
+did not notice:</p>
+
+<p>"There was a terrible time then, and I was sent
+away to a school, a good many miles from home,
+where I stayed for several years. Father always
+came up to see me every week end, for a few hours at
+least, and we had wonderful times together. Sometimes
+in vacation he would bring my stepmother
+along and she would bring me beautiful presents and
+smile and pet me, and say she missed me so much
+and she wished I would ask my father to let me come
+back and go to school in the city. But I never did,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+because I was afraid of Herbert. As I grew older
+I used to have an awful horror of him. But finally
+one vacation father and mother both came up and
+said they wanted me at home. My stepmother went
+to my room with me and told me I needn't be afraid
+of Herbert any more, that he was quite grown up and
+changed and would be good to me, and that it would
+please my father to have all his family together happily
+again. I believed her and I told father I would
+like to go. He looked very happy, and so I went
+home. Herbert had been away at school himself
+most of the time, and so had Bessemer, although they
+had been in trouble a good many times, so the servants
+told me, and had to change to new schools.
+They were both away when I got home. I had
+a very happy time for three weeks, only that I never
+saw father alone once. My stepmother was always
+there. But she was kind and I tried not to mind.
+Then all of a sudden one night I woke up and heard
+voices, and I knew that the boys were back from
+the camp to which they had been sent. I didn't sleep
+much the rest of the night, but in the morning I made
+up my mind that it was only a little while before I
+could go back to school, and I would be nice to the
+boys and maybe they wouldn't trouble me.</p>
+
+<p>"I found that it was quite true that Herbert had
+grown up and changed. He didn't want to torment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+me any more, he wanted to make love to me, and I
+was only a child yet. I wasn't quite fifteen. It filled
+me with horror, and after he had caught me in the
+dark&mdash;he always loved to get people in the dark&mdash;and
+tried to kiss me, I asked father to let me go
+back to school at once. I can remember how sad he
+looked at me as if I had cut him to the heart when
+I asked him."</p>
+
+<p>During this part of the tale Reyburn sat with
+stern countenance, his fingers clenched around the
+arms of the chair in which he sat, but he held himself
+quiet and listened with compressed lips, watching
+every expression that flitted across the sweet
+pale face.</p>
+
+<p>"That was the last time I was at home with my
+father," she said, trying to control her quivering
+lips. "He took me back to school, and he came three
+times to see me, though not so often as before. The
+last time he said beautiful things to me about trying
+to live a right life and being kind to those about me,
+and he asked me to forgive him if he had ever done
+anything to hurt me in any way. Of course I said he
+hadn't. And then he said he hoped I wouldn't feel
+too hard at him for marrying again and bringing
+those boys into my life. I told him it was all
+right, that some day they would grow up and go
+away and he and I would live together again! And<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+he said some awful words about them under his
+breath. But he asked me to forgive him again and
+kissed me and went away.</p>
+
+<p>"He was taken very sick when he got home, and
+they never let me know until he was dead. Of
+course I went home to the funeral, but I didn't stay;
+I couldn't. I went back to school alone. My stepmother
+had been very kind, but she said she knew
+it was my father's wish that I should finish my
+school year. When vacation came she was traveling
+for her health. She wrote me a beautiful letter
+telling me how she missed me, and how much she
+needed me now in her bereavement, and how she
+hoped another summer would see us together; but
+she stayed abroad two years and the third year she
+went to California. I was sent to another school,
+and because I was not asked about it and there didn't
+seem anything else to do, I went. Every time I
+would suggest doing something else my stepmother
+would write and say how sorry she was she could
+not give her consent, but my father had left very
+explicit directions about me and she was only trying
+to carry out his wishes. She knew me well enough
+to be sure I would want to do anything he wished
+for me. And I did, of course."</p>
+
+<p>Reyburn gave her a look of sympathy and getting
+up began to pace the little room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">It</span> was not until last spring that she sent for me
+to come home," went on Betty, "and was very effusive
+about how much she needed me and how she
+was so much better, and meant to be a real mother
+to me now, helping me see the world and have a
+good time. She took me from one summer resort
+to another. Of course it was pleasant after having
+been shut up in school all those years, but she kept me
+close with her all the time, and I met only the people
+she chose to have me meet. All the time she kept
+talking about 'dear Herbert' and telling how wonderful
+he was and how he had grown to be 'such a
+dear boy.' Finally he arrived and began the very
+first evening he was with us to coax me to marry him.
+At first he was very courteous and waited upon
+me whenever I stirred, and I almost thought his
+mother was right about his being changed. But when
+I told him that I did not love him and could not ever
+marry him I caught a look on his face like an angry
+snarl, and I heard him tell his mother I was a crazy
+little fool, and that he would break my neck for me
+after he got me good and married. Then his mother<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+began to come to me and cry and tell me how dear
+Herbert was almost heart-broken, that he would
+never lift up his head again, and that I would send
+him to ruin. It was simply awful, and I didn't know
+how to endure it. I began to wonder where I could
+go. Of course I had never been brought up to do
+anything, so I could not very well expect to go out
+into the world and make my living."</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you have any money at all?" interrupted
+Reyburn suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," she said, looking up as if she had just
+remembered his presence. "I had always plenty of
+spending money, but if I went away where they
+couldn't find me, why, of course, I would have to
+give that up."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, where did your money come from? Was
+it an allowance from your stepmother, or did your
+father leave it to you, or what?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not just sure," said Betty, with troubled
+brow. "I never really knew much about the money
+affairs. When I asked, they always put me off and
+said that I was too young to be bothered with business
+yet, I would be told all about it when I came
+of age. My stepmother harped a great deal on keeping
+me young as long as possible. She said it was
+my father's wish that I should be relieved of all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+care until I came of age. But there were some trustees
+in Boston. I know that, because I had to write
+to them, about once or twice a year. My stepmother
+was most particular about that. I think they were old
+friends of my own mother, though I don't know
+when I learned that. Father told me once that
+mother had left me enough to keep me comfortably
+even without what he would leave me, so I'm sure
+I shall have enough to repay you if I could once
+get it."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry about me!" he exclaimed. "It
+seems so terrible for you to have been alone in a
+situation like that! Wasn't there any one you could
+appeal to for help?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not any one whom I thought it would be
+right to tell. You see, in a way it was my father's
+honor. She was his wife, and I'm sure he loved her&mdash;at
+least at first&mdash;and she really was very good to
+me, except when it was a question of her son."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't agree with you there!" he
+said sternly. "I think she was a clever actress. But
+excuse me. Go on, please."</p>
+
+<p>"At last, when things had got so bad that I thought
+I must run away somewhere, my stepmother came
+into my room one morning and locked the door. She
+had been weeping, and she looked very sweet and pitiful.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+She said she had something to tell me. She
+had tried not to have to do it, for she was afraid it
+would grieve me and might make me have hard
+feelings against my father. I told her that was impossible.
+Then she told me that my father on his
+deathbed had called her to him and told her that
+it was his wish that I should marry one of her sons,
+and he wanted her to tell me. He felt that he had
+wronged them by hating them for my sake and he
+felt that I could make it all right by marrying one of
+them. My stepmother said that when she saw how
+infatuated dear Herbert was with me she hoped that
+she would be spared having to tell me, but now that I
+was treating him so she felt bound to deliver the
+message. Then she handed me a paper which said
+virtually the same thing which she had told me,
+and was signed by my father in his own
+handwriting."</p>
+
+<p>"Was the paper written or printed?" interrupted
+Reyburn.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it was typewritten, but the signature
+was papa's. There could be no mistake about that,
+and he wouldn't have signed something he didn't
+mean." Betty sighed as if it were a subject she had
+worn into her heart by much sorrowful thought.</p>
+
+<p>"It might be quite possible for him to have done<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+that under influence or delirium, or when he was
+too sick to realize."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do you think so?" Betty caught at the hope.
+"It seems so awful to go against papa's last request."</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing awful but the idea of your
+being tied to that&mdash;beast!" said Reyburn with unexpected
+fervor. Betty looked at him gratefully and
+went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I was simply appalled. I couldn't think, and I
+made my stepmother go away and leave me for a
+little while, but things got blacker and blacker and
+I thought I was going crazy. I couldn't marry Herbert
+even to please my father. The next day
+Bessemer arrived. He had been worrying his mother
+a lot about money, and when he arrived I couldn't
+help hearing what they said to him. They charged
+him with all sort of dreadful things. They called
+him a disgrace, and threatened to let him be arrested,
+and a great many more such things. Finally his
+mother ended up by telling him she never had loved
+him and that if he made any more trouble about
+money she would cut him off without a cent. I was
+sitting upstairs in my room with my windows open,
+and all their talk floated right up to me. It made
+me feel sick, and yet I felt sorry for Bessemer, for
+lately whenever he had been around he had been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+kind to me, and sometimes I had stayed near him
+to get rid of Herbert. We often talked over our
+troubles together and sympathized with one another.
+He felt sorry for me, but he was weak himself and
+couldn't see any way out for either of us.</p>
+
+<p>"They had pretty stormy times all that day.
+Late in the afternoon Herbert and Bessemer went to
+their mother's room and were closeted with her for
+two hours, after which Herbert went away in the car
+with his suitcase and bags as if he were not coming
+back soon. I watched him from my window, and in
+great relief went down to take a little walk, for I had
+stayed closely in my room all day trying to plan
+what to do. One thing that held me from running
+away was that it would be such a disgrace to the
+family, and I knew my father would have felt it so
+keenly. That was always the great trouble when the
+boys got into scrapes at college, my father would
+groan and say he felt disgraced to be so conspicuous
+before the world. So I hesitated to do what would
+have been a sorrow to him had he been alive.</p>
+
+<p>"Half an hour later I was sitting alone in the
+twilight on one of the porches, and Bessemer came
+out and sat down beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"He looked so sort of homely and lonesome that
+I put my hand on his arm and told him I was awfully<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+sorry for him, and suddenly he turned around
+and said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Say, Betty, why don't you marry <i>me?</i> Then
+they can't say a word to either of us. Your father's
+wishes will be carried out and Herb'll have to whistle.'</p>
+
+<p>"At first I was horrified, but we talked a long
+time about it, and he told me how lonely he had
+always been, and how nobody had ever loved him,
+and he knew he wasn't attractive, and all that; and
+then he said that if I married him we would go away
+and live by ourselves and he would let me do just
+as I wanted to. He wouldn't bother me about anything.
+If I didn't love him he would keep out of my
+sight, and things like that, till I got very sorry for
+him, and began to think that perhaps after all it was
+the best thing that would ever come for either of
+us. So I said I would.</p>
+
+<p>"It surprised me a little that my stepmother took
+it so calmly when we told her. She cried a little, but
+did it very prettily, and kissed Bessemer, and told
+him he was fortunate. Then she kissed me and said
+I was a darling, and that she would be so happy
+if it only weren't for poor dear Herbert.</p>
+
+<p>"But after that they began to rush things for a
+grand wedding, and I let them do it because I didn't
+see anything else in the world for me."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Betty raised her eyes and encountered the clear
+grave gaze of Reyburn fixed on her, and the color
+flew into her cheeks:</p>
+
+<p>"I know you think I'm dreadful," she said,
+shrinking. "I've thought so myself a thousand
+times, but truly I didn't realize then what an awful
+thing it would be to marry a man I didn't love. I
+only wanted to hurry up and get it done before Herbert
+came home. They said he had been called away
+by important business and might be at home any
+day. I gave my consent to everything they wanted
+to do, and they fixed it all just as they pleased. One
+thing that happened upset me terribly. When the
+wedding invitations came home my stepmother carried
+them off to her room. I was too sad to pay
+much attention anyway. But the next morning I
+happened to be down in the kitchen looking over the
+papers that the maid had taken down from the waste
+baskets to search for a missing letter and there in
+the pile I found one of the invitations partly addressed
+and flung aside, and the invitation was still
+in the envelope. I pulled it out with a ghastly kind
+of curiosity to see how I looked on paper, and there
+it read, Mrs. Charles Garland Stanhope invites you
+to be present at the marriage of her daughter Elizabeth
+to <i>Mr. Herbert Hutton<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>!</i></p>
+
+<p>"My heart just stood still. With the paper in
+my hand I rushed up to my stepmother's room and
+demanded to know what that meant. She smiled
+and said she was so sorry I had been annoyed that
+way, that that was a mistake, the invitations had
+come wrongly engraved and she had had to send
+them back and have them done over again. She
+was afraid I might be superstitious about it, so she
+hadn't told me. She was very gentle and sweet and
+tried to soothe me, and called me 'Betty,' the name
+my father always had for me, and at last I went back
+to my room feeling quite comfortable. She had said
+she always felt troubled for poor Bessemer, that nobody
+could love him right, he was so homely, and
+now I was going to make everything right by marrying
+him. She was going to try to forget what I
+had done to poor dear Herbert, and just be happy
+about Bessemer. She talked so nicely that I kissed
+her, a thing I hadn't done in years, not since she was
+first married to father. But somehow the shock of
+seeing Herbert's name on the invitation stayed with
+me, and I began to feel gloomier about it all and
+to wonder if perhaps I had done right. The last
+day I was terribly depressed and when I got to the
+church that night it suddenly came to me that perhaps
+after all I was not going to be free at all as I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+had hoped, but was just tying myself up to them all
+for life. I was thinking that as I walked up the
+aisle, and my throat had a big lump in it the way it
+always does when I am frightened, and then I looked
+up hoping a glimpse of poor Bessemer's face would
+steady me and he wasn't there at all! And right
+over me, waiting beside the minister, to marry me
+stood <i>Herbert!</i> My knees just gave way under me,
+and everything got black so I couldn't go on another
+step, nor even stand up. I had to drop. I wasn't
+unconscious as you all thought&mdash;I heard everything
+that went on, but I couldn't do anything about it.</p>
+
+<p>"After they had carried me into the other room
+and given me things to drink, and I could get my
+breath again I saw it all clearly. Herbert hadn't
+given up at all. He meant to marry me anyway. He
+had had the invitations printed with his name on
+purpose and they probably hadn't been changed at
+all. Everybody in that great church out there was
+<i>expecting</i> me to marry Herbert Hutton, and I <i>was
+not going to do it!</i> I didn't quite know how I was
+going to stop it, but I knew I had to! You see I was
+brought up to think a great deal about what people
+would think of me if I did anything out of the
+usual, and it seemed to me I had disgraced myself
+forever by dropping down in the aisle. I knew<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+Herbert well enough to be sure he would carry that
+wedding through now if he had to hold me up in
+his arms till the ceremony was over, and I was
+desperate. I would have given everything I had in
+the world if the floor had opened and swallowed
+me up then, but of course I knew wild thoughts
+like that wouldn't get me anywhere, so I just shut
+my eyes and tried to think of a way; and then I
+asked them all to go out a minute and let me be quiet.
+The doctor who had come out of the church told
+them to go. I shall always bless that man, whoever
+he was! Then when they were gone I opened a door
+that had a key in it, and I locked it behind me and
+ran away down some stairs and out a passage that led
+to the street. That girl, Jane Carson, was passing
+and she put her own coat on me and took me to her
+room and sent me here. Oh, it's been so good to get
+here! Do you think they can take me away against
+my will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not!" said the young man. "Not
+without some foul play, but I don't intend to give
+them any chance for that. By the way, when do you
+come of age?"</p>
+
+<p>"In three weeks," said Betty, looking troubled.
+"Why, would I be safe after I was of age?"</p>
+
+<p>"You certainly would not be under their guardianship<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+any longer," said the young lawyer, "and
+they would have no right to control your actions, unless
+of course you were incapacitated somehow and
+unfit to manage your own affairs."</p>
+
+<p>Betty looked troubled.</p>
+
+<p>"I've thought sometimes, ever since I saw that
+paper in which they hinted that I was temporarily
+insane, that they might try to shut me up in an insane
+asylum. Herbert wouldn't stop at anything. Could
+he do that?"</p>
+
+<p>"They would have to get a doctor to swear that
+you were mentally unsound," said Reyburn, looking
+troubled. "Does he really love you, do you think
+or does he only want to get you in his power for
+some reason?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is more like that," said Betty sorrowfully,
+"he couldn't really love anybody but himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, don't you worry. I'm going at the case
+at once, and I'll put those people where they'll have
+to walk a chalk line before many hours are over. The
+first thing I must do is to see those trustees of yours.
+Can you give me the names and addresses?"</p>
+
+<p>He got out his fountain pen, and Betty told him
+all he wanted to know, that is, all she knew herself,
+and then suddenly it was train time and he hurried
+away. On the steps he paused and said in a low tone:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Are you perfectly comfortable with these people
+for a few days until I can get you better accommodations
+where you will be safe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Entirely," said Betty eagerly. "I wouldn't
+want to go elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"But it must be very hard for one like you to be
+thrown constantly with illiterate, uncultured people."</p>
+
+<p>Betty smiled dreamily:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think they are exactly uncultured," she
+said slowly. "They&mdash;well, you see, they make a
+friend of God, and somehow I think that makes a
+difference. Don't you think it would?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should think it would," said Warren Reyburn
+reverently with a light in his eyes. "I think, perhaps,
+if you don't mind my saying it, that you, too, have
+been making a friend of God."</p>
+
+<p>"I've been trying to," said Betty softly, with a
+shy glow on her face that he remembered all the way
+back to the city.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Candace Cameron</span> paced her little gabled room
+restively, with face growing redder and more excited
+at every step. For several weeks now she had
+been virtually a prisoner&mdash;albeit a willing enough
+one&mdash;in the house of Stanhope. But the time had
+come when she felt that she must do something.</p>
+
+<p>She had gone quietly enough about a proscribed
+part of the house, doing little helpful things, making
+herself most useful to the madam, slipping here
+and there with incredible catlike tread for so plump
+a body, managing to overhear important conversations,
+and melting away like a wraith before her
+presence was discovered. She had made herself so
+unobtrusive as to be almost forgotten by all save
+the maid Marie, who had been set to watch her;
+and she had learned that if she went to bed quite
+early in the evening, Marie relaxed her watch and
+went down to the servants' quarters, or even sometimes
+went out with a lover for a while, that is, if the
+madam herself happened to be out also. On several
+such occasions she had made valuable tours of
+investigation through the madam's desk and private
+papers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That she was overstepping her privileges as a
+servant in the house went without saying, but she
+silenced her Scotch conscience, which until this
+period of her existence had always kept her strictly
+from meddling with other people's affairs, by declaring
+over and over again to herself that she was
+doing perfectly right because she was doing it for
+the sake of "that poor wee thing that was being
+cheated of her rights."</p>
+
+<p>Several weeks had passed since her sudden re-establishment
+in the family, and the reports of Betty,
+so hastily readjusted and refurbished to harmonize
+with the newspaper reports, had not been any more
+satisfying. Mrs. Stanhope had explained to the
+servants the day after the excitement that Miss
+Betty had become temporarily deranged, and later
+that she had escaped from the private hospital where
+she had been taken, and they were doing all in their
+power to find her. In reply to Candace's gimlet-like
+questions she had given the name of a hospital where
+she said Betty had been taken at first, and everything
+seemed altogether plausible. But as the days
+went by and the horror of her absence grew into the
+soul of the lonely woman whose care Betty had been
+for years, Candace became more and more restive
+and suspicious. It was these <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'suspicians'">suspicions</ins> which sent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+her on her investigations, and made her uncannily
+wise to pry open secret locks and cover all trace of her
+absence after she had gleaned what knowledge
+she sought.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular evening her excitement was
+due to having come across some correspondence
+bearing the signature of a man to whom a certain
+letter had been addressed, which had been entrusted
+to her charge by Betty's dying father and taken from
+her by his wife. For years she had been worried
+about that, and yet she had no absolute reason to
+doubt that the madam had not sent it to its destination,
+except as she knew its contents and read Mrs.
+Stanhope's character beneath the excellent camouflage.
+But to-night, even the briefest glance through
+the bundle of letters showed plainly that those men
+in Boston never knew the master's wishes, or at least,
+if they knew them, they were utterly disregarding
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Aroused on one point, her suspicions began to
+extend further. Where was Betty? Did her stepmother
+know, and was she somewhere suffering,
+alone, perhaps being neglected because she had not
+done as they wanted her to do? If the stepmother
+was capable of destroying a letter, was she perhaps
+not also capable of putting Betty out of the way?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+There were points of detail which of course did not
+harmonize with any such theory as this. Candace
+was no logician, but she was keen enough to feel
+that something was wrong. As for that theory of
+Betty's insanity she scouted it with a harsh laugh
+whenever it was mentioned in her hearing. Betty&mdash;keen,
+sweet, trusting little Betty <i>insane!</i> Nonsense!
+It was unthinkable. If she was in an asylum anywhere
+she was there without warrant, and it behoved
+her faithful old nurse to find a way out for her.
+This she meant to do against all odds, for she was
+thoroughly aroused now.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the window and looked down into the
+lighted street. Over there not four blocks away
+rose the steeple of the church where Betty had gone
+to be married! Around the corner was the great
+brick pile of the hospital where her stepmother said
+she had been taken from the church, and from
+which she was believed by the other servants to
+have escaped.</p>
+
+<p>Standing thus looking out into the light-starred
+city, Candace began to form a plan, her plump
+tightly garmented chest rising and falling excitedly
+as she thought it all out. It was up to her to find
+out what had become of Betty. But how was she
+to get away without being suspected? Somehow she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+must do it. She knew perfectly the address that
+had been on that letter. She had written it down
+carefully from memory as soon as it had been taken
+away from her. She must go to Boston and find that
+man to whom it had been written, and discover
+whether he had ever received it. But she could not
+go until she found out certainly whether or not Betty
+had ever really escaped from the hospital. Who
+knew but that she was shut up there yet, and the
+madam telling this tale all about and advertising with
+a five thousand dollar reward! In the movies, too!
+Such a disgrace on the family! How the master
+would have writhed at the publicity of his beloved
+daughter&mdash;"poor wee thing!"</p>
+
+<p>Candace turned from the window with her lips
+set, and <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'tiptoing'">tiptoeing</ins> to the door, listened. Yes, it was
+Aileen who was coming lightly up the stairs, singing
+in a low tone. It was Aileen's evening out. That
+meant that Marie would be more than usually active
+on the upper floor. She must manage it before
+Aileen left and Marie was called upstairs, or there
+would be no opportunity to get away without Marie
+seeing her.</p>
+
+<p>Hastily she gathered her silk dress, her cloak and
+her apoplectic hat into a bundle with her purse and
+her gloves, and tied them into an old apron, with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+strings hanging free. Then stealthily opening the
+window, she dropped them out into the kitchen
+area below, close to the region of the ash cans. It
+was a risk, of course, but one must take some chances,
+and the servants would all be in the kitchen just now,
+laughing and talking. They would scarcely have
+heard it fall.</p>
+
+<p>She listened a tense instant, then closed the window,
+and possessing herself of a few little things,
+gathered hastily about the room, which she could
+stuff in her pockets, she opened her door softly,
+closed it behind her, and trotted off down the stairs
+just as if she were going about her ordinary duty.
+Listening a minute outside the kitchen door she
+slipped stealthily down the cellar stairs, and tiptoed
+over to the area door where the ashman took out
+the ashes. Softly slipping the bolt she opened the
+door and drew in her bundle. Then standing within,
+she quickly slipped the black silk over her housemaid's
+gown, donned her coat and hat and gloves,
+and sallied forth. A moment more and she was in
+the next street with the consciousness that she
+"might have done the like any time sooner, if she'd
+wanted, in spite of that little spy-cat Marie."</p>
+
+<p>"If I want to go back I'll just say I went after
+my insurance book," she chuckled to herself as she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+sped down the street in the direction of the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at the big building she asked to see the
+list of patients taken in on the day of Betty's wedding,
+and succeeded in getting a pretty accurate
+description of each one, sufficient at least to satisfy
+her that Betty was not among them. Then she asked
+a few more bold questions, and came away fully convinced
+that Betty had never been in that hospital.</p>
+
+<p>By this time it was nine o'clock, and she meant to
+take the evening train for Boston, which left, she was
+sure, somewhere near midnight. She took a trolley
+to her old lodgings where she had been since Mrs.
+Stanhope had sent her away the first time, and
+hastily packed a small hand bag with a few necessities,
+made a few changes in her garments, then went
+to see a fellow lodger whom she knew well, and
+where she felt sure she could easily get a check
+cashed, for she had a tidy little bank account of her
+own, and was well known to be reliable.</p>
+
+<p>Having procured the necessary funds, she made
+her way to the station and found that she had still
+an hour to spare before the Boston train left.</p>
+
+<p>Settled down at last in the back seat of a common
+car, she made herself as comfortable as her surroundings
+would allow, and gave herself up to planning
+the campaign that was before her.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Canny Candace did not go at once to the office
+of the brothers, James and George McIntyre, though
+she looked them up in the telephone book the very
+first thing when the train arrived in Boston even
+before she had had a bite to eat, and her cup of tea
+which meant more to her than the "bite." She
+reasoned that they would be busy in the early hours
+and not be able to give her their undivided attention.
+She had not lived out all her life for nothing. She
+knew the ways of the world, and she had very
+strict ideas about the best ways of doing everything.
+So it happened that when she was at last shown
+into the office of the McIntyres, Warren Reyburn
+who had traveled to Boston on the sleeper of the
+same train that she had taken the night before, was
+just arising from an earnest conference with the
+two men. With her first glance, as the three emerged
+from the inner office, Candace saw that the two elder
+gentlemen were much disturbed and it flitted through
+her mind that she had come at an inopportune moment.
+Then her quick eye took in the younger man
+and her little alert head cocked to one side with a
+questioning attitude. Where had she seen him before?
+Candace had the kind of a mind that kept
+people and events card-indexed even to the minutest
+detail, and it didn't take many seconds for her to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+place Warren Reyburn back in the church at the
+wedding, standing against the wall with his arms
+folded. She had noticed him particularly because
+he was so courteous to a little old lady who came
+in too late to get a seat. She had studied him as he
+stood there, waiting for the wedding march, and
+she had thought how handsome he looked and how
+fine it would have been if her wee Betty had been
+getting a man like that in place of the weak-faced
+Bessemer Hutton. She had watched to see who
+he was with, and felt deep satisfaction when she
+noticed him lean over and speak to Mrs. Bryce
+Cochrane as if he belonged to her. He wasn't her
+husband, because she knew Mr. Cochrane, who had
+been a favorite with Mr. Stanhope and much at the
+house. This man might be Mrs. Cochrane's brother
+"or the likes," and she had pleased herself watching
+him till Betty arrived and took all her thoughts. So
+now she stood with her little round head in its hectic
+hat tilted interestedly to one side, watching, ears on
+the keen to catch any word, for all the world like
+a "bit brown sparrow" saucily perched on another
+man's window, where it really had no right to be.</p>
+
+<p>At last one of the McIntyre's shook hands gravely
+with the younger man, and the other one attended
+him to the door, talking in low tones. The McIntyre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+thus set at liberty, turned questioningly toward
+the stranger, who was not slow in getting to
+her feet and coming forward.</p>
+
+<p>"You will maybe be Mr. James McIntyre?" she
+asked, lifting her sea-blue eyes set in her apple-red
+face, and fixing her firm little lips in dignity. Candace
+was a servant and knew her place, but she felt
+the importance of her mission, and meant to have
+no disrespect done to it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Mr. George McIntyre," the gentleman
+replied, and, indicating the man at the door, "Mr.
+James McIntyre will be at liberty in a moment, but
+perhaps I will do as well?"</p>
+
+<p>Candace cocked a glance toward the elderly back
+at the door; and then returned her look to
+Mr. George:</p>
+
+<p>"You'll maybe be knowing Mr. Charles Stanhope?"
+she propounded, as if she were giving
+him a riddle, and her blue eyes looked him through
+and through:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, surely, surely! He was a very close friend!
+You&mdash;knew him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was Miss Betty's nurse who cooked the griddle
+cakes for you the morning after the funeral&mdash;&mdash;"
+she said, and waited with breathless dignity to see
+how he would take it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Is that so!" He beamed on her kindly.
+"Yes, yes, I remember those cakes. They were delicious!
+And what can I do for you? Just sit
+down. Why, bless me, I don't know but that your
+coming may be very opportune! Can you tell me
+anything of Miss Betty?"</p>
+
+<p>Candace pressed her lips together with a knowing
+smile as much as to say she might tell volumes if it
+were wise, and she cast a glance at the other brother
+who was shaking hands now with his visitor and
+promising to meet him a little later:</p>
+
+<p>"Yon man'll be knowing a bit, too, I'll be thinking,"
+she hazarded nodding toward Reyburn as he
+left. "He was at the wedding, I'm most sure&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>The elder McIntyre gave her a quick glance and
+signalled to his brother to come near:</p>
+
+<p>"This is Miss Stanhope's nurse, the one who
+cooked breakfast for us at the time of the
+funeral," he said, and to Candace, "This is
+Mr. James McIntyre."</p>
+
+<p>Candace fixed him with another of her inquisitive
+little glances:</p>
+
+<p>"I've some bit papers put by that I thought ye
+might like to see," she said with a cautious air. "I've
+kept them fer long because I thought they might be
+wanted sometime, yet I've never dared bring them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+to your notice before lest I would be considered
+meddlin', and indeed I wasn't sure but you had them
+already. Will you please to look over them papers
+and see if you've ever seen them before?" She drew
+forth an envelope from her bag and handed it to
+them. "It's a bit letter that Mr. Stanhope wrote the
+day he was dyin' an' then copied and give to me to
+mail, and his lady took it away, sayin' she would
+attend to it. What I want to know is, did ye ever
+get the letter? If ye did it's all right and none of
+my business further, an' I'll go on my way back home
+again and think no more about it; but if ye didn't
+then there it is, an' you ought to see it, that's sure!"</p>
+
+<p>The two men drew eagerly together and studied
+the trembling lines:</p>
+
+<p>"It's his writing all right," murmured one,
+under his breath, and the brother nodded gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"You say that this was the original of a letter
+that was given to you to mail to us?"</p>
+
+<p>Candace nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"It's what he wrote first, and got ink on it, an'
+then wrote it over. I can't say what changes he
+made, as I didn't read it, but this he gave to me to
+burn, and before I gets it burned my lady comes in
+and takes the letter from me while he was sleepin';
+and so I hid the bit papers, thinkin' they might<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+be a help to wee Betty sometime. And oh, can ye
+tell me anything of my little Lady Betty? Is she
+safe? Did she come to you for refuge? You needn't
+be afraid to tell me. I'll never breathe a word&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>The two brothers exchanged quick glances of
+warning and the elder man spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"My good woman, we appreciate your coming,
+and these papers may prove very useful to us. We
+hope to be able to clear up this matter of Miss Stanhope's
+disappearance very soon. She did not come
+to us, however, and she is not here. But if you will
+step into the room just beyond and wait for a little
+while we may be able to talk this matter over
+with you."</p>
+
+<p>Very courteously he ushered the plump, apprehensive
+little woman into the next room and established
+her in an easy leather chair with a quantity
+of magazines and newspapers about her, but she kept
+her little head cocked anxiously on one side, and
+watched the door like a dog whose master has gone
+in and shut the way behind him; and she never sat
+back in her chair nor relaxed one iota during the
+whole of the two hours that she had to wait before
+she was called at last to the inner office where she
+found the handsome young man whom she remembered
+seeing at the wedding.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She presently found that Reyburn was as keen as
+he was handsome, but if she hadn't remembered him
+at the wedding as a friend of that nice Mrs. Cochrane,
+she never would have made it as easy as she did
+for him to find out things from her, for she could
+be canny herself on occasion if she tried, and she did
+not trust everybody.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> mysterious disappearance of Candace from
+the Stanhope house caused nothing short of a panic.
+Herbert and his mother held hourly wrangles,
+and frantically tried one thing and then another.
+Day after day the responses came in from the advertisements
+they had caused to be put forth. Everyone
+was hot-foot for the reward, but so far little of
+encouragement had been brought out. More and
+more the young man was fixing his mind on the idea
+that Candace had something to do with Betty's disappearance,
+so he was leaving no stone unturned
+to find the nurse as well as the girl. To this end
+he insisted on seeing personally and cross-examining
+every person who came claiming to have a clue to
+the lost girl.</p>
+
+<p>That morning, at about the same hour when Candace
+walked into the office of the McIntyre Brothers
+in Boston, James, the butler, much against his dignity,
+was ushering a curious person into the presence
+of the son of the house. James showed by every line
+of his noble figure that he considered this duty beneath
+his dignity, and that it was only because the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+occasion was unusual that he tolerated it for a moment,
+but the man who ambled observantly behind
+him, stretching his neck to see everything that was to
+be seen in this part of the great house, that he might
+tell about it at the fire-house, failed to get the effect.
+He was wondering why in thunder such rich people
+as these seemed to be, couldn't afford carpets big
+enough to cover their whole floors, instead of just
+having skimpy little bits of pieces dropped around
+here and there, that made you liable to skid all over
+the place if you stepped on one of them biasly.</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Hutton lifted his head and watched
+Abijah Gage slouch into the room. He measured
+him keenly and remained silent while Abijah opened
+up. There had been many other applicants for that
+reward that day, with stories cunningly woven, and
+facts, substantiated by witnesses, in one case a whole
+family brought along to swear to the fabrication;
+but as yet Herbert had not found a promising clue
+to his missing bride, and the time was going by.
+In a few days it would be too late, and his undisciplined
+spirit raged within him. It was not only his
+bride he wanted, it was her fortune, which was worth
+any trouble he might take; and every day, every
+hour, every minute now, it was slipping, slipping,
+slipping from his eager grasp.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Abijah was a little overawed in the presence of
+this insolent man of the world, but he felt he had,
+for almost the first time in his life, Truth on his side,
+and he was strong in the power of it. With a cunning
+equal to the one that matched him he dealt
+out his information bit by bit, giving only enough at
+a time to make his victim sure it was the real thing
+this time; and then he halted stubbornly and would
+say no more until that five thousand dollars was
+signed and sealed over to him. They had a long
+argument, but in the end Bi won, and was given
+certain documents which he was satisfied would stand
+in court. A little later the telephone in Reyburn's
+office rang sharply, and when Jimmie Ryan responded
+a voice that he had never heard before asked
+for Mr. Warren Reyburn.</p>
+
+<p>"He's out of town," Jimmie replied.</p>
+
+<p>"How soon will he be back?" The voice was
+like a snarl.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not quite sure. He's called to Boston on
+business," swelled Jimmie loyally.</p>
+
+<p>An oath ripped over the wire, and Jimmie raged
+within and quailed. Was his idol then losing a
+great case?</p>
+
+<p>"He might be back in a few hours," insinuated
+Jimmie. "Who shall I say called up if he should
+have me over long distance?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You needn't say anybody! I'll call up again,"
+growled the voice, and the man hung up.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmie sat for a long time in blissful reverie.
+"He's getting there!" he whispered to himself.
+"He'll get the big cases yet, and I can keep my first
+place. I must see Jane to-night and tell her."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, back at Tinsdale improvements had
+been going on at the Carsons'. Bob, always handy
+with tools, had been putting in a tank over the bathtub.
+They had one at the house on the hill, only it
+was run by a windmill. Bob had a friend who was
+a plumber's son, and from him had obtained some
+lengths of second-hand water-pipe and an old faucet.
+He had conceived the idea of a tank on the roof, and
+his first plan had been only a rainwater tank, but
+gradually as his vision widened he included a force
+pump in the outfit of desires. He hung around the
+plumber's until they unearthed an old force pump
+somewhat out of repair, and for a few days' assisting
+the plumber Bob acquired it, together with after-hour
+help to put it into operation. The next object
+was a tank, which seemed at first to represent the
+impossible; but the grocer at last offered a suggestion
+in the shape of several large empty hogsheads
+which he readily accepted at the price of four Saturdays'
+work in the store.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All Bob's extra time was put into these improvements,
+and he was as excited every night when it
+grew dark and he was forced to come to supper
+because he couldn't see any longer to work, as if he
+had been building an airship.</p>
+
+<p>The day the hogsheads were marshaled and connected
+and the force pump sent its first stream into
+them was a great occasion. The family assembled in
+the yard, with Elise Hathaway, who had been
+allowed to come over for a few minutes with Betty.
+Bob and his plumber friend pumped, and Emily
+climbed to the attic window, which overlooked the
+row of hogsheads, ranged so that the water would
+flow from one to the other, and acted as pilot to the
+new enterprise. As the first stream from the force
+pump, which Bob had lavishly painted red, crept
+its way up the pipes and began to wet the bottom of
+the first and highest hogshead Emily gave a little
+squeal of delight and shouted "It's come! It's come!
+The water's come!" and the family below fairly held
+their breath with the wonder of it. Not that such a
+thing could be, but that their own freckled, grinning
+Bob should have been able to achieve it.</p>
+
+<p>There was an elaborate system of tin conductors
+which conveyed the waste water from the bathtub
+out through a hole in the wall of the little laundry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+bathroom, and distributed it along the garden beds
+wherever its controller desired to irrigate. Thus the
+system became practical as well as a luxury. There
+was also an arrangement of gutter pipes for carrying
+off any surplus water from the hogsheads, so saving
+the Carson house from possible inundation at any
+time of heavy storms.</p>
+
+<p>After the plumbing was finished Bob painted the
+laundry neatly inside with beautiful white paint and
+robin's-egg blue for the ceiling, and Betty told him it
+almost made one think of going swimming in the
+ocean. Next he began to talk about a shower bath.
+Betty told him what one was like and he began to
+spend more days down at the plumber's asking questions
+and picking up odd bits of pipe, making measurements,
+and doing queer things to an old colander
+for experiment's sake. The day that Warren Reyburn
+came for the first time Bob had the shower
+part finished and ready to erect, and the next day
+saw it complete with a rod for the rubber curtain
+that Betty had promised to make for him. He and
+she were planning how they would make further
+improvements on the house before Jane and Nellie
+should come home for their summer vacation week.
+Betty had thoroughly entered into the life of the
+little household now, and was a part of it. She<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+saved her own small wages, and grudged all she
+had to spend for necessary clothes, that she might
+contribute further to the comfort and beauty of
+the general home.</p>
+
+<p>After Warren Reyburn's visit the last barrier between
+Betty and Ma seemed to be broken down. As
+soon as she had closed the door she flew into the other
+room and flung her arms around Ma's neck, bursting
+into soft weeping on her motherly shoulder. Ma had
+done a rapid turning act when she heard her coming,
+for in truth she had been peeping behind the green
+window-shade to watch the handsome stranger go
+down the street, but she would have dropped the iron
+on her foot and pretended to be picking it up rather
+than let Betty suspect her interest in the visitor.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mother," she murmured in Mrs. Carson's
+willing ear, "I have been so frightened&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know, dearie!" soothed the mother, quite as
+if she had been her own. "I know!"</p>
+
+<p>"But he was very kind," she said lifting her head
+with an April effect of tears. "He's going to try to
+fix things for me so that I don't need ever to be
+afraid of any one making trouble for me any more.
+You see, I sort of ran away. There was somebody I
+was afraid of who troubled me a great deal."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dearie, I thought as much," said Ma.
+"Jane kind of gave me to understand there was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+something like that. I'm real glad there's somebody
+goin' to look into your affairs an' fix things right
+for you. I knew you was restless an' worried. Now
+it'll get all straightened out. He's got a nice face.
+I trusted him first off. He's a church member, an'
+that's somethin'. They ain't all spiritual, but they're
+mostly clean an' just an' kindly, when they're anythin'
+at all but just plain hypocrites, which, thank
+the Lord, there ain't so many as some would have us
+believe. Now wash your face, dearie, an' run back
+to your place so you can come home early, for we're
+goin' to have the old hen with dumplin's for supper
+to celebrate."</p>
+
+<p>That was one charming thing about that household:
+they celebrated every blessed little trifle that
+came into their lives, so that living with them was
+like a procession of beautiful thanksgivings.</p>
+
+<p>It was while Betty was eating the gala "hen,"
+delicious in its festive gravy and dumplings, that she
+looked off across the little dining-room to the dark
+window with its twinkling village lights in the distance
+and thought of the stranger. A dark fear
+flashed across her sweet face and sparkled in the
+depths of her eyes for just an instant. Was it perhaps
+the distant bay of the hounds on her trail, coming
+nearer every moment? Then she remembered
+the heavenly Father and her new-found faith, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+turned back to the cheery little room and the children's
+pleasant clatter, resolved to forget the fear
+and to trust all to Him who cared for her. Perhaps
+he had sent the pleasant stranger, and the thought
+brought a quiet little smile to settle about her lips.
+She laughed with Bob and Emily at how they had got
+wet with a sudden unexpected shower from the new
+bath while they were arranging the curtain on the rod,
+and Emily had turned the faucet on without knowing
+it. The patient-eyed mother watched them all and
+was satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>How good it is that we cannot hear all the noises
+of the earth at the same time, nor know of every
+danger that lurks near as we are passing by! We
+grumble a great deal that God does not send us as
+much as we think he might, but we give scarce a
+thought to our escape from the many perils, lying
+close as our very breath, of which we never
+even dream.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, as they sat quietly eating their
+happy meal, a deadly particular peril was headed
+straight for Tinsdale.</p>
+
+<p>Abijah Gage and Herbert Hutton boarded the
+evening train for Tinsdale together and entered the
+sleeper. Abijah shuffled behind, carrying the bags,
+a most extraordinary and humiliating position for
+him. He had never been known to carry anything,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+not even himself if he could help it, since the day
+his mother died and ceased to force him to carry
+in wood and water for her at the end of a hickory
+switch. He glanced uneasily round with a slight
+cackle of dismay as he arrived in the unaccustomed
+plush surroundings and tried to find some place to
+dump his load. But the well-groomed Herbert strode
+down the long aisle unnoticing and took possession
+of the section he had secured as if he owned the road.</p>
+
+<p>"You can sit there!" he ordered Bi with a
+condescending motion, dropping into his own seat
+and opening a newspaper.</p>
+
+<p>Bi sat down on the edge of the seat, and held on
+to the arm in a gingerly way as if he were afraid
+to trust himself to anything so different. He looked
+furtively up and down the car, eyed the porter, who
+ignored him contemptuously and finally came back
+and demanded his sleeper ticket with a lordliness
+that Bi did not feel he could take from a negro. But
+somehow the ticket got tangled in his pocket, and Bi
+had a hard time finding it, which deepened his indignation
+at the porter.</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't takin' no sass from no one. My seat's
+paid fer all right," he said distinctly for the enlightenment
+of the other passengers, and Herbert Hutton
+reached out a discreet arm and dropped something in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+the porter's hand which sent him on his way and
+left Bi snorting audibly after him.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better shut up!" growled the dictator to
+Bi. "We don't want to be conspicuous, you know.
+If you can't hold your tongue and act as if you had
+ever traveled before, I'll get off this train at the next
+station and you can whistle for your reward. Do
+you understand?"</p>
+
+<p>Bi dropped his toothless lower jaw a trifle and
+his little eyes grew narrow. This was no way to
+manage affable Bi. He loved a good visit, and he had
+counted on one all the way to Tinsdale. He had no
+idea of sitting silent.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," he drawled, "an' I'll be gormed
+ef I'll agree. I ain't told you yet where we get off,
+an' I don't have to ef I don't wantta. Ef you can't
+treat me like a gen'l'man you know where you can
+get off, an' I ain't havin' to state it."</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Hutton drew his arrogant brows in a
+frown of annoyance, and whirled around to placate
+his guide:</p>
+
+<p>"Now see here, you old popinjay, what's got
+into you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, I ain't nobody's papa," babbled Bi,
+seeing he had scored a point. "I have enough to do
+to support myself without any family."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, have it your own way, only
+shut up or we'll have somebody listening. Have a
+cigar. Take two. But you can't smoke 'em in here,
+you'll have to go to the smoking-room. Wait! I'll
+see if we can get the drawing-room."</p>
+
+<p>The porter appeared and the change was effected,
+to the great <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'disapointment'">disappointment</ins> of Bi, who kept continually
+poking his head out to get a glimpse of the fine
+ladies. He would much have preferred staying out
+in the main car and getting acquainted with people.
+His cunning had departed with the need. He had
+put things in the hands of this surly companion, and
+now he meant to have a good time and something to
+tell the gang about when he got home.</p>
+
+<p>About midnight the train drew into a station and
+Herbert Hutton roused himself and looked out of
+the window. Bi, whose cunning had returned, followed
+his example. Suddenly he leaned forward
+excitedly and tapped the glass with a long finger:</p>
+
+<p>"That's him! That's the guy," he whispered excitedly
+as another train drew in and passengers
+began to hurry down the platform and across to the
+waiting sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sartin!"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean the one with the coat over his arm,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+and the two men behind?" He stopped short with
+an exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>Bi looked up cunningly. Now what was up? He
+saw a thunder-cloud on the face of his companion.</p>
+
+<p>With embellishments Herbert Hutton asked if Bi
+had ever seen the two tall gray-haired men who were
+walking with their prey.</p>
+
+<p>Bi narrowed his eyes and denied any knowledge,
+but perceived there were more sides than two to the
+enigma. Now, what could he figure out of those
+two guys? Were there more rewards to be offered?
+If so, he was a candidate. He wondered what chance
+there was of getting away from H. H. and sauntering
+through the train. He found, however, a sudden
+willingness on the part of his companion to vanish
+and let him do the scout work for the rest of
+the night.</p>
+
+<p>With a sense of being on a vacation and a chance
+at catching big fish Bi swung out through the train.
+Bumping down among the now curtained berths,
+adjusting his long form to the motion of the express,
+lurching to right and to left as they went round a
+curve, falling over an occasional pair of shoes and
+bringing down lofty reproaches from the sleepy
+porter, he penetrated to the day coaches and at last
+located his quarry.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They were sitting in a double seat, the younger
+man facing the two older ones, and had evidently been
+unable to get sleepers. Bi hung around the water-cooler
+at the far end of the car until he had laid out
+his plans; then he sauntered up to the vacant seat
+behind the three men and dropped noiselessly into its
+depths, drawing his hat down well over his face,
+and apparently falling into instant slumber, with
+a fair sample of Tinsdale snoring brought in at moderate
+distances.</p>
+
+<p>The conversation was earnest, in well-modulated
+voices, and hard to follow connectedly, for the men
+knew how to talk without seeming to the outside
+world to be saying anything intelligible. Occasionally
+a sentence would come out clear cut in an
+interval of the rhythm of the train, but for the
+most part Bi could make little or nothing of it.</p>
+
+<p>"In all the years we've been trustees of that
+estate we haven't seen her but twice," said one of
+the older men; "once at her father's second marriage,
+and again at his funeral. Then we only saw
+her at a distance. Her stepmother said she was too
+grief-stricken to speak with any one, and it was by
+the utmost effort she could be present at the service."</p>
+
+<p>"She looked very frail and young," said the other
+old man; "and her hair&mdash;I remember her hair!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Bi changed his position cautiously and tried to
+peer over the back of his seat, but the voices were
+crowded together now, and the younger man was
+talking earnestly. He could not catch a syllable.
+"Trustees!" That word stayed with him. "Estate"
+was another promising one, and the fact that
+her hair had been remembered. He nodded his old
+head sagaciously, and later when the three men settled
+back in their seats more comfortably with their
+eyes closed he slid back to the water-cooler and so on
+through the sleeper to the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>Hutton was sleeping the sleep of the unjust,
+which means that he woke at the slightest breath, and
+Bi's breath was something to wake a heavier sleeper.
+So they sat and planned as the train rushed on
+through the night. Now and again Bi took a pilgrimage
+up to the day coach and back to report the
+three travelers still asleep.</p>
+
+<p>About six o'clock in the morning the train slowed
+down, and finally came to a thrashing halt, waking
+the sleepers uncomfortably and making them conscious
+of crunching feet in the cinders outside, and
+consulting voices of trainmen busy with a hammer
+underneath the car somewhere. Then they drowsed
+off to sleep again and the voices and hammering
+blended comfortably into their dreams.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The passengers in the day coach roused, looked
+at their watches, stretched their cramped limbs,
+squinted out to see if anything serious was the matter,
+and settled into a new position to sleep once more.</p>
+
+<p>Bi, stretched for the nonce upon the long couch
+of the drawing-room while his superior occupied the
+more comfortable berth, roused to instant action,
+slipped out to the platform and took his bearings.
+He had lived in that part of the country all his life
+and he knew where they ought to be by that
+time. Yes, there was the old saw mill down by
+Hague's Crossing, and the steeple over by the soft
+maple grove just beyond Fox Glove. It would not
+be a long walk, and they had a garage at Fox Glove!</p>
+
+<p>He sauntered along the cinder path; discovered
+that the trouble with the engine was somewhat
+serious, requiring to wait for help, took a glimpse
+into the day coach ahead to assure himself that the
+three men were still safely asleep, and sauntered
+back to the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>His entrance roused the sleeper, who was on the
+alert instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, we got a hot box an' a broken engyne!"
+Bi announced. "It'll take us some time. We ain't
+fur from Fox Glove. We could santer over an' git
+a car an' beat 'em to it!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We could?" said Hutton. "You sure? No
+chances, mind you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do it easy. Those guys are asleep. They
+won't get to the Junction 'fore ten o'clock, mebbe
+later, an' they can't possibly get to our place
+'fore 'leven."</p>
+
+<p>"Lead the way!" ordered Hutton, cramming
+himself into his coat and hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Better slide down on the other side," whispered
+Bi as they reached the platform. "We kin
+go back round the train an' nobody'll notice."</p>
+
+<p>As if they were only come out to see what was the
+matter they idled along the length of the train
+around out of sight, slid down the bank, took a shortcut
+across a meadow to a road, and were soon well on
+their way to Fox Glove in the early cool of the spring
+morning, a strangely mated couple bent on mischief.</p>
+
+<p>Back on the cinder track the express waited,
+dreamily indifferent, with a flagman ahead and behind
+to guard its safety, and while men slept the
+enemy took wings and flew down the white morning
+road to Tinsdale, but no one ran ahead with a little
+red flag to the gray cottage where slept Betty, to
+warn her, though perchance an angel with a flaming
+sword stood invisibly to guard the way.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bob</span> had just finished feeding the chickens when
+the automobile drew up at the door, and he hurried
+around the house to see who it might be. He was
+rather looking for the return of that nice lawyer
+again. He felt the family expected him some time
+soon. Perhaps he would be to breakfast and mother
+would want some fresh eggs.</p>
+
+<p>They had dropped Bi at the edge of the village
+and there were only Hutton and the driver who had
+brought them. Bi had no mind to get mixed up in
+this affair too openly. He valued his standing in his
+home town, and did not wish to lose it. He had an
+instinct that what he was doing might make him
+unpopular if it became known. Besides, he had another
+ax to grind.</p>
+
+<p>Bob did not like the looks of the strange dark
+man who got out of the car and came into the yard
+with the air of a thrashing machine bolting into whatever
+came in his way. He stood sturdily and waited
+until he was asked who lived there, and admitted with
+a stingy "yes" that it was Mrs. Carson's house. A
+thundering knock on the front door followed, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+the other man in the car got out and came into the
+yard behind the first.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you needn't take the door down," snapped
+Bob, and scuttled around the house to warn his
+mother, aware that he had been rude, and glad of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was Betty who came to the door, for Ma was
+frying bacon and eggs for breakfast, and Bob hadn't
+been quite soon enough. She started back with a
+scream, and eluding the hand that reached for her
+arm, fairly flew back to the kitchen, taking refuge
+behind Mrs. Carson, with her eyes wild with fear and
+her hand on her heart, while Hutton strode after her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson wheeled around with her knife in
+her hand and faced him:</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by coming into my house
+this way, I'd like to know?" she demanded angrily,
+putting her arm around Betty.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," said Hutton, a poor apology
+for courtesy slipping into his manner. "I don't
+suppose you know it, but that is my wife you are
+harboring there, and she ran away from home several
+months ago! I have just discovered her whereabouts
+and have come to take her away!"</p>
+
+<p>Ma straightened up with the air of a queen and
+a judge, while Betty stifled a scream and in a small
+voice full of terror cried: "It isn't true, Mrs. Carson,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+it isn't true! Oh, <i>mother</i>, don't let him take me!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson pushed Betty behind her, the knife
+still in her other hand, and answered with dignity:</p>
+
+<p>"You've made a big mistake, Mr. Herbert
+Hutton; this isn't your wife at all. I know all
+about you."</p>
+
+<p>Hutton put on a look of instant suavity.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course, madam, she has told you that,
+but I'm sorry to have to tell you that she is not
+in her right mind. She made her escape from the
+insane asylum."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, rats!" shouted Bob, and vanished out the
+kitchen door, slamming it behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Emily, frightened and white, stood just outside,
+and he nearly knocked her over in his flight. He
+pulled her along with him, whispering in her
+ear excitedly:</p>
+
+<p>"You beat it down to the fire gong and hit it
+for all you're worth! Quick!"</p>
+
+<p>Emily gave him one frightened look and sprang
+to action. Her little feet sped down the path to
+the lot where hung the big fire gong, like two wild
+rabbits running for their life, and in a moment more
+the loud whang of alarm rang through the little town,
+arousing the "gang" and greatly disconcerting Bi,
+who was craning his neck at the station and watching<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+the fast-growing speck down the railroad track.
+That sure was the train coming already. How had
+they made it so soon?</p>
+
+<p>But Bob was on his stomach in the road scuttling
+the ship that was to have carried away the princess.
+The chauffeur was fully occupied in the house, for he
+had been ordered to follow and be ready to assist in
+carrying away an insane person, and he had no
+thought for his car at present. It was an ugly job,
+and one that he didn't like, but he was getting big
+pay, and such things had to be done.</p>
+
+<p>Bob's knife was sharp. He always kept it in good
+condition. It did many of the chores about the
+house, and was cunning in its skill. It cut beautiful
+long punctures in the four tires, until there was
+no chance at all of that car's going on its way
+for some time to come. Then he squirmed his way
+out on the opposite side from the house, slid along
+by the fence to the side door, around to the back
+like a flash and without an instant's hesitation hauled
+up his elaborate system of drainage. He stuck the
+longest conductor pipe through the open window of
+the old laundry, clutched at the sill and swung inside,
+drawing the pipe in after him.</p>
+
+<p>The altercation in the kitchen had reached white
+heat. Hutton's suavity was fast disappearing behind<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+a loud angry tone. He had about sized up Ma
+and decided to use force.</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a tense moment when Bob, his hasty arrangements made, silently swung
+open the laundry door in full range of the uninvited guests and waited for the
+psychological moment. Mrs. Carson had dropped her knife and seized the smoking
+hot frying-pan <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">of bacon as a weapon. She was
+cool and collected,</span> but one could see in her eyes the little devil of
+battle that sometimes sat in Bob's eyes as she swung the frying-pan back for a
+blow. Suddenly out flashed a cold steel eye, menacing, unanswerable, looking
+straight into her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>At that instant, unannounced and unobserved,
+through the laundry door lumbered a long ugly tin
+conductor pipe, and the deluge began. Straight into
+the eyes of the would-be husband it gushed, battering
+swashingly down on the cocked revolver, sending it
+harmlessly to the floor, where it added to the confusion
+by going off with a loud report, and sending
+the chauffeur to the shelter of the parlor. Bob never
+knew how near he came to killing some one by his
+hasty service, and Ma never had the heart to suggest
+it. Instead she acted promptly and secured the
+weapon before the enemy had time to recover from
+his shock.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Bob, in the laundry, standing on a chair mounted
+on a board across the bathtub, sturdily held his
+wobbling conductor pipe and aimed it straight to the
+mark. Of course he knew that even a well-filled
+phalanx of hogsheads could not hold the enemy forever,
+but he was counting on the fire company to
+arrive in time to save the day.</p>
+
+<p>Gasping, clawing the air, ducking, diving here
+and there to escape the stream, Herbert Hutton presented
+a spectacle most amusing and satisfying to
+Bob's boy mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Beat it, Lizzie, beat it! Beat it!" he shouted
+above the noise of the pouring waters. But Betty,
+white with horror, seemed to have frozen to the spot.
+She could not have moved if she had tried, and
+her brain refused to order her to try. She felt
+as if the end of everything had come and she
+were paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p>Down the street with dash and flourish, licking
+up excitement like a good meal, dashed the gang,
+the fire chief ostentatiously arraying himself in rubber
+coat and helmet as he stood on the side of the
+engine, while the hysterical little engine bell banged
+away, blending with the sound of the bell of the
+incoming train at the station. Bi, with his mouth
+stretched wide, and one foot holding him for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+train while the other urged toward the fire and
+excitement, vibrated on the platform, a wild figure
+of uncertainty. Where Duty and Inclination both
+called, Cupidity still had the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p>For once Bi did not have to act a part as he stood
+watching the three travelers descend from the train.
+The excitement in his face was real and his gestures
+were quite natural, even the ones made by his one
+and only long waving top-lock of gray hair that
+escaped all bounds as his hat blew off with the
+suction of the train. Bi rushed up to the three
+men wildly:</p>
+
+<p>"Say, was you goin' down to Carson's house
+after that Hope girl?" he demanded loudly.</p>
+
+<p>The three men surveyed him coldly, and the
+young one gave him a decided shove:</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, my friend," he said firmly. "We
+don't need any of your assistance."</p>
+
+<p>"But I got a line on this thing you'll want to
+know," he insisted, hurrying alongside. "There's a
+guy down there in a car goin' to take her away. He
+ain't been gone long, but you won't find her 'thout
+my help. He's goin' to take her to a insane institution.
+I let on I was helpin' him an' I found out
+all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"What's all this?" said Reyburn, wheeling about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+and fixing the old fellow with a muscular young
+shake that made his toothless jaws chatter. "How
+long ago did he go? What kind of a looking man
+was he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lemme go!" whined Bi, playing to make time,
+one cunning eye down the road. "I ain't as young
+as I used to be, an' I can't stand gettin' excited. I
+got a rig here a purpose, an' I'll take you all right
+down, an' then ef he's gone, an' I s'pose he must be,
+'cause your train was late, why, we'll foller."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, quick, then!" said Reyburn, climbing
+into the shackley spring wagon that Bi indicated, the
+only vehicle in view. The two trustees climbed
+stiffly and uncertainly into the back seat as if they
+felt they were risking their lives, and Bi lumbered
+rheumatically into the driver's place and took up the
+lines. It appeared that the only living thing in Tinsdale
+that wasn't awake and keen to go to the fire was
+that horse, and Bi had to do quite a little urging
+with the stump of an old whip. So, reluctantly, they
+joined the procession toward the Carson house.</p>
+
+<p>As the stream from the hogshead gurgled smaller,
+and the victim writhed out of its reach and began to
+get his bearings, suddenly the outside kitchen door
+burst open and a crew of rubber-coated citizens
+sprang in, preceded by a generous stream of chemicals
+which an ardent young member of the company<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+set free indiscriminately in his excitement. It struck
+the right man squarely in the middle and sent him
+sprawling on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>Bob dropped the conductor pipe in exhausted
+relief and flew to the scene of action. It had been
+fearful to be held from more active service so long.
+Emily, outside, could be seen dancing up and down
+excitedly and directing the procession, with frightened
+shouts, "In there! In the kitchen! Quick!"
+as the neighbors and townsmen crowded in and filled
+the little kitchen demanding to know where the
+fire was.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson with dignity stepped forward to
+explain:</p>
+
+<p>"There ain't any fire, friends, an' I don't know
+how you all come to get here, but I reckon the Lord
+sent you. You couldn't a-come at a better moment.
+We certainly was in some trouble, an' I'll be obliged
+to you all if you'll just fasten that man up so't he
+can't do any more harm. He came walkin' in here
+tryin' to take away a member of my family by force,
+an' he pointed this at me!"</p>
+
+<p>She lifted the incriminating weapon high where
+they could all see.</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Hutton, struggling to his feet in the
+crowd, began to understand that this was no place
+for him, and looked about for an exit, but none presented<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+itself. The chauffeur had vanished and was
+trying to make out what had happened to his car.</p>
+
+<p>Hutton, brought to bay, turned on the crowd like
+a snarling animal, although the effect was slightly
+spoiled by his drabbled appearance, and roared
+out insolently:</p>
+
+<p>"The woman doesn't know what she's talking
+about, men; she's only frightened. I came here after
+my wife, and I intend to take her away with me!
+She escaped from an insane asylum some time ago,
+and we've been looking for her ever since. This
+woman is doing a very foolish and useless thing
+in resisting me, for the law can take hold of
+her, of course."</p>
+
+<p>The crowd wavered and looked uncertainly at
+Mrs. Carson and at Betty cowering horrified behind
+her, and Hutton saw his advantage:</p>
+
+<p>"Men," he went on, "there is one of your own
+townsmen who knows me and can vouch for me.
+A Mr. Gage. Abijah Gage. If you will just look
+him up&mdash;he was down at the station a few minutes
+ago. He knows that all I am saying is true!"</p>
+
+<p>A low sound like a rumble went over the little
+audience and they seemed to bunch together and
+look at one another while some kind of an understanding
+traveled from eye to eye. An articulate syllable,
+"Bi!" breathed in astonishment, and then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+again "Bi!" in contempt. Public opinion, like a
+panther crouching, was forming itself ready to
+spring, when suddenly a new presence was felt in the
+room. Three strangers had appeared and somehow
+quietly gotten into the doorway. Behind them,
+stretching his neck and unable to be cautious any
+longer, appeared Bi's slouching form. Crouching
+Public Opinion caught sight of him and showed its
+teeth, but was diverted by the strangers.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly, from the corner behind Ma,
+slipped Betty with outstretched hands, like a lost
+thing flying to its refuge, straight to the side of
+the handsome young stranger.</p>
+
+<p>He put out his hands and drew her to his side
+with a protecting motion, and she whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"Tell, them, please; oh, make them understand."</p>
+
+<p>Then Reyburn, with her hand still protectingly
+in his, spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"What that man has just said is a lie!"</p>
+
+<p>Hutton looked up, went deadly white and reeled
+as he saw the two elderly men.</p>
+
+<p>The crowd drew a united breath and stood
+straighter, looking relieved. Bi blanched, but did
+not budge. Whatever happened he was in with both
+crowds. Reyburn continued:</p>
+
+<p>"I carry papers in my pocket which give authority<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+to arrest him. If the sheriff is present will he
+please take charge of him. His name is Herbert
+Hutton, and he is charged with trying to make this
+lady marry him under false pretenses in order to get
+control of her property. She is not his wife, for she
+escaped before the ceremony was performed. I
+know, for I was present. These two gentlemen with
+me are the trustees of her estate."</p>
+
+<p>Estate!</p>
+
+<p>The neighbors looked at Betty respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>Bi dropped his jaw perceptibly and tried to
+figure out how that would affect him. The sheriff
+stepped forward to magnify his office, and the silence
+was impressive, almost reverent. In the midst of it
+broke Bob's practical suggestion:</p>
+
+<p>"Shut him in the coal shed. It's got a padlock an'
+is good an' strong. He can't kick it down."</p>
+
+<p>Then the law began to take its course, the fire
+gang stepped out, and Mrs. Carson set to work
+to clean up. In the midst of it all Reyburn looked
+down at Betty, and Betty looked up at Reyburn,
+and they discovered in some happy confusion that
+they still had hold of hands. They tried to cover
+their embarrassment by laughing, but something
+had been established between them that neither
+could forget.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> days that followed were full of bliss and
+peace to Betty. With Hutton safely confined in the
+distant city, and a comfortable sum of her accumulated
+allowance in the Tinsdale bank, with a thorough
+understanding between herself and her trustees
+and the knowledge that her estate was large
+enough to do almost anything in reason that she
+wished to do with it, and would be hers in three
+weeks, life began to take on a different look to the
+poor storm-tossed child. The days in the Carson
+home were all Thanksgivings now, and every member
+of the family was as excited and happy as every
+other member. There were arguments long and
+earnest between Betty and her benefactor as to how
+much she might in reason be allowed to do for the
+family now that she had plenty of money, but in the
+end Betty won out, declaring that she had wished
+herself on this family in her distress, and they took
+her as a man does when he marries, for better
+for worse. Now that the worse had passed by she
+was theirs for the better, and she intended to exercise<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+the privilege of a daughter of the house for the
+rest of her natural life.</p>
+
+<p>Bi Gage was worried. He was still trying to
+get something out of the estate for his part in the
+exercises, and he vibrated between Tinsdale and
+Warren Reyburn's office working up his case. The
+five-thousand-dollar reward was as yet unpaid, and
+the papers he held didn't seem to impress the functionaries
+nearly so much as he had expected. It
+began to look as though Bi had missed his chances
+in life once more, and when he took his old seat in the
+fire-house and smoked, he said very little. Popular
+Opinion was still crouching with her eye in his
+direction and it behooved him to walk cautiously
+and do nothing to offend. So while he smoked he
+cogitated in his cunning little brain, and hatched
+out a plan by which he might get in with the heiress
+later, perhaps, when things had quieted down a little
+and she had her money.</p>
+
+<p>Betty received a pitiful letter from her stepmother,
+trying to explain away her part in the affair
+and professing to be so relieved at the news that
+Betty was still alive and well that she cared nothing
+about anything else, not even the fact that poor dear
+Herbert was landed in jail, or that the fortune which
+she had schemed so long to keep in her own power<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+was wrested from her so ignominiously. She begged
+Betty to come back to their home and "be happy
+again together."</p>
+
+<p>But Betty was so happy where she was that she
+could afford to be generous and try to forget her
+wrongs. She wrote a decent little note gently but
+firmly declining to come "home" ever again, making
+it quite plain that she was no longer deceived by
+honeyed phrases, and closing with a request that
+if in future any communication might be necessary
+it should be made through her lawyer, Mr.
+Warren Reyburn.</p>
+
+<p>This same Warren Reyburn had returned to his
+city office in a very much exalted state of mind.
+He could not get away from that little hand of
+Betty's that had been laid so tremblingly and confidingly
+in his; and yet how could he, a poverty-stricken
+lawyer with absolutely no prospects at all,
+ever dare to think of her, a lady of vast estates. Still,
+there was some comfort in the fact that he had still
+some business to transact for her, and would have
+to return to Tinsdale again. He might at least see
+her once more. So he solaced himself on his return
+trip, feeling that he had done some good work, and
+that he would have a pleasant report to give to Jane
+Carson when he called upon her, as he meant to do
+the next day.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He arrived at home to find James Ryan in a great
+state of excitement. A pile of mail had arrived,
+and he had memorized the return addresses on the
+outside of all the envelopes. One was from a big
+corporation, and another bore a name widely spoken
+of in the circles of the world of finance, Jimmie in
+close council with Jane Carson, had decided that it
+must be from that person who called up twice on the
+'phone and swore such terrible oaths when he found
+that Reyburn was away.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmie hovered nervously about, putting things
+to rights, while Reyburn read his mail. He had come
+to the smallest envelope of all, a plain government
+envelope now, and nothing had developed. Jimmie
+saw his first place fast slipping away from him and
+his heart grew heavy with fear. Perhaps after all
+nothing good had turned up yet.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Reyburn sprang up and came toward
+him with an open letter, holding out his hand in a
+joyous greeting:</p>
+
+<p>"Read that, Ryan! We're made at last, and I
+shan't have to let you go after all!"</p>
+
+<p>Ryan read, the letters dancing before his delighted
+eyes, every one wearing an orange blossom on
+its brow. It was from an old established and influential
+firm, asking Reyburn to take full charge of all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+their law business, and saying they had been referred
+to him by two old friends in Boston, who by the
+way were Betty's two trustees.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Ryan, come out to lunch with me!
+We've got to celebrate," said Reyburn. "I have a
+hunch somehow that you have been the one that
+brought me this good luck. You and a Miss Jane
+Carson. You both share alike, I guess, but you
+were the first with your five-thousand-dollar
+reward story."</p>
+
+<p>"Jane Carson!" said Jimmie mystified. "Why,
+<i>she's</i> my <i>girl!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Your girl?" said Reyburn, a queer look coming
+in his eyes. "You don't say! Well, you're in
+some luck, boy, with a girl like that! And, by the
+way, next time you see her, ask her to show you
+her wedding dress!"</p>
+
+<p>And not another word would Reyburn tell him,
+though he recurred frequently to the subject during
+the very excellent lunch which they had together in
+friendly companionship.</p>
+
+<p>They spent the afternoon composing the brief
+and comprehensive letter in response to the momentous
+one of the morning, and in the evening together
+they sought out Jane Carson, Reyburn staying only
+long enough to outline the ending of the Elizabeth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+Stanhope story, while Jimmie remained to hear the
+beginning, and get a glimpse of the wedding gown,
+which Reyburn assured Jane he was sure she need
+never return. He said he thought if the owner of it
+was married ever in the future she would be likely
+to want a gown that had no unpleasant associations.</p>
+
+<p>Great excitement prevailed in Tinsdale as the
+weeks went by. Betty had bought the lots either side
+of the Carson house, and wonderful improvements
+were in progress. A windmill was being erected and
+water pipes laid scientifically. Workmen arrived,
+some of them from the village, some from the city.
+Extensive excavations went on about the old house,
+and stone arrived. It began to be whispered about
+that "Miss Stanhope," as Betty was now called, was
+going to build the house all over and all of stone.</p>
+
+<p>The work went forward rapidly as work can go
+when there is money enough behind it, and the family,
+living in the little old part of the house, and still
+using the faithful tin bath-tub and shower of Bob's
+manufacture, now looked forward to real bathrooms
+on the bedroom floor, with tiled floors and
+porcelain fittings. Large windows cropped out on
+the new walls that were going up, a wide stone chimney
+and porches. A charming little stone affair in
+the back yard that went up so quietly it was hardly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+noticed until it was done suddenly became the home
+of a big gray car that arrived in town one morning.
+Betty gave up her position at the Hathaways so
+that she could have more time to superintend the
+work and see that it was just as she wanted it, and
+she and Bob spent hours going over the plans together,
+he making many wise suggestions. Mrs.
+Hathaway called her "Miss Stanhope" with elaborate
+ceremony, and made Elise kiss her whenever
+she met her.</p>
+
+<p>Betty went to a near-by town and bought some
+pretty clothes, and a lot of things for Ma and Emily
+and Bob. A beautiful new piano came by express
+and took the place of Mrs. Barlow's tinpanny one.</p>
+
+<p>Then Betty went up to the city and bought more
+things, furniture and silver and curtains and rugs,
+and brought Jane back with her to take a rest and
+see the little old house once more before it became
+the big new house, and stay until she was ready to
+be married; for Betty was determined to have the
+house ready for Jane's wedding.</p>
+
+<p>When all the new beautiful things began to arrive
+Betty told Ma that she had taken her in when she
+was poor and homeless and absolutely penniless, and
+now all these things were her reward, and Betty
+couldn't do enough ever to thank her for what she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+had done for her. They had offered a five-thousand-dollar
+reward for news of her, and Ma had done
+more than ten thousand and thousands of thousands
+of dollars' worth of holding back news about her,
+and she was never going to get done giving her
+her reward.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Betty brought Nellie home, too, and
+established her in a lovely new room just fit for a
+young girl, and began to pet her and fix her up with
+pretty things as any loving sister might do if she
+had money of her own.</p>
+
+<p>All this time Reyburn had much business to transact
+in Tinsdale, for Betty had asked him to look
+after all the little details about the building for her,
+and he had to come down every week-end and look
+things over to see that she was not being cheated.
+And once he brought Jimmie down with him for
+Ma to look over and approve and they had a wonderful
+time with the two best hens in the hen-coop for
+dinner. Ryan incidentally gave his approval
+to Betty.</p>
+
+<p>During these visits Reyburn was making great
+strides in the wisdom and the knowledge of the love
+of God. One could not be in that family over Sunday
+and not feel the atmosphere of a Christian
+home. Even Jimmie felt it and said he liked it;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+that he wanted his house to be that way when he
+had one. He went obediently to church with Jane,
+and marveled at the way social classes were getting
+all muddled up in his world.</p>
+
+<p>The Christmas time was coming on when the
+house finally got itself completed and was ready for
+living, and with holly and mistletoe and laurel they
+made it gay for the wedding. Betty spent several
+days with Jane in New York picking out Jane's
+"trooso" things, and then a few more days doing
+some shopping of her own, and at last the wedding
+day arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody thought it queer, though Jimmie felt
+just the least bit shy when the two trustees of Betty's
+estate arrived the night before from Boston and
+incorporated themselves into the wedding party. Ma
+seemed to think it was all right, so nobody said anything
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>But after the ceremony when Jane and Jimmie
+were happily married, Jane looking very young and
+pretty indeed in Betty's old wedding gown, veil and
+slippers and all, and standing under the holly bell in
+the laurel arch to be congratulated just as it had been
+arranged, there suddenly came a hush over everybody.
+Jane noticed for the first time that Betty
+was not anywhere in the room. Then everybody's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+eyes went to the wide staircase, and here came Betty
+trailing down the stairs on the arm of Reyburn,
+wearing still the little white organdie she had worn a
+few minutes before as a bridesmaid, only she had
+thrown aside the rose-colored sash and put over her
+brow a simple tulle veil, and her arms were full of
+little pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley.</p>
+
+<p>Up they walked in front of the minister just
+where the others had stood, and were married with
+the same sweet simple service, and everybody was so
+surprised and delighted and excited and breathless
+that Bob simply couldn't stand it. He slipped into
+the little music room where the piano had been installed,
+turned a handspring on the floor, and then
+sat down and played chopsticks on the piano with
+all the pedals on, till Ma had to send Emily in to
+stop him.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+<p>Duplicate title pages were removed.</p>
+<p>The original text did not contain a table of contents. A hyperlinked version
+was created for this HTML edition to aid the reader.</p>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Exit Betty, by Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Exit Betty
+
+
+Author: Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2009 [eBook #30759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXIT BETTY***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Emmy, and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+by
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOKS BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ April Gold
+ Happiness Hill
+ The Beloved Stranger
+ The Honor Girl
+ Bright Arrows
+ Kerry
+ Christmas Bride
+ Marigold
+ Crimson Roses
+ Miranda
+ Duskin
+ The Mystery of Mary
+ Found Treasure
+ Partners
+ A Girl to Come Home To
+ Rainbow Cottage
+ The Red Signal
+ White Orchids
+ Silver Wings
+ The Tryst
+ The Strange Proposal
+ Through These Fires
+ The Street of the City
+ All Through the Night
+ The Gold Shoe
+ Astra
+ Homing
+ Blue Ruin
+ Job's Niece
+ Challengers
+ The Man of the Desert
+ Coming Through the Rye
+ More Than Conqueror
+ Daphne Deane
+ A New Name
+ The Enchanted Barn
+ The Patch of Blue
+ Girl from Montana
+ The Ransom
+ Rose Galbraith
+ The Witness
+ Sound of the Trumpet
+ Sunrise
+ Tomorrow About This Time
+ Amorelle
+ Head of the House
+ Ariel Custer
+ In Tune with Wedding Bells
+ Chance of a Lifetime
+ Maris
+ Crimson Mountain
+ Out of the Storm
+ Exit Betty
+ Mystery Flowers
+ The Prodigal Girl
+ Girl of the Woods
+ Re-Creations
+ The White Flower
+ Matched Pearls
+ Time of the Singing of Birds
+ Ladybird
+ The Substitute Guest
+ Beauty for Ashes
+ Stranger Within the Gates
+ The Best Man
+ Spice Box
+ By Way of the Silverthorns
+ The Seventh Hour
+ Dawn of the Morning
+ The Search
+ Brentwood
+ Cloudy Jewel
+ The Voice in the Wilderness
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+Author of
+Marcia Schuyler, The Search, Dawn of the Morning, Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers New York
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+Copyright, 1919, by The Christian Herald
+
+Copyright, 1920, by J. B. Lippincott Company
+
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+THE crowd gave way and the car glided smoothly up to the curb at the
+canopied entrance to the church. The blackness of the wet November night
+was upon the street. It had rained at intervals all day.
+
+The pavements shone wetly like new paint in the glimmer of the street
+lights, and rude shadows gloomed in every cranny of the great stone
+building.
+
+Betty, alone in the midst of her bridal finery, shrank back from the
+gaze of the curious onlookers, seeming very small like a thing of the
+air caught in a mesh of the earth.
+
+She had longed all day for this brief respite from everyone, but it had
+passed before she could concentrate her thoughts. She started forward, a
+flame of rose for an instant in her white cheeks, but gone as quickly.
+Her eyes reminded one of the stars among the far-away clouds on a night
+of fitful storm with only glimpses of their beauty in breaks of the
+overcast sky. Her small hands gripped one another excitedly, and the
+sweet lips were quivering.
+
+A white-gloved hand reached out to open the car door, and other hands
+caught and cared for the billow of satin and costly lace with which she
+was surrounded, as if it, and not she, were the important one.
+
+They led her up the curtained way, where envious eyes peeped through a
+furtive rip in the canvas, or craned around an opening to catch a better
+glimpse of her loveliness, one little dark-eyed foreigner even reached
+out a grimy, wondering finger to the silver whiteness of her train; but
+she, all unknowing, trod the carpeted path as in a dream.
+
+The wedding march was just beginning. She caught the distant notes, felt
+the hush as she approached the audience, and wondered why the ordeal
+seemed so much greater now that she was actually come to the moment. If
+she had known it would be like this--! Oh, why had she given in!
+
+The guests had risen and were stretching their necks for the first
+vision of her. The chaplet of costly blossoms sat upon her brow and
+bound her wedding veil floating mistily behind, but the lovely head was
+bowed, not lifted proudly as a bride's should be, and the little white
+glove that rested on the arm of the large florid cousin trembled
+visibly. The cousin was almost unknown until a few hours before. His
+importance overpowered her. She drooped her eyes and tried not to wish
+for the quiet, gray-haired cousin of her own mother. It was so strange
+for him to have failed her at the last moment, when he had promised long
+ago to let nothing hinder him from giving her away if she should ever be
+married. His telegram, "Unavoidably detained," had been received but an
+hour before. He seemed the only one of her kind, and now she was all
+alone. All the rest were like enemies, although they professed deep
+concern for her welfare; for they were leagued together against all her
+dearest wishes, until she had grown weary in the combat.
+
+She gave a frightened glance behind as if some intangible thing were
+following her. Was it a hounding dread that after all she would not be
+free after marriage?
+
+With measured tread she passed the long white-ribboned way, under arches
+that she never noticed, through a sea of faces that she never saw, to
+the altar smothered in flowers and tropical ferns. It seemed
+interminable. Would it never end? They paused at last, and she lifted
+frightened eyes to the florid cousin, and then to the face of her
+bridegroom!
+
+It was a breathless moment, and but for the deep tones of the organ now
+hushing for the ceremony, one of almost audible silence. No lovelier
+bride had trod those aisles in many a long year; so exquisite, so
+small, so young--and so exceeding rich! The guests were entranced, and
+every eye was greedily upon her as the white-robed minister advanced
+with his open book.
+
+"Beloved, we are met together to-night to join this man----!"
+
+At that word they saw the bride suddenly, softly sink before them, a
+little white heap at the altar, with the white face turned upward, the
+white eyelids closed, the long dark lashes sweeping the pretty cheek,
+the wedding veil trailing mistily about her down the aisle, and her big
+bouquet of white roses and maiden-hair ferns clasped listlessly in the
+white-gloved hands.
+
+For a moment no one stirred, so sudden, so unexpected it was. It all
+seemed an astonishing part of the charming spectacle. The gaping throng
+with startled faces stood and stared. Above the huddled little bride
+stood the bridegroom, tall and dark and frowning, an angry red surging
+through his handsome face. The white-haired minister, with two red spots
+on his fine scholarly cheeks, stood grave with troubled dignity, as
+though somehow he meant to hold the little still bride responsible for
+this unseemly break in his beautiful service. The organ died away with
+a soft crash of the keys and pedals as if they too leaped up to see; the
+scent of the lilies swept sickeningly up in a great wave on the top of
+the silence.
+
+In a moment all was confusion. The minister stooped, the best man sprang
+into the aisle and lifted the flower-like head. Some one produced a fan,
+and one of the ushers hurried for a glass of water. A physician
+struggled from his pew across the sittings of three stout dowagers, and
+knelt, with practiced finger on the little fluttering pulse. The bride's
+stepmother roused to solicitous and anxious attention. The organ came
+smartly up again in a hopeless tangle of chords and modulations, trying
+to get its poise once more. People climbed upon their seats to see, or
+crowded out in the aisle curiously and unwisely kind, and in the way.
+Then the minister asked the congregation to be seated; and amid the
+rustle of wedding finery into seats suddenly grown too narrow and too
+low, the ushers gathered up the little inert bride and carried her
+behind the palms across a hall and into the vestry room. The stepmother
+and a group of friends hurried after, and the minister requested the
+people to remain quietly seated for a few minutes. The organ by this
+time had recovered its poise and was playing soft tender melodies, but
+the excited audience was not listening:
+
+"I thought she looked ghastly when she came in," declared the mother of
+three frowsy daughters. "It's strange she didn't put on some rouge."
+
+"Um-mm! What a pity! I suppose she isn't strong! What did her own mother
+die of?" murmured another speculatively, preparing to put forth a theory
+before any one else got ahead of her.
+
+"Oh! The poor child!" sympathized a romantic friend. "They've been
+letting her do too much! Didn't they make a handsome couple? I'm crazy
+to see them come marching down the aisle. They surely wouldn't put off
+the wedding just for a faint, would they?"
+
+And all over the church some woman began to tell how her sister's child,
+or her brother's niece, or her nephew's aunt had fainted just before her
+wedding or during it, till it began to seem quite a common performance,
+and one furnishing a unique and interesting part of the program for a
+wedding ceremony.
+
+Meanwhile on a couch in the big gloomy vestry room lay Betty with a
+group of attendants about her. Her eyes were closed, and she made no
+move. She swallowed the aromatic ammonia that some one produced, and she
+drew her breath a little less feebly, but she did not open her eyes, nor
+respond when they spoke to her.
+
+Her stepmother stooped over finally and spoke in her ear:
+
+"Elizabeth Stanhope! sit up and control yourself!" she said sharply in a
+low tone. "You are making a spectacle of yourself that you can never get
+over. Your father would be ashamed of you if he were here!"
+
+It was the one argument that had been held a successful lash over her
+poor little quivering heart for the last five years, and Betty flashed
+open her sorrowful eyes and looked around on them with a troubled
+concentration as if she were just taking in what had happened:
+
+"I'm so tired!" she said in a little weary voice. "Won't you just let me
+get my breath a minute?"
+
+The physician nodded emphatically toward the door and motioned them out:
+
+"She'll be all right in just a minute. Step outside and give her a
+chance to get calm. She's only worn out with excitement."
+
+She opened her eyes and looked furtively about the room. There was no
+one there, and the door was closed. She could hear them murmuring in low
+tones just beyond it. She looked wildly about her with a frantic thought
+of escape. The two windows were deeply curtained, giving a narrow
+glimpse of blank wall. She sprang softly to her feet and looked out.
+There was a stone pavement far below. She turned silently and tried a
+door. It opened into a closet overflowing with musty hymn-books. She
+closed it quickly and slipped back to her couch just in time as the door
+opened and the doctor came back. She could catch a glimpse of the others
+through the half open door, anxiously peering in. She gathered all her
+self-control and spoke:
+
+"I'm all right now, Doctor," she said quite calmly. "Would you just ask
+them to send Bessemer here a minute?"
+
+"Certainly." The doctor turned courteously and went back to the door,
+half closing it and making her request in a low tone. Then her
+stepmother's excited sibilant whisper:
+
+"Bessemer! Why, he isn't here! He went down to the shore last night."
+
+"Sh-h-h!" came another voice, and the door was shut smartly.
+
+Betty's eyes grew wide with horror as she lay staring at the closed
+door, and a cold numbness seemed to envelop her, clutching at her
+throat, her heart and threatening to overwhelm her.
+
+Bessemer not here! What could it mean? Her mind seemed unable to grasp
+and analyze the nameless fear that awaited her outside that door. In a
+moment more they would all swarm in and surround her, and begin to
+clamor for her to go back into that awful church--and _she could
+not_--EVER! She would far rather die!
+
+She sprang to her feet again and glided noiselessly to the only
+remaining uninvestigated door in the room. If this was another closet
+she would shut herself inside and stay till she died. She had read tales
+of people dying in a small space from lack of air. At least, if she did
+not die she could stay here till she had time to think. There was a key
+in the lock. Her fingers closed around it and drew it stealthily from
+the keyhole, as she slid through the door, drawing her rich draperies
+ruthlessly after. Her fingers were trembling so that she scarcely could
+fit the key in the lock again and turn it, and every click of the metal,
+every creak of the door, sounded like a gong in her ears. Her heart was
+fluttering wildly and the blood seemed to be pouring in torrents behind
+her ear-drums. She could not be sure whether there were noises in the
+room she had just left or not. She put her hand over her heart, turned
+with a sickening dread to look about her prison, and behold, it was not
+a closet at all, but a dark landing to a narrow flight of stone steps
+that wound down out of sight into the shadows. With a shudder she
+gathered her white impediment about her and crept down the murky way,
+frightened, yet glad to creep within the friendly darkness.
+
+There were unmistakable sounds of footsteps overhead now, and sharp
+exclamations. A hand tried the door above and rattled it violently. For
+an instant her heart beat frightfully in her throat at the thought that
+perhaps after all she had not succeeded in quite locking it, but the
+door held, and she flew on blindly down the stairs, caring little where
+they led only so that she might hide quickly before they found the
+janitor and pried that door open.
+
+The stairs ended in a little hall and a glass door. She fumbled wildly
+with the knob. It was locked, but there was a key! It was a large one
+and stuck, and gave a great deal of trouble in turning. Her fingers
+seemed so weak!
+
+Above the noises grew louder. She fancied the door was open and the
+whole churchful of people were after her. She threw her full weight with
+fear in the balance, and the key turned. She wrenched it out of the
+rusty keyhole, slid out shutting the door after her, and stooping,
+fitted in the key again. With one more Herculean effort she locked it
+and stood up, trembling so that she could scarcely keep her balance. At
+least she was safe for a moment and could get her breath. But where
+could she go? She looked about her. High walls arose on either hand,
+with a murky sky above. A stone walk filled the space between and ran
+down the length of the church to a big iron gate. The lights of the
+street glistened fitfully on the puddles of wet in the depressions of
+the paving-stones. The street looked quiet, and only one or two people
+were passing. Was that gate locked also, and if so could she ever climb
+it, or break through? Somehow she must! She shuddered at the thought of
+what would happen if she did not get away at once. She strained at the
+buttons on her soft white gloves and pulled the fingers off, slipping
+her hands out and letting the glove hands hang limp at her wrists. Then
+with a quick glance backward at a flicker of light that appeared
+wavering beyond the glass door, she gathered her draperies again and
+fled down the long stone walk. Silently, lightly as a ghost she passed,
+and crouched at the gate as she heard footsteps, her heart beating so
+loudly it seemed like a bell calling attention to her. An old man was
+shuffling past, and she shrank against the wall, yet mindful of the
+awful glass door back at the end of the narrow passage. If they should
+come now she could not hope to elude them!
+
+She stooped and studied the gate latch. Yes, it was a spring lock, and
+had no key in it. Stealthily she tried it and found to her relief that
+it swung open. She stepped around it and peered out. The gateway was not
+more than a hundred feet from the brightly lighted corner of the main
+avenue where rows of automobiles were lined up waiting for the wedding
+ceremony to be over. She could see the chauffeurs walking back and forth
+and chatting together. She could hear the desultory wandering of the
+organ, too, from the partly open window near by. A faint sickening waft
+of lily sweetness swept out, mingled with a dash of drops from the maple
+tree on the sidewalk. In a panic she stepped forth and drew back again,
+suddenly realizing for the first time what it would be to go forth into
+the streets clad in her wedding garments? How could she do it and get
+away? It could not be done!
+
+Down the street, with a backward, wistful glance at the church, hurried
+a large woman with a market basket. Her curious eyes shone in the
+evening light and darkness of the street. There was something about her
+face that made Betty know instantly that this woman would love to tell
+how she had seen her, would gather a crowd in no time and pursue her.
+She shrank farther back, and then waited in awful fear and tried to
+listen again. Was that a rattling at the glass door? She must get away
+no matter what happened! Where? Was there an alleyway or anything across
+the block? Could she hope to cross the street between the shadows
+unnoticed?
+
+She looked out fearfully once more. A girl of her own age was
+approaching around the corner, paddling along in rubbers, and a long
+coat. She was chewing gum. Betty could see the outline of a strong
+good-natured jaw working contentedly as she was silhouetted against the
+light. She had her hands in her pockets, and a little dark hat worn
+boyishly on the back of her head, and she was humming a popular song.
+Betty had slipped behind the half open gate again and was watching her
+approach, her desperation driving her to thoughts that never would have
+entered her mind at another time. Suddenly, as the girl passed directly
+in front of the gate, Betty leaned forward and plucked at her sleeve:
+
+"Wait!" she said sharply; and then, with a pitiful pleading in her
+voice, "Won't you help me just a minute, please?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+THE girl came to a standstill abruptly and faced about, drawing away
+just a hair's-breadth from the detaining hand, and surveying her
+steadily, the boyish expression in her eyes changing to an amused
+calculation such as one would fancy a cowboy held up on his native
+plains by a stray lamb might have worn.
+
+"What's the little old idea!" asked the girl coldly, her eyes narrowing
+as she studied the other girl in detail and attempted to classify her
+into the known and unknown quantities of her world. Her face was
+absolutely expressionless as far as any sign of interest or sympathy was
+concerned. It was like a house with the door still closed and a
+well-trained butler in attendance.
+
+"I've got to get away from here at once before anybody sees me,"
+whispered Betty excitedly, with a fearful glance behind her.
+
+"Do you want me to call a cab for you?" sneered the girl on the
+sidewalk, with an envious glance at the white satin slippers.
+
+"Oh, no! Never!" cried Betty, wringing her hands in desperation. "I want
+you to show me somewhere to go out of sight, and if you will I'd like
+you to walk a block or so with me so I won't be so--so conspicuous! I'm
+so frightened I don't know which way to go."
+
+"What do you want to go at all for?" asked the girl bluntly, with the
+look of an inquisitor, and the intolerance of the young for its
+contemporary of another social class.
+
+"Because I _must_!" said Betty with terror in her voice. "They're
+coming! Listen! Oh, help me quick! I can't wait to explain!"
+
+Betty dashed out of the gate and would have started up the street but
+that a strong young arm came out like a flash and a firm young fist
+gripped her arm like a vise. The girl's keen ears had caught a sound of
+turning key and excited voices, and her quick eyes pierced the darkness
+of the narrow court and measured the distance back.
+
+"Here! You can't go togged out like that!" she ordered in quite a
+different tone. She flung off her own long coat and threw it around the
+shrinking little white figure, then knelt and deftly turned up the long
+satin draperies out of sight and fixed them firmly with a pin extracted
+from somewhere about her person. Quickly she stood up and pulled off her
+rubbers, her eye on the long dark passageway whence came now the
+decided sound of a forcibly opened door and footsteps.
+
+"Put these on, quick!" she whispered, lifting first one slippered foot
+and then the other and supporting the trembling Betty in her strong
+young arms, while she snapped on the rubbers.
+
+Lastly, she jerked the rakish hat from her own head, crammed it down
+hard over the orange-wreathed brow and gave her strange protégée a hasty
+shove.
+
+"Now beat it around that corner and wait till I come!" she whispered,
+and turning planted herself in an idle attitude just under the church
+window, craning her neck and apparently listening to the music. A second
+later an excited usher, preceded by the janitor, came clattering down
+the passageway.
+
+"Have you seen any one go out of this gate recently?" asked the usher.
+
+The girl, hatless and coatless in the chill November night, turned
+nonchalantly at the question, surveyed the usher coolly from the point
+of his patent leather shoes to the white gardenia in his buttonhole,
+gave his features a cursory glance, and then shook her head.
+
+"There might have been an old woman come out a while back. Dressed in
+black, was she? I wasn't paying much attention. I think she went down
+the avenoo," she said, and stretched her neck again, standing on her
+tiptoes to view the wedding guests. Her interest suddenly became real,
+for she spied a young man standing in the church, in full view of the
+window, back against the wall with his arms folded, a fine handsome
+young man with pleasant eyes and a head like that of a young nobleman,
+and she wanted to make sure of his identity. He looked very much like
+the young lawyer whose office boy was her "gentleman friend." Just to
+make sure she gave a little spring from the sidewalk that brought her
+eyes almost on a level with the window and gave her a brief glimpse,
+enough to see his face quite clearly; then she turned with satisfaction
+to see that the janitor and the usher had gone back up the passageway,
+having slammed the gate shut. Without more ado the girl wheeled and
+hurried down the street toward the corner where Betty crouched behind a
+tree trunk, watching fearfully for her coming.
+
+"Aw! You don't need to be that scared!" said the girl, coming up.
+"They've gone back. I threw 'em off the scent. Come on! We'll go to my
+room and see what to do. Don't talk! Somebody might recognize your
+voice. Here, we'll cut through this alley and get to the next block.
+It's further away and not so many folks passing."
+
+Silently they hurried through the dark alley and down the next street,
+Betty holding the long cloak close that no gleam of her white satin
+might shine out and give away her secret, her heart beating like a trip
+hammer in her breast, her eyes filled with unshed tears, the last words
+of her stepmother ringing in her ears. Was she making her father
+ashamed? Her dear dead father! Was she doing the wrong thing? So long
+that thought had held her! But she could not go back now. She had taken
+an irrevocable step.
+
+Her guide turned another corner abruptly and led her up some stone steps
+to the door of a tall, dingy brick house, to which she applied a
+latchkey.
+
+The air of the gloomy hall was not pleasant. The red wall-paper was
+soiled and torn, and weird shadows flickered from the small gas taper
+that blinked from the ceiling. There were suggestions of old dinners,
+stale fried potatoes and pork in all the corners, and one moving toward
+the stairs seemed to stir them up and set them going again like old
+memories.
+
+The stairs were bare and worn by many feet, and not particularly clean.
+Betty paused in dismay then hurried on after her hostess, who was
+mounting up, one, two, three flights, to a tiny hall bedroom at the
+back. A fleeting fear that perhaps the place was not respectable shot
+through her heart, but her other troubles were so great that it found no
+lodgment. Panting and trembling she arrived at the top and stood looking
+about her in the dark, while the other girl found a match and lighted
+another wicked little flickering gas-burner.
+
+Then her hostess drew her into the room and closed and locked the door.
+As a further precaution she climbed upon a chair and pushed the transom
+shut.
+
+"Now," she said with a sigh of evident relief, "we're safe! No one can
+hear you here, and you can say what you please. But first we'll get this
+coat and hat off and see what's the damage."
+
+As gently as if she were undressing a baby the girl removed the hat and
+coat from her guest, and shook out the wonderful shining folds of satin.
+It would have been a study for an artist to have watched her face as she
+worked, smoothing out wrinkles, shaking the lace down and uncrushing it,
+straightening a bruised orange-blossom, and putting everything in place.
+It was as if she herself were an artist restoring a great masterpiece,
+so silently and absorbedly she worked, her eyes full of a glad wonder
+that it had come to her once to be near and handle anything so rare and
+costly. The very touch of the lace and satin evidently thrilled her; the
+breath of the exotic blossoms was nectar as she drew it in.
+
+Betty was still panting from her climb, still trembling from her flight,
+and she stood obedient and meek while the other girl pulled and shook
+and brushed and patted her into shape again. When all was orderly and
+adjusted about the crumpled bride, the girl stood back as far as the
+limits of the tiny room allowed and surveyed the finished picture.
+
+"There now! You certainly do look great! That there band of flowers
+round your forehead makes you look like some queen. 'Coronet'--ain't
+that what they call it? I read that once in a story at the Public
+Library. Say! Just to think I should pick that up in the street! Good
+night! I'm glad I came along just then instead o' somebody else! This
+certainly is some picnic! Well, now, give us your dope. It must've been
+pretty stiff to make you cut and run from a show like the one they got
+up for you! Come, tune up and let's hear the tale. I rather guess I'm
+entitled to know before the curtain goes up again on this little old
+stage!"
+
+The two tears that had been struggling with Betty for a long time
+suddenly appeared in her eyes and drowned them out, and in dismay she
+brought out a faint little sorry giggle of apology and amusement and
+dropped on the tiny bed, which filled up a good two-thirds of the room.
+
+"Good night!" exclaimed the hostess in alarm, springing to catch her.
+"Don't drop down that way in those glad rags! You'll finish 'em! Come,
+stand up and we'll get 'em off. You look all in. I'd oughta known you
+would be!" She lifted Betty tenderly and began to remove her veil and
+unfasten the wonderful gown. It seemed to her much like helping an angel
+remove her wings for a nap. Her eyes shone with genuine pleasure as she
+handled the hooks deftly.
+
+"But I've nothing else to put on!" gurgled Betty helplessly.
+
+"I have!" said the other girl.
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a sudden thought. "I wonder! Would you be willing
+to exchange clothes? Have you perhaps got some things you don't need
+that I could have, and I'll give you mine for them? I don't suppose
+perhaps a wedding dress would be very useful unless you're thinking of
+getting married soon, but you could make it over and use it for the
+foundation of an evening dress----"
+
+The other girl was carefully folding the white satin skirt at the
+moment, but she stopped with it in her arms and sat down weakly on the
+foot of the bed with it all spread out in her lap and looked at her
+guest in wonder:
+
+"You don't mean you _wantta give it up_!" she said in an awed tone. "You
+don't mean you would be willing to take some of my old togs for it?"
+
+"I certainly would!" cried Betty eagerly. "I never want to see these
+things again! _I hate_ them! And besides, I want to get away somewhere.
+I can't go in white satin! You know that! But I don't like to take
+anything of yours that you might need. Do you think these things would
+be worth anything to you? You weren't thinking of getting married
+yourself some time soon, were you?"
+
+"Well, I might," said the other girl, looking self-conscious. "I got a
+gentleman friend. But I wasn't expectin' to get in on any trooso like
+this!" She let her finger move softly over the satin hem as if she had
+been offered a plume of the angel's wing. "Sure, I'll take it off you if
+I've got anything you're satisfied to have in exchange. I wouldn't mind
+havin' it to keep jest to look at now and then and know it's mine. It'd
+be somethin' to live for, jest to know you had that dress in the
+house!"
+
+Suddenly Betty, without any warning even to herself, dropped upon her
+knees beside the diminutive bed and began to weep. It seemed somehow so
+touching that a thing like a mere dress could make a girl glad like
+that. All the troubles of the days that were past went over her in a
+great wave of agony, and overwhelmed her soul. In soft silk and lace
+petticoat and camisole with her pretty white arms and shoulders shaking
+with great sobs she buried her face in the old patchwork quilt that her
+hostess had brought from her village home, and gave way to a grief that
+had been long in growing. The other girl now thoroughly alarmed, laid
+the satin on a chair and went over to the little stranger, gathering her
+up in a strong embrace, and gradually lifting her to the bed.
+
+"You poor little Kid, you! I oughtta known better! You're just all in!
+You ben gettin' ready to be married, and something big's been troubling
+you, and I bet they never gave you any lunch--er else you wouldn't eat
+it,--and you're jest natcheraly all in. Now you lie right here an' I'll
+make you some supper. My name's Jane Carson, and I've got a good mother
+out to Ohio, and a nice home if I'd had sense enough to stay in it; only
+I got a chance to make big money in a fact'ry. But I know what 'tis to
+be lonesome, an' I ain't hard-hearted, if I do know how to take care of
+misself. There! There!"
+
+She smoothed back the lovely hair that curled in golden tendrils where
+the tears had wet it.
+
+"Say, now, you needn't be afraid! Nobody'll getcha here! I know how to
+bluff 'em. Even if a policeman should come after yeh, I'd get around him
+somehow, and I don't care what you've done or ain't done, I'll stand by
+yeh. I'm not one to turn against anybody in distress. My mother always
+taught me that. After you've et a bite and had a cup of my nice tea with
+cream and sugar in it you'll feel better, and we'll have a real
+chin-fest and hear all about it. Now, you just shut your eyes and wait
+till I make that tea."
+
+Jane Carson thumped up the pillow scientifically to make as many of the
+feathers as possible and shifted the little flower-head upon it. Then
+she hurried to her small washstand and took a little iron contrivance
+from the drawer, fastening it on the sickly gas-jet. She filled a tiny
+kettle with water from a faucet in the hall and set it to boil. From
+behind a curtain in a little box nailed to the wall she drew a loaf of
+bread, a paper of tea and a sugar-bowl. A cup and saucer and other
+dishes appeared from a pasteboard box under the washstand. A small
+shelf outside the tiny window yielded a plate of butter, a pint bottle
+of milk, and two eggs. She drew a chair up to the bed, put a clean
+handkerchief on it, and spread forth her table. In a few minutes the
+fragrance of tea and toast pervaded the room, and water was bubbling
+happily for the eggs. As cosily as if she had a chum to dine with her
+she sat down on the edge of the bed and invited her guest to supper. As
+she poured the tea she wondered what her co-laborers at the factory
+would think if they knew she had a real society lady visiting her. It
+wasn't every working girl that had a white satin bride thrust upon her
+suddenly this way. It was like a fairy story, having a strange bride
+lying on her bed, and everything a perfect mystery about her. She eyed
+the white silk ankles and dainty slippers with satisfaction. Think of
+wearing underclothes made of silk and real lace!
+
+It seemed to Betty as if never before in all her life had she tasted
+anything so delicious as that tea and toast and soft boiled egg cooked
+by this wonderful girl on a gaslight and served on a chair. She wanted
+to cry again over her gladness at being here. It didn't seem real after
+all the trouble she had been through. It couldn't last! Oh, of course it
+couldn't last!
+
+This thought came as she swallowed the last bite of toast, and she sat
+up suddenly!
+
+"I ought to be doing something quick!" she said in sudden panic. "It is
+getting late and I must get away. They'll be watching the trains,
+perhaps. I ought to have gone at once. But I don't know where I can go.
+Give me some old things, please. I must get dressed at once."
+
+"Lie down first and tell me who you are and what it's all about. I can't
+do a thing for you till I know. I've got to go into this with my eyes
+open or I won't stir one step," she declared stubbornly.
+
+Betty looked at her with wide eyes of trouble and doubt. Then the doubt
+suddenly cleared away, and trust broke through.
+
+"I can trust you, I'm sure! You've been so good to me! But it seems
+dreadful to tell things about my family, even to one who has been so
+kind. My father would be so hurt----"
+
+"Your father? Where is your father? Why didn't he take care of you and
+keep you from getting into such big trouble, I'd like to know?"
+
+The blue eyes clouded with tears again.
+
+"My father died five years ago," she said, "but I've always tried to do
+as he would want to have me do. Only--this--I _couldn't_."
+
+"H'm!" said Jane Carson. "Then he prob'ly wouldn't of wanted you to.
+Suppose you take the rest of those togs off. I'll find you a warm
+nightgown and we'll get to bed. It's turning cold here. They take the
+heat off somewhere about six o'clock in the evening, and it gets like
+ice up here sometimes."
+
+Jane shivered and went to her small trunk, from which she produced a
+coarse but clean flanellete nightgown, and Betty, who had never worn
+anything but a dainty lingerie one before in all her life, crept into it
+thankfully and cuddled down with a warm feeling that she had found a
+real friend. It was curious why she did not shrink from this poor girl,
+but she did not, and everything looked clean and nice. Besides, this was
+a wonderful haven of refuge in her dire necessity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+MEANWHILE, in the stately mansion that Betty had called home, a small
+regiment of servants hastened with the last tasks in preparation for the
+guests that were soon expected to arrive. The great rooms had become a
+dream of paradise, with silver rain and white lilies in a mist of soft
+green depending from the high ceilings. In the midst of all, a fairy
+bower of roses and tropical ferns created a nook of retirement where
+everyone might catch a glimpse of the bride and groom from any angle in
+any room. The spacious vistas stretched away from an equally spacious
+hallway, where a wide and graceful staircase curved up to a low gallery,
+smothered in flowers and palms and vines; and even so early the
+musicians were taking their places and tuning their instruments. On the
+floor above, where room after room shone in beauty, with costly
+furnishings, and perfect harmonies, white-capped maids flitted about,
+putting last touches to dressing tables and pausing to gossip as they
+passed one another:
+
+"Well, 'twill all be over soon," sighed one, a wan-faced girl with
+discontented eyes. "Ain't it kind of a pity, all this fuss just for a
+few minutes?"
+
+"Yes, an' glad I'll be!" declared another, a fresh young Irish girl with
+a faint, pretty brogue. "I don't like the look of my Lady Betty. A
+pretty fuss Candace her old nurse would be makin' if she was here the
+night! I guess the madam knew what she was about when she give her her
+walkin' ticket! Candace never could bear them two bys, and _him_ was the
+worse of the two, she always said."
+
+"Well, a sight of good it would do for old Candace to make a fuss!" said
+the discontented one. "And anyhow, he's as handsome as the devil, and
+she's got money enough, so she oughtn't complain."
+
+"Money ain't everything!" sniffed Aileen. "I wouldn't marry a king if I
+wasn't crazy about him!"
+
+"Oh, you're young!" sneered Marie with disdain. "Wait till your looks
+go! You don't know what you'd take up with!"
+
+"Well I'd never take up with the likes of _him_!" returned the Irish
+girl grandly, "and what's more he knows it!" She tossed her head
+meaningfully and was about to sail away on her own business when a stir
+below stairs attracted their attention. A stout, elderly woman, dressed
+in a stiff new black silk and an apoplectic hat, came panting up the
+stairs looking furtively from side to side, as if she wished to escape
+before anyone recognized her:
+
+"It's Candace!" exclaimed Aileen. "As I live! Now what d'ye wantta know
+about that! Poor soul! Poor soul! Candy! Oh!--Candy! What iver brought
+ye here the night? This is no place for the loikes of you. You better
+beat it while the beatin' is good if ye know which side yer bread's
+buthered!"
+
+But the old nurse came puffing on, her face red and excited:
+
+"Is she here? Has she come, yet, my poor wee Betty?" she besought them
+eagerly.
+
+"Miss Betty's at the church now gettin' married!" announced Marie
+uppishly, "and you'd best be gettin' out of here right away, for the
+wedding party's due to arrive any minute now and madam'll be very angry
+to have a servant as doesn't belong snoopin' round at such a time!"
+
+"Be still, Marie! For shame!" cried Aileen. "You've no need to talk like
+that to a self-respectin' woman as has been in this house more years
+than you have been weeks! Come along, Candace, and I'll slip you in my
+room and tell you all about it when I can get away long enough. You see,
+Miss Betty's being married----"
+
+"But she's _not_!" cried Candace wildly. "I was at the church myself.
+Miss Betty sent me the word to be sure and come, and where to sit and
+all, so she'd see me; and I went, and she come up the aisle as white as
+a lily and dropped right there before the poolpit, just like a little
+white lamb that couldn't move another step, all of a heap in her pretty
+things! And they stopped the ceremony and everybody got up, and they
+took her away, and we waited till bime-by the minister said the bride
+wasn't well enough to proceed with the ceremony and would they all go
+home, and I just slipped out before the folks got their wraps on and
+took a side street with wings to my feet and got up here! Haven't they
+brought her home yet, the poor wee thing? I been thinkin' they might
+need me yet, for many's the time I've brought her round by my nursin'."
+
+The two maids looked wildly at one another, their glances growing into
+incredulity, the eyebrows of Marie moving toward her well-dressed hair
+with a lofty disapproval.
+
+"Well, you'd better come with me, Candy," said Aileen drawing the
+excited old servant along the hall to the back corridor gently. "I guess
+there's some mistake somewheres; anyway, you better stay in my room till
+you see what happens. We haven't heard anything yet, and they'd likely
+send word pretty soon if there's to be any change in the program. You
+say she fell----?"
+
+But just then sounds of excitement came distantly up to them and Aileen
+hastened back to the gallery to listen. It was the voice of Madam
+Stanhope angrily speaking to her youngest son:
+
+"You must get Bessemer on the 'phone at once and order him home! I told
+you it was a great mistake sending him away. If he had been standing
+there, where she could see him, everything would have gone through just
+as we planned it----"
+
+"Aw! Rot! Mother. Can't you shut up? I know what I'm about and I'm going
+to call up another detective. Bessemer may go to the devil for all I
+care! How do you know but he has, and taken her with him? The first
+thing to do is to get that girl back! You ought to have had more sense
+than to show your whole hand to my brother. You might have known he'd
+take advantage----"
+
+Herbert Hutton slammed into the telephone booth under the stairs and
+Madam Stanhope was almost immediately aware of the staring servants who
+were trying not to seem to have listened.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope stood in the midst of the beautiful empty rooms and
+suddenly realized her position. Her face froze into the haughty lines
+with which her menage was familiar, and she was as coldly beautiful in
+her exquisite heliotrope gown of brocaded velvet and chiffon with the
+glitter of jewels about her smooth plump neck, and in her carefully
+marcelled black hair as if she were quietly awaiting the bridal party
+instead of facing defeat and mortification:
+
+"Aileen, you may get Miss Betty's room ready to receive her. She has
+been taken ill and will be brought home as soon as she is able to be
+moved," she announced, without turning an eyelash. "Put away her things,
+and get the bed ready!" One could see that she was thinking rapidly. She
+was a woman who had all her life been equal to an emergency, but never
+had quite such a tragic emergency been thrust upon her to camouflage
+before.
+
+"James!" catching the eye of the butler, "there will be no reception
+to-night, of course, and you will see that the hired people take their
+things away as soon as possible, and say that I will agree to whatever
+arrangements they see fit to make, within reason, of course. Just use
+your judgment, James, and by the way, there will be telephone calls, of
+course, from our friends. Say that Miss Betty is somewhat better, and
+the doctor hopes to avert a serious nervous breakdown, but that she
+needs entire rest and absolute quiet for a few days. Say that and
+nothing more, do you understand, James?"
+
+The butler bowed his thorough understanding and Madam Stanhope sailed
+nobly up the flower-garlanded staircase, past the huddled musicians, to
+her own apartment. Aileen, with a frightened glance, scuttled past the
+door as she was closing it:
+
+"Aileen, ask Mr. Herbert to come to my room at once when he has finished
+telephoning, and when Mr. Bessemer arrives send him to me at once!" Then
+the door closed and the woman was alone with her defeat, and the placid
+enameled features melted into an angry snarl like an animal at bay. In a
+moment more Herbert stormed in.
+
+"It's all your fault, mother!" he began, with an oath. "If you hadn't
+dragged Bessemer into this thing I'd have had her fixed. I had her just
+about where I wanted her, and another day would have broken her in.
+She's scared to death of insane asylums, and I told her long ago that it
+would be dead easy to put a woman in one for life. If I had just hinted
+at such a thing she'd have married me as meek as a lamb!"
+
+"Now look here, Bertie," flared his mother excitedly, "you've got to
+stop blaming me! Haven't I given in to you all your life, and now you
+say it's all my fault the least little thing that happens! It was for
+your sake that I stopped you; you know it was. You couldn't carry out
+any such crazy scheme. Betty's almost of age, and if those trustees
+should find out what you had threatened, you would be in jail for life,
+and goodness knows what would become of me."
+
+"Trustees! How would the trustees find it out?"
+
+"Betty might tell them."
+
+"Betty might _not_ tell them, not if she was _my wife_!" He bawled out
+the words in a way that boded no blissful future to the one who should
+have the misfortune to become his wife. "I think I'd have her better
+trained than that. As for you, Mother, you're all off, as usual! What do
+you think could possibly happen to _you_? You're always saying you do
+everything for me, but when it comes right down to brass tacks I notice
+you're pretty much of a selfish coward on your own account."
+
+For a moment the baffled woman faced her angry uncontrolled son in
+speechless rage, then gathered command of the situation once more, an
+inscrutable expression on her hard-lined face. Her voice took on an
+almost pitiful reproach as she spoke in a low, even tone that could
+hardly fail to bring the instant attention of her spoiled son:
+
+"Bertie, you don't know what you're talking about!" she said, and there
+was a strained white look of fear about her mouth and eyes as she spoke.
+"I'm going to tell you, in this great crisis, what I did for you, what I
+risked that you might enjoy the luxury which you have had for the last
+five years. Listen! The day before Mr. Stanhope died he wrote a letter
+to the trustees of Betty's fortune giving very explicit directions about
+her money and her guardianship, tying things up so that not one cent
+belonging to her should pass through my hands, which would have left us
+with just my income as the will provided, and would have meant
+comparative poverty for us all except as Betty chose to be benevolent. I
+kept a strict watch on all his movements those last few days, of course,
+and when I found he had given Candace a letter to mail, I told her I
+would look after it, and I brought it up to my room and read it, for I
+suspected just some such thing as he had done. He was very fussy about
+Betty and her rights, you remember, and he had always insisted that this
+was Betty's house, her mother's wedding present from the grandfather,
+and therefore not ours at all, except through Betty's bounty. I was
+determined that we should not be turned out of here, and that you should
+not have to go without the things you wanted while that child had
+everything and far more than she needed. So I burned the letter! Now, do
+you see what the mother you have been blaming has done for you?"
+
+But the son looked back with hard glittering eyes and a sneer on his
+handsome lustful lips:
+
+"I guess you did it about as much for your own sake as mine, didn't
+you?" he snarled. "And I don't see what that's got to do with it,
+anyway. Those trustees don't know what they missed if they never got the
+letter, and you've always kept in with them, you say, and made them
+think you were crazy about the girl. They pay you Betty's allowance till
+she's of age, don't they? They can't lay a finger on you. You're a fool
+to waste my time talking about a little thing like that when we ought to
+be planning a way to get hold of that girl before the trustees find out
+about it. If we don't get her fixed before she's of age we shall be in
+the soup as far as the property is concerned. Isn't that so? Well, then,
+we've got to get her good and married----"
+
+"If you only had let her marry Bessemer quietly," whimpered his mother,
+"and not have brought in all this deception. It will look so terrible if
+it ever comes out. I shall never be able to hold up my head in society
+again----!"
+
+"There you are again! Thinking of yourself----!" sneered the dutiful
+son, getting up and stamping about her room like a wild man. "I tell
+you, Mother, that girl is _mine_, and I won't have Bessemer or anybody
+else putting in a finger. _She's mine!_ I told her so a long time ago,
+and she knows it! She can't get away from me, and it's going to go the
+harder with her because she's tried. I'm never going to forgive her
+making a fool out of me before all those people! I'll get her yet!
+Little fool!"
+
+Herbert was well on his way into one of those fits of uncontrollable
+fury that had always held his mother in obedience to his slightest whim
+since the days when he used to lie on the floor and scream himself black
+in the face and hold his breath till she gave in; and the poor woman,
+wrought to the highest pitch of excitement already by the tragic events
+of the evening, which were only the climax of long weeks of agitation,
+anxiety and plotting, dropped suddenly into her boudoir chair and began
+to weep.
+
+But this new manifestation on the part of his usually pliable mother
+only seemed to infuriate the young man. He walked up to her, and seizing
+her by the shoulder, shook her roughly:
+
+"Cut that out!" he said hoarsely. "This is no time to cry. We've got to
+make some kind of a plan. Don't you see we'll have the hounds of the
+press at our heels in a few hours? Don't you see we've got to make a
+plan and stick to it?"
+
+His mother looked up, regardless for once of the devastation those few
+tears had made of her carefully groomed face, a new terror growing in
+her eyes:
+
+"I've told James to answer all telephone calls and say that Betty is
+doing as well as could be expected, but that the doctor says she must
+have perfect quiet to save her from a nervous breakdown----" she
+answered him coldly. "I'm not quite a fool if you do think so----"
+
+"Well, that's all right for to-night, but what'll we say to-morrow if we
+don't find her----"
+
+"Oh! She'll come back," said the stepmother confidently. "She can't help
+it. Why, where would she go? She hasn't a place on earth since she's
+lost confidence in that cousin of her mother's because he didn't come to
+her wedding. She hasn't an idea that he never got her note asking him to
+give her away. Thank heaven I got hold of that before it reached the
+postman! If that old granny had been here we should have had trouble
+indeed. I had an experience with him once just before I married Betty's
+father, and I never want to repeat it. But we must look out what gets in
+the papers!"
+
+"It's rather late for that, I suspect. The bloodhounds 'ill be around
+before many minutes and you better think up what you want said. But I'm
+not so sure she wouldn't go there, and we better tell the detectives
+that. What's the old guy's address? I'll call him up long distance and
+say she was on a motoring trip and intended to stop there if she had
+time. I'll ask if she's reached there yet."
+
+"That's a good idea, although I'm sure she was too hurt about it to go
+to him. She cried all the afternoon. It's a wonder she didn't look
+frightful! But that's Betty! Cry all day and come out looking like a
+star without any paint either. It's a pity somebody that would have
+appreciated it couldn't have had her complexion."
+
+"That's you all over, Mother, talking about frivolous things when
+everything's happening at once. You're the limit! I say, you'd better be
+getting down to business! I've thought of another thing. How about that
+old nurse, Candace? Betty used to be crazy about her? What became of
+her?"
+
+Mrs. Stanhope's face hardened, and anxiety grew in her eyes.
+
+"She might have gone to her, although I don't believe she knows where
+she is. I'm sure I don't. I sent her away just before we began to get
+ready for the wedding. I didn't dare have her here. She knows too much
+and takes too much upon herself. I wouldn't have kept her so long, only
+she knew I took the trustee's letter, and she was very impudent about it
+once or twice, so that I didn't really dare to let her go until just a
+few days ago. I thought things would all be over here before she could
+do any harm, and Betty would be of age and have her money in her own
+right, and being your wife, of course there wouldn't be any more trouble
+about it."
+
+"Well, you better find out what's become of her!" said the young man
+with darkening face. "_She_ ought to be locked up somewhere! She's
+liable to make no end of trouble! You can't tell what she's stirred up
+already! Ring for a servant and find out if they know where she is. Ten
+to one that's where Betty is."
+
+Mrs. Stanhope, with startled face, stepped to the bell and summoned
+Aileen:
+
+"Aileen, have you any idea where we could find Miss Betty's old nurse,
+Candace?" she asked in a soothing tone, studying the maid's countenance.
+"I think it might be well to send for her in case Miss Betty needs her.
+She was so much attached to her!"
+
+Aileen lifted startled eyes to her mistress' face. There was reserve and
+suspicion in her glance:
+
+"Why, she was here a few minutes ago," she said guardedly. "It seems
+Miss Betty sent her an invitation, and when Miss Betty took sick she was
+that scared she ran out of the church and come here to find out how she
+was. She might not have gone yet. I could go see."
+
+"Here! Was she here?" Mrs. Stanhope turned her head to her son and her
+eyes said: "That's strange!" but she kept her face well under control.
+
+"Yes, you might go and see if you can find her, Aileen, and if you do,
+tell her I would like to see her a moment."
+
+Aileen went away on her errand and Mrs. Stanhope turned to her son:
+
+"Betty can't have gone to her unless there was some collusion. But in
+any case I think we had better keep her here until we know something."
+
+Quick trotting steps were heard hurrying along the hall and a little
+jerky knock announced unmistakably the presence of Candace.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope surveyed the little red-faced creature coolly and sharply:
+
+"Candace, you have broken one of my express commands in returning here
+without permission from me, but seeing it was done in kindness I will
+overlook it this time and let you stay. You may be useful if they bring
+my daughter home to-night and I presume she will be very glad to see
+you. Just now she is--umm----" she glanced furtively at her son, and
+lifting her voice a trifle, as if to make her statement more
+emphatic--"she is at a private hospital near the church where they took
+her till she should be able to come home. It will depend on her
+condition whether they bring her to-night or to-morrow or in a few days.
+Meantime, if you like you may go up to your old room and wait until I
+send for you. I shall have news soon and will let you know. Don't go
+down to the servant's quarters, I wish to have you where I can call you
+at a moment's notice."
+
+Candace gave her ex-mistress a long, keen suspicious stare, pinned her
+with a glance as steely as her own for an instant, in search of a
+possible ulterior motive, and then turning on her little fat heel,
+vanished like a small fast racer in the direction of her old room.
+
+"Now," said Mrs. Stanhope, turning with a sigh of relief, "she's safe!
+I'll set Marie to watch her and if there's anything going on between
+those two Marie will find it out."
+
+But Herbert Hutton was already sitting at his mother's desk with the
+telephone book and calling up Long Distance.
+
+All the long hours when he had expected to have been standing under the
+rose bower downstairs in triumph with his bride, Herbert Hutton sat at
+that telephone in his mother's boudoir alternately raging at his mother
+and shouting futile messages over the 'phone. The ancient cousin of
+Betty's mother was discovered to be seriously ill in a hospital and
+unable to converse even through the medium of his nurse, so there was
+nothing to be gained there. Messages to the public functionaries in his
+town developed no news. Late into the night, or rather far toward the
+morning, Bessemer was discovered at a cabaret where his persistent
+mother and brother had traced him, too much befuddled with his evening's
+carouse to talk connectedly. He declared Betty was a good old girl, but
+she might go to thunder for all he cared; he knew a girl "worth twice of
+her."
+
+His mother turned with disgust from his babbling voice, convinced that
+he knew nothing of Betty's whereabouts. Nevertheless, by means of a
+financial system of threats and rewards which she had used on him
+successfully for a number of years, she succeeded in impressing upon him
+the necessity of coming home at once, and just as the pink was beginning
+to dawn in the gray of the morning, Bessemer drove up in a hired car,
+and stumbled noisily into the house, demanding to know where the wedding
+was. He wanted to kiss the bride.
+
+Candace, still in her stiff black silk, stood in the shadowy hall, as
+near as she dared venture, and listened, with her head thoughtfully on
+one side. Betty in her note about the wedding had said she was going to
+be married to Bessemer. But Bessemer didn't sound like a bridegroom. Had
+Bessemer run away then, or what? But some things looked queer. She
+remembered that Aileen had spoken as if Herbert was the bridegroom, but
+she had taken it for a mere slip of the tongue and thought nothing of
+it. When Aileen next came that way, she asked her if she happened to
+have got hold of one of the invitations, and Aileen, with her finger on
+her lips, nodded, and presently returned with something under her apron:
+
+"I slipped it from the waste-basket," she said, "and Miss Betty got a
+holt of it, and there was a tremenjus fuss about something, I couldn't
+make out what; but I heard the missus say it was all a mistake as she
+gave the order over the 'phone, and she must have misspoke herself, but
+anyhow she thought she'd destroyed them all and given a rush order and
+they would be all right and sent out in plenty of time. So she sticks
+this back in the waste-basket and orders me to take the basket down and
+burn it, but I keeps this out and hides it well. I couldn't see nothin'
+the matter with it, can you?"
+
+"There's _all_ the matter with it!" declared the angry nurse as she
+glared at the name of Herbert Hutton thoughtfully, and read between the
+lines more than she cared to tell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+NOT two miles away, Betty lay safe and warm in the flanellette
+nightgown, and watched Jane Carson turn out the light and open the
+window. A light leaped up from the street and made a friendly spot of
+brightness on the opposite wall, and Betty had a sense of cosiness that
+she had not felt since she was in boarding school with a roommate.
+
+"Now," said Jane, climbing into bed and pulling up the covers carefully
+lest she should let the cold in on her guest, "let's hear!--You warm
+enough?"
+
+There was a curious tenderness in her voice as if she had brought home a
+young princess and must guard her carefully.
+
+"Oh, perfectly!" said Betty, giving a little nervous shiver. "And I'm so
+glad to be here safe away from them all! Oh, I've needed some one to
+advise with _so_ much! I haven't had a soul since they sent my old nurse
+away because she dared to take my part sometimes."
+
+Suddenly Betty buried her face in the pillow and began to sob and Jane
+reached out quick gentle arms and gathered her in a close comforting
+embrace. In a moment more Betty had gained control of herself and began
+to explain:
+
+"You see," she said, catching her breath bravely, "they were determined
+I should marry a man I can't _endure_, and when I wouldn't they tried to
+_trick_ me into it anyway. I never suspected until I got into the church
+and looked around and couldn't see Bessemer anywhere; only the other one
+with his evil eyes gloating over me, and then I knew! They thought they
+would get me there before all that church full of people and I wouldn't
+dare do anything. But when I realized it, I just dropped right down in
+the aisle. I couldn't stand up, I was so frightened."
+
+"But I don't understand," said Jane. "Were there _two_ men?"
+
+"Oh, yes," sighed Betty, "there were two."
+
+"Well, where was the other one, the one you _wanted_ to marry?"
+
+"I don't know----" said Betty with a half sob in her voice. "That's just
+what frightened me. You see they were my stepmother's two sons, and it
+was my father's dying wish that I should marry one of them. I didn't
+really _want_ to marry Bessemer, but I simply _loathed_ Herbert, the
+younger one, who was so determined to marry me. I was terribly afraid
+of him. He had been frightfully cruel to me when I was a child and when
+he grew up he was always tormenting me; and then when he tried to make
+love to me he was so repulsive that I couldn't bear to look at him. It
+really made me sick to think of ever marrying him. Oh--I _couldn't_--no
+matter who asked me. So Bessemer and I decided to get married to stop
+the trouble. They were always nagging him, too, and I was kind of sorry
+for him."
+
+"But why should you marry anybody you didn't want to, I'd like to know!"
+exclaimed Jane in horror. "This is a free country and nobody ever makes
+people marry anybody they don't like any more. Why didn't you just beat
+it?"
+
+"I thought about that a good many times," said Betty, pressing her tired
+eyes with her cold little fingers, "but I couldn't quite bring myself to
+do it. In the first place, I didn't know where to go, nor what to do.
+They never would let me learn to do anything useful, so I couldn't have
+got any work; and anyhow I had a feeling that it wouldn't be possible to
+get away where Herbert couldn't find me if he wanted to. He's that way.
+He always gets what he wants, no matter whom it hurts. He's
+_awful_--Jane--really!"
+
+There was a pitiful note in her voice that appealed to the mother in
+Jane, and she stooped over her guest and patted her comfortingly on the
+shoulder:
+
+"You poor little kid," she said tenderly, "you must have been worried
+something awful, but still I don't get you; what was the idea in
+sticking around and thinking you _had_ to marry somebody you didn't
+like? You coulda gone to some one and claimed pertection. You could uv
+appealed to the p'lice if worst came to worst----!"
+
+"Oh! But Jane I couldn't! That would have brought our family into
+disgrace, and father would have felt so _dreadfully_ about it if he had
+been alive! I couldn't quite bring myself, either, to go against his
+dying request. We had always been so much to each other, Daddy and I.
+Besides, I didn't mind _Bessemer_ so _much_--he was always kind--though
+we never had much to do with each other----"
+
+"Well, I don't think I'd have stopped around long to please a father
+that didn't care any more for me than to want me to marry somebody I
+felt that way about!" said Jane, indignantly. "I haven't much use for a
+father like that!"
+
+"Oh, but he wasn't like that!" said Betty, rising up in her eagerness
+and looking at Jane through her shining curls that were falling all
+about her eager, troubled young face, "and he did love me, Jane, he
+loved me better than anything else in the whole world! That was why I
+was willing to sacrifice almost anything to please him."
+
+"Well, I'll be darned!" said Jane Carson, sitting up squarely in bed and
+staring at the spot of light on the wall. "That gets my goat! How could
+a man love you and yet want to torment you?"
+
+"Well, you see, Jane, he hadn't been very fond of them when they were
+boys"--she spoke it with dignity and a little gasp as if she were
+committing a breach of loyalty to explain, but realized that it was
+necessary--"and he felt when he was dying that he wanted to make
+reparation, so he thought if I should marry one of them it would show
+them that he had forgiven them----"
+
+"It--may--be--so," drawled Jane slowly, nodding her head deliberately
+with each word, "but--I don't see it that _way_! What kind of a man was
+this father of yours, anyway?"
+
+"Oh, a wonderful man, Jane!" Betty eagerly hastened to explain. "He was
+all the world to me, and he used to come up to school week-ends and take
+me on beautiful trips and we had the best times together, and he would
+tell me about my own dear mother----"
+
+Betty's hand grasped Jane's convulsively and her voice died out, in a
+sudden sob. Jane's hand went quickly to the bright head on the pillow:
+
+"There! there!" she whispered tenderly, "don't take on so, I didn't mean
+anything. I was just trying to dope it out; get it through my bean what
+in thunder----! Say! Did _he_ TELL _you_ he wanted you to marry those
+guys?"
+
+"Oh, no, he left word--it was his dying request."
+
+"Who'd he request it to?"
+
+"My stepmother."
+
+"H'm! I thought so! How'd you know he did? How'd you know but she was
+lyin'?"
+
+"No," said Betty sorrowfully, "she wasn't lying, she showed me the paper
+it was written on. There couldn't be any mistake. And his name was
+signed to it, his dear hand-writing, just as he always wrote it with the
+little quirl to the S that wasn't like anybody else. It went through me
+just like a knife when I saw it, that my dear father should have asked
+me to do what was so very very hard for me to think of. It was so much
+harder to have it come that way. If he had only asked me himself and we
+could have talked it over, perhaps he would have helped me to be strong
+enough to do it, but to have _her_ have to _tell me_! She felt that
+herself. She tried to be kind, I think. She said she wanted to have him
+wake me up and tell me himself, but she saw his strength was going and
+he was so anxious to have her write it down quick and let him sign it
+that she did as he asked----"
+
+"Well, you may depend on it he never wrote it at all--or anyhow, never
+knew what he was signing. Like as not she dragged it out of him some way
+while he was out of his mind or so near dying he didn't know what he was
+about. Besides, they mightta some of 'em forged his name. It's easy to
+copy signatures. Lotsa people do it real good. If I was you I wouldn't
+think another mite about it. If he was a man like you say he is, he
+couldn'ta done a thing like that to his own little girl, not on his
+life! It ain't like real fathers and mothers to. I know, fer I've got a
+mother that's a peach and no mistake! No, you may depend on it, he never
+knew a thing about that, and marrying a guy like that is the last thing
+on earth he'd want you to do."
+
+"Oh, do you really think so? Oh, are you _sure_?" cried Betty, clinging
+to Jane eagerly, the tears raining down her white cheeks. "I've thought
+so a thousand times, but I didn't dare trust myself to decide."
+
+"Yes, I'm sure!" said Jane, gathering her in her arms and hugging her
+tight, just as she would have done with a little sister who had waked up
+in the night with a bad dream. "Now, look here, you stop crying and
+don't you worry another bit. Just tell me the rest if there's any rest,
+so I'll know what to bank on. Who is the other guy, the one you didn't
+mind marryin'? What became of him?"
+
+"Why, that's the queer part," said Betty, troubled again. "He didn't
+seem to be anywhere, and when they carried me into the room back of the
+church and fanned me and got water to bathe my face, a doctor came and
+gave me some medicine and sent them all out, and I asked him to send
+Bessemer to me. I wanted to find out why he hadn't been standing up
+there by the minister the way I expected. I heard the doctor go out and
+ask for Bessemer and I heard my stepmother's voice say, 'Why Bessemer
+isn't here! He's gone down to the shore!' and then somebody said,
+'Hush,' and they shut the door, and I was so frightened that I got up
+and tried all the doors till I found one that led down some stairs, and
+I locked it behind me and ran and found you!"
+
+"You poor little kid!" cried Jane, cuddling her again. "I sure am glad I
+was on the job! But now, tell me, what's your idea? Will they make a
+big noise and come huntin' you?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Betty wearily. "I suppose they will. I _know_ they will,
+in fact. Herbert won't be balked in anything he wants----Bessemer won't
+count. He never counts. I'm sort of sorry for him, though I don't like
+him much. You see they had been making an awful fuss with him, too,
+about some actress down at the shore that he was sending flowers to, and
+I knew he didn't have a very easy time. So when he came in one day and
+asked me why I didn't marry _him_ and settle the whole thing that way, I
+was horrified at first, but I finally thought perhaps that would be the
+best thing to do. He said he wouldn't bother me any, if I wouldn't
+bother him; and we thought perhaps the others would let us alone then.
+But I might have known Herbert wouldn't give in! Bessemer is easily
+led--Herbert could have hired him to go away to-night--or they may have
+_made_ him ask me to marry him. He's like that," sadly. "You can't
+depend on him. I don't know. You see, it was kind of queer about the
+invitations. They came with Herbert's name in them first, and my
+stepmother tried to keep me from seeing them. She said they were late
+and she had them all sent off; but I found one, and when I went to my
+stepmother with it she said it was a mistake. She hadn't meant me to be
+annoyed by seeing it; and she didn't know how it happened; she must have
+misspoken herself--but it had been corrected and they would rush it
+through and send them right from the store this time so there wouldn't
+be any delay. I tried to think it was all right, but it troubled me, for
+I saw that Herbert hadn't given up at all--though he pretended to go
+away, and I hoped I wouldn't have any more trouble--but I might have
+known! Herbert never gave up anything in his life, not even when father
+was living. He always managed to get his way, somehow----"
+
+"Did he love you so much?" Jane asked awesomely.
+
+Betty shuddered:
+
+"Oh, I don't know whether it was love or hate! It was all the same. I
+hate to think about him--he is--_unbearable_, Jane! Why, Jane, once he
+told me if he ever got me in his power he'd break my will or kill me in
+the attempt!"
+
+"Well, now, there, Kid! Don't you think another bit about him, the old
+brute! You just lie down and sleep as easy as if you was miles away.
+They won't any of 'em ever find you here with me, and I've pulled the
+washstand in front of the door, so you needn't be dreaming of anybody
+coming in and finding you. Now go to sleep, and to-morrow I'll sneak you
+away to a place where they can't ever find you. Good night, Kid!" and
+Jane leaned down and kissed the soft hair on the pillow beside her.
+Betty flung her arms about her new-found friend and kissed her tenderly:
+
+"Oh, you've been so good to me! What should I ever have done if I hadn't
+found you. You were like an angel. I think surely God must have sent you
+to help me."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if he did!" said Jane thoughtfully. "An angel in a
+mackintosh! Some angel!"
+
+Jane Carson with her eyes wide open lay staring into the darkness and
+thinking it all over. She did not waste much time marvelling over the
+wonder that it had all happened to her. That would do for afterward when
+there was nothing else to be done about it. Now there must be some plans
+made and she was the one to make them. It was quite plain that the
+wonderful and beautiful Elizabeth Stanhope, the plans for whose wedding
+had been blazoned in the papers for days beforehand, was not at present
+capable of making or carrying out anything effective. Jane was. She knew
+it. She was a born leader and promoter. She liked nothing better than
+to work out a difficult situation. But this was the most difficult
+proposition that she had ever come up against. When her father died and
+her mother was left with the little house and the three younger children
+to support in a small country village, and only plain sewing and now and
+then a boarder to eke out a living for them all, she had sought and
+found, through a summer visitor who had taught her Sunday school class
+for a few weeks, a good position in this big Eastern city. She had made
+good and been promoted until her wages not only kept herself with strict
+economy, but justified her in looking forward to the time when she might
+send for her next younger sister. Her deft fingers kept her meagre
+wardrobe in neatness--and a tolerable deference to fashion, so that she
+had been able to annex the "gentleman friend" and take a little outing
+with him now and then at a moving picture theatre or a Sunday evening
+service. She had met and vanquished the devil on more than one
+battlefield in the course of her experience with different department
+heads; and she was wise beyond her years in the ways of the world. But
+this situation was different. Here was a girl who had been brought up
+"by hand," as she would have said with a sneer a few hours before, and
+she would have despised her for it. She raised up on one elbow and
+leaned over once more to watch the delicate profile of this gentle
+maiden, in the dim fitful light of the city night that came through the
+one little window. There had been something appealing in the beauty and
+frankness of the girl bride, something appalling in the situation she
+had found herself in. Jane Carson didn't know whether she was doing
+right or not to help this stray bride. It made her catch her breath to
+think how she might be bringing all the power of the law and of money
+upon her reckless young head, but she meant to do it, just the same.
+
+Elizabeth Stanhope! What a beautiful name! It fitted right in with all
+the romance Jane had ever dreamed. If she only could write scenarios,
+what a thriller this would make!
+
+Then she lay down and fell to planning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+THE morning dawned, and still no word from the missing bride. But the
+brief guarded sentences which Herbert Hutton had telephoned to the
+newspapers had been somehow sidetracked, and in their place a ghastly
+story had leaked out which some poor, hard-pressed reporter had gleaned
+from the gossip in the church and hurried off to put into type before
+there was time for it to be denied. Hot foot the story had run, and
+great headlines proclaimed the escape of Betty even while the family
+were carefully paving the way for the report of a protracted illness and
+absence, if need be, till they could find trace of her. The sun rose
+brightly and made weird gleaming of the silver wire on which the dying
+roses hung. The air was heavy with their breath, and the rooms in the
+early garish light looked out of place as if some fairy wand had failed
+to break the incantation at the right hour and left a piece of Magicland
+behind. The parlor maid went about uncertainly, scarcely knowing what to
+do and what to leave undone, and the milk cars, and newsboys, and early
+laborers began to make a clatter of every day on the streets. The
+morning paper, flung across the steps with Betty's picture, where
+Betty's reluctant feet had gone a few hours before, seemed to mock at
+life, and upstairs the man that Betty thought she went out to marry, lay
+in a heavy stupor of sleep. Happy Betty, to be resting beneath the
+coarse sheet of the kindly working girl, sleeping the sleep of
+exhaustion and youth in safety, two miles from the rose-bowered rooms!
+
+Long before day had really started in the great city Jane Carson was up
+and at work. She dressed swiftly and silently, then went to her little
+trunk, and from it selected a simple wardrobe of coarse clean garments.
+One needed mending and two buttons were off. She sat by the dingy window
+and strained her eyes in the dawn to make the necessary repairs. She
+hesitated long over the pasteboard suit-box that she drew from under the
+bed. It contained a new dark blue serge dress for which she had saved a
+long time and in which she had intended to appear at church next
+Sabbath. She was divided between her desire to robe the exquisite little
+guest in its pristine folds and her longing to wear it herself. There
+was a sense of justice also which entered into the matter. If that
+elegant wedding dress was to be hers, and all those wonderful silk
+underclothes, which very likely she would never allow herself to wear,
+for they would be out of place on a poor working girl, it was not fair
+to repay their donor in old clothes. She decided to give the runaway
+bride her new blue serge. With just a regretful bit of a sigh she laid
+it out on the foot of the bed, and carefully spread out the tissue
+papers and folded the white satin garments away out of sight, finishing
+the bundle with a thick wrapping of old newspapers from a pile behind
+the door and tying it securely. She added a few pins to make the matter
+more sure, and got out a stub of a pencil and labeled it in large
+letters, "My summer dresses," then shoved it far back under the bed. If
+any seeking detective came he would not be likely to bother with that,
+and he might search her trunk in vain for white satin slippers and
+wedding veils.
+
+Breakfast was next, and she put on her cloak and hurried out for
+supplies for the larder had been heavily depleted the night before to
+provide for her guest. With a tender glance toward the sleeper she
+slipped the key from the lock and placed it in the outside of the door,
+silently locking her guest within. Now there would be no danger of any
+one spiriting her away while she was gone, and no danger that the girl
+might wake up and depart in her absence.
+
+She stopped a newsboy on his way to the subway and bought a paper,
+thrilling at the thought that there might be something in it about the
+girl who lay asleep in her little hall bedroom.
+
+While she waited for her bundles she stole a glance at her paper, and
+there on the front page in big letters ran the heading:
+
+ STANHOPE WEDDING
+ HELD UP AT ALTAR BY
+ UNCONSCIOUS BRIDE
+
+ _Relatives Seek Runaway Girl Who is
+ Thought to be Insane_
+
+She caught her breath and rolled the paper in a little wad, stuffing it
+carelessly into her pocket. She could not read any more of that in
+public. She hastened back to her room.
+
+Betty was still sleeping. Jane stood watching her for a full minute with
+awe in her face. She could not but recognize the difference between
+herself and this fine sweet product of civilization and wealth. With the
+gold curls tossed back like a ripple of sunshine, and a pathetic little
+droop at the corners of her sweet mouth, nothing lovelier could be. Jane
+hurried to the window and turned her back on the bed while she perused
+the paper, her rage rising at the theories put forth. It was even
+hinted that her mother had been insane. Jane turned again and looked
+hard at the young sleeper, and the idea crossed her mind that even she
+might be deceived. Still, she was willing to trust her judgment that
+this girl was entirely sane, and anyhow she meant to help her! She
+stuffed the paper down behind the trunk and began to get breakfast. When
+it was almost ready she gently awoke the sleeper.
+
+Betty started at the light touch on her shoulder and looked wildly
+around at the strange room and stranger face of the other girl. In the
+dim light of the evening she had scarcely got to know Jane's face. But
+in a moment all the happenings of the day before came back, and she sat
+up excitedly.
+
+"I ought to have got away before it was light," she said gripping her
+hands together. "I wonder where I could go, Jane?" It was pleasant to
+call this girl by her first name. Betty felt that she was a tower of
+strength, and so kind.
+
+"I have this ring," she said, slipping off an exquisite diamond and
+holding it out. "Do you suppose there would be any way I could get money
+enough to travel somewhere with this? If I can't I'll have to walk, and
+I can't get far in a day that way."
+
+Betty was almost light-hearted, and smiling. The night had passed and no
+one had come. Perhaps after all she was going to get away without being
+stopped.
+
+Jane's face set grimly.
+
+"I guess there won't be any walking for you. You'll have to travel
+regular. It wouldn't be safe. And you don't want no rich jewelry along
+either. Was that your wedding ring?"
+
+"Oh, no; father gave it to me. It was mother's, but I guess they'd want
+me to use it now. I haven't anything else."
+
+"Of course," said Jane shortly to hide the emotion in her voice. "Now
+eat this while I talk," thrusting a plate of buttered toast and a glass
+of orange marmalade at her, and hastening to pour an inviting cup of
+coffee.
+
+"Now, I been thinking," she said sitting down on the edge of the bed and
+eating bits of the piece of toast she had burned--Betty's was toasted
+beautifully--"I got a plan. I think you better go to Ma. She's got room
+enough for you for a while, and I want my sister to come over and take a
+place I can get fer her. If you was there she could leave. Mebbe you
+could help Ma with the kids. Of course we're poor and you ain't used to
+common things like we have them, but I guess you ain't got much choice
+in your fix. I got a paper this morning. They're huntin' fer you hot
+foot. They say you was temperary insane, an' 'f I was you I'd keep out
+o' their way a while. You lay low an' I'll keep my eye out and let you
+know, I've got a little money under the mattrass I can let you have till
+that ring gets sold. You can leave it with me an' I'll do the best I can
+if you think you can trust me. Of course I'm a stranger, but then, land!
+So are you! We just _gotta_ trust each other. And I'm sending you to my
+mother if you'll go!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, springing up and hugging her impulsively, "you're so
+good! To think I should find somebody just like that right in the street
+when I needed you so. I almost think God did it!"
+
+"Well, mebbe!" said Jane, in her embarrassment turning to hang up a
+skirt that had fallen from its hook. "That's what they say sometimes in
+Chrishun Deavor meetin'. Ever go to Chrishun Deavor? Better go when you
+get out home. They have awful good socials an' ice cream, and you'll
+meet some real nice folks. We've got a peach of a minister, and his wife
+is perfec'ly dandy. I tell you I missed 'em when I came to the city!
+They was always doing something nice fer the young folks."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty, wondering if she might really be going to
+live like other girls. Then the shadow of her danger fell over her once
+more, and her cheek paled.
+
+"If I can only get there safely," she shuddered. "Oh, Jane! You can't
+understand what it would be to have to go back!"
+
+"Well, you're not going back. You're going to Tinsdale, and nobody's
+going to find you ever, unless you want 'em to! See? Now, listen! We
+haven't any time to waste. You oughtta get off on the ten o'clock train.
+I put out some clothes there for yeh. They ain't like yours, but it
+won't do fer you to go dressed like a millionairess. Folks out to
+Tinsdale would suspect yeh right off the bat. You gotta go plain like
+me, and it's this way: You're a friend I picked up in the city whose
+mother is dead and you need country air a while, see? So I sent you home
+to stay with Ma till you got strong again. I'm wirin' Ma. She'll
+understand. She always does. I kinda run Ma anyhow. She thinks the sun
+rises an' sets in me, so she'll do just what I say."
+
+"I'm afraid I oughtn't to intrude," said Betty soberly, taking up the
+coarse, elaborately trimmed lingerie with a curious look, and trying not
+to seem to notice that it was different from any she had ever worn
+before.
+
+"Say! Looka here!" said Jane Carson, facing round from her coffee cup on
+the washstand. "I'm sorry to criticize, but if you could just talk a
+little slang or something. Folks'll never think you belong to me.
+_'Intrude!'_ Now, that sounds stuck up! You oughtta say 'be in the way,'
+or something natural like that. See?"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't," said Betty dubiously, "but I'll try."
+
+"You're all right, Kid," said Jane with compunction in her voice. "Just
+let yourself down a little like I do, and remember you don't wear silk
+onderclothes now. I'm afraid those stockings won't feel very good after
+yours, but you gotta be careful. An' 'f I was you I'd cut my hair off, I
+really would. It's an awful pity, it's so pretty, but it'll grow again.
+How old are you?"
+
+"Almost twenty-one," said Betty thoughtfully. "Just three months more
+and I'll be twenty-one."
+
+"H'm! Of age!" said Jane with a sharp significant look at her, as if a
+new thought had occurred. "Well, you don't look it! You could pass for
+fifteen, especially if you had your hair bobbed. I can do it for you if
+you say so."
+
+"All right," said Betty promptly without a qualm. "I always wanted it
+short. It's an awful nuisance to comb."
+
+"That's the talk!" said Jane. "Say 'awful' a lot, and you'll kinda get
+into the hang of it. It sounds more--well, _natural_, you know; not like
+society talk. Here, sit down and I'll do it quick before you get cold
+feet. I sure do hate to drop them curls, but I guess it's best."
+
+The scissors snipped, snipped, and the lovely strands of bright hair
+fell on the paper Jane had spread for them. Betty sat cropped like a
+sweet young boy. Jane stood back and surveyed the effect through her
+lashes approvingly. She knew the exact angle at which the hair should
+splash out on the cheek to be stylish. She had often contemplated
+cutting her own, only that her mother had begged her not to, and she
+realized that her hair was straight as a die and would never submit to
+being tortured into that alluring wave over the ear and out toward the
+cheekbone. But this sweet young thing was a darling! She felt that the
+daring deed had been a success.
+
+"I got a bottle of stuff to make your hair dark," she remarked. "I guess
+we better put it on. That hair of yours is kinda conspicuous, you know,
+even when it's cut off. It won't do you any harm. It washes off soon."
+And she dashed something on the yellow hair. Betty sat with closed eyes
+and submitted. Then her mentor burnt a cork and put a touch to the
+eyebrows that made a different Betty out of her. A soft smudge of dark
+under her eyes and a touch of talcum powder gave her a sickly complexion
+and when Betty stood up and looked in the glass she did not know
+herself. Jane finished the toilet by a smart though somewhat shabby
+black hat pulled well down over Betty's eyes, and a pair of gray cotton
+gloves, somewhat worn at the fingers. The high-laced boots she put upon
+the girl's feet were two sizes too large, and wobbled frightfully, but
+they did well enough, and there seemed nothing more to be desired.
+
+"Now," said Jane as she pinned on her own hat, "you've gotta have a name
+to go by. I guess you better be Lizzie Hope. It kinda belongs to yeh,
+and yet nobody'd recognize it. You don't need to tell Ma anything you
+don't want to, and you can tell her I'll write a letter to-night all
+about it. Now come on! We gotta go on the trolley a piece. I don't see
+havin' you leave from the General Station. We'll go up to the Junction
+and get the train there."
+
+With an odd feeling that she was bidding good-by to herself forever and
+was about to become somebody else, Betty gave one more glance at the
+slim boylike creature in the little mirror over the washstand and
+followed Jane out of the room, shuffling along in the big high-heeled
+boots, quite unlike the Betty that she was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+WARREN REYBURN laid down his pen and shoved back his office chair
+impatiently, stretching out his long muscular limbs nervously and
+rubbing his hands over his eyes as if to clear them from annoying
+visions.
+
+James Ryan, his office boy and stenographer, watched him furtively from
+one corner of his eye, while his fingers whirled the typewriter on
+through the letter he was typing. James wanted to take his girl to the
+movies that evening and he hadn't had a chance to see her the day
+before. He was wondering if Mr. Reyburn would go out in time for him to
+call her up at her noon hour. He was a very temperamental stenographer
+and understood the moods and tenses of his most temperamental employer
+fully. It was all in knowing how to manage him. James was most
+deferential, and knew when to keep still and not ask questions. This was
+one of the mornings when he went to the dictionary himself when he
+wasn't sure of a word rather than break the ominous silence. Not that
+Mr. Reyburn was a hard master, quite the contrary, but this was James's
+first place straight from his brief course at business school, and he
+was making a big bluff of being an old experienced hand.
+
+There was not much business to be done. This was Warren Reyburn's "first
+place" also in the world of business since finishing his law course, and
+he was making a big bluff at being very busy, to cover up a sore heart
+and an anxious mind. It was being borne in upon him gradually that he
+was not a shouting success in business so far. The rosy dreams that had
+floated near all through his days of hard study had one by one left him,
+until his path was now leading through a murky gray way with little hope
+ahead. Nothing but sheer grit kept him at it, and he began to wonder how
+long he could stick it out if nothing turned up.
+
+True, he might have accepted an offer that even now lay open on his
+desk; a tempting offer, too, from a big corporation who recognized the
+influence of his old family upon their particular line of business; but
+it was a line that his father and his grandfather had scorned to touch,
+and he had grown up with an honest contempt for it. He just could not
+bring himself to wrest the living from the poor and needy, and plunder
+the unsuspecting, and he knew that was what it would be if he closed
+with this offer. Not yet had he been reduced to such depths, he told
+himself, shutting his fine lips in a firm curve. "No, not if he
+starved!"
+
+That was the legitimate worry that ruffled his handsome brow as he sat
+before his desk frowning at that letter. He meant to begin dictation on
+its answer in another five minutes or so, but meantime he was forcing
+himself to go over every point and make it strong and clear to himself,
+so that he should say, "No!" strongly and clearly to the corporation. It
+might do harm to make his reason for declining so plain, but he owed it
+to his self-respect to give it nevertheless, and he meant to do so.
+After all, he had no business so far to harm, so what did it matter? If
+nothing turned up pretty soon to give him a start he would have to
+change his whole plan of life and take up something else where one did
+not have to wait for a reputation before he could have a chance to show
+what was in him.
+
+But underneath the legitimate reason for his annoyance this morning
+there ran a most foolish little fretting, a haunting discomfort.
+
+He had taken his cousin to a wedding the night before because her
+husband had been called away on business, and she had no one to escort
+her. They had been late and the church was crowded. He had had to
+stand, and as he idly looked over the audience he suddenly looked full
+into the great sad eyes of the sweetest little bride he had ever seen.
+He had not been a young man to spend his time over pretty faces,
+although there were one or two nice girls in whom he was mildly
+interested. He had even gone so far as to wonder now and then which of
+them he would be willing to see sitting at his table day after day the
+rest of his life, and he had not yet come to a satisfactory conclusion.
+His cousin often rallied him about getting married, but he always told
+her it would be time enough to think about that when he had an income to
+offer her.
+
+But when he saw that flower-face, his attention was held at once.
+Somehow he felt as if he had not known there was a face like that in all
+the world, so like a child's, with frank yet modest droop to the head,
+and the simplicity of an angel, yet the sadness of a sacrificial
+offering. Unbidden, a great desire sprang up to lift for her whatever
+burden she was bearing, and bring light into those sad eyes. Of course
+it was a passing sensation, but his eyes had traveled involuntarily to
+the front of the church to inspect the handsome forbidding face of the
+bridegroom, and with instant dissatisfaction he looked back to the girl
+once more and watched her come up to the altar, speculating as those
+who love to study humanity are wont to do when they find an interesting
+subject. How had those two types ever happened to come together? The
+man's part in it was plain. He was the kind who go about seeking whom
+they may devour, thought Warren Reyburn. But the woman! How could a
+wise-eyed child like that have been deceived by a handsome face? Well,
+it was all speculation of course, and he had nothing to do with any of
+them. They were strangers to him and probably always would be. But he
+had no conception at that time what a small world he lived in, nor how
+near the big experiences of life lie all about us.
+
+He watched the lovely bride as all the audience watched her until he saw
+her fall, and then he started forward without in the least realizing
+what he was doing. He found himself half way up the side aisle to the
+altar before he came to himself and forced his feet back to where his
+cousin was sitting. Of course he had no right up there, and what could
+he do when there were so many of her friends and relatives about her?
+
+His position near the side door through which they carried her made it
+quite possible for him to look down into her still face as they took her
+to the vestry room, and he found a great satisfaction in seeing that
+she was even more beautiful at close hand than at a distance. He
+wondered afterward why his mind had laid so much stress upon the fact
+that her skin was lovely like a baby's without any sign of cosmetics. He
+told himself that it was merely his delight to learn that there was such
+a type, and that it ran true.
+
+He was therefore not a little disappointed that the minister, after the
+congregation had waited an unconscionable time for the return of the
+bride, came out and announced that owing to her continued collapse the
+ceremony would have to be postponed. The clatter of polite wonder and
+gossip annoyed him beyond measure, and he was actually cross with his
+cousin on the way home when she ranted on about the way girls nowadays
+were brought up, coddled, so that a breath would blow them away. Somehow
+she had not looked like that kind of a girl.
+
+But when the morning papers came out with sensational headlines
+proclaiming that the bride had run away, and suggesting all sorts of
+unpleasant things about her, he felt a secret exultation that she had
+been brave enough to do so. It was as if he had found that her spirit
+was as wise and beautiful as her face had been. His interest in the
+matter exceeded all common sense and he was annoyed and impatient with
+himself more than he cared to own. Never before had a face lured his
+thoughts like this one. He told himself that his business was getting on
+his nerves, and that as soon as he could be sure about one or two little
+matters that he hoped would fall into his hands to transact, he would
+take a few days off and run down to the shore.
+
+Again and again the little white bride came across his vision and
+thoughts, and hindered the courteous but stinging phrases with which he
+had intended to illumine his letter. At last he gave it up and taking
+his hat went out in the keen November air for a walk to clear his brain.
+
+This was James Ryan's opportunity. It was almost twelve o'clock and no
+harm in calling the "forelady" in the cotton blouse department of the
+big factory. He swung to the telephone with alacrity.
+
+"I want to speak with Miss Carson, please. Yes, Miss J. Carson. Is that
+Miss Carson? Oh, hello, Jane, is that you?"
+
+"Yes, it is _Mister_ Ryan," answered Jane sweetly.
+
+"Jane!"
+
+"Well, didn't you 'Miss Carson' me?"
+
+"Give it up, Jane. You win. Say, Jane!"
+
+"Well, Jimmie?"
+
+"That's my girl, say how about that wedding veil? Been thinking any more
+about it?"
+
+There was silence for a moment, then a conscious giggle, the full
+significance of which James Ryan was not in a position to figure out.
+
+"Say, Jimmie, quit your kiddin'! You mustn't say things like that over
+the 'phone."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"'Cause. Folks might listen."
+
+"I should worry! Well, since you say so. How about seein' a show
+together to-night?"
+
+"Fine an' dandy, Jimmie! I'll be ready at the usual time. I gotta go
+now, the boss is comin'. So long, Jimmie!"
+
+"So long, darling!"
+
+But the receiver at the other end hung up with a click, while Jane with
+a smile on her lips thought of the pasteboard box under her bed and
+wondered what Jimmie would say if he could know. For Jane had fully made
+up her mind that Jimmie was not to know. Not at present, anyhow. Some
+time she might tell him if things turned out all right, but she knew
+just what lordly masculine advice and criticism would lie upon James
+Ryan's lips if she attempted to tell him about her strange and wonderful
+guest of the night before. Maybe she was a fool to have trusted a
+stranger that way. Maybe the girl would turn out to be insane or wrong
+somehow, and trouble come, but she didn't believe it; and anyhow, she
+was going to wait, until she saw what happened next before she got
+Jimmie mixed up in it. Besides, the secret wasn't hers to tell. She had
+promised Betty, and she always kept her promises. That was one reason
+why she was so slow in promising to think about a wedding veil in
+response to James Ryan's oft repeated question.
+
+That evening on the way to the movies Jane instituted an investigation.
+
+"Jimmie, what kind of a man is your boss?"
+
+"White man!" said Jimmie promptly.
+
+"Aw! Cut it out, James Ryan! I don't mean how'd s'e look, or what color
+is he; I mean what kind of a _man_ is he?"
+
+"Well, that's the answer. White man! What's the matter of that? I said
+it and I meant it. He's white if there ever was one!"
+
+"Oh, that!" said Miss Carson in scorn. "Of course I know he's a peach.
+If he wasn't you wouldn't be workin' for him. What I mean, is he a
+_snob_?"
+
+"No chance!"
+
+"Well, I saw him _with_ 'em last night. I was passin' that big church
+up Spruce Street and I saw him standin' with his arms folded so----" she
+paused on the sidewalk and indicated his pose. "It was a swell weddin'
+and the place was full up. He had a big white front an' a clawhammer
+coat. I know it was him 'cause I took a good look at him that time you
+pointed him out at church that evenin'. I wondered was he _in with_ them
+swells?"
+
+Her tone expressed scorn and not a little anxiety, as if she had asked
+whether he frequented places of low reputation.
+
+"Oh, if you mean, _could_ he be, why that's a diffrunt thing!" said
+James the wise. "_Sure_, he could be if he wanted, I guess. He's got a
+good family. His uncle's some high muckymuck, and you often see his
+aunts' and cousins' names in the paper giving teas and receptions and
+going places. But he don't seem to go much. I often hear folks ask him
+why he wasn't some place last night, or 'phone to know if he won't come,
+and he always says he can't spare the time, or he can't afford it, or
+something like that."
+
+"Ain't he rich, Jimmie?"
+
+"Well, no, not exactly. He may have some money put away, or left him by
+some one. If he don't have I can't fer the life of me see how he lives.
+But he certainly don't get it in fees. I often wonder where my salary
+comes from, but it always does, regular as the clock."
+
+"Jimmie, doesn't he have _any_ business at all?"
+
+"Oh, yes he has business, but it ain't the paying kind. Fer instance,
+there was a man in to-day trying to get his house back that another man
+took away from him, and my boss _took the case_! He took it _right off
+the bat_ without waiting to see whether the man could pay him anything
+or not! He can't! He's only a poor laboring man, and a rich man stole
+his house. Just out an' out stole it, you know. It's how he got rich.
+Like as not we'll lose it, too, those rich men have so many ways of
+crawling out of a thing and making it look nice to the world. Oh, he'll
+get a fee, of course--twenty-five dollars, perhaps--but what's
+twenty-five dollars, and like as not never get even the whole of that,
+or have to wait for it? Why, it wouldn't keep _me_ in his office long!
+Then there was a girl trying to get hold of the money her own father
+left her, and her uncle frittered away and pertends it cost him all
+that, and _he's_ been supporting _her_! Well, we took that, too, and we
+won't get much out of that even if we do win. Then there come along one
+of these here rich guys with a pocket full of money and a nice slick
+tongue wanting to be protected from the law in some devilment, and _him
+we turned down flat_! That's how it goes in our office. I can't just
+figger out how it's coming out! But he's a good guy, a white man if
+there ever was one!"
+
+"I should say!" responded Jane with shining eyes. "Say, Jimmie, what's
+the matter of us throwin' a little business in his way--real, payin'
+business, I mean?"
+
+"Fat chance!" said Jimmie dryly.
+
+"You never can tell!" answered Jane dreamily. "I'm goin' to think about
+it. Our fact'ry has lawyers sometimes. I might speak to the boss."
+
+"Do!" said Jimmie sarcastically! "And have yer labor for yer pains!
+We'll prob'ly turn _them_ down. Fact'ries are _always_ doing things they
+hadn't ought to."
+
+But Jane was silent and thoughtful, and they were presently lost in the
+charms of Mary Pickford.
+
+The evening papers came out with pictures of Elizabeth Stanhope and her
+bridegroom that was to have been. Jane cut away the bridegroom and
+pasted the bride's picture in the flyleaf of her Bible, then hid it away
+in the bottom of her trunk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+WHEN Betty found herself seated on the day coach of a way train, jogging
+along toward a town she had never seen and away from the scenes and
+people of her childhood, she found herself trembling violently. It was
+as if she had suddenly been placed in an airplane all by herself and
+started off to the moon without any knowledge of her motor power or
+destination. It both frightened and exhilarated her. She wanted to cry
+and she wanted to laugh, but she did neither. Instead she sat demurely
+for the first hour and a half looking out of the window like any
+traveler, scarcely turning her head nor looking at anything in the car.
+It seemed to her that there might be a detective in every seat just
+waiting for her to lift her eyes that he might recognize her. But
+gradually as the time dragged by and the landscape grew monotonous she
+began to feel a little more at her ease. Furtively she studied her
+neighbors. She had seldom traveled in a common car, and it was new to
+her to study all types as she could see them here. She smiled at a dirty
+baby and wished she had something to give it. She studied the careworn
+man and the woman in black who wept behind her veil and would not smile
+no matter how hard the man tried to make her. It was a revelation to her
+that any man would try as hard as that to make a woman smile. She
+watched the Italian family with five children and nine bundles, and
+counted the colors on a smart young woman who got in at a way station.
+Every minute of the day was interesting. Every mile of dreary November
+landscape that whirled by gave her more freedom.
+
+She opened the little shabby handbag that Jane had given her and got out
+the bit of mirror one inch by an inch and a half backed with pasteboard
+on which lingered particles of the original green taffeta lining and
+studied her own strange face, trying to get used to her new self and her
+new name. Jane had written it, Lizzie Hope, on the back of the envelope
+containing the address of Mrs. Carson. It seemed somehow an
+identification card. She studied it curiously and wondered if Lizzie
+Hope was going to be any happier than Betty Stanhope had been. And then
+she fell to thinking over the strange experiences of the last
+twenty-four hours and wondering whether she had done right or not, and
+whether her father would have been disappointed in her, "ashamed of
+her," as her stepmother had said. Somehow Jane had made her feel that
+he would not, and she was more light-hearted than she had been for many
+a day.
+
+Late in the afternoon she began to wonder what Tinsdale would be like.
+In the shabby handbag was her ticket to Tinsdale and eight dollars and a
+half in change. It made her feel richer than she had ever felt in her
+life, although she had never been stinted as to pocket money. But this
+was her very own, for her needs, and nobody but herself to say how she
+should spend either it or her time.
+
+Little towns came in sight and passed, each one with one or two
+churches, a schoolhouse, a lot of tiny houses. Would Tinsdale look this
+way? How safe these places seemed, yet lonely, too! Still, no one would
+ever think of looking for her in a lonely little village.
+
+They passed a big brick institution, and she made out the words, "State
+Asylum," and shuddered inwardly as she thought of what Jane had told her
+about the morning paper. Suppose they should hunt her up and _put her in
+an insane asylum_, just to show the world that it had not been their
+fault that she had run away from her wedding! The thought was appalling.
+She dropped her head on her hand with her face toward the window and
+tried to pretend she was asleep and hide the tears that would come, but
+presently a boy came in at the station with a big basket and she bought
+a ham sandwich and an apple. It tasted good. She had not expected that
+it would. She decided that she must have been pretty hungry and then
+fell to counting her money, aghast that the meager supper had made such
+a hole in her capital. She must be very careful. This might be all the
+money she would have for a very long time, and there was no telling what
+kind of an impossible place she was going to. She might have to get away
+as eagerly as she had come. Jane was all right, but that was not saying
+that her mother and sisters would be.
+
+It was growing dark, and the lights were lit in the car. All the little
+Italian babies had been given drinks of water, and strange things to
+eat, and tumbled to sleep across laps and on seats, anywhere they would
+stick. They looked so funny and dirty and pitiful with their faces all
+streaked with soot and molasses candy that somebody had given them. The
+mother looked tired and greasy and the father was fat and dark, with
+unpleasant black eyes that seemed to roll a great deal. Yet he was kind
+to the babies and his wife seemed to like him. She wondered what kind of
+a home they had, and what relation the young fellow with the shiny dark
+curls bore to them. He seemed to take as much care of the babies as did
+their father and mother.
+
+The lights were flickering out in the villages now and gave a friendly
+inhabited look to the houses. Sometimes when the train paused at
+stations Betty could see people moving back and forth at what seemed to
+be kitchen tables and little children bringing dishes out, all working
+together. It looked pleasant and she wondered if it would be like that
+where she was going. A big lump of loneliness was growing in her throat.
+It was one thing to run away from something that you hated, but it was
+another to jump into a new life where one neither knew nor was known.
+Betty began to shrink inexpressibly from it all. Not that she wanted to
+go back! Oh, no; far from it! But once when they passed a little white
+cemetery with tall dark fir trees waving guardingly above the white
+stones she looked out almost wistfully. If she were lying in one of
+those beside her father and mother how safe and rested she would be. She
+wouldn't have to worry any more. What was it like where father and
+mother had gone? Was it a real place? Or was that just the end when one
+died? Well, if she were sure it was all she would not care. She would be
+willing to just go out and not be. But somehow that didn't seem to be
+the commonly accepted belief. There was always a beyond in most people's
+minds, and a fear of just what Betty didn't know. She was a good deal of
+a heathen, though she did not know that either.
+
+Then, just as she was floundering into a lot of theological mysteries of
+her own discovery the nasal voice of the conductor called out:
+"Tinsdale! Tinsdale!" and she hurried to her feet in something of a
+panic, conscious of her short hair and queer clothes.
+
+Down on the platform she stood a minute trying to get used to her feet,
+they felt so numb and empty from long sitting. Her head swam just a
+little, too, and the lights on the station and in the houses near by
+seemed to dance around her weirdly. She had a feeling that she would
+rather wait until the train was gone before she began to search for her
+new home, and then when the wheels ground and began to turn and the
+conductor shouted "All aboard!" and swung himself up the step as she had
+seen him do a hundred times that afternoon, a queer sinking feeling of
+loneliness possessed her, and she almost wanted to catch the rail and
+swing back on again as the next pair of car steps flung by her.
+
+Then a voice that sounded a little like Jane's said pleasantly in her
+ear: "Is this Lizzie Hope?" and Betty turned with a thrill of actual
+fright to face Nellie Carson and her little sister Emily.
+
+"Bobbie'll be here in a minute to carry your suitcase," said Nellie
+efficiently; "he just went over to see if he could borrow Jake Peter's
+wheelbarrow in case you had a trunk. You didn't bring your trunk? O, but
+you're going to stay, aren't you? I'm goin' up to the city to take a
+p'sition, and Mother'd be awful lonesome. Sometime of course we'll send
+fer them to come, but now the children's little an' the country's better
+fer them. They gotta go to school awhile. You'll stay, won't you?"
+
+"How do you know you'll want me?" laughed Betty, at her ease in this
+unexpected air of welcome.
+
+"Why, of course we'd want you. Jane sent you. Jane wouldn't of sent you
+if you hadn't been a good scout. Jane knows. Besides, I've got two eyes,
+haven't I? I guess I can tell right off."
+
+Emily's shy little hand stole into Betty's and the little girl looked
+up:
+
+"I'm awful glad you come! I think you're awful pretty!"
+
+"Thank you!" said Betty, warmly squeezing the little confiding hand. It
+was the first time in her life that a little child had come close to her
+in this confiding way. Her life had not been among children.
+
+Then Bob whirled up, bareheaded, freckled, whistling, efficient, and
+about twelve years old. He grabbed the suitcase, eyed the stranger with
+a pleasant grin, and stamped off into the darkness ahead of them.
+
+It was a new experience to Betty to be walking down a village street
+with little houses on each side and lights and warmth and heads bobbing
+through the windows. It stirred some memory of long ago, before she
+could scarcely remember. She wondered, had her own mother ever lived in
+a small village?
+
+"That's our church," confided Emily, as they passed a large frame
+building with pointed steeple and belfry. "They're goin' to have a
+entertainment t'morra night, an' we're all goin' and Ma said you cud go
+too."
+
+"Isn't that lovely!" said Betty, feeling a sudden lump like tears in her
+throat. It was just like living out a fairy story. She hadn't expected
+to be taken right in to family life this way.
+
+"But how did you know I was coming on that train?" she asked the older
+girl suddenly. "Jane said she was going to telegraph, but I expected to
+have to hunt around to find the house."
+
+"Oh, we just came down to every train after the telegram came. This is
+the last train to-night, and we were awful scared for fear you wouldn't
+come till morning, an' have to stay on the train all night. Ma says it
+isn't nice for a girl to have to travel alone at night. Ma always makes
+Jane and me go daytimes."
+
+"It was just lovely of you," said Betty, wondering if she was talking
+"natural" enough to please Jane.
+
+"Did you bob you hair 'cause you had a fever?" asked Nellie enviously.
+
+"No," said Betty, "that is, I haven't been very well, and I thought it
+might be good for me," she finished, wondering how many questions like
+that it was going to be hard for her to answer without telling a lie. A
+lie was something that her father had made her feel would hurt him more
+deeply than anything else she could do.
+
+"I just love it," said Nellie enthusiastically. "I wanted to cut mine,
+an' so did Jane, but Ma wouldn't let us. She says God gave us our hair,
+an' we oughtta take care of it."
+
+"That's true, too," said Betty. "I never thought about that. But I guess
+mine will grow again after a while. I think it will be less trouble this
+way. But it's very dirty with traveling. I think I'll have to wash it
+before I put it on a pillow."
+
+That had troubled Betty greatly. She didn't know how to get rid of that
+hair dye before Jane's family got used to having it dark.
+
+"Sure, you can wash it, if you ain't 'fraid of takin' cold. There's lots
+of hot water. Ma thought you'd maybe want to take a bath. We've got a
+big tin bath-tub out in the back shed. Ma bought it off the Joneses when
+they got their porcelain one put into their house. We don't have no
+runnin' water but we have an awful good well. Here's our house. I guess
+Bob's got there first. See, Ma's out on the steps waitin' fer us."
+
+The house was a square wooden affair, long wanting paint, and trimmed
+with little scrollwork around the diminutive front porch. The color was
+indescribable, blending well into the surroundings either day or night.
+It had a cheerful, decent look, but very tiny. There was a small yard
+about it with a picket fence, and a leafless lilac bush. A cheerful
+barberry bush flanked the gate on either side. The front door was open
+into a tiny hall and beyond the light streamed forth from a glass lamp
+set on a pleasant dining-room table covered with a red cloth. Betty
+stepped inside the gate and found herself enveloped in two motherly
+arms, and then led into the light and warmth of the family dining-room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THERE was a kettle of stew on the stove in the kitchen, kept hot from
+supper for Betty, with fresh dumplings just mixed before the train came
+in, and bread and butter with apple sauce and cookies. They made her sit
+right down and eat, before she even took her hat off, and they all sat
+around her and talked while she ate. It made her feel very much at home
+as if somehow she was a real relative.
+
+It came over her once how different all this was from the house which
+she had called home all her life. The fine napery, the cut glass and
+silver, the stately butler! And here was she eating off a stone china
+plate thick enough for a table top, with a steel knife and fork and a
+spoon with the silver worn off the bowl. She could not help wondering
+what her stepmother would have said to the red and white tablecloth, and
+the green shades at the windows. There was an old sofa covered with
+carpet in the room, with a flannel patchwork pillow, and a cat cuddled
+up cosily beside it purring away like a tea-kettle boiling. Somehow,
+poor as it was, it seemed infinitely more attractive than any room she
+had ever seen before, and she was charmed with the whole family. Bobbie
+sat at the other end of the table with his elbows on the table and his
+round eyes on her. When she smiled at him he winked one eye and grinned
+and then wriggled down under the table out of sight.
+
+The mother had tired kind eyes and a firm cheerful mouth like Jane's.
+She took Betty right in as if she had been her sister's child.
+
+"Come, now, get back there, Emily. Don't hang on Lizzie. She'll be tired
+to death of you right at the start. Give her a little peace while she
+eats her supper. How long have you and Jane been friends, Lizzie?" she
+asked, eager for news of her own daughter.
+
+Betty's cheeks flushed and her eyes grew troubled. She was very much
+afraid that being Lizzie was going to be hard work:
+
+"Why, not so very long," she said hesitatingly.
+
+"Are you one of the girls in her factory?"
+
+"Oh, no!" said Betty wildly, wondering what would come next. "We--just
+met--that is--why--_out one evening_!" she finished desperately.
+
+"Oh, I see!" said the mother. "Yes, she wrote about going out sometimes,
+mostly to the movies. And to church. My children always make it a point
+to go to church wherever they are. I brought 'em up that way. I hope you
+go to church."
+
+"I shall love to," said Betty eagerly.
+
+"Is your mother living?" was the next question.
+
+"No," answered Betty. "Mother and father are both dead and I've been
+having rather a hard time. Jane was kind to me when I was in trouble."
+
+"I'll warrant you! That's Jane!" beamed her mother happily. "Jane always
+was a good girl, if I do say so. I knew Jane was at her tricks again
+when she sent me that telegram."
+
+"Ma's got you a place already!" burst out Nellie eagerly.
+
+"Now, Nellie, you said you'd let Ma tell that!" reproached Bob. "You
+never can keep your mouth shut."
+
+"There! There! Bob, don't spoil the evening with anything unkind,"
+warned the mother. "Yes, Lizzie, I got you a position. It just happened
+I had the chance, and I took it, though I don't really b'lieve that
+anythin' in this world just happens, of course. But it did seem
+providential. Mrs. Hathaway wanted somebody to look after her little
+girl. She's only three years old and she is possessed to run away every
+chance she gets. Course I s'pose she's spoiled. Most rich children are.
+Now, my children wouldn't have run away. They always thought too much
+of what I said to make me trouble. But that's neither here nor there.
+She does it, and besides her Ma is an invalid. She had an operation, so
+she has to lie still a good bit, and can't be bothered. She wants
+somebody just to take the little girl out walking and keep her happy in
+the house, an' all."
+
+"How lovely!" exclaimed Betty. "I shall enjoy it, I know."
+
+"She's awful pretty!" declared Emily eagerly. "Got gold curls and blue
+eyes just like you, and she has ever an' ever so many little dresses,
+and wears pink shoes and blue shoes, an' rides a tricycle."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty.
+
+"You'll get good wages," said the mother. "She said she'd give you six
+dollars a week, an' mebbe more, an' you'd get some of your meals."
+
+"Then I can pay my board to you," cried Betty.
+
+"Don't worry about that, child. We'll fix that up somehow. We're awful
+glad to have you come, and I guess we shall like each other real well.
+Now, children, it's awful late. Get to bed. Scat! Lizzie can have her
+bath an' get to bed, too. Come, mornin's half way here already!"
+
+The children said good night and Betty was introduced to the tin bath
+tub and improvised bathroom--a neat little addition to the kitchen
+evidently intended originally for a laundry. She wanted to laugh when
+she saw the primitive makeshifts, but instead the tears came into her
+eyes to think how many luxuries she had taken all her life as a matter
+of course and never realized how hard it was for people who had none. In
+fact it had never really entered her head before that there were people
+who had no bathrooms.
+
+Betty was not exactly accustomed to washing her own hair, and with the
+added problem of the dye it was quite a task; but she managed it at
+last, using all the hot water, to get it so that the rinsing water was
+clear, and her hair felt soft. Then, attired in the same warm nightgown
+she had worn the night before, which Jane had thoughtfully put in the
+suitcase--otherwise filled with old garments she wished to send
+home--Betty pattered upstairs to the little room with the sloping roof
+and the dormer window and crept into bed with Nellie. That young woman
+had purposely stayed awake, and kept Betty as long as she could talk,
+telling all the wonderful things she wanted to know about city life, and
+Betty found herself in deep water sometimes because the city life she
+knew about was so very different from the city life that Jane would
+know. But at last sleep won, and Nellie had to give up because her last
+question was answered with silence. The guest was deep in slumber.
+
+The next morning the children took her over the house, out in the yard,
+showing her everything. Then they had to take her down to the village
+and explain all about the little town and its people. They were crazy
+about Betty's beautiful hair and much disappointed when she would insist
+on wearing her hat. It was a bright sunny morning, not very cold, and
+they told her that nobody wore a hat except to church or to go on the
+train, but Betty had a feeling that her hair might attract attention,
+and in her first waking hours a great shadow of horror had settled upon
+her when she realized that her people would leave no stone unturned to
+find her. It was most important that she should do or be nothing whereby
+she might be recognized. She even thought of getting a cap and apron to
+wear when attending her small charge, but Nellie told her they didn't do
+that in the country and she would be thought stuck up, so she desisted.
+But she drew the blue serge skirt up as high above her waistband as
+possible when she dressed in the morning so that she might look like a
+little girl and no one would suspect her of being a runaway bride. Also
+she had a consultation with herself in the small hours of the morning
+while Nellie was still fast asleep, and settled with her conscience just
+what she would tell about her past and what she would keep to herself.
+There was a certain reserve that any one might have, and if she was
+frank about a few facts no one would be likely to question further.
+
+So next morning she told Mrs. Carson that since her parents' death she
+had lived with a woman who knew her father well, but lately things had
+been growing very unpleasant and she found she had to leave. She had
+left under such conditions that she could not bring away anything that
+belonged to her, so she would have to work and earn some more clothes.
+
+Mrs. Carson looked into her sweet eyes and agreed that it was the best
+thing she could do; they might follow her up and make all sorts of
+trouble for her in her new home if she wrote for her things; and so the
+matter dropped. They were simple folks, who took things at their face
+value and were not over inquisitive.
+
+On the third day there arrived a long letter from Jane in which she gave
+certain suggestions concerning the new member of the family, and ended:
+"Ma, she's got a story, but don't make her tell any more of it than she
+wants. She's awful sensitive about it, and trust me, she's all right!
+She's been through a lot. Just make her feel she's got some folks that
+loves and trusts her."
+
+Ma, wise beyond her generation and experience, said no more, and took
+the little new daughter into her heart. She took the opportunity to
+inform the village gossips that a friend of Jane's had come to rest up
+and get a year's country air, boarding with them; and so the
+amalgamation of Betty Stanhope into the life of the little town began.
+
+The "job" proved to be for only part of the day, so that Betty was free
+most of the mornings to help around the house and take almost a
+daughter's place. That she was a rare girl is proved by the way she
+entered into her new life. It was almost as if she had been born again,
+and entered into a new universe, so widely was her path diverging from
+everything which had been familiar in the old life. So deep had been her
+distress before she came into it that this new existence, despite its
+hard and unaccustomed work, seemed almost like heaven.
+
+It is true there was much bad grammar and slang, but that did not
+trouble Betty. She had been brought up to speak correctly, and it was
+second nature to her, but no one had ever drummed it into her what a
+crime against culture an illiterate way of speaking could be. She never
+got into the way of speaking that way herself, but it seemed a part of
+these people she had come to know and admire so thoroughly, as much as
+for a rose to have thorns, and so she did not mind it. Her other world
+had been so all-wrong for years that the hardships of this one were
+nothing. She watched them patch and sacrifice cheerfully to buy their
+few little plain coarse new things. She marveled at their sweetness and
+content, where those of her world would have thought they could not
+exist under the circumstances.
+
+She learned to make that good stew with carrots and celery and parsley
+and potatoes and the smallest possible amount of meat, that had tasted
+so delicious the night she arrived. She learned the charms of the common
+little bean, and was proud indeed the day she set upon the table a
+luscious pan of her own baking, rich and sweet and brown with their
+coating of molasses well baked through them. She even learned to make
+bread and never let any one guess that she had always supposed it
+something mysterious.
+
+During the week that Nellie was preparing to go to the city, Betty had
+lessons in sewing. Nellie would bring down an old garment, so faded and
+worn that it would seem only fit for the rag-bag. She would rip and
+wash, dye with a mysterious little package of stuff, press, and behold,
+there would come forth pretty breadths of cloth, blue or brown or green,
+or whatever color was desired. It seemed like magic. And then a box of
+paper-patterns would be brought out, and the whole evening would be
+spent in contriving how to get out a dress, with the help of trimmings
+or sleeves of another material. Betty would watch and gradually try to
+help, but she found there were so many strange things to be considered.
+There, for instance, was the up and down of a thing and the right and
+wrong of it. It was exactly like life. And one had to plan not to have
+both sleeves for one arm, and to have the nap of the goods running down
+always. It was as complicated as learning a new language. But at the end
+of the week there came forth two pretty dresses and a blouse. Betty, as
+she sat sewing plain seams and trying to help all she could, kept
+thinking of the many beautiful frocks she had thrown aside in the years
+gone by, and of the rich store of pretty things that she had left when
+she fled. If only Nellie and Jane and little Emily could have them! Ah,
+and if only she herself might have them now! How she needed them! For a
+girl who had always had all she wanted it was a great change to get
+along with this one coarse serge and aprons.
+
+But the sewing and other work had not occupied them so fully that they
+had not had time to introduce Betty into their little world. The very
+next evening after she arrived she had been taken to that wonderful
+church entertainment that the girls had told her about on the way from
+the station, and there she had met the minister's wife and been invited
+to her Sabbath school class.
+
+Betty would not have thought of going if Nellie and her mother had not
+insisted. In fact, she shrank unspeakably from going out into the little
+village world. But it was plain that this was expected of her, and if
+she remained here she must do as they wanted her to do. It was the least
+return she could make to these kind people.
+
+The question of whether or not she should remain began to come to her
+insistently now. The children clamored every day for her to bind herself
+for the winter, and Jane's mother had made her most welcome. She saw
+that they really wanted her; why should she not stay? And yet it did
+seem queer to arrange deliberately to spend a whole year in a poor
+uncultured family. Still, where could she go and hope to remain unknown
+if she attempted to get back into her own class? It was impossible. Her
+mother had just the one elderly cousin whom she had always secretly
+looked to to help her in any time of need, but his failing her and
+sending that telegram without even a good wish in it, just at the last
+minute, too, made her feel it was of no use to appeal to him. Besides,
+that was the first place her stepmother would seek for her. She had many
+good society friends, but none who would stand by her in trouble. No one
+with whom she had ever been intimate enough to confide in. She had been
+kept strangely alone in her little world after all, hedged in by
+servants everywhere. And now that she was suddenly on her own
+responsibility, she felt a great timidity in taking any step alone.
+Sometimes at night when she thought what she had done she was so
+frightened that her heart would beat wildly as if she were running away
+from them all yet. It was like a nightmare that pursued her.
+
+Mrs. Hathaway had sent for her and made arrangements for her to begin
+her work with the little Elise the following week when the present
+governess should leave, and Betty felt that this might prove a very
+pleasant way to earn her living. The Hathaways lived in a great brick
+house away back from the street in grounds that occupied what in the
+city would have been a whole block. There was a high hedge about the
+place so that one could not see the road, and there were flower-beds, a
+great fountain, and a rustic summerhouse. Betty did not see why days
+passed in such a pleasant place would not be delightful in summertime.
+She was not altogether sure whether she would like to have to be a sort
+of servant in the house--and of course these cold fall days she would
+have to be much in the house--but the nursery had a big fireplace in it,
+a long chest under the window where toys were kept, and many comfortable
+chairs. That ought to be pleasant, too. Besides, she was not just out
+looking for pleasant things on this trip. She was trying to get away
+from unbearable ones, and she ought to be very thankful indeed to have
+fallen on such comfort as she had.
+
+There was another element in the Carson home that drew her strongly,
+although she was shy about even thinking of it, and that was the frank,
+outspoken Christianity. "Ma" tempered all her talk with it, adjusted all
+her life to God and what He would think about her actions, spoke
+constantly of what was right and wrong. Betty had never lived in an
+atmosphere where right and wrong mattered. Something sweet and pure like
+an instinct in her own soul had held her always from many of the ways
+of those about her, perhaps the spirit of her sweet mother allowed to be
+one of those who "bear them up, lest at any time they dash their feet
+against a stone." Or it might have been some memory of the teachings of
+her father, whom she adored, and who in his last days often talked with
+her alone about how he and her own mother would want her to live. But
+now, safe and quiet in this shelter of a real home, poor though it was,
+the God-instinct stirred within her, caused her to wonder what He was,
+why she was alive, and if He cared? One could not live with Mrs. Carson
+without thinking something about her God, for He was an ever-present
+help in all her times of need, and she never hesitated to give God the
+glory for all she had achieved, and for all the blessings she had
+received.
+
+The very first Sabbath in the little white church stirred still deeper
+her awakening interest in spiritual things. The minister's wife was a
+sweet-faced woman who called her "my dear" and invited her to come and
+see her, and when she began to teach the lesson Betty found to her
+amazement that it was interesting. She spoke of God in much the same
+familiar way that "Ma" had done, only with a gentler refinement, and
+made the girls very sure that whatever anybody else believed, Mrs.
+Thornley was a very intimate friend of Jesus Christ. Betty loved her at
+once, but so shy was she that the minister's wife never dreamed it, and
+remarked to her husband Sunday night after church, when they were having
+their little, quiet Sabbath talk together, that she was afraid she was
+going to have a hard time winning that little new girl that had come to
+live with Mrs. Carson.
+
+"Somehow I can't get away from the thought that she comes from
+aristocracy somewhere," she added. "It's the way she turns her head, or
+lifts her eyes or the quiet assurance with which she answers. And she
+smiles, Charles, never grins like the rest. She is delicious, but
+somehow I find myself wondering if I have remembered to black my shoes
+and whether my hat is on straight, when she looks at me."
+
+"Well, maybe she's the daughter of some black sheep who has gone down a
+peg, and our Father has sent her here for you to help her back again,"
+said her husband with an adorable look at his helper. "If anyone can do
+it you can."
+
+"I'm not so sure," she said, shaking her head. "She maybe doesn't need
+me. She has Mrs. Carson, remember, and she is a host in herself. If
+anybody can lead her to Christ she can, plain as she is."
+
+"Undoubtedly you were meant to help, too, dear, or she would not have
+been sent to you."
+
+His wife smiled brilliantly a look of thorough understanding: "Oh, I
+know. I'm not going to shirk any but I wish I knew more about her. She
+is so sad and quiet, I can't seem to get at her."
+
+Even at that moment Betty lay in her little cot bed under the roof
+thinking about the minister's wife and what she had said about Christ
+being always near, ready to show what to do, if one had the listening
+heart and the ready spirit. Would Christ tell her what to do, she
+wondered, now right here, if she were to ask him? Would He show her
+whether to stay in this place or seek further to hide herself from the
+world? Would He show her how to earn her living and make her life right
+and sweet as it ought to be.
+
+Then she closed her eyes and whispered softly under the sheltering
+bedclothes, "O Christ, if you are here, please show me somehow and teach
+me to understand."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+WHEN Betty had been in Tinsdale about a month it was discovered that she
+could play the piano. It happened on a rainy Sunday in Sunday school,
+and the regular pianist was late. The superintendent looked about
+helplessly and asked if there was anybody present who could play,
+although he knew the musical ability of everybody in the village. The
+minister's wife had already pleaded a cut finger which was well wrapped
+up in a bandage, and he was about to ask some one to start the tune
+without the piano when Mrs. Thornton leaned over with a sudden
+inspiration to Betty and asked:
+
+"My dear, you couldn't play for us, could you?"
+
+Betty smiled assent, and without any ado went to the instrument, not
+realizing until after she had done so that it would have been better
+policy for her to have remained as much in the background as possible,
+and not to have shown any accomplishments lest people should suspect her
+position. However, she was too new at acting a part to always think of
+these little things, and she played the hymns so well that they gathered
+about her after the hour was over and openly rejoiced that there was
+another pianist in town. The leader of Christian Endeavor asked her to
+play in their meeting sometimes, and Betty found herself quite popular.
+The tallest girl in their class, who had not noticed her before, smiled
+at her and patronized her after she came back from playing the first
+hymn, and asked her where she learned to play so well.
+
+"Oh, I used to take lessons before my father died," she said, realizing
+that she must be careful.
+
+Emily and Bob came home in high feather and told their mother, who had
+not been able to get out that morning, and she beamed on Betty with as
+warm a smile as if she had been her own daughter:
+
+"Now, ain't that great!" she said, and her voice sounded boyish just
+like Jane's. "Why, we'll have to get a pianna. I heard you could get 'em
+cheap in the cities sometimes--old-fashioned ones, you know. I heard
+they have so many old-fashioned ones that they have to burn 'em to get
+rid of 'em, and they even give 'em away sometimes. I wonder, could we
+find out and get hold of one?"
+
+"I guess 'twould cost too much to get it here," said Bob practically.
+"My! I wisht we had one. Say, Lizzie, 'f we had a pianna would you show
+me how to read notes?"
+
+"Of course," said Betty.
+
+"Well, we'll get one somehow! We always do when we need anything
+awfully. Look at the bathtub! Good-night! I'm goin' to earn one myself!"
+declared Bob.
+
+"Mrs. Crosby's gotta get a new one. P'raps she'll sell us her old one
+cheap."
+
+That was the way the music idea started, and nothing else was talked of
+at the table for days but how to get a piano. Then one day Emily came
+rushing home from school all out of breath, her eyes as bright as stars,
+and her cheeks like roses. "Mrs. Barlow came to our school to-day and
+talked to the teacher, and I heard her say she was going away for the
+winter. She's going to store her goods in the Service Company barn, but
+she wants to get somebody to take care of her piano. I stepped right up
+and told her my mother was looking for a piano, and we'd be real careful
+of it, and she's just delighted; and--it's coming to-morrow morning at
+nine o'clock! The man's going to bring it!"
+
+She gasped it out so incoherently that they had to make her tell it over
+twice to get any sense out of it; but when Bob finally understood he
+caught his little sister in his arms and hugged her with a big smacking
+kiss:
+
+"You sure are a little peach, Em'ly!" he shouted. "You're a pippin of
+the pippins! I didn't know you had that much nerve, you kid, you! I sure
+am proud of you! My! Think of havin' a pianna! Say, Betty, I can play
+the base of chopsticks now!"
+
+The next evening when Betty got home from the Hathaways there was the
+piano standing in the big space opposite the windows in the dining-room.
+Ma had elected to have it there rather than in the front room, because
+it might often be too cold in the front room for the children to
+practice, and besides it wouldn't be good for the piano. So the piano
+became a beloved member of the family, and Betty began to give
+instructions in music, wondering at herself that she knew how, for her
+own music had been most desultory, and nobody had ever cared whether she
+practiced or not. She had been allowed to ramble among the great masters
+for the most part unconducted, with the meagerest technique, and her own
+interpretation. She could read well and her sense of time and rhythm
+were natural, else she would have made worse work of it than she did.
+But she forthwith set herself to practicing, realizing that it might yet
+stand her in good stead since she had to earn her living.
+
+Little Emily and Bob stood one on either side and watched her as she
+played, with wondering admiration, and when Betty went to help their
+mother Bob would sit down and try to imitate what she had done. Failing,
+he would fall headlong into the inevitable chopsticks, beating it out
+with the air of a master.
+
+It was the piano that brought to Betty's realization the first real
+meaning of the Sabbath day. Bob came down early and went at the piano as
+usual banging out chopsticks, and a one-fingered arrangement of "The
+Long, Long Trail," while his mother was getting breakfast. Betty was
+making the coffee, proud of the fact that she had learned how. But Bob
+had accomplished only a brief hint of his regular program when the music
+stopped suddenly and Betty glanced through the kitchen door to see Ma
+standing with her hand on her son's shoulder and a look on her face she
+had not seen before: It was quite gentle, but it was decided:
+
+"No, Bob! We won't have that kinda music on Sunday," she said. "This is
+God's day, an' we'll have all we can rightly do to keep it holy without
+luggin' in week-day music to make us forget it. You just get t' work an'
+learn 'Safely Through Another Week,' an' if you can't play it right you
+get Lizzie to teach you."
+
+Bob pouted:
+
+"There ain't nothin' wrong with chopsticks, Ma. 'Tain't got words to
+it."
+
+"Don't make any diffrence. It b'longs to weekdays an' fun, an' anyhow it
+makes you think of other things, an' you can't keep your mind on God.
+That's what Sunday was made fer, to kinda tone us up to God, so's we
+won't get so far away in the week that we won't be any kind of ready for
+heaven some time. An' anyhow, 'tisn't seemly. You better go learn your
+Golden Text, Bob. The minister'll be disappointed if you don't have it
+fine."
+
+Betty stood by the window thoughtfully looking out. Was that what Sunday
+was made for, or was it only a quaint idea of this original woman? She
+wished she knew. Perhaps some time she would know the minister's wife
+well enough to ask. She would have liked to ask Ma more about it, but
+somehow felt shy. But Ma herself was started now, and when she came back
+to the kitchen, as if she felt some explanation was due the new inmate
+of the family, she said:
+
+"I don't know how you feel about it. I know city folks don't always hold
+to the old ways. But it always seemed to me God meant us to stick to
+Sunday, and make it diff'rent from other days. I never would let my
+children go visitin', nor play ball an' we always tried to have
+something good for supper fixed the night before. I heard somebody say a
+long time ago that it says somewhere in the Bible that Sunday was meant
+to be a sign forever between God and folks. The ones that keeps it are
+his'n, an' them as don't aren't. Anyhow, that's the only day we have got
+to kinda find out what's wanted of us. You wouldn't mind just playin'
+hymns and Sunday things t'day, would you?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Betty, interested. "I like it. It sounds so kind of safe,
+and as if God cared. I never thought much about it before. You think God
+really thinks about us and knows what we're doing then, don't you?"
+
+"Why, sure, child. I don't just think, I _know_ He does. Hadn't you
+never got onto that? Why, you poor little ducky, you! O' course He
+does."
+
+"I'd like to feel sure that He was looking out for me," breathed Betty
+wistfully.
+
+"Well, you can!" said Ma, hurrying back to see that her bacon didn't
+burn. "It's easy as rollin' off a log."
+
+"What would I have to do?"
+
+"Why, just b'lieve."
+
+"Believe?" asked Betty utterly puzzled. "Believe what?"
+
+"Why, believe that He'll do it. He said 'Come unto me, an' I will give
+you rest,' an' He said, 'Cast your burden on the Lord,' an' He said
+'Castin' all yer care 'pon Him, fer He careth fer you,' an' a whole lot
+more such things, an' you just got to take it fer straight, an' act on
+it."
+
+"But how could I?" asked Betty.
+
+"Just run right up to your room now, while you're feelin' that way, an'
+kneel down by your bed an' tell Him what you just told me," said Mrs.
+Carson, stirring the fried potatoes with her knife to keep them from
+burning. "It won't take you long, an' I'll tend the coffee. Just you
+tell Him you want Him to take care of you, an' you'll believe what I
+told you He said. It's all in the Bible, an' you can read it for
+yourself, but I wouldn't take the time now. Just run along an' speak it
+out with Him, and, then come down to breakfast."
+
+Betty was standing by the kitchen door, her hand on her heart, as if
+about to do some great wonderful thing that frightened her:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, suppose, maybe, He might not be pleased with me.
+Suppose I've done something that He doesn't like, something that makes
+Him ashamed of me."
+
+"Oh, why, didn't you know He fixed for all that when He sent His Son to
+be the Saviour of the world? We all do wrong things, an' everybody has
+sinned. But ef we're rightly sorry, He'll fergive us, and make us His
+children."
+
+Betty suddenly sat down in a chair near the door:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, I'm not sure I _am_ sorry--at least I know I'm _not_.
+I'm afraid I'd do it all over again if I got in the same situation."
+
+Mrs. Carson stood back from the stove and surveyed her thoughtfully a
+moment:
+
+"Well, then, like's not it wasn't wrong at all, and if it wasn't He
+ain't displeased. You can bank on that. You better go talk it out to
+Him. Just get it off your mind. I'll hold up breakfast a minute while
+you roll it on Him and depend on it he'll show you in plenty of time for
+the next move."
+
+Betty with her cheeks very red and her eyes shining went up to her
+little cot, and with locked door knelt and tried to talk to God for the
+first time in her life. It seemed queer to her, but when she arose and
+hurried back to her duties she had a sense of having a real Friend who
+knew all about her and could look after things a great deal better than
+she could.
+
+That night she went with Bob and Emily to the young people's meeting and
+heard them talk about Christ familiarly as if they knew Him. It was all
+strange and new and wonderful to Betty, and she sat listening and
+wondering. The old question of whether she was pleasing her earthly
+father was merging itself into the desire to please her Heavenly Father.
+
+There were of course many hard and unpleasant things about her new life.
+There were so many things to learn, and she was so awkward at work of
+all kinds! Her hands seemed so small and inadequate when she tried to
+wring clothes or scrub a dirty step. Then, too, her young charge, Elise
+Hathaway, was spoiled and hard to please, and she was daily tried by the
+necessity of inventing ways of discipline for the poor little neglected
+girl which yet would not bring down a protest from her even more
+undisciplined mother. If she had been independent she would not have
+remained with Mrs. Hathaway, for sometimes the child was unbearable in
+her naughty tantrums, and it took all her nerve and strength to control
+her. She would come back to the little gray house too weary even to
+smile, and the keen eye of Ma would look at her wisely and wonder if
+something ought not to be done about it.
+
+Betty felt that she must keep this place, of course, because it was
+necessary for her to be able to pay some board. She could not be
+beholden to the Carsons. And they had been so kind, and were teaching
+her so many things, that it seemed the best and safest place she could
+be in. So the days settled down into weeks, and a pleasant life grew up
+about her, so different from the old one that more and more the
+hallucination was with her that she had become another creature, and the
+old life had gone out forever.
+
+Of course as striking-looking a girl as Betty could not enter into the
+life of a little town even as humbly as through the Carson home, without
+causing some comment and speculation. People began to notice her. The
+church ladies looked after her and remarked on her hair, her complexion,
+and her graceful carriage, and some shook their heads and said they
+should think Mrs. Hathaway would want to know a little more about her
+before she put her only child in her entire charge; and they told weird
+stories about girls they had known or heard of.
+
+Down at the fire-house, which was the real clearing-house of Tinsdale
+for all the gossip that came along and went the rounds, they took up the
+matter in full session several evenings in succession. Some of the
+younger members made crude remarks about Betty's looks, and some of the
+older ones allowed that she was entirely too pretty to be without a
+history. They took great liberties with their surmises. The only two,
+the youngest of them all, who might have defended her, had been
+unconsciously snubbed by her when they tried to be what Bobbie called
+"fresh" with her, and so she was at their mercy. But if she had known it
+she probably would have been little disturbed. They seemed so far
+removed from her two worlds, so utterly apart from herself. It would not
+have occurred to her that they could do her any harm.
+
+One night the fire-house gang had all assembled save one, a little
+shrimp of a good-for-nothing, nearly hairless, toothless, cunning-eyed,
+and given to drink when he could lay lips on any. He had a wide loose
+mouth with a tendency to droop crookedly, and his hands were always
+clammy and limp. He ordinarily sat tilted back against the wall to the
+right of the engine, sucking an old clay pipe. He had a way of often
+turning the conversation to imply some deep mystery known only to
+himself behind the life of almost any one discussed. He often added
+choice embellishments to whatever tale went forth as authentic to go the
+rounds of the village, and he acted the part of a collector of themes
+and details for the evening conversations.
+
+His name was Abijah Gage.
+
+"Bi not come yet?" asked the fire chief settling a straw comfortably
+between his teeth and looking around on the group. "Must be somepin'
+doin'. Don't know when Bi's been away."
+
+"He went up to town this mornin' early," volunteered Dunc Withers.
+"Reckon he was thirsty. Guess he'll be back on the evenin' train. That's
+her comin' in now."
+
+"Bars all closed in the city," chuckled the chief. "Won't get much
+comfort there."
+
+"You bet Bi knows some place to get it. He won't come home thirsty,
+that's sure."
+
+"I donno, they say the lid's down pretty tight."
+
+"Aw, shucks!" sneered Dunc. "Bet I could get all I wanted."
+
+Just then the door opened and Abijah Gage walked in, with a toothless
+grin all around.
+
+"Hello, Bi, get tanked up, did yeh?" greeted the chief.
+
+"Well, naow, an' ef I did, what's that to you?" responded Bi, slapping
+the chief's broad shoulder with a folded newspaper he carried. "You
+don't 'spose I'm goin' to tell, an' get my frien's in trouble?"
+
+"Le's see yer paper, Bi," said Dunc, snatching at it as Bi passed to his
+regular seat.
+
+Bi surrendered his paper with the air of one granting a high favor and
+sank to his chair and his pipe.
+
+"How's crops in the city?" asked Hank Fielder, and Bi's tale was set
+a-going. Bi could talk; that was one thing that always made him welcome.
+
+Dunc was deep in the paper. Presently he turned it over:
+
+"Whew!" he said speculatively. "If that don't look like that little
+lollypop over to Carson's I'll eat my hat! What's her name?"
+
+They all drew around the paper and leaned over Dunc's shoulder squinting
+at the picture, all but Bi, who was lighting his pipe:
+
+"They're as like as two peas!" said one.
+
+"It sure must be her sister!" declared another.
+
+"Don't see no resemblance 'tall," declared the chief, flinging back to
+his comfortable chair. "She's got short hair, an she's only a kid. This
+one's growed up!"
+
+"She might a cut her hair," suggested one.
+
+Bi pricked up his ears, narrowed his cunning eyes, and slouched over to
+the paper, looking at the picture keenly:
+
+"Read it out, Dunc!" he commanded.
+
+"Five thousand dollars reward for information concerning Elizabeth
+Stanhope!"
+
+There followed a description in detail of her size, height, coloring,
+etc.
+
+An inscrutable look overspread Bi's face and hid the cunning in his
+eyes. He slouched to his seat during the reading and tilted back
+comfortably smoking, but he narrowed his eyes to a slit and spoke little
+during the remainder of the evening. They discussed the picture and the
+possibility of the girl in the paper being a relative of the girl at
+Carson's, but as Bi did not come forward with information the subject
+languished. Some one said he had heard the Carson kid call her Lizzie,
+he thought, but he wasn't sure. Ordinarily Bi would have known the full
+name, but Bi seemed to be dozing, and so the matter was finally dropped.
+But the hounds were out and on the scent, and it was well for Betty
+sleeping quietly in her little cot beneath the roof of the humble Carson
+home, that she had committed her all to her heavenly Father before she
+slept.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"WELL, he gave me notice t'day," said James Ryan sadly as Jane and he
+rounded the corner from her boarding-house and turned toward their
+favorite movie theater. "I been expectin' it, an' now it's come!"
+
+Jane stopped short on the sidewalk appalled:
+
+"He gave you notice!" she exclaimed, as if she could not believe it was
+true. "Now, Jimmie! You don't mean it? Did he find any fault? He'd
+better not! B'leeve me, if he did he gets a piece of _my_ mind, even if
+I am a poor workin' girl!"
+
+"Oh, no, he didn't find any fault," said Jimmie cheerfully. "He was
+awful nice! He said he'd recommend me away up high. He's gonta give me
+time every day to hunt a new place, an' he's gonta recommend me to some
+of his rich friends."
+
+"But what's the matter of him keepin' you? Did you ast him that?"
+
+"Oh, he told me right out that things wasn't working the way he hoped
+when he started; the war and all had upset his prospects, and he
+couldn't afford to keep me. He's gonta take an office way down town and
+do his own letters. He says if he ever succeeds in business and I'm free
+to come to him he'll take me back. Oh, he's pleased with me all right!
+He's a peach! He certainly is."
+
+"Jimmie, what d'you tell him?"
+
+"Tell him? There wasn't much for me to tell him, only I was sorry, and I
+thanked him, and I told him I was gonta stick by him as long as I didn't
+have a place. Of course I can't live on air, but seeing he's willing I
+should go out and hunt a place every day, why I ain't that mean that I
+can't write a few letters for him now and then. He don't have that many,
+and it keeps me in practice. I s'pose I've got to get another place but
+I haven't tried yet. I can't somehow bring myself to give him up. I kind
+of wanted to stick in my first place a long time. It doesn't look well
+to be changing."
+
+"Well, if it ain't your fault, you know, when you can't help it,"
+advised Jane.
+
+They were seated in the theater by this time, and the screen claimed
+their attention. It was just at the end of the funny reel, and both
+forgot more serious matters in following the adventures of a dog and a
+bear who were chasing each other through endless halls and rooms, to say
+nothing of bathtubs, and wash boilers, and dining tables, and anything
+that came in their way, with a shock to the people who happened to be
+around when they passed. But suddenly the film ended and the
+announcements for the next week began to flash on the screen.
+
+"We must go to that, sure!" said Jimmie, nudging Jane, as the Mary
+Pickford announcement was put on.
+
+Then immediately afterward came the photograph of a beautiful girl, and
+underneath in great letters:
+
+ FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS' REWARD FOR ACCURATE
+ INFORMATION AS TO THE PRESENT WHEREABOUTS
+ OF ELIZABETH STANHOPE
+
+There followed further particulars and an address and the showing stayed
+on the screen for a full minute.
+
+Jane sat gripping the arms of the seat and trying to still the wild
+excitement that possessed her, while her eyes looked straight into the
+eyes of the little bride whom she had helped to escape on the night of
+her wedding.
+
+Jimmie took out his pencil and wrote down the address in shorthand, but
+Jane did not notice. She was busy thinking what she ought to do.
+
+"What do you s'pose they want her for?" she asked in a breathless
+whisper, as a new feature film began to dawn on the screen.
+
+"Oh, she's mebbe eloped," said the wise young man, "or there might be
+some trouble about property. There mostly is."
+
+Jane said no more, and the pictures began again, but her mind was not
+following them. She was very quiet on the way home, and when Jimmie
+asked her if she had a grouch on she shivered and said, no, she guessed
+she was tired. Then she suddenly asked him what time he was going out to
+hunt for another job. He told her he couldn't be sure. He would call her
+up about noon and let her know. Could she manage to get out a while and
+meet him? She wasn't sure either, but would see when he called her up.
+And so they parted for the night.
+
+The next morning when Reyburn entered his office Jimmie was already
+seated at his typewriter. On Reyburn's desk lay a neatly typed copy of
+the announcement that had been put on the screen the night before.
+
+"What's this, Ryan?" he questioned as he took his seat and drew the
+paper toward him.
+
+"Something I saw last night on the screen at the movies, sir. I thought
+it might be of interest."
+
+"Were you thinking of trying for the reward?" asked Reyburn with a
+comical smile. "What is it, anyway?" And he began to read.
+
+"Oh, no sir!" said Jimmie. "_I_ couldn't, of course; but I thought mebbe
+_you'd_ be able to find out something about her and get all that money.
+That would help you through until you got started in your own business."
+
+"H'm! That's kind of you, Ryan," said the young lawyer, reading the
+paper with a troubled frown. "I'm afraid it's hardly in my line,
+however. I'm not a detective, you know." He laid the paper down and
+looked thoughtfully out of the window.
+
+"Oh, of course not, sir!" Jimmie hastened to apologize. "Only you know a
+lot of society folks in the city, and I thought you might think of some
+way of finding out where she is. I know it isn't up to what you ought to
+be doing, sir, but it wouldn't do any harm. You could work it through
+me, you know, and nobody need ever know 'twas you got the reward. I'd be
+glad to help you out doing all I could, but of course it would take your
+brains to get the information, sir. You see, it would be to my interest,
+because then you could afford to keep me, and--I like you, Mr. Reyburn,
+I certainly do. I would hate to leave you."
+
+"Well, now, I appreciate that, Ryan. It's very thoughtful of you. I
+scarcely think there would be any possibility of my finding out anything
+about this girl, but I certainly appreciate your thoughtfulness. I'll
+make a note of it, and if anything turns up I'll let you know. I don't
+believe, however, that I would care to go after a reward even through
+someone else. You know, I was at that wedding, Ryan!" His eyes were
+dreamily watching the smoke from a distant funnel over the roof-tops in
+line with his desk.
+
+"You were!" said Jimmie, watching his employer with rapt admiration. He
+had no higher ambition than to look like Warren Reyburn and have an
+office of his own.
+
+"Yes, I was there," said Reyburn again, but his tone was so far off that
+Jimmie dared approach no nearer, and resumed the letter he was typing.
+
+About noon Jimmie called up the factory while Reyburn was out to lunch
+and told Jane that he expected to go out at two o'clock. Could she meet
+him and walk a little way with him? Jane said no, she couldn't, but she
+would try and see him the next day, then he could tell her how he had
+"made out."
+
+At exactly five minutes after two, Jane, having watched from a telephone
+booth in a drug store until Jimmie went by, hurried up to Reyburn's
+office and tapped on the door, her heart in her mouth lest he should be
+occupied with some one else and not be able to see her before her few
+minutes of leave which she had obtained from the factory should have
+expired.
+
+Reyburn himself opened the door to her, and treated her as if she had
+been a lady every inch, handing her a chair and speaking quite as if she
+were attired in sealskin and diamonds.
+
+She looked him over with bright eyes of approval. Jane was a born
+sentimentalist, fed on the movies. Not for anything would she have had a
+knight rescue her lady fair who did not look the part. She was entirely
+satisfied with this one. In fact, she was almost tongue-tied with
+admiration for the moment.
+
+Then she rallied to the speech she had prepared:
+
+"Mr. Reyburn," she said, "I came to see you about a matter of very great
+importance. I heard you was a great lawyer, and I've got a friend that's
+in trouble. I thought mebbe you could do something about it. But first,
+I want to ast you a question, an' I want you to consider it perfectly
+confidential!"
+
+Jane took great credit to herself that she had assembled all these words
+and memorized them so perfectly.
+
+"Certainly!" said Reyburn gravely, wondering what kind of a customer he
+had now.
+
+"I don't want you to think I can't pay for it," said Jane, laying down a
+five-dollar bill grandly. "I know you can't afford to waste your
+valuable time even to answer a question."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," said Reyburn heartily. "Let me hear what the
+question is first. There may be no charge."
+
+"No," said Jane hastily, laying the bill firmly on the desk before him.
+"I shan't feel right astin' unless I know it's to be paid for."
+
+"Oh, very well," said Reyburn, taking the bill and laying it to one
+side. "Now, what is the question?"
+
+"Well, Mr. Reyburn, will you please tell me what would anybody want to
+offer a reward, a big reward, like a thousand dollars--or several of
+them,--for information about any one? Could you think of any reason?"
+
+Reyburn started. Reward again! This was uncanny. Probably this girl had
+been to the movies and seen the same picture that Ryan had told him
+about. But he smiled gravely and answered, watching her quizzically the
+while:
+
+"Well, they might love the person that had disappeared," he suggested at
+random.
+
+"Oh, no!" said Jane decidedly. "They didn't! I know that fer a fac'!
+What else could it be?"
+
+"Well, they might have a responsibility!" he said thoughtfully.
+
+"No chance!" said Jane scornfully.
+
+"Couldn't they be anxious, don't you think?"
+
+"Not so's you'd notice it."
+
+"Well, there might be some property to be divided, perhaps."
+
+"I'd thought of that," said Jane, her face growing practical. "It would
+have to be a good deal of property to make them offer a big reward,
+wouldn't it?"
+
+"I should think so," answered Reyburn politely, watching her plain eager
+face amusedly. He could not quite get at her idea in coming to him.
+
+"Would her coming of age have anything to do with it?" put Jane,
+referring to a much folded paper she carried in her hand, as if she had
+a written catechism which she must go through.
+
+"It might." Reyburn was growing interested. This queer visitor evidently
+had thought something out, and was being very cautious.
+
+"I really can't answer very definitely without knowing more of the
+circumstances," he said with sudden alarm lest the girl might take some
+random answer and let serious matters hinge on his word.
+
+"Well, there's just one more," she said, looking down at her paper. "If
+a man was trying to make a girl marry him when she just hated him, could
+anybody make her do it, and would anybody have a right to put her in an
+insane 'sylum or anythin' ef she wouldn't?"
+
+"Why, no, of course not! Where did you ever get such a ridiculous idea?"
+He sat up suddenly, annoyed beyond expression over disturbing
+suggestions that seemed to rise like a bevy of black bats all around the
+borders of his mind.
+
+"See here," he said, sitting up very straight. "I really can't answer
+any more blind questions. I've got to know what I'm talking about. Why,
+I may be saying the most impossible things without knowing it."
+
+"I know," said Jane, looking at him gravely. "I've thought of that, but
+you've said just the things I thought you would. Well, say, if I tell
+you about it can you promise on yer honor you won't ever breathe a word
+of it? Not to nobody? Whether you take the case or not?"
+
+"Why, certainly, you can trust me to look out for any confidence you may
+put in me. If you can't I should prefer that you say nothing more."
+
+"Oh, I c'n trust you all right," said Jane smiling. "I just mean, would
+you be 'lowed to keep it under yer hat?"
+
+"Would I be allowed? What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean would the law let you? You wouldn't _have_ to go an' tell where
+she was or nothin' an' give her away? You'd be 'lowed to keep it on the
+q. t. an' take care of her?"
+
+"You mean would it be right and honorable for me to protect my client?
+Why, certainly."
+
+"Well, I mean you wouldn't get into no trouble if you did."
+
+"Of course not."
+
+"Well, then I'll tell you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+JANE opened a small shabby handbag, and took out a folded newspaper,
+opening it up and spreading it on the desk before him. "There!" she
+said, and then watched his face critically.
+
+Reyburn looked, and found himself looking into Betty's eyes. Only a
+newspaper cut, and poor at that, but wonderfully real and mournful, as
+they had struck him when she lifted them for that swift glance before
+she sank in the church aisle.
+
+"Where did you get this?" he asked, his voice suddenly husky.
+
+"Out o' the mornin' paper." Her tone was low and excited. "Were you
+wanting to try for the reward?" Reyburn asked.
+
+There was a covert sneer in the question from which the girl shrank
+perceptibly. She sprang to her feet, her eyes flashing:
+
+"If that's what you take me for, I better be goin'!" she snapped and
+reached out her hand for the paper. But Reyburn's hand covered the
+paper, and his tone was respectful and apologetic as he said:
+
+"Excuse me, I didn't quite understand, I see. Sit down, please. You and
+I must understand each other or there is no use in our talking. You can
+trust me to keep this conversation entirely to myself, whatever the
+outcome. Will you tell me what it is you want of me?"
+
+Jane subsided into a chair, tears of excitement springing into her eyes.
+
+"Well, you see, it's pretty serious business," she said, making a dab at
+the corner of one eye. "I thought I could trust you, or I wouldn't a
+come. But you gotta take me on trust, too."
+
+"Of course," said Reyburn. "Now, what have you to do with this girl? Do
+you know where she is?"
+
+"I certainly do!" said Jane, "but I ain't a-goin' ta tell until you say
+if there's anything you can do fer her. 'Cause you see, if you can't
+find a way to help her, I've gotta do it myself, an' it might get you
+into trouble somehow fer you to know what you ain't supposed to know."
+
+"I see," said Reyburn, meekly. "Well, what are you going to tell me? Am
+I allowed to ask that?"
+
+Jane grinned.
+
+"Say, you're kiddin' me! I guess you are all right. Well, I'll just tell
+you all about it. One night last November,--you can see the date there
+in the paper, I was goin' home to my boardin' house in Camac Street,
+an' I was passin' the side of that church on 18th an' Spruce, where the
+weddin' was--you know, fer you was there!"
+
+Reyburn looked at her astonished.
+
+"How did you know I was there?"
+
+"I saw you through the window, over against the wall to the street side
+of the altar," said Jane calmly.
+
+"How did you know me?"
+
+"Oh, somebody I know pointed you out once an' said you was goin' to be
+one of the risin' lawyers of the day," she answered nonchalantly, her
+face quite serious.
+
+A flicker of amusement passed like a ray of light through his eyes, but
+his face was entirely grave as he ignored the compliment.
+
+"Go on!"
+
+"I saw there was a weddin' an' I stopped to watch a minute, 'cause I
+expect to get married myself some day, an' I wanted to see how they did
+things. But I couldn't get near the door, an' the windows were all high
+up. I could only see folks who were standing up like you were. So I
+thought I'd go on. I turned the corner and went long-side the church
+listenin' to the music, an' just as I passed a big iron gate at the
+back end of the church somebody grabbed me an' begged me to help 'em. I
+looked round, an' there was the bride, all in her white togs, with the
+prettiest white satin slippers, in the wet an' mud! I tried to get her
+line, but she cried out somebody was comin' back in the passageway, so I
+slipped off my coat an' hat and whisked her into 'em an' clapped my
+rubbers over her satin shoes, and we beat it round the corner. I took
+her to my room, an' gave her some supper. She was all in. Then I put her
+to bed, an' she told me a little bit about it. She didn't tell me much.
+Only that they had been tryin' fer a long time back to make her marry a
+man she hated, an' now they'd almost tricked her into it, an' she'd die
+if she had to do it. She wanted to exchange clothes with me, cause, of
+course, she couldn't get anywhere togged out that way, so we changed
+things, an' I fixed her up. In the mornin' I ran out an' got a paper,
+an' found they was sayin' she was temporary insane, an' stuff like that,
+an' so I saw their game was tryin' to get her in a 'sylum till they
+could make her do what they wanted. I fixed her up an' got her off to a
+place I know where she'd be safe. An' she's got a job an' doin' real
+well. But now they've got this here reward business out everywhere in
+the papers an' the movies, she ain't safe nowhere. An' I want somebody
+that's wiser'n me to take a holt an' do somethin'. I can't pay much, but
+I'll pay a little every month as long's I live ef it takes that long to
+pay yer bill, an' I have a notion she may have some money herself,
+though she didn't say nothin' about it. But there's a ring she left with
+me to sell, to pay fer what I gave her. It oughtta be worth somethin'.
+It looks real. I ain't sold it. I couldn't. I thought she might want it
+sometime----"
+
+But Reyburn interrupted her excitedly.
+
+"Do you mean to say that Miss Stanhope is in the city and you know where
+she is?"
+
+"Now, don't get excited," warned Jane coolly. "I didn't say she was in
+this city, did I? I didn't say where she was, did I? I said she was
+safe."
+
+"But are you aware that you have told me a very strange story? What
+proof can you give me that it is true?"
+
+Jane looked at him indignantly.
+
+"Say, I thought you was goin' to trust me? I have to trust you, don't I?
+Course you don't know who I am, an' I haven't told you, but I've got a
+good p'sition myself, an' I don't go round tellin' privarications! An'
+there's the weddin' dress, an' veil and fixin's! I got them. You can see
+'em if you like,--that is pervided I know what you're up to! I ain't
+taking any chances till I see what you mean to do."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Reyburn, trying to smile assurance once more.
+"You certainly must own this whole thing is enough to make anybody
+doubt."
+
+"Yes, it is," said Jane. "I was some upset myself, havin' a thing like
+that happen to me, a real millionairess bride drop herself down on my
+hands just like that, an' I 'spose it _is_ hard to b'lieve. But I can't
+waste much more time now. I gotta get back to my job. Is there anything
+can be done to keep 'em from gettin' her again?"
+
+"I should most certainly think so," said Reyburn, "but I would have to
+know her side of the story, the whole of it, before I could say just
+what!"
+
+"Well, s'pose you found there wasn't anythin' you could do to help her,
+would you go an' tell on her?"
+
+Reyburn leaned back in his chair and smiled at his unique client:
+
+"I shall have to quote your own language. 'What do you take me for?'"
+
+"A white man!" said Jane suddenly, and showed all her fine teeth in an
+engaging smile. "Say, you're all right. Now, I gotta go. When will you
+tell me what you can do?" She glanced anxiously at her little
+leather-bound wrist watch. It was almost time for Jimmie to return.
+Jimmie mustn't find her here. He wouldn't understand, and what Jimmie
+didn't know wouldn't hurt him.
+
+"Well, this ought to be attended to, at once, if anything is to be
+done," he said eagerly. "Let me see. I have an engagement at five. How
+would seven o'clock do? Could I call at your boarding-house? Would there
+be any place where we could talk uninterrupted?"
+
+"Sure," said Jane, rising. "I'll get my landlady to let me have her
+settin' room fer an hour."
+
+"Meantime, I'll think it over and try to plan something."
+
+Jane started down the long flights of stairs, not daring to trust to the
+elevator, lest she should come face to face with Jimmie and have to
+explain.
+
+Reyburn stood with his back to the room, his hands in his pockets,
+frowning and looking out the window, when Jimmie entered a moment later.
+
+"I hope I'm not late, sir?" he said anxiously, as he hung up his hat and
+sat down at his typewriter. "I had to wait. The man was out."
+
+"Oh, that's all right, Ryan," said his employer, obviously not listening
+to his explanation. "I'm going out now, Ryan. I may not be back this
+afternoon. Just see that everything is all right."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+Reyburn went out, then opened the door and put his head back in the
+room.
+
+"I may have to go out of town to-night, Ryan. I'm not sure. Something
+has come up. If I'm not in to-morrow, could you--would you mind just
+staying here all day and looking after things? I may need you. Of course
+you'll lock up and leave the card out when you go to lunch."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+"I'll keep in touch with you in case I'm delayed," and Reyburn was off
+again. When the elevator had clanked down to the next floor Jimmie went
+to the window and looked dreamily out over the roofs of the city:
+
+"Aw!" he breathed joyously. "Now I'll bet he's going to do something
+about that reward!"
+
+Reyburn hurried down the street to the office of an old friend where he
+had a bit of business as an excuse, and asked a few casual questions
+when he was done. Then he went on to a telephone booth and called up a
+friend of his mother's, with whom he had a brief gossip, ostensibly to
+give a message from his mother, contained in her last letter to him.
+None of the questions that he asked were noticeable. He merely led the
+conversation into certain grooves. The lady was an old resident and well
+known in the higher social circles. She knew all there was to know about
+everybody and she loved to tell it. She never dreamed that he had any
+motive in leading her on.
+
+He dropped into a bank and asked a few questions, called up an address
+they gave him and made another inquiry, then dropped around to his
+cousin's home for a few minutes, where he allowed her to tell all she
+knew about the Stanhope wedding they had attended together, and the
+different theories concerning the escaped bride. Quite casually he asked
+if she knew whether the bride had property of her own, if so who were
+her guardians. His cousin thought she knew a lot, but, sifting it down,
+he discovered that it was nearly all hearsay or surmise.
+
+When he reached Jane Carson's boarding house he found that young woman
+ensconced in a tiny room, nine by twelve, a faded ingrain carpet on the
+floor, a depressed looking bed lounge against the bleary wall-paper,
+beneath crayon portraits of the landlady's dead husband and sons. There
+was a rocking-chair, a trunk, a cane-seat chair, and an oil stove turned
+up to smoking point in honor of the caller, but there was little room
+left for the caller. On the top of the trunk reposed a large pasteboard
+box securely tied.
+
+Jane, after a shy greeting, untied the strings and opened the cover,
+having first carefully slipped the bolt of the door.
+
+"You can't be too careful," she said. "You never can tell."
+
+Reyburn stood beside her and looked in a kind of awe at the glistening
+white, recognized the thick texture of the satin, the rare quality of
+the rose-point lace with which it was adorned, caught the faint
+fragrance of faded orange blossoms wafting from the filmy mist of the
+veil as Jane lifted it tenderly; then leaned over and touched a finger
+to the pile of whiteness, reverently, as though he were paying a tribute
+at a lovely shrine.
+
+Jane even unwrapped the little slippers, one at a time, and folded them
+away again, and they said no word until it was all tied back in its
+papers, Reyburn assisting with the strings.
+
+"Now, ef you don't mind waitin' a minute I guess it would be safer to
+put it away now," she said as she slipped the bolt and ran upstairs.
+
+She was back in a minute and sat down opposite to him, drawing out from
+the neck of her blouse a ribbon with a heavy glittering circlet at its
+end.
+
+"Here's the ring." She laid it in his palm. He took it, wondering, a
+kind of awe still upon him that he should be thus handling the intimate
+belongings of that little unknown bride whom he had seen lying
+unconscious in a strange church a few short months before. How strange
+that all this should have come to him when many wiser, more nearly
+related, were trying their best to get some clue to the mystery!
+
+He lifted the ring toward the insufficient gas jet to make out the
+initials inside, and copied them down in his note-book.
+
+"Take good care of that. It is valuable," he said as he handed it back
+to her.
+
+"Mebbe I better give it to you," she half hesitated.
+
+"You've taken pretty good care of it so far," he said. "I guess you've a
+better right to it than I. Only don't let anybody know you've got it.
+Now, I've been making inquiries, and I've found out a few things, but
+I've about come to the conclusion that I can't do much without seeing
+the lady. Do you suppose she would see me? Is she very far away?"
+
+"When do you want to go?" asked Jane.
+
+"At once," he answered decidedly. "There's no time to waste if she is
+really in danger, as you think."
+
+Jane's eyes glittered with satisfaction.
+
+"There's a train at ten-thirty. You'll get there in the morning. I've
+written it all down here on a paper so you can't make any mistakes. I've
+written her a letter so she'll understand and tell you everythin'. I'll
+wire Ma, too, so she'll let you see her. Ma might not size you up
+right."
+
+Reyburn wondered at the way he accepted his orders from this coolly
+impudent girl, but he liked her in spite of himself.
+
+In a few minutes more he was out in the street again, hurrying to his
+own apartment, where he put together a few necessities in a bag and went
+to the train.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+IT was one of those little ironies of fate that are spoken about so
+much, that when Warren Reyburn alighted from the train in Tinsdale
+Abijah Gage should be supporting one corner of the station, and
+contributing a quid now and then to the accumulations of the week
+scattered all about his feet.
+
+He spotted the stranger at once and turned his cunning little eyes upon
+him, making it obvious that he was bulging with information. It was,
+therefore, quite natural, when Reyburn paused to take his bearings, that
+Bi should speak up and inquire if he was looking for some one. Reyburn
+shook his head and passed on, but Bi was not to be headed off so easily
+as that. He shuffled after him:
+
+"Say!" he said, pointing to a shackley horse and buckboard that stood
+near, belonging to a pal over at the freight house. "Ef you want a lift
+I'll take you along."
+
+"Thank you, no," said Reyburn, smiling; "I'm not going far."
+
+"Say!" said Bi again as he saw his quarry about to disappear. "You name
+ain't Bains, is it?"
+
+"No!" said Reyburn, quite annoyed by the persistent old fellow.
+
+"From New York?" he hazarded cheerfully.
+
+"No," answered Reyburn, turning to go. "You must excuse me. I'm in a
+hurry."
+
+"That's all right," said Bi contentedly. "I'll walk a piece with you. I
+was lookin' fer a doctor to take down to see a sick child. A doctor from
+New York. You ain't by any chance a doctor, are you?" Bi eyed the big
+leather bag inquiringly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn, laughing in spite of his annoyance. "I'm only a
+lawyer." And with a bound he cleared the curb and hurried off down the
+street, having now recognized the direction described in Jane's diagram
+of Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage looked after him with twinkling eyes of dry mirth, and
+slowly sauntered after him, watching him until he entered the little
+unpainted gate of the Carson house and tapped at the old gray door. Then
+Bi lunged across the street and entered a path that ran along the
+railroad track for a few rods, curving suddenly into a stretch of vacant
+lots. On a convenient fence rail with a good outlook toward the west end
+of the village he ensconced himself and set about whittling a whistle
+from some willow stalks. He waited until he saw Bobbie Carson hurry off
+toward Hathaway's house and return with Lizzie Hope; waited hopefully
+until the stranger finally came out of the house again, touching his hat
+gracefully to the girl as she stood at the open door. Then he hurried
+back to the station again, and was comfortably settled on a tub of
+butter just arrived by freight, when Reyburn reached there. He was much
+occupied with his whistle, and never seemed to notice, but not a
+movement of the stranger escaped him, and when the Philadelphia express
+came by, and the stranger got aboard the parlor car, old Bi Gage swung
+his lumbering length up on the back platform of the last car. The hounds
+were hot on the trail now.
+
+It was several years since Bi Gage had been on so long a journey, but he
+managed to enjoy the trip, and kept in pretty good touch with the parlor
+car, although he was never in evidence. If anybody had told Warren
+Reyburn as he let himself into his apartment late that night that he was
+being followed, he would have laughed and told them it was an
+impossibility. When he came out to the street the next morning and swung
+himself into a car that would land him at his office, he did not see the
+lank flabby figure of the toothless Bi standing just across the block,
+and keeping tab on him from the back platform, nor notice that he slid
+into the office building behind him and took the same elevator up,
+crowding in behind two fat men and effacing himself against the wall of
+the cage. Reyburn was reading his paper, and did not look up. The figure
+slid out of the elevator after him and slithered into a shadow, watching
+him, slipping softly after, until sure which door he took, then waited
+silently until sure that the door was shut. No one heard the slouching
+footsteps come down the marble hall. Bi Gage always wore rubbers when he
+went anywhere in particular. He had them on that morning. He took
+careful note of the name on the door: "_Warren Reyburn_,
+Attorney-at-Law," and the number. Then he slid down the stairs as
+unobserved as he had come, and made his way to a name and number on a
+bit of paper from his pocket which he consulted in the shelter of a
+doorway.
+
+When Warren Reyburn started on his first trip to Tinsdale his mind was
+filled with varying emotions. He had never been able to quite get away
+from the impression made upon him by that little white bride lying so
+still amid her bridal finery, and the glowering bridegroom above her. It
+epitomized for him all the unhappy marriages of the world, and he felt
+like starting out somehow in hot pursuit of that bridegroom and making
+him answer for the sadness of his bride. Whenever the matter had been
+brought to his memory he had always been conscious of the first gladness
+he had felt when he knew she had escaped. It could not seem to him
+anything but a happy escape, little as he knew about any of the people
+who played the principal parts in the little tragedy he had witnessed.
+
+Hour after hour as he sat in the train and tried to sleep or tried to
+think he kept wondering at himself that he was going on this "wild goose
+chase," as he called it in his innermost thoughts. Yet he knew he had to
+go. In fact, he had known it from the moment James Ryan had shown him
+the advertisement. Not that he had ever had any idea of trying for that
+horrible reward. Simply that his soul had been stirred to its most
+knightly depths to try somehow to protect her in her hiding. Of course,
+it had been a mere crazy thought then, with no way of fulfilment, but
+when the chance had offered of really finding her and asking if there
+was anything she would like done, he knew from the instant it was
+suggested that he was going to do it, even if he lost every other
+business chance he ever had or expected to have, even if it took all his
+time and every cent he could borrow. He knew he had to try to find that
+girl! The thought that the only shelter between her and the great awful
+world lay in the word of an untaught girl like Jane Carson filled him
+with terror for her. If that was true, the sooner some one of
+responsibility and sense got to her the better. The questions he had
+asked of various people that afternoon had revealed more than he had
+already guessed of the character of the bridegroom to whom he had taken
+such a strong dislike on first sight.
+
+Thus he argued the long night through between the fitful naps he caught
+when he was not wondering if he should find her, and whether he would
+know her from that one brief sight of her in church. How did he know but
+this was some game put up on him to get him into a mix-up? He must go
+cautiously, and on no account do anything rash or make any promises
+until he had first found out all about her.
+
+When morning dawned he was in a state of perturbation quite unusual for
+the son and grandson of renowned lawyers noted for their calmness and
+poise under all circumstances. This perhaps was why the little incident
+with Abijah Gage at the station annoyed him so extremely. He felt he was
+doing a questionable thing in taking this journey at all. He certainly
+did not intend to reveal his identity or business to this curious old
+man.
+
+The little gray house looked exactly as Jane had described it, and as he
+opened the gate and heard the rusty chain that held it clank he had a
+sense of having been there before.
+
+He was pleasantly surprised, however, when the door was opened by Emily,
+who smiled at him out of shy blue eyes, and stood waiting to see what he
+wanted. It was like expecting a viper and finding a flower. Somehow he
+had not anticipated anything flower-like in Jane's family. The mother,
+too, was a surprise when she came from her ironing, and, pushing her
+wavy gray hair back from a furrowed brow lifted intelligent eyes that
+reminded him of Jane, to search his face. Ma did not appear flustered.
+She seemed to be taking account of him and deciding whether or not she
+would be cordial to him.
+
+"Yes, I had a telegram from Jane this morning," she was scanning his
+eyes once more to see whether there was a shadow of what she called
+"shiftiness" in them. "Come in," she added grudgingly.
+
+He was not led into the dining-room, but seated on one of the best
+varnished chairs in the "parlor," as they called the little unused front
+room. He felt strangely ill at ease and began to be convinced that he
+was on the very wildest of wild goose chases. To think of expecting to
+find Elizabeth Stanhope in a place like this! If she ever had been here
+she certainly must have flown faster than she had from the church on her
+wedding night.
+
+So, instead of beginning as he had planned, to put a list of logically
+prepared keen questions to a floundering and suspecting victim, he found
+the clear eyes of Ma looking into his unwaveringly and the wise tongue
+of Ma putting him through a regular orgy of catechism before she would
+so much as admit that she had ever heard of a girl named Lizzie Hope.
+Then he bethought him of her daughter's letter and handed it over for
+her to read.
+
+"Well," she admitted at last, half satisfied, "she isn't here at
+present. I sent her away when I found you was comin'. I wasn't sure I'd
+let you see her at all if I didn't like your looks."
+
+"That's right, Mrs. Carson," he said heartily, with real admiration in
+his voice. "I'm glad she has some one so careful to look out for her.
+Your daughter said she was in a good safe place, and I begin to see she
+knew what she was talking about."
+
+Then the strong look around Ma's lips settled into the sweeter one, and
+she sent Bob after the girl.
+
+"Are you a friend of hers?" she asked, watching him keenly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn. "I've never seen her but once. She doesn't know me
+at all."
+
+"Are you a friend of her--family?"
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+"Or any of her friends or relations?" Ma meant to be comprehensive.
+
+"No. I'm sorry I am not. I am a rather recent comer to the city where
+she made her home, I understand."
+
+Ma looked at him thoughtfully for a moment. It wouldn't have been called
+a stare, it was too kindly for that, but Reyburn thought to himself that
+he would not have liked to have borne her scrutiny if he had anything to
+conceal, for he felt as if she might read the truth in his eyes.
+
+"Are you--please excuse me for askin'--but are you a member of any
+church?"
+
+Reyburn flushed, and wanted to laugh, but was embarrassed in spite of
+himself:
+
+"Why, yes--I'm a member," he said slowly, then with a frank lifting of
+his eyes to her troubled gaze, "I united with the church when I was a
+mere kid, but I'm afraid I'm not much of a member. I really am not what
+you'd call 'working' at it much nowadays. I go to morning service
+sometimes, but that's about all. I don't want to be a hypocrite."
+
+He wondered as he spoke why he took the trouble to answer the woman so
+fully. Her question was in a way impertinent, much like the way her
+daughter talked. Yet she seemed wholly unconscious of it.
+
+"I know," she assented sorrowfully. "There's lots of them in the church.
+We have 'em, too, even in our little village. But still, after all, you
+can't help havin' confidence more in them that has 'named the name' than
+in them that has not."
+
+Reyburn looked at her curiously and felt a sudden infusion of respect
+for her. She was putting the test of her faith to him, and he knew by
+the little stifled sigh that he had been found wanting.
+
+"I s'pose lawyers don't have much time to think about being Christians,"
+she apologized for him.
+
+He felt impelled to be frank with her:
+
+"I'm afraid I can't urge that excuse. Unfortunately I have a good deal
+of time on my hands now. I've just opened my office and I'm waiting for
+clients."
+
+"Where were you before that? You did not just get through studying?"
+
+He saw she was wondering whether he was wise enough to help her protege.
+
+"No, I spent the last three years in France."
+
+"Up at the front?" The pupils of her eyes dilated eagerly.
+
+"Yes, in every drive," he answered, wondering that a woman of this sort
+should be so interested now that the war was over.
+
+"And you came back safe!" she said slowly, looking at him with a kind of
+wistful sorrow in her eyes. "My boy was shot the first day he went over
+the top."
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," said Reyburn gently, a sudden tightness in his throat.
+
+"But it was all right." She flashed a dazzling smile at him through the
+tears that came into her eyes. "It wasn't as if he wasn't ready. Johnny
+was always a good boy, an' he joined church when he was fourteen, an'
+always kep' his promises. He used to pray every night just as faithful,
+an' read his Bible. I've got the little Testament he carried all
+through. His chaplain sent it to me. It's got a bullet hole through it,
+and blood-marks, but it's good to me to look at, 'cause I know Johnny's
+with his Saviour. He wasn't afraid to die. He said to me before he left,
+he says: 'Ma, if anythin' happens to me it's all right. You know, Ma, I
+ain't forgettin' what you taught me, an' I ain't forgettin' Christ is
+with me.'"
+
+Mrs. Carson wiped her eyes furtively, and tried to look cheerful.
+Reyburn wished he knew how to comfort her.
+
+"It makes a man feel mean," he said at last, trying to fit his toe into
+the pattern of the ingrain carpet, "to come home alive and whole when so
+many poor fellows had to give their lives. I've often wondered how I
+happened to get through."
+
+She looked at him tenderly:
+
+"Perhaps your Heavenly Father brought you back to give you more chance
+to do things for Him, an' get ready to die when your time comes."
+
+There was something startling to this self-composed city chap in hearing
+a thing like this from the lips of the mother whose beloved son was gone
+forever beyond her teaching but had "been ready." Reyburn looked at her
+steadily, soberly, and then with a queer constriction in his throat he
+looked down at the floor thoughtfully and said:
+
+"Perhaps He did."
+
+"Well, I can't help bein' glad you're a church member, anyhow," said
+Mrs. Carson, rising to look out of the window. "She needs a Christian to
+help her, an' I'd sooner trust a Christian. If you really meant it when
+you joined church you've got somethin' to fall back on anyhow. Here she
+comes. I'll just go an' tell her you're in here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+BETTY, her eyes wide with fear, her face white as a lily, appeared like
+a wraith at the parlor door and looked at him. It gave Reyburn a queer
+sensation, as if a picture one had been looking at in a story book
+should suddenly become alive and move and stare at one. As he rose and
+came forward he still seemed to see like a dissolving view between them
+the little huddled bride on the floor of the church. Then he suddenly
+realized that she was trembling.
+
+"Please don't be afraid of me, Miss Stanhope," he said gently. "I have
+only come to help you, and if after you have talked with me you feel
+that you would rather I should have nothing to do with your affairs I
+will go away and no one in the world shall be the wiser for it. I give
+you my word of honor."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, toppling into a chair near by. "I--guess--I'm not
+afraid of you. I just didn't know who you might be----!" She stopped,
+caught her breath and tried to laugh, but it ended sorrily, almost in a
+sob.
+
+"Well, I don't wonder," said Reyburn, trying to find something
+reassuring to say. "The truth is, I was rather upset about you. I
+didn't quite know who you might turn out to be, you see!"
+
+"Oh!" Betty's hand slipped up to her throat, and her lips quivered as
+she tried to smile.
+
+"Please don't feel that way," he said, "or I'll go away at once." He was
+summoning all his courage and hoping she wasn't going to break down and
+cry. How little she was, and sweet! Her eyes pleaded, just as they did
+in that one look in the church. How could anybody be unkind to her?
+
+"I'm quite all right," said Betty with a forced smile, siting up very
+straight.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better introduce myself," he said, trying to speak in a
+very commonplace tone. "I'm just a lawyer that your friend Miss Jane
+Carson sent out to see if I could be of any service to you. It may
+possibly make things a little easier for you if I explain that while I
+never had heard of you before, and have no possible connection with your
+family or friends, I happened to be at your wedding!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a little agonized breath.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Bryce Cochrane?" he asked.
+
+Betty could not have got any whiter, but her eyes seemed to blanch a
+trifle.
+
+"A little," she said in a very small voice.
+
+"Well, she is my cousin."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty again.
+
+"Her husband was unable to accompany her to the wedding, and so I went
+in his place to escort Isabel. I knew nothing of your affairs either
+before or after the wedding, until this announcement was brought to my
+notice, and Miss Carson called on me."
+
+Betty took the paper in her trembling fingers, and looked into her own
+pictured eyes. Then everything seemed to swim before her for a moment.
+She pressed her hand against her throat and set her white lips firmly,
+looking up at the stranger with a sudden terror and comprehension.
+
+"You want to get that five thousand dollars!" she said, speaking the
+words in a daze of trouble. "Oh, I haven't got five thousand dollars!
+Not now! But perhaps I could manage to get it if you would be good
+enough to wait just a little, till I can find a way. Oh, if you knew
+what it means to me!"
+
+Warren Reyburn sprang to his feet in horror, a flame of anger leaping
+into his eyes.
+
+"Five thousand dollars be hanged!" he said fiercely. "Do I look like
+that kind of a fellow? It may seem awfully queer to you for an utter
+stranger to be butting into your affairs like this unless I did have
+some ulterior motive, but I swear to you that I have none. I came out
+here solely because I saw that you were in great likelihood of being
+found by the people from whom you had evidently run away. Miss Stanhope,
+I stood where I could watch your face when you came up the aisle at your
+wedding, and something in your eyes just before you dropped made me wish
+I could knock that bridegroom down and take care of you somehow until
+you got that hurt look out of your face. I know it was rather ridiculous
+for an utter stranger to presume so far, but when I saw that the sleuths
+were out after you, and when the knowledge of your whereabouts was put
+into my hands without the seeking, I wouldn't have been a man if I
+hadn't come and offered my services. I'm not a very great lawyer, nor
+even a very rising one, as your Miss Carson seems to think, but I'm a
+man with a soul to protect a woman who is in danger, and if that's you,
+I'm at your service. If not, you've only to say so and I'll take the
+next train home and keep my mouth shut!"
+
+He took his watch out and looked at it hastily, although he had not the
+slightest idea what it registered, nor what time the next train for home
+left. He looked very tall and strong and commanding as he stood in his
+dignity waiting for her answer, and Betty looked up like a little child
+and trusted him.
+
+"Oh! Please forgive me!" she cried. "I've been so frightened ever since
+Bob came after me. I couldn't think you had come for any good, because I
+didn't know any one in the world who would want to help me."
+
+"Certainly!" said Warren Reyburn with a lump in his throat, sitting down
+quickly to hide his emotion. "Please consider me a friend, and command
+me."
+
+"Thank you," said Betty taking a deep breath and trying to crowd back
+the tears. "I'm afraid there isn't any way to help me, but I'm glad to
+have a friend, and I'm sorry I was so rude."
+
+"You weren't rude, and that was a perfectly natural conclusion from my
+blundering beginning," he protested, looking at the adorable waves of
+hair that framed her soft cheeks. "But there is always a way to help
+people when they are in trouble, and I'm here to find out what it is. Do
+you think you could trust me enough to tell me what it's all about? Miss
+Carson didn't seem to know much or else she didn't feel free to say."
+
+"I didn't tell her much," said Betty, lifting her sea-blue eyes. "She
+was a stranger, too, you know."
+
+"Well, she's a mighty good friend of yours, I'll say, and she's acted
+in a very wise manner. She took more precautions than an old detective
+would have done. She told me only that some one was trying to make you
+marry a man you did not wish to marry. Is that correct?"
+
+Betty shivered involuntarily and a wave of color went over her white
+face.
+
+"It sounds queer," she said, "as if I hadn't any character or force
+myself, but you don't understand. No one would understand unless they
+knew it all, and had been through it for years. At first I didn't quite
+understand it myself. I'd better tell you the story. I thought I never
+could tell any one, because they were my father's family, and I know he
+would shrink so from having it known, but I'm sure he wouldn't blame me
+now."
+
+"He certainly would not blame you, Miss Stanhope. I have heard that your
+father was a wonderful man, with high principles. I feel sure he would
+justify you in appealing to some one who was willing to advise you in a
+strait like this. You know no woman need ever marry any man against her
+will."
+
+"Not if it were her father's dying wish?"
+
+"Certainly not. Miss Stanhope, did your father love you?"
+
+"Oh, I'm sure he did. He was the most wonderful father! I've often
+thought that he would never have asked it of me if he had realized----"
+
+"Did he ever during his lifetime seem to wish you to be unhappy?"
+
+"Never! That was the strange part of it. But you see he didn't know how
+I felt. I think I'd better tell you all about it."
+
+"That would be the better way, if it won't be too hard for you."
+
+Betty clasped her small hands together tightly and began:
+
+"My own mother died when I was quite a little girl, so father and I were
+a great deal to each other. He used to look after my lessons himself,
+and was always very careful what kind of teachers I had. He was mother
+and father both to me. When I was ten years old my governess died
+suddenly while father was away on a business trip, and one of our
+neighbors was very kind to me, coming in and looking after the servants
+and everything and keeping me over at her house for a few days till
+father got back. She had a widowed sister visiting her, a rather young
+woman who was very beautiful. At least I thought she was beautiful then,
+and she made a great pet of me, so that I grew fond of her, although I
+had not liked her at first.
+
+"After father came home she used to slip over every day to see me while
+he was at his business, and he was grateful to her for making me happy.
+Then he found out that she was in trouble, had lost her money or
+something, and wanted to get a position teaching. He arranged to have
+her teach me, and so she came to our house to stay.
+
+"Somehow after that I never seemed to see so much of my father as I used
+to do, for she was always there, but at first I didn't care, because she
+was nice to me, and always getting up things to keep me busy and happy.
+She would make my father buy expensive toys and books and games for me,
+and fine clothes, and so of course I was pleased. In about a year my
+father married her, and at first it seemed very beautiful to me to have
+a real mother, but little by little I began to see that she preferred to
+be alone with my father and did not want me around so much. It was very
+hard to give up the companionship of my father, but my stepmother kept
+me busy with other things, so that I really didn't think much about it
+while it was first happening.
+
+"But one day there came a letter. I remember it came while we were at
+breakfast, and my father got very white and stern when he read it, and
+handed it over to my mother and asked whether it was true, and then she
+began to cry and sent me from the table. I found out a few days after
+that that my stepmother had two sons, both older than myself, and that
+she had not told my father. It was through some trouble they had got
+into at school which required quite a large sum of money to cover
+damages that my father discovered it, and he was terribly hurt that she
+should have concealed it from him. I learned all this from the servants,
+who talked when they thought I was not within hearing. There were days
+and days when my father scarcely spoke at the table, and when he looked
+at me it made a pain go through my heart, he looked so stern and sad. My
+stepmother stayed a great deal in her room and looked as if she had been
+crying. But after a few weeks things settled down a good deal as they
+had been, only that my father never lost that sad troubled look. There
+was some trouble about my stepmother's sons, too, for there was a great
+deal of argument between her and my father, of which I only heard
+snatches, and then one day they came home to stay with us. Something had
+happened at the school where they were that they could not stay any
+longer. I can remember distinctly the first night they ate dinner with
+us. It seemed to me that it was like a terrific thunderstorm that never
+quite broke. Everybody was trying to be nice and polite, but underneath
+it all there was a kind of lightning of all kinds of feelings, hurt
+feelings and wrong ones and right ones all mixed up.
+
+"Only the two boys didn't seem to feel it much. They sort of took things
+for granted, as if that had always been their home, and they didn't act
+very polite. It seemed to trouble my father, who looked at them so
+severely that it almost choked me, and I couldn't go on eating my
+dinner. He didn't seem like my dear father when he looked like that. I
+always used to watch my father, and he seemed to make the day for me. If
+he was sad, then I was sad; and if he was glad then I was happy all
+over, until one day my stepmother noticed me and said: 'See, dear little
+Elizabeth is trembling. You ought not to speak that way before her,
+Charles.' And then father looked at me, and all suddenly I learned to
+smile when I didn't feel like it. I smiled back to him just to let him
+know it didn't matter what he did, I would love him anyhow!"
+
+During the recital Reyburn had sat with courteous averted gaze as though
+he would not trouble her with more of his presence than was absolutely
+necessary. Now he gave her a swift glance.
+
+Betty's eyes were off on distance, and she was talking from the depths
+of her heart, great tears welling into her eyes. All at once she
+remembered the stranger:
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said, and brushed her hand across her eyes. "I
+haven't gone over it to any one ever, and I forgot you would not be
+interested in details."
+
+"Please don't mind me. I am interested in every detail you are good
+enough to give me. It all makes the background of the truth, you know,
+and that is what I am after," said Reyburn, deeply touched. "I think you
+are wonderful to tell me all this. I shall regard it most sacredly."
+
+Betty flashed a look of gratitude at him, and noticed the sympathy in
+his face. It almost unnerved her, but she went on:
+
+"The oldest boy was named Bessemer, and he wasn't very good-looking. He
+was very tall and awkward, and always falling over things. He had little
+pale eyes, and hardly any chin. His teeth projected, too, and his hair
+was light and very straight and thin. His mother didn't seem to love him
+very much, even when he was a little boy. She bullied him and found
+fault with him continually, and quite often I felt very sorry for him,
+although I wasn't naturally attracted to him. He wasn't really
+unpleasant to me. We got along very nicely, although I never had much to
+do with him. There wasn't much to him.
+
+"The other brother, Herbert, was handsome like his mother, only dark,
+with black curly hair, black wicked eyes, and a big, loose, cruel mouth.
+His mother just idolized him, and he knew it. He could make her do
+anything on earth. He used to force Bessemer into doing wrong things,
+too, things that he was afraid to do himself, because he knew father
+would not be so hard on Bessemer as on him. For father had taken a great
+dislike to Herbert, and it was no wonder. He seemed to have no idea at
+all that he was not owner of the house. He took anything he pleased for
+his own use, even father's most sacred possessions, and broke them in a
+fit of anger, too, sometimes, without ever saying he was sorry. He
+talked very disrespectfully of father and to him, and acted so to the
+servants that they gave notice and left. Every few days there would be a
+terrible time over something Herbert had done. Once I remember he went
+to the safe and got some money out that belonged to father and went off
+and spent it in some dreadful way that made father very angry. Of course
+I was still only a little girl, and I did not know all that went on.
+Father was very careful that I should not know. He guarded me more than
+ever, but he always looked sad when he came to kiss me good-night.
+
+"Herbert took especial delight in tormenting me," she went on with a sad
+far-away look in her eyes as if she were recalling unpleasant memories.
+She did not see the set look on Reyburn's face nor notice his low
+exclamation of anger. She went steadily on: "He found out that I did not
+like June-bugs, and once he caught hundreds of them and locked me into a
+room with them with all the lights turned on. I was almost frightened to
+death, but it cured me of being afraid of June-bugs." A little smile
+trembled out on Betty's lips. "Just because I wouldn't give him the
+satisfaction of letting him hear me scream." She finished. "Then he
+caught a snake and put it in my room, and he put a lot of burdocks in my
+hat so they would get in my hair. Foolish things those were, of course,
+but he was a constant nightmare to me. Sometimes he would tie a wire
+across the passages in the upper hall where I had to pass to my room,
+and when I fell my hands went down against a lot of slimy toads in the
+dark, for he always somehow managed to have the light go out just as I
+fell. There were hundreds of things like that, but I needn't multiply
+them. That's the kind of boy he was. And because he discovered that my
+father loved me very much, and because he knew my father disliked him,
+he spent much time in trying to torment me in secret. I couldn't tell my
+father, because he always looked so sad whenever there was trouble, and
+there was sure to be trouble between him and my stepmother if my father
+found out that Herbert had done anything wrong. One day my father came
+upon us just as Herbert had caught me and was trying to cut my curls
+off. I didn't care about the curls, but I knew my father did. I began to
+scream. Herbert gripped me so I thought I would die with the pain,
+putting his big strong fingers around my throat and choking me so I
+could not make any noise."
+
+Reyburn clenched his hands until the knuckles went white and uttered an
+exclamation, but Betty did not notice:
+
+"There was a terrible time then, and I was sent away to a school, a good
+many miles from home, where I stayed for several years. Father always
+came up to see me every week end, for a few hours at least, and we had
+wonderful times together. Sometimes in vacation he would bring my
+stepmother along and she would bring me beautiful presents and smile and
+pet me, and say she missed me so much and she wished I would ask my
+father to let me come back and go to school in the city. But I never
+did, because I was afraid of Herbert. As I grew older I used to have an
+awful horror of him. But finally one vacation father and mother both
+came up and said they wanted me at home. My stepmother went to my room
+with me and told me I needn't be afraid of Herbert any more, that he was
+quite grown up and changed and would be good to me, and that it would
+please my father to have all his family together happily again. I
+believed her and I told father I would like to go. He looked very happy,
+and so I went home. Herbert had been away at school himself most of the
+time, and so had Bessemer, although they had been in trouble a good many
+times, so the servants told me, and had to change to new schools. They
+were both away when I got home. I had a very happy time for three weeks,
+only that I never saw father alone once. My stepmother was always there.
+But she was kind and I tried not to mind. Then all of a sudden one night
+I woke up and heard voices, and I knew that the boys were back from the
+camp to which they had been sent. I didn't sleep much the rest of the
+night, but in the morning I made up my mind that it was only a little
+while before I could go back to school, and I would be nice to the boys
+and maybe they wouldn't trouble me.
+
+"I found that it was quite true that Herbert had grown up and changed.
+He didn't want to torment me any more, he wanted to make love to me,
+and I was only a child yet. I wasn't quite fifteen. It filled me with
+horror, and after he had caught me in the dark--he always loved to get
+people in the dark--and tried to kiss me, I asked father to let me go
+back to school at once. I can remember how sad he looked at me as if I
+had cut him to the heart when I asked him."
+
+During this part of the tale Reyburn sat with stern countenance, his
+fingers clenched around the arms of the chair in which he sat, but he
+held himself quiet and listened with compressed lips, watching every
+expression that flitted across the sweet pale face.
+
+"That was the last time I was at home with my father," she said, trying
+to control her quivering lips. "He took me back to school, and he came
+three times to see me, though not so often as before. The last time he
+said beautiful things to me about trying to live a right life and being
+kind to those about me, and he asked me to forgive him if he had ever
+done anything to hurt me in any way. Of course I said he hadn't. And
+then he said he hoped I wouldn't feel too hard at him for marrying again
+and bringing those boys into my life. I told him it was all right, that
+some day they would grow up and go away and he and I would live together
+again! And he said some awful words about them under his breath. But he
+asked me to forgive him again and kissed me and went away.
+
+"He was taken very sick when he got home, and they never let me know
+until he was dead. Of course I went home to the funeral, but I didn't
+stay; I couldn't. I went back to school alone. My stepmother had been
+very kind, but she said she knew it was my father's wish that I should
+finish my school year. When vacation came she was traveling for her
+health. She wrote me a beautiful letter telling me how she missed me,
+and how much she needed me now in her bereavement, and how she hoped
+another summer would see us together; but she stayed abroad two years
+and the third year she went to California. I was sent to another school,
+and because I was not asked about it and there didn't seem anything else
+to do, I went. Every time I would suggest doing something else my
+stepmother would write and say how sorry she was she could not give her
+consent, but my father had left very explicit directions about me and
+she was only trying to carry out his wishes. She knew me well enough to
+be sure I would want to do anything he wished for me. And I did, of
+course."
+
+Reyburn gave her a look of sympathy and getting up began to pace the
+little room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+"IT was not until last spring that she sent for me to come home," went
+on Betty, "and was very effusive about how much she needed me and how
+she was so much better, and meant to be a real mother to me now, helping
+me see the world and have a good time. She took me from one summer
+resort to another. Of course it was pleasant after having been shut up
+in school all those years, but she kept me close with her all the time,
+and I met only the people she chose to have me meet. All the time she
+kept talking about 'dear Herbert' and telling how wonderful he was and
+how he had grown to be 'such a dear boy.' Finally he arrived and began
+the very first evening he was with us to coax me to marry him. At first
+he was very courteous and waited upon me whenever I stirred, and I
+almost thought his mother was right about his being changed. But when I
+told him that I did not love him and could not ever marry him I caught a
+look on his face like an angry snarl, and I heard him tell his mother I
+was a crazy little fool, and that he would break my neck for me after he
+got me good and married. Then his mother began to come to me and cry
+and tell me how dear Herbert was almost heart-broken, that he would
+never lift up his head again, and that I would send him to ruin. It was
+simply awful, and I didn't know how to endure it. I began to wonder
+where I could go. Of course I had never been brought up to do anything,
+so I could not very well expect to go out into the world and make my
+living."
+
+"Didn't you have any money at all?" interrupted Reyburn suddenly.
+
+"Oh, yes," she said, looking up as if she had just remembered his
+presence. "I had always plenty of spending money, but if I went away
+where they couldn't find me, why, of course, I would have to give that
+up."
+
+"Why, where did your money come from? Was it an allowance from your
+stepmother, or did your father leave it to you, or what?"
+
+"I'm not just sure," said Betty, with troubled brow. "I never really
+knew much about the money affairs. When I asked, they always put me off
+and said that I was too young to be bothered with business yet, I would
+be told all about it when I came of age. My stepmother harped a great
+deal on keeping me young as long as possible. She said it was my
+father's wish that I should be relieved of all care until I came of
+age. But there were some trustees in Boston. I know that, because I had
+to write to them, about once or twice a year. My stepmother was most
+particular about that. I think they were old friends of my own mother,
+though I don't know when I learned that. Father told me once that mother
+had left me enough to keep me comfortably even without what he would
+leave me, so I'm sure I shall have enough to repay you if I could once
+get it."
+
+"Don't worry about me!" he exclaimed. "It seems so terrible for you to
+have been alone in a situation like that! Wasn't there any one you could
+appeal to for help?"
+
+"No, not any one whom I thought it would be right to tell. You see, in a
+way it was my father's honor. She was his wife, and I'm sure he loved
+her--at least at first--and she really was very good to me, except when
+it was a question of her son."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't agree with you there!" he said sternly. "I think she
+was a clever actress. But excuse me. Go on, please."
+
+"At last, when things had got so bad that I thought I must run away
+somewhere, my stepmother came into my room one morning and locked the
+door. She had been weeping, and she looked very sweet and pitiful. She
+said she had something to tell me. She had tried not to have to do it,
+for she was afraid it would grieve me and might make me have hard
+feelings against my father. I told her that was impossible. Then she
+told me that my father on his deathbed had called her to him and told
+her that it was his wish that I should marry one of her sons, and he
+wanted her to tell me. He felt that he had wronged them by hating them
+for my sake and he felt that I could make it all right by marrying one
+of them. My stepmother said that when she saw how infatuated dear
+Herbert was with me she hoped that she would be spared having to tell
+me, but now that I was treating him so she felt bound to deliver the
+message. Then she handed me a paper which said virtually the same thing
+which she had told me, and was signed by my father in his own
+handwriting."
+
+"Was the paper written or printed?" interrupted Reyburn.
+
+"I think it was typewritten, but the signature was papa's. There could
+be no mistake about that, and he wouldn't have signed something he
+didn't mean." Betty sighed as if it were a subject she had worn into her
+heart by much sorrowful thought.
+
+"It might be quite possible for him to have done that under influence
+or delirium, or when he was too sick to realize."
+
+"Oh, do you think so?" Betty caught at the hope. "It seems so awful to
+go against papa's last request."
+
+"There is nothing awful but the idea of your being tied to that--beast!"
+said Reyburn with unexpected fervor. Betty looked at him gratefully and
+went on:
+
+"I was simply appalled. I couldn't think, and I made my stepmother go
+away and leave me for a little while, but things got blacker and blacker
+and I thought I was going crazy. I couldn't marry Herbert even to please
+my father. The next day Bessemer arrived. He had been worrying his
+mother a lot about money, and when he arrived I couldn't help hearing
+what they said to him. They charged him with all sort of dreadful
+things. They called him a disgrace, and threatened to let him be
+arrested, and a great many more such things. Finally his mother ended up
+by telling him she never had loved him and that if he made any more
+trouble about money she would cut him off without a cent. I was sitting
+upstairs in my room with my windows open, and all their talk floated
+right up to me. It made me feel sick, and yet I felt sorry for Bessemer,
+for lately whenever he had been around he had been kind to me, and
+sometimes I had stayed near him to get rid of Herbert. We often talked
+over our troubles together and sympathized with one another. He felt
+sorry for me, but he was weak himself and couldn't see any way out for
+either of us.
+
+"They had pretty stormy times all that day. Late in the afternoon
+Herbert and Bessemer went to their mother's room and were closeted with
+her for two hours, after which Herbert went away in the car with his
+suitcase and bags as if he were not coming back soon. I watched him from
+my window, and in great relief went down to take a little walk, for I
+had stayed closely in my room all day trying to plan what to do. One
+thing that held me from running away was that it would be such a
+disgrace to the family, and I knew my father would have felt it so
+keenly. That was always the great trouble when the boys got into scrapes
+at college, my father would groan and say he felt disgraced to be so
+conspicuous before the world. So I hesitated to do what would have been
+a sorrow to him had he been alive.
+
+"Half an hour later I was sitting alone in the twilight on one of the
+porches, and Bessemer came out and sat down beside me.
+
+"He looked so sort of homely and lonesome that I put my hand on his arm
+and told him I was awfully sorry for him, and suddenly he turned around
+and said:
+
+"'Say, Betty, why don't you marry _me_? Then they can't say a word to
+either of us. Your father's wishes will be carried out and Herb'll have
+to whistle.'
+
+"At first I was horrified, but we talked a long time about it, and he
+told me how lonely he had always been, and how nobody had ever loved
+him, and he knew he wasn't attractive, and all that; and then he said
+that if I married him we would go away and live by ourselves and he
+would let me do just as I wanted to. He wouldn't bother me about
+anything. If I didn't love him he would keep out of my sight, and things
+like that, till I got very sorry for him, and began to think that
+perhaps after all it was the best thing that would ever come for either
+of us. So I said I would.
+
+"It surprised me a little that my stepmother took it so calmly when we
+told her. She cried a little, but did it very prettily, and kissed
+Bessemer, and told him he was fortunate. Then she kissed me and said I
+was a darling, and that she would be so happy if it only weren't for
+poor dear Herbert.
+
+"But after that they began to rush things for a grand wedding, and I let
+them do it because I didn't see anything else in the world for me."
+
+Betty raised her eyes and encountered the clear grave gaze of Reyburn
+fixed on her, and the color flew into her cheeks:
+
+"I know you think I'm dreadful," she said, shrinking. "I've thought so
+myself a thousand times, but truly I didn't realize then what an awful
+thing it would be to marry a man I didn't love. I only wanted to hurry
+up and get it done before Herbert came home. They said he had been
+called away by important business and might be at home any day. I gave
+my consent to everything they wanted to do, and they fixed it all just
+as they pleased. One thing that happened upset me terribly. When the
+wedding invitations came home my stepmother carried them off to her
+room. I was too sad to pay much attention anyway. But the next morning I
+happened to be down in the kitchen looking over the papers that the maid
+had taken down from the waste baskets to search for a missing letter and
+there in the pile I found one of the invitations partly addressed and
+flung aside, and the invitation was still in the envelope. I pulled it
+out with a ghastly kind of curiosity to see how I looked on paper, and
+there it read, Mrs. Charles Garland Stanhope invites you to be present
+at the marriage of her daughter Elizabeth to _Mr. Herbert Hutton_!
+
+"My heart just stood still. With the paper in my hand I rushed up to my
+stepmother's room and demanded to know what that meant. She smiled and
+said she was so sorry I had been annoyed that way, that that was a
+mistake, the invitations had come wrongly engraved and she had had to
+send them back and have them done over again. She was afraid I might be
+superstitious about it, so she hadn't told me. She was very gentle and
+sweet and tried to soothe me, and called me 'Betty,' the name my father
+always had for me, and at last I went back to my room feeling quite
+comfortable. She had said she always felt troubled for poor Bessemer,
+that nobody could love him right, he was so homely, and now I was going
+to make everything right by marrying him. She was going to try to forget
+what I had done to poor dear Herbert, and just be happy about Bessemer.
+She talked so nicely that I kissed her, a thing I hadn't done in years,
+not since she was first married to father. But somehow the shock of
+seeing Herbert's name on the invitation stayed with me, and I began to
+feel gloomier about it all and to wonder if perhaps I had done right.
+The last day I was terribly depressed and when I got to the church that
+night it suddenly came to me that perhaps after all I was not going to
+be free at all as I had hoped, but was just tying myself up to them all
+for life. I was thinking that as I walked up the aisle, and my throat
+had a big lump in it the way it always does when I am frightened, and
+then I looked up hoping a glimpse of poor Bessemer's face would steady
+me and he wasn't there at all! And right over me, waiting beside the
+minister, to marry me stood _Herbert_! My knees just gave way under me,
+and everything got black so I couldn't go on another step, nor even
+stand up. I had to drop. I wasn't unconscious as you all thought--I
+heard everything that went on, but I couldn't do anything about it.
+
+"After they had carried me into the other room and given me things to
+drink, and I could get my breath again I saw it all clearly. Herbert
+hadn't given up at all. He meant to marry me anyway. He had had the
+invitations printed with his name on purpose and they probably hadn't
+been changed at all. Everybody in that great church out there was
+_expecting_ me to marry Herbert Hutton, and I _was not going to do it_!
+I didn't quite know how I was going to stop it, but I knew I had to! You
+see I was brought up to think a great deal about what people would think
+of me if I did anything out of the usual, and it seemed to me I had
+disgraced myself forever by dropping down in the aisle. I knew Herbert
+well enough to be sure he would carry that wedding through now if he had
+to hold me up in his arms till the ceremony was over, and I was
+desperate. I would have given everything I had in the world if the floor
+had opened and swallowed me up then, but of course I knew wild thoughts
+like that wouldn't get me anywhere, so I just shut my eyes and tried to
+think of a way; and then I asked them all to go out a minute and let me
+be quiet. The doctor who had come out of the church told them to go. I
+shall always bless that man, whoever he was! Then when they were gone I
+opened a door that had a key in it, and I locked it behind me and ran
+away down some stairs and out a passage that led to the street. That
+girl, Jane Carson, was passing and she put her own coat on me and took
+me to her room and sent me here. Oh, it's been so good to get here! Do
+you think they can take me away against my will?"
+
+"Certainly not!" said the young man. "Not without some foul play, but I
+don't intend to give them any chance for that. By the way, when do you
+come of age?"
+
+"In three weeks," said Betty, looking troubled. "Why, would I be safe
+after I was of age?"
+
+"You certainly would not be under their guardianship any longer," said
+the young lawyer, "and they would have no right to control your actions,
+unless of course you were incapacitated somehow and unfit to manage your
+own affairs."
+
+Betty looked troubled.
+
+"I've thought sometimes, ever since I saw that paper in which they
+hinted that I was temporarily insane, that they might try to shut me up
+in an insane asylum. Herbert wouldn't stop at anything. Could he do
+that?"
+
+"They would have to get a doctor to swear that you were mentally
+unsound," said Reyburn, looking troubled. "Does he really love you, do
+you think or does he only want to get you in his power for some reason?"
+
+"It is more like that," said Betty sorrowfully, "he couldn't really love
+anybody but himself."
+
+"Well, don't you worry. I'm going at the case at once, and I'll put
+those people where they'll have to walk a chalk line before many hours
+are over. The first thing I must do is to see those trustees of yours.
+Can you give me the names and addresses?"
+
+He got out his fountain pen, and Betty told him all he wanted to know,
+that is, all she knew herself, and then suddenly it was train time and
+he hurried away. On the steps he paused and said in a low tone:
+
+"Are you perfectly comfortable with these people for a few days until I
+can get you better accommodations where you will be safe?"
+
+"Entirely," said Betty eagerly. "I wouldn't want to go elsewhere."
+
+"But it must be very hard for one like you to be thrown constantly with
+illiterate, uncultured people."
+
+Betty smiled dreamily:
+
+"I don't think they are exactly uncultured," she said slowly.
+"They--well, you see, they make a friend of God, and somehow I think
+that makes a difference. Don't you think it would?"
+
+"I should think it would," said Warren Reyburn reverently with a light
+in his eyes. "I think, perhaps, if you don't mind my saying it, that
+you, too, have been making a friend of God."
+
+"I've been trying to," said Betty softly, with a shy glow on her face
+that he remembered all the way back to the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+CANDACE CAMERON paced her little gabled room restively, with face
+growing redder and more excited at every step. For several weeks now she
+had been virtually a prisoner--albeit a willing enough one--in the house
+of Stanhope. But the time had come when she felt that she must do
+something.
+
+She had gone quietly enough about a proscribed part of the house, doing
+little helpful things, making herself most useful to the madam, slipping
+here and there with incredible catlike tread for so plump a body,
+managing to overhear important conversations, and melting away like a
+wraith before her presence was discovered. She had made herself so
+unobtrusive as to be almost forgotten by all save the maid Marie, who
+had been set to watch her; and she had learned that if she went to bed
+quite early in the evening, Marie relaxed her watch and went down to the
+servants' quarters, or even sometimes went out with a lover for a while,
+that is, if the madam herself happened to be out also. On several such
+occasions she had made valuable tours of investigation through the
+madam's desk and private papers.
+
+That she was overstepping her privileges as a servant in the house went
+without saying, but she silenced her Scotch conscience, which until this
+period of her existence had always kept her strictly from meddling with
+other people's affairs, by declaring over and over again to herself that
+she was doing perfectly right because she was doing it for the sake of
+"that poor wee thing that was being cheated of her rights."
+
+Several weeks had passed since her sudden re-establishment in the
+family, and the reports of Betty, so hastily readjusted and refurbished
+to harmonize with the newspaper reports, had not been any more
+satisfying. Mrs. Stanhope had explained to the servants the day after
+the excitement that Miss Betty had become temporarily deranged, and
+later that she had escaped from the private hospital where she had been
+taken, and they were doing all in their power to find her. In reply to
+Candace's gimlet-like questions she had given the name of a hospital
+where she said Betty had been taken at first, and everything seemed
+altogether plausible. But as the days went by and the horror of her
+absence grew into the soul of the lonely woman whose care Betty had been
+for years, Candace became more and more restive and suspicious. It was
+these suspicions which sent her on her investigations, and made her
+uncannily wise to pry open secret locks and cover all trace of her
+absence after she had gleaned what knowledge she sought.
+
+On this particular evening her excitement was due to having come across
+some correspondence bearing the signature of a man to whom a certain
+letter had been addressed, which had been entrusted to her charge by
+Betty's dying father and taken from her by his wife. For years she had
+been worried about that, and yet she had no absolute reason to doubt
+that the madam had not sent it to its destination, except as she knew
+its contents and read Mrs. Stanhope's character beneath the excellent
+camouflage. But to-night, even the briefest glance through the bundle of
+letters showed plainly that those men in Boston never knew the master's
+wishes, or at least, if they knew them, they were utterly disregarding
+them.
+
+Aroused on one point, her suspicions began to extend further. Where was
+Betty? Did her stepmother know, and was she somewhere suffering, alone,
+perhaps being neglected because she had not done as they wanted her to
+do? If the stepmother was capable of destroying a letter, was she
+perhaps not also capable of putting Betty out of the way? There were
+points of detail which of course did not harmonize with any such theory
+as this. Candace was no logician, but she was keen enough to feel that
+something was wrong. As for that theory of Betty's insanity she scouted
+it with a harsh laugh whenever it was mentioned in her hearing.
+Betty--keen, sweet, trusting little Betty _insane_! Nonsense! It was
+unthinkable. If she was in an asylum anywhere she was there without
+warrant, and it behoved her faithful old nurse to find a way out for
+her. This she meant to do against all odds, for she was thoroughly
+aroused now.
+
+She went to the window and looked down into the lighted street. Over
+there not four blocks away rose the steeple of the church where Betty
+had gone to be married! Around the corner was the great brick pile of
+the hospital where her stepmother said she had been taken from the
+church, and from which she was believed by the other servants to have
+escaped.
+
+Standing thus looking out into the light-starred city, Candace began to
+form a plan, her plump tightly garmented chest rising and falling
+excitedly as she thought it all out. It was up to her to find out what
+had become of Betty. But how was she to get away without being
+suspected? Somehow she must do it. She knew perfectly the address that
+had been on that letter. She had written it down carefully from memory
+as soon as it had been taken away from her. She must go to Boston and
+find that man to whom it had been written, and discover whether he had
+ever received it. But she could not go until she found out certainly
+whether or not Betty had ever really escaped from the hospital. Who knew
+but that she was shut up there yet, and the madam telling this tale all
+about and advertising with a five thousand dollar reward! In the movies,
+too! Such a disgrace on the family! How the master would have writhed at
+the publicity of his beloved daughter--"poor wee thing!"
+
+Candace turned from the window with her lips set, and tiptoeing to the
+door, listened. Yes, it was Aileen who was coming lightly up the stairs,
+singing in a low tone. It was Aileen's evening out. That meant that
+Marie would be more than usually active on the upper floor. She must
+manage it before Aileen left and Marie was called upstairs, or there
+would be no opportunity to get away without Marie seeing her.
+
+Hastily she gathered her silk dress, her cloak and her apoplectic hat
+into a bundle with her purse and her gloves, and tied them into an old
+apron, with the strings hanging free. Then stealthily opening the
+window, she dropped them out into the kitchen area below, close to the
+region of the ash cans. It was a risk, of course, but one must take some
+chances, and the servants would all be in the kitchen just now, laughing
+and talking. They would scarcely have heard it fall.
+
+She listened a tense instant, then closed the window, and possessing
+herself of a few little things, gathered hastily about the room, which
+she could stuff in her pockets, she opened her door softly, closed it
+behind her, and trotted off down the stairs just as if she were going
+about her ordinary duty. Listening a minute outside the kitchen door she
+slipped stealthily down the cellar stairs, and tiptoed over to the area
+door where the ashman took out the ashes. Softly slipping the bolt she
+opened the door and drew in her bundle. Then standing within, she
+quickly slipped the black silk over her housemaid's gown, donned her
+coat and hat and gloves, and sallied forth. A moment more and she was in
+the next street with the consciousness that she "might have done the
+like any time sooner, if she'd wanted, in spite of that little spy-cat
+Marie."
+
+"If I want to go back I'll just say I went after my insurance book," she
+chuckled to herself as she sped down the street in the direction of the
+hospital.
+
+Arrived at the big building she asked to see the list of patients taken
+in on the day of Betty's wedding, and succeeded in getting a pretty
+accurate description of each one, sufficient at least to satisfy her
+that Betty was not among them. Then she asked a few more bold questions,
+and came away fully convinced that Betty had never been in that
+hospital.
+
+By this time it was nine o'clock, and she meant to take the evening
+train for Boston, which left, she was sure, somewhere near midnight. She
+took a trolley to her old lodgings where she had been since Mrs.
+Stanhope had sent her away the first time, and hastily packed a small
+hand bag with a few necessities, made a few changes in her garments,
+then went to see a fellow lodger whom she knew well, and where she felt
+sure she could easily get a check cashed, for she had a tidy little bank
+account of her own, and was well known to be reliable.
+
+Having procured the necessary funds, she made her way to the station and
+found that she had still an hour to spare before the Boston train left.
+
+Settled down at last in the back seat of a common car, she made herself
+as comfortable as her surroundings would allow, and gave herself up to
+planning the campaign that was before her.
+
+Canny Candace did not go at once to the office of the brothers, James
+and George McIntyre, though she looked them up in the telephone book the
+very first thing when the train arrived in Boston even before she had
+had a bite to eat, and her cup of tea which meant more to her than the
+"bite." She reasoned that they would be busy in the early hours and not
+be able to give her their undivided attention. She had not lived out all
+her life for nothing. She knew the ways of the world, and she had very
+strict ideas about the best ways of doing everything. So it happened
+that when she was at last shown into the office of the McIntyres, Warren
+Reyburn who had traveled to Boston on the sleeper of the same train that
+she had taken the night before, was just arising from an earnest
+conference with the two men. With her first glance, as the three emerged
+from the inner office, Candace saw that the two elder gentlemen were
+much disturbed and it flitted through her mind that she had come at an
+inopportune moment. Then her quick eye took in the younger man and her
+little alert head cocked to one side with a questioning attitude. Where
+had she seen him before? Candace had the kind of a mind that kept people
+and events card-indexed even to the minutest detail, and it didn't take
+many seconds for her to place Warren Reyburn back in the church at the
+wedding, standing against the wall with his arms folded. She had noticed
+him particularly because he was so courteous to a little old lady who
+came in too late to get a seat. She had studied him as he stood there,
+waiting for the wedding march, and she had thought how handsome he
+looked and how fine it would have been if her wee Betty had been getting
+a man like that in place of the weak-faced Bessemer Hutton. She had
+watched to see who he was with, and felt deep satisfaction when she
+noticed him lean over and speak to Mrs. Bryce Cochrane as if he belonged
+to her. He wasn't her husband, because she knew Mr. Cochrane, who had
+been a favorite with Mr. Stanhope and much at the house. This man might
+be Mrs. Cochrane's brother "or the likes," and she had pleased herself
+watching him till Betty arrived and took all her thoughts. So now she
+stood with her little round head in its hectic hat tilted interestedly
+to one side, watching, ears on the keen to catch any word, for all the
+world like a "bit brown sparrow" saucily perched on another man's
+window, where it really had no right to be.
+
+At last one of the McIntyre's shook hands gravely with the younger man,
+and the other one attended him to the door, talking in low tones. The
+McIntyre thus set at liberty, turned questioningly toward the stranger,
+who was not slow in getting to her feet and coming forward.
+
+"You will maybe be Mr. James McIntyre?" she asked, lifting her sea-blue
+eyes set in her apple-red face, and fixing her firm little lips in
+dignity. Candace was a servant and knew her place, but she felt the
+importance of her mission, and meant to have no disrespect done to it.
+
+"I am Mr. George McIntyre," the gentleman replied, and, indicating the
+man at the door, "Mr. James McIntyre will be at liberty in a moment, but
+perhaps I will do as well?"
+
+Candace cocked a glance toward the elderly back at the door; and then
+returned her look to Mr. George:
+
+"You'll maybe be knowing Mr. Charles Stanhope?" she propounded, as if
+she were giving him a riddle, and her blue eyes looked him through and
+through:
+
+"Oh, surely, surely! He was a very close friend! You--knew him?"
+
+"I was Miss Betty's nurse who cooked the griddle cakes for you the
+morning after the funeral----" she said, and waited with breathless
+dignity to see how he would take it.
+
+"Oh! Is that so!" He beamed on her kindly. "Yes, yes, I remember those
+cakes. They were delicious! And what can I do for you? Just sit down.
+Why, bless me, I don't know but that your coming may be very opportune!
+Can you tell me anything of Miss Betty?"
+
+Candace pressed her lips together with a knowing smile as much as to say
+she might tell volumes if it were wise, and she cast a glance at the
+other brother who was shaking hands now with his visitor and promising
+to meet him a little later:
+
+"Yon man'll be knowing a bit, too, I'll be thinking," she hazarded
+nodding toward Reyburn as he left. "He was at the wedding, I'm most
+sure----!"
+
+The elder McIntyre gave her a quick glance and signalled to his brother
+to come near:
+
+"This is Miss Stanhope's nurse, the one who cooked breakfast for us at
+the time of the funeral," he said, and to Candace, "This is Mr. James
+McIntyre."
+
+Candace fixed him with another of her inquisitive little glances:
+
+"I've some bit papers put by that I thought ye might like to see," she
+said with a cautious air. "I've kept them fer long because I thought
+they might be wanted sometime, yet I've never dared bring them to your
+notice before lest I would be considered meddlin', and indeed I wasn't
+sure but you had them already. Will you please to look over them papers
+and see if you've ever seen them before?" She drew forth an envelope
+from her bag and handed it to them. "It's a bit letter that Mr. Stanhope
+wrote the day he was dyin' an' then copied and give to me to mail, and
+his lady took it away, sayin' she would attend to it. What I want to
+know is, did ye ever get the letter? If ye did it's all right and none
+of my business further, an' I'll go on my way back home again and think
+no more about it; but if ye didn't then there it is, an' you ought to
+see it, that's sure!"
+
+The two men drew eagerly together and studied the trembling lines:
+
+"It's his writing all right," murmured one, under his breath, and the
+brother nodded gravely:
+
+"You say that this was the original of a letter that was given to you to
+mail to us?"
+
+Candace nodded.
+
+"It's what he wrote first, and got ink on it, an' then wrote it over. I
+can't say what changes he made, as I didn't read it, but this he gave to
+me to burn, and before I gets it burned my lady comes in and takes the
+letter from me while he was sleepin'; and so I hid the bit papers,
+thinkin' they might be a help to wee Betty sometime. And oh, can ye
+tell me anything of my little Lady Betty? Is she safe? Did she come to
+you for refuge? You needn't be afraid to tell me. I'll never breathe a
+word----!"
+
+The two brothers exchanged quick glances of warning and the elder man
+spoke:
+
+"My good woman, we appreciate your coming, and these papers may prove
+very useful to us. We hope to be able to clear up this matter of Miss
+Stanhope's disappearance very soon. She did not come to us, however, and
+she is not here. But if you will step into the room just beyond and wait
+for a little while we may be able to talk this matter over with you."
+
+Very courteously he ushered the plump, apprehensive little woman into
+the next room and established her in an easy leather chair with a
+quantity of magazines and newspapers about her, but she kept her little
+head cocked anxiously on one side, and watched the door like a dog whose
+master has gone in and shut the way behind him; and she never sat back
+in her chair nor relaxed one iota during the whole of the two hours that
+she had to wait before she was called at last to the inner office where
+she found the handsome young man whom she remembered seeing at the
+wedding.
+
+She presently found that Reyburn was as keen as he was handsome, but if
+she hadn't remembered him at the wedding as a friend of that nice Mrs.
+Cochrane, she never would have made it as easy as she did for him to
+find out things from her, for she could be canny herself on occasion if
+she tried, and she did not trust everybody.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+THE mysterious disappearance of Candace from the Stanhope house caused
+nothing short of a panic. Herbert and his mother held hourly wrangles,
+and frantically tried one thing and then another. Day after day the
+responses came in from the advertisements they had caused to be put
+forth. Everyone was hot-foot for the reward, but so far little of
+encouragement had been brought out. More and more the young man was
+fixing his mind on the idea that Candace had something to do with
+Betty's disappearance, so he was leaving no stone unturned to find the
+nurse as well as the girl. To this end he insisted on seeing personally
+and cross-examining every person who came claiming to have a clue to the
+lost girl.
+
+That morning, at about the same hour when Candace walked into the office
+of the McIntyre Brothers in Boston, James, the butler, much against his
+dignity, was ushering a curious person into the presence of the son of
+the house. James showed by every line of his noble figure that he
+considered this duty beneath his dignity, and that it was only because
+the occasion was unusual that he tolerated it for a moment, but the man
+who ambled observantly behind him, stretching his neck to see everything
+that was to be seen in this part of the great house, that he might tell
+about it at the fire-house, failed to get the effect. He was wondering
+why in thunder such rich people as these seemed to be, couldn't afford
+carpets big enough to cover their whole floors, instead of just having
+skimpy little bits of pieces dropped around here and there, that made
+you liable to skid all over the place if you stepped on one of them
+biasly.
+
+Herbert Hutton lifted his head and watched Abijah Gage slouch into the
+room. He measured him keenly and remained silent while Abijah opened up.
+There had been many other applicants for that reward that day, with
+stories cunningly woven, and facts, substantiated by witnesses, in one
+case a whole family brought along to swear to the fabrication; but as
+yet Herbert had not found a promising clue to his missing bride, and the
+time was going by. In a few days it would be too late, and his
+undisciplined spirit raged within him. It was not only his bride he
+wanted, it was her fortune, which was worth any trouble he might take;
+and every day, every hour, every minute now, it was slipping, slipping,
+slipping from his eager grasp.
+
+Abijah was a little overawed in the presence of this insolent man of the
+world, but he felt he had, for almost the first time in his life, Truth
+on his side, and he was strong in the power of it. With a cunning equal
+to the one that matched him he dealt out his information bit by bit,
+giving only enough at a time to make his victim sure it was the real
+thing this time; and then he halted stubbornly and would say no more
+until that five thousand dollars was signed and sealed over to him. They
+had a long argument, but in the end Bi won, and was given certain
+documents which he was satisfied would stand in court. A little later
+the telephone in Reyburn's office rang sharply, and when Jimmie Ryan
+responded a voice that he had never heard before asked for Mr. Warren
+Reyburn.
+
+"He's out of town," Jimmie replied.
+
+"How soon will he be back?" The voice was like a snarl.
+
+"I'm not quite sure. He's called to Boston on business," swelled Jimmie
+loyally.
+
+An oath ripped over the wire, and Jimmie raged within and quailed. Was
+his idol then losing a great case?
+
+"He might be back in a few hours," insinuated Jimmie. "Who shall I say
+called up if he should have me over long distance?"
+
+"You needn't say anybody! I'll call up again," growled the voice, and
+the man hung up.
+
+Jimmie sat for a long time in blissful reverie. "He's getting there!" he
+whispered to himself. "He'll get the big cases yet, and I can keep my
+first place. I must see Jane to-night and tell her."
+
+Meanwhile, back at Tinsdale improvements had been going on at the
+Carsons'. Bob, always handy with tools, had been putting in a tank over
+the bathtub. They had one at the house on the hill, only it was run by a
+windmill. Bob had a friend who was a plumber's son, and from him had
+obtained some lengths of second-hand water-pipe and an old faucet. He
+had conceived the idea of a tank on the roof, and his first plan had
+been only a rainwater tank, but gradually as his vision widened he
+included a force pump in the outfit of desires. He hung around the
+plumber's until they unearthed an old force pump somewhat out of repair,
+and for a few days' assisting the plumber Bob acquired it, together with
+after-hour help to put it into operation. The next object was a tank,
+which seemed at first to represent the impossible; but the grocer at
+last offered a suggestion in the shape of several large empty hogsheads
+which he readily accepted at the price of four Saturdays' work in the
+store.
+
+All Bob's extra time was put into these improvements, and he was as
+excited every night when it grew dark and he was forced to come to
+supper because he couldn't see any longer to work, as if he had been
+building an airship.
+
+The day the hogsheads were marshaled and connected and the force pump
+sent its first stream into them was a great occasion. The family
+assembled in the yard, with Elise Hathaway, who had been allowed to come
+over for a few minutes with Betty. Bob and his plumber friend pumped,
+and Emily climbed to the attic window, which overlooked the row of
+hogsheads, ranged so that the water would flow from one to the other,
+and acted as pilot to the new enterprise. As the first stream from the
+force pump, which Bob had lavishly painted red, crept its way up the
+pipes and began to wet the bottom of the first and highest hogshead
+Emily gave a little squeal of delight and shouted "It's come! It's come!
+The water's come!" and the family below fairly held their breath with
+the wonder of it. Not that such a thing could be, but that their own
+freckled, grinning Bob should have been able to achieve it.
+
+There was an elaborate system of tin conductors which conveyed the waste
+water from the bathtub out through a hole in the wall of the little
+laundry bathroom, and distributed it along the garden beds wherever its
+controller desired to irrigate. Thus the system became practical as well
+as a luxury. There was also an arrangement of gutter pipes for carrying
+off any surplus water from the hogsheads, so saving the Carson house
+from possible inundation at any time of heavy storms.
+
+After the plumbing was finished Bob painted the laundry neatly inside
+with beautiful white paint and robin's-egg blue for the ceiling, and
+Betty told him it almost made one think of going swimming in the ocean.
+Next he began to talk about a shower bath. Betty told him what one was
+like and he began to spend more days down at the plumber's asking
+questions and picking up odd bits of pipe, making measurements, and
+doing queer things to an old colander for experiment's sake. The day
+that Warren Reyburn came for the first time Bob had the shower part
+finished and ready to erect, and the next day saw it complete with a rod
+for the rubber curtain that Betty had promised to make for him. He and
+she were planning how they would make further improvements on the house
+before Jane and Nellie should come home for their summer vacation week.
+Betty had thoroughly entered into the life of the little household now,
+and was a part of it. She saved her own small wages, and grudged all
+she had to spend for necessary clothes, that she might contribute
+further to the comfort and beauty of the general home.
+
+After Warren Reyburn's visit the last barrier between Betty and Ma
+seemed to be broken down. As soon as she had closed the door she flew
+into the other room and flung her arms around Ma's neck, bursting into
+soft weeping on her motherly shoulder. Ma had done a rapid turning act
+when she heard her coming, for in truth she had been peeping behind the
+green window-shade to watch the handsome stranger go down the street,
+but she would have dropped the iron on her foot and pretended to be
+picking it up rather than let Betty suspect her interest in the visitor.
+
+"Oh, mother," she murmured in Mrs. Carson's willing ear, "I have been so
+frightened----"
+
+"I know, dearie!" soothed the mother, quite as if she had been her own.
+"I know!"
+
+"But he was very kind," she said lifting her head with an April effect
+of tears. "He's going to try to fix things for me so that I don't need
+ever to be afraid of any one making trouble for me any more. You see, I
+sort of ran away. There was somebody I was afraid of who troubled me a
+great deal."
+
+"Yes, dearie, I thought as much," said Ma. "Jane kind of gave me to
+understand there was something like that. I'm real glad there's
+somebody goin' to look into your affairs an' fix things right for you. I
+knew you was restless an' worried. Now it'll get all straightened out.
+He's got a nice face. I trusted him first off. He's a church member, an'
+that's somethin'. They ain't all spiritual, but they're mostly clean an'
+just an' kindly, when they're anythin' at all but just plain hypocrites,
+which, thank the Lord, there ain't so many as some would have us
+believe. Now wash your face, dearie, an' run back to your place so you
+can come home early, for we're goin' to have the old hen with dumplin's
+for supper to celebrate."
+
+That was one charming thing about that household: they celebrated every
+blessed little trifle that came into their lives, so that living with
+them was like a procession of beautiful thanksgivings.
+
+It was while Betty was eating the gala "hen," delicious in its festive
+gravy and dumplings, that she looked off across the little dining-room
+to the dark window with its twinkling village lights in the distance and
+thought of the stranger. A dark fear flashed across her sweet face and
+sparkled in the depths of her eyes for just an instant. Was it perhaps
+the distant bay of the hounds on her trail, coming nearer every moment?
+Then she remembered the heavenly Father and her new-found faith, and
+turned back to the cheery little room and the children's pleasant
+clatter, resolved to forget the fear and to trust all to Him who cared
+for her. Perhaps he had sent the pleasant stranger, and the thought
+brought a quiet little smile to settle about her lips. She laughed with
+Bob and Emily at how they had got wet with a sudden unexpected shower
+from the new bath while they were arranging the curtain on the rod, and
+Emily had turned the faucet on without knowing it. The patient-eyed
+mother watched them all and was satisfied.
+
+How good it is that we cannot hear all the noises of the earth at the
+same time, nor know of every danger that lurks near as we are passing
+by! We grumble a great deal that God does not send us as much as we
+think he might, but we give scarce a thought to our escape from the many
+perils, lying close as our very breath, of which we never even dream.
+
+At that moment, as they sat quietly eating their happy meal, a deadly
+particular peril was headed straight for Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage and Herbert Hutton boarded the evening train for Tinsdale
+together and entered the sleeper. Abijah shuffled behind, carrying the
+bags, a most extraordinary and humiliating position for him. He had
+never been known to carry anything, not even himself if he could help
+it, since the day his mother died and ceased to force him to carry in
+wood and water for her at the end of a hickory switch. He glanced
+uneasily round with a slight cackle of dismay as he arrived in the
+unaccustomed plush surroundings and tried to find some place to dump his
+load. But the well-groomed Herbert strode down the long aisle unnoticing
+and took possession of the section he had secured as if he owned the
+road.
+
+"You can sit there!" he ordered Bi with a condescending motion, dropping
+into his own seat and opening a newspaper.
+
+Bi sat down on the edge of the seat, and held on to the arm in a
+gingerly way as if he were afraid to trust himself to anything so
+different. He looked furtively up and down the car, eyed the porter, who
+ignored him contemptuously and finally came back and demanded his
+sleeper ticket with a lordliness that Bi did not feel he could take from
+a negro. But somehow the ticket got tangled in his pocket, and Bi had a
+hard time finding it, which deepened his indignation at the porter.
+
+"I ain't takin' no sass from no one. My seat's paid fer all right," he
+said distinctly for the enlightenment of the other passengers, and
+Herbert Hutton reached out a discreet arm and dropped something in the
+porter's hand which sent him on his way and left Bi snorting audibly
+after him.
+
+"You'd better shut up!" growled the dictator to Bi. "We don't want to be
+conspicuous, you know. If you can't hold your tongue and act as if you
+had ever traveled before, I'll get off this train at the next station
+and you can whistle for your reward. Do you understand?"
+
+Bi dropped his toothless lower jaw a trifle and his little eyes grew
+narrow. This was no way to manage affable Bi. He loved a good visit, and
+he had counted on one all the way to Tinsdale. He had no idea of sitting
+silent.
+
+"I understand," he drawled, "an' I'll be gormed ef I'll agree. I ain't
+told you yet where we get off, an' I don't have to ef I don't wantta. Ef
+you can't treat me like a gen'l'man you know where you can get off, an'
+I ain't havin' to state it."
+
+Herbert Hutton drew his arrogant brows in a frown of annoyance, and
+whirled around to placate his guide:
+
+"Now see here, you old popinjay, what's got into you?"
+
+"No, sir, I ain't nobody's papa," babbled Bi, seeing he had scored a
+point. "I have enough to do to support myself without any family."
+
+"That's all right, have it your own way, only shut up or we'll have
+somebody listening. Have a cigar. Take two. But you can't smoke 'em in
+here, you'll have to go to the smoking-room. Wait! I'll see if we can
+get the drawing-room."
+
+The porter appeared and the change was effected, to the great
+disappointment of Bi, who kept continually poking his head out to get a
+glimpse of the fine ladies. He would much have preferred staying out in
+the main car and getting acquainted with people. His cunning had
+departed with the need. He had put things in the hands of this surly
+companion, and now he meant to have a good time and something to tell
+the gang about when he got home.
+
+About midnight the train drew into a station and Herbert Hutton roused
+himself and looked out of the window. Bi, whose cunning had returned,
+followed his example. Suddenly he leaned forward excitedly and tapped
+the glass with a long finger:
+
+"That's him! That's the guy," he whispered excitedly as another train
+drew in and passengers began to hurry down the platform and across to
+the waiting sleeper.
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Sartin!"
+
+"You mean the one with the coat over his arm, and the two men behind?"
+He stopped short with an exclamation.
+
+Bi looked up cunningly. Now what was up? He saw a thunder-cloud on the
+face of his companion.
+
+With embellishments Herbert Hutton asked if Bi had ever seen the two
+tall gray-haired men who were walking with their prey.
+
+Bi narrowed his eyes and denied any knowledge, but perceived there were
+more sides than two to the enigma. Now, what could he figure out of
+those two guys? Were there more rewards to be offered? If so, he was a
+candidate. He wondered what chance there was of getting away from H. H.
+and sauntering through the train. He found, however, a sudden
+willingness on the part of his companion to vanish and let him do the
+scout work for the rest of the night.
+
+With a sense of being on a vacation and a chance at catching big fish Bi
+swung out through the train. Bumping down among the now curtained
+berths, adjusting his long form to the motion of the express, lurching
+to right and to left as they went round a curve, falling over an
+occasional pair of shoes and bringing down lofty reproaches from the
+sleepy porter, he penetrated to the day coaches and at last located his
+quarry.
+
+They were sitting in a double seat, the younger man facing the two older
+ones, and had evidently been unable to get sleepers. Bi hung around the
+water-cooler at the far end of the car until he had laid out his plans;
+then he sauntered up to the vacant seat behind the three men and dropped
+noiselessly into its depths, drawing his hat down well over his face,
+and apparently falling into instant slumber, with a fair sample of
+Tinsdale snoring brought in at moderate distances.
+
+The conversation was earnest, in well-modulated voices, and hard to
+follow connectedly, for the men knew how to talk without seeming to the
+outside world to be saying anything intelligible. Occasionally a
+sentence would come out clear cut in an interval of the rhythm of the
+train, but for the most part Bi could make little or nothing of it.
+
+"In all the years we've been trustees of that estate we haven't seen her
+but twice," said one of the older men; "once at her father's second
+marriage, and again at his funeral. Then we only saw her at a distance.
+Her stepmother said she was too grief-stricken to speak with any one,
+and it was by the utmost effort she could be present at the service."
+
+"She looked very frail and young," said the other old man; "and her
+hair--I remember her hair!"
+
+Bi changed his position cautiously and tried to peer over the back of
+his seat, but the voices were crowded together now, and the younger man
+was talking earnestly. He could not catch a syllable. "Trustees!" That
+word stayed with him. "Estate" was another promising one, and the fact
+that her hair had been remembered. He nodded his old head sagaciously,
+and later when the three men settled back in their seats more
+comfortably with their eyes closed he slid back to the water-cooler and
+so on through the sleeper to the drawing-room.
+
+Hutton was sleeping the sleep of the unjust, which means that he woke at
+the slightest breath, and Bi's breath was something to wake a heavier
+sleeper. So they sat and planned as the train rushed on through the
+night. Now and again Bi took a pilgrimage up to the day coach and back
+to report the three travelers still asleep.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the train slowed down, and finally came
+to a thrashing halt, waking the sleepers uncomfortably and making them
+conscious of crunching feet in the cinders outside, and consulting
+voices of trainmen busy with a hammer underneath the car somewhere. Then
+they drowsed off to sleep again and the voices and hammering blended
+comfortably into their dreams.
+
+The passengers in the day coach roused, looked at their watches,
+stretched their cramped limbs, squinted out to see if anything serious
+was the matter, and settled into a new position to sleep once more.
+
+Bi, stretched for the nonce upon the long couch of the drawing-room
+while his superior occupied the more comfortable berth, roused to
+instant action, slipped out to the platform and took his bearings. He
+had lived in that part of the country all his life and he knew where
+they ought to be by that time. Yes, there was the old saw mill down by
+Hague's Crossing, and the steeple over by the soft maple grove just
+beyond Fox Glove. It would not be a long walk, and they had a garage at
+Fox Glove!
+
+He sauntered along the cinder path; discovered that the trouble with the
+engine was somewhat serious, requiring to wait for help, took a glimpse
+into the day coach ahead to assure himself that the three men were still
+safely asleep, and sauntered back to the drawing-room.
+
+His entrance roused the sleeper, who was on the alert instantly.
+
+"Say, we got a hot box an' a broken engyne!" Bi announced. "It'll take
+us some time. We ain't fur from Fox Glove. We could santer over an' git
+a car an' beat 'em to it!"
+
+"We could?" said Hutton. "You sure? No chances, mind you!"
+
+"Do it easy. Those guys are asleep. They won't get to the Junction 'fore
+ten o'clock, mebbe later, an' they can't possibly get to our place 'fore
+'leven."
+
+"Lead the way!" ordered Hutton, cramming himself into his coat and hat.
+
+"Better slide down on the other side," whispered Bi as they reached the
+platform. "We kin go back round the train an' nobody'll notice."
+
+As if they were only come out to see what was the matter they idled
+along the length of the train around out of sight, slid down the bank,
+took a shortcut across a meadow to a road, and were soon well on their
+way to Fox Glove in the early cool of the spring morning, a strangely
+mated couple bent on mischief.
+
+Back on the cinder track the express waited, dreamily indifferent, with
+a flagman ahead and behind to guard its safety, and while men slept the
+enemy took wings and flew down the white morning road to Tinsdale, but
+no one ran ahead with a little red flag to the gray cottage where slept
+Betty, to warn her, though perchance an angel with a flaming sword stood
+invisibly to guard the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+BOB had just finished feeding the chickens when the automobile drew up
+at the door, and he hurried around the house to see who it might be. He
+was rather looking for the return of that nice lawyer again. He felt the
+family expected him some time soon. Perhaps he would be to breakfast and
+mother would want some fresh eggs.
+
+They had dropped Bi at the edge of the village and there were only
+Hutton and the driver who had brought them. Bi had no mind to get mixed
+up in this affair too openly. He valued his standing in his home town,
+and did not wish to lose it. He had an instinct that what he was doing
+might make him unpopular if it became known. Besides, he had another ax
+to grind.
+
+Bob did not like the looks of the strange dark man who got out of the
+car and came into the yard with the air of a thrashing machine bolting
+into whatever came in his way. He stood sturdily and waited until he was
+asked who lived there, and admitted with a stingy "yes" that it was Mrs.
+Carson's house. A thundering knock on the front door followed, and the
+other man in the car got out and came into the yard behind the first.
+
+"Well, you needn't take the door down," snapped Bob, and scuttled around
+the house to warn his mother, aware that he had been rude, and glad of
+it.
+
+It was Betty who came to the door, for Ma was frying bacon and eggs for
+breakfast, and Bob hadn't been quite soon enough. She started back with
+a scream, and eluding the hand that reached for her arm, fairly flew
+back to the kitchen, taking refuge behind Mrs. Carson, with her eyes
+wild with fear and her hand on her heart, while Hutton strode after her.
+
+Mrs. Carson wheeled around with her knife in her hand and faced him:
+
+"What do you mean by coming into my house this way, I'd like to know?"
+she demanded angrily, putting her arm around Betty.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Hutton, a poor apology for courtesy slipping
+into his manner. "I don't suppose you know it, but that is my wife you
+are harboring there, and she ran away from home several months ago! I
+have just discovered her whereabouts and have come to take her away!"
+
+Ma straightened up with the air of a queen and a judge, while Betty
+stifled a scream and in a small voice full of terror cried: "It isn't
+true, Mrs. Carson, it isn't true! Oh, _mother_, don't let him take me!"
+
+Mrs. Carson pushed Betty behind her, the knife still in her other hand,
+and answered with dignity:
+
+"You've made a big mistake, Mr. Herbert Hutton; this isn't your wife at
+all. I know all about you."
+
+Hutton put on a look of instant suavity.
+
+"Oh, of course, madam, she has told you that, but I'm sorry to have to
+tell you that she is not in her right mind. She made her escape from the
+insane asylum."
+
+"Oh, rats!" shouted Bob, and vanished out the kitchen door, slamming it
+behind him.
+
+Emily, frightened and white, stood just outside, and he nearly knocked
+her over in his flight. He pulled her along with him, whispering in her
+ear excitedly:
+
+"You beat it down to the fire gong and hit it for all you're worth!
+Quick!"
+
+Emily gave him one frightened look and sprang to action. Her little feet
+sped down the path to the lot where hung the big fire gong, like two
+wild rabbits running for their life, and in a moment more the loud whang
+of alarm rang through the little town, arousing the "gang" and greatly
+disconcerting Bi, who was craning his neck at the station and watching
+the fast-growing speck down the railroad track. That sure was the train
+coming already. How had they made it so soon?
+
+But Bob was on his stomach in the road scuttling the ship that was to
+have carried away the princess. The chauffeur was fully occupied in the
+house, for he had been ordered to follow and be ready to assist in
+carrying away an insane person, and he had no thought for his car at
+present. It was an ugly job, and one that he didn't like, but he was
+getting big pay, and such things had to be done.
+
+Bob's knife was sharp. He always kept it in good condition. It did many
+of the chores about the house, and was cunning in its skill. It cut
+beautiful long punctures in the four tires, until there was no chance at
+all of that car's going on its way for some time to come. Then he
+squirmed his way out on the opposite side from the house, slid along by
+the fence to the side door, around to the back like a flash and without
+an instant's hesitation hauled up his elaborate system of drainage. He
+stuck the longest conductor pipe through the open window of the old
+laundry, clutched at the sill and swung inside, drawing the pipe in
+after him.
+
+The altercation in the kitchen had reached white heat. Hutton's suavity
+was fast disappearing behind a loud angry tone. He had about sized up
+Ma and decided to use force.
+
+It was a tense moment when Bob, his hasty arrangements made, silently
+swung open the laundry door in full range of the uninvited guests and
+waited for the psychological moment. Mrs. Carson had dropped her knife
+and seized the smoking hot frying-pan of bacon as a weapon. She was cool
+and collected, but one could see in her eyes the little devil of battle
+that sometimes sat in Bob's eyes as she swung the frying-pan back for a
+blow. Suddenly out flashed a cold steel eye, menacing, unanswerable,
+looking straight into her own.
+
+At that instant, unannounced and unobserved, through the laundry door
+lumbered a long ugly tin conductor pipe, and the deluge began. Straight
+into the eyes of the would-be husband it gushed, battering swashingly
+down on the cocked revolver, sending it harmlessly to the floor, where
+it added to the confusion by going off with a loud report, and sending
+the chauffeur to the shelter of the parlor. Bob never knew how near he
+came to killing some one by his hasty service, and Ma never had the
+heart to suggest it. Instead she acted promptly and secured the weapon
+before the enemy had time to recover from his shock.
+
+Bob, in the laundry, standing on a chair mounted on a board across the
+bathtub, sturdily held his wobbling conductor pipe and aimed it straight
+to the mark. Of course he knew that even a well-filled phalanx of
+hogsheads could not hold the enemy forever, but he was counting on the
+fire company to arrive in time to save the day.
+
+Gasping, clawing the air, ducking, diving here and there to escape the
+stream, Herbert Hutton presented a spectacle most amusing and satisfying
+to Bob's boy mind.
+
+"Beat it, Lizzie, beat it! Beat it!" he shouted above the noise of the
+pouring waters. But Betty, white with horror, seemed to have frozen to
+the spot. She could not have moved if she had tried, and her brain
+refused to order her to try. She felt as if the end of everything had
+come and she were paralyzed.
+
+Down the street with dash and flourish, licking up excitement like a
+good meal, dashed the gang, the fire chief ostentatiously arraying
+himself in rubber coat and helmet as he stood on the side of the engine,
+while the hysterical little engine bell banged away, blending with the
+sound of the bell of the incoming train at the station. Bi, with his
+mouth stretched wide, and one foot holding him for the train while the
+other urged toward the fire and excitement, vibrated on the platform, a
+wild figure of uncertainty. Where Duty and Inclination both called,
+Cupidity still had the upper hand.
+
+For once Bi did not have to act a part as he stood watching the three
+travelers descend from the train. The excitement in his face was real
+and his gestures were quite natural, even the ones made by his one and
+only long waving top-lock of gray hair that escaped all bounds as his
+hat blew off with the suction of the train. Bi rushed up to the three
+men wildly:
+
+"Say, was you goin' down to Carson's house after that Hope girl?" he
+demanded loudly.
+
+The three men surveyed him coldly, and the young one gave him a decided
+shove:
+
+"That will do, my friend," he said firmly. "We don't need any of your
+assistance."
+
+"But I got a line on this thing you'll want to know," he insisted,
+hurrying alongside. "There's a guy down there in a car goin' to take her
+away. He ain't been gone long, but you won't find her 'thout my help.
+He's goin' to take her to a insane institution. I let on I was helpin'
+him an' I found out all about it."
+
+"What's all this?" said Reyburn, wheeling about and fixing the old
+fellow with a muscular young shake that made his toothless jaws chatter.
+"How long ago did he go? What kind of a looking man was he?"
+
+"Lemme go!" whined Bi, playing to make time, one cunning eye down the
+road. "I ain't as young as I used to be, an' I can't stand gettin'
+excited. I got a rig here a purpose, an' I'll take you all right down,
+an' then ef he's gone, an' I s'pose he must be, 'cause your train was
+late, why, we'll foller."
+
+"Well, quick, then!" said Reyburn, climbing into the shackley spring
+wagon that Bi indicated, the only vehicle in view. The two trustees
+climbed stiffly and uncertainly into the back seat as if they felt they
+were risking their lives, and Bi lumbered rheumatically into the
+driver's place and took up the lines. It appeared that the only living
+thing in Tinsdale that wasn't awake and keen to go to the fire was that
+horse, and Bi had to do quite a little urging with the stump of an old
+whip. So, reluctantly, they joined the procession toward the Carson
+house.
+
+As the stream from the hogshead gurgled smaller, and the victim writhed
+out of its reach and began to get his bearings, suddenly the outside
+kitchen door burst open and a crew of rubber-coated citizens sprang in,
+preceded by a generous stream of chemicals which an ardent young member
+of the company set free indiscriminately in his excitement. It struck
+the right man squarely in the middle and sent him sprawling on the
+floor.
+
+Bob dropped the conductor pipe in exhausted relief and flew to the scene
+of action. It had been fearful to be held from more active service so
+long. Emily, outside, could be seen dancing up and down excitedly and
+directing the procession, with frightened shouts, "In there! In the
+kitchen! Quick!" as the neighbors and townsmen crowded in and filled the
+little kitchen demanding to know where the fire was.
+
+Mrs. Carson with dignity stepped forward to explain:
+
+"There ain't any fire, friends, an' I don't know how you all come to get
+here, but I reckon the Lord sent you. You couldn't a-come at a better
+moment. We certainly was in some trouble, an' I'll be obliged to you all
+if you'll just fasten that man up so't he can't do any more harm. He
+came walkin' in here tryin' to take away a member of my family by force,
+an' he pointed this at me!"
+
+She lifted the incriminating weapon high where they could all see.
+
+Herbert Hutton, struggling to his feet in the crowd, began to understand
+that this was no place for him, and looked about for an exit, but none
+presented itself. The chauffeur had vanished and was trying to make out
+what had happened to his car.
+
+Hutton, brought to bay, turned on the crowd like a snarling animal,
+although the effect was slightly spoiled by his drabbled appearance, and
+roared out insolently:
+
+"The woman doesn't know what she's talking about, men; she's only
+frightened. I came here after my wife, and I intend to take her away
+with me! She escaped from an insane asylum some time ago, and we've been
+looking for her ever since. This woman is doing a very foolish and
+useless thing in resisting me, for the law can take hold of her, of
+course."
+
+The crowd wavered and looked uncertainly at Mrs. Carson and at Betty
+cowering horrified behind her, and Hutton saw his advantage:
+
+"Men," he went on, "there is one of your own townsmen who knows me and
+can vouch for me. A Mr. Gage. Abijah Gage. If you will just look him
+up--he was down at the station a few minutes ago. He knows that all I am
+saying is true!"
+
+A low sound like a rumble went over the little audience and they seemed
+to bunch together and look at one another while some kind of an
+understanding traveled from eye to eye. An articulate syllable, "Bi!"
+breathed in astonishment, and then again "Bi!" in contempt. Public
+opinion, like a panther crouching, was forming itself ready to spring,
+when suddenly a new presence was felt in the room. Three strangers had
+appeared and somehow quietly gotten into the doorway. Behind them,
+stretching his neck and unable to be cautious any longer, appeared Bi's
+slouching form. Crouching Public Opinion caught sight of him and showed
+its teeth, but was diverted by the strangers.
+
+Then suddenly, from the corner behind Ma, slipped Betty with
+outstretched hands, like a lost thing flying to its refuge, straight to
+the side of the handsome young stranger.
+
+He put out his hands and drew her to his side with a protecting motion,
+and she whispered:
+
+"Tell, them, please; oh, make them understand."
+
+Then Reyburn, with her hand still protectingly in his, spoke:
+
+"What that man has just said is a lie!"
+
+Hutton looked up, went deadly white and reeled as he saw the two elderly
+men.
+
+The crowd drew a united breath and stood straighter, looking relieved.
+Bi blanched, but did not budge. Whatever happened he was in with both
+crowds. Reyburn continued:
+
+"I carry papers in my pocket which give authority to arrest him. If the
+sheriff is present will he please take charge of him. His name is
+Herbert Hutton, and he is charged with trying to make this lady marry
+him under false pretenses in order to get control of her property. She
+is not his wife, for she escaped before the ceremony was performed. I
+know, for I was present. These two gentlemen with me are the trustees of
+her estate."
+
+Estate!
+
+The neighbors looked at Betty respectfully.
+
+Bi dropped his jaw perceptibly and tried to figure out how that would
+affect him. The sheriff stepped forward to magnify his office, and the
+silence was impressive, almost reverent. In the midst of it broke Bob's
+practical suggestion:
+
+"Shut him in the coal shed. It's got a padlock an' is good an' strong.
+He can't kick it down."
+
+Then the law began to take its course, the fire gang stepped out, and
+Mrs. Carson set to work to clean up. In the midst of it all Reyburn
+looked down at Betty, and Betty looked up at Reyburn, and they
+discovered in some happy confusion that they still had hold of hands.
+They tried to cover their embarrassment by laughing, but something had
+been established between them that neither could forget.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE days that followed were full of bliss and peace to Betty. With
+Hutton safely confined in the distant city, and a comfortable sum of her
+accumulated allowance in the Tinsdale bank, with a thorough
+understanding between herself and her trustees and the knowledge that
+her estate was large enough to do almost anything in reason that she
+wished to do with it, and would be hers in three weeks, life began to
+take on a different look to the poor storm-tossed child. The days in the
+Carson home were all Thanksgivings now, and every member of the family
+was as excited and happy as every other member. There were arguments
+long and earnest between Betty and her benefactor as to how much she
+might in reason be allowed to do for the family now that she had plenty
+of money, but in the end Betty won out, declaring that she had wished
+herself on this family in her distress, and they took her as a man does
+when he marries, for better for worse. Now that the worse had passed by
+she was theirs for the better, and she intended to exercise the
+privilege of a daughter of the house for the rest of her natural life.
+
+Bi Gage was worried. He was still trying to get something out of the
+estate for his part in the exercises, and he vibrated between Tinsdale
+and Warren Reyburn's office working up his case. The five-thousand-dollar
+reward was as yet unpaid, and the papers he held didn't seem to impress
+the functionaries nearly so much as he had expected. It began to look as
+though Bi had missed his chances in life once more, and when he took his
+old seat in the fire-house and smoked, he said very little. Popular
+Opinion was still crouching with her eye in his direction and it
+behooved him to walk cautiously and do nothing to offend. So while he
+smoked he cogitated in his cunning little brain, and hatched out a plan
+by which he might get in with the heiress later, perhaps, when things
+had quieted down a little and she had her money.
+
+Betty received a pitiful letter from her stepmother, trying to explain
+away her part in the affair and professing to be so relieved at the news
+that Betty was still alive and well that she cared nothing about
+anything else, not even the fact that poor dear Herbert was landed in
+jail, or that the fortune which she had schemed so long to keep in her
+own power was wrested from her so ignominiously. She begged Betty to
+come back to their home and "be happy again together."
+
+But Betty was so happy where she was that she could afford to be
+generous and try to forget her wrongs. She wrote a decent little note
+gently but firmly declining to come "home" ever again, making it quite
+plain that she was no longer deceived by honeyed phrases, and closing
+with a request that if in future any communication might be necessary it
+should be made through her lawyer, Mr. Warren Reyburn.
+
+This same Warren Reyburn had returned to his city office in a very much
+exalted state of mind. He could not get away from that little hand of
+Betty's that had been laid so tremblingly and confidingly in his; and
+yet how could he, a poverty-stricken lawyer with absolutely no prospects
+at all, ever dare to think of her, a lady of vast estates. Still, there
+was some comfort in the fact that he had still some business to transact
+for her, and would have to return to Tinsdale again. He might at least
+see her once more. So he solaced himself on his return trip, feeling
+that he had done some good work, and that he would have a pleasant
+report to give to Jane Carson when he called upon her, as he meant to do
+the next day.
+
+He arrived at home to find James Ryan in a great state of excitement. A
+pile of mail had arrived, and he had memorized the return addresses on
+the outside of all the envelopes. One was from a big corporation, and
+another bore a name widely spoken of in the circles of the world of
+finance, Jimmie in close council with Jane Carson, had decided that it
+must be from that person who called up twice on the 'phone and swore
+such terrible oaths when he found that Reyburn was away.
+
+Jimmie hovered nervously about, putting things to rights, while Reyburn
+read his mail. He had come to the smallest envelope of all, a plain
+government envelope now, and nothing had developed. Jimmie saw his first
+place fast slipping away from him and his heart grew heavy with fear.
+Perhaps after all nothing good had turned up yet.
+
+Suddenly Reyburn sprang up and came toward him with an open letter,
+holding out his hand in a joyous greeting:
+
+"Read that, Ryan! We're made at last, and I shan't have to let you go
+after all!"
+
+Ryan read, the letters dancing before his delighted eyes, every one
+wearing an orange blossom on its brow. It was from an old established
+and influential firm, asking Reyburn to take full charge of all their
+law business, and saying they had been referred to him by two old
+friends in Boston, who by the way were Betty's two trustees.
+
+"Come on, Ryan, come out to lunch with me! We've got to celebrate," said
+Reyburn. "I have a hunch somehow that you have been the one that brought
+me this good luck. You and a Miss Jane Carson. You both share alike, I
+guess, but you were the first with your five-thousand-dollar reward
+story."
+
+"Jane Carson!" said Jimmie mystified. "Why, _she's_ my _girl_!"
+
+"Your girl?" said Reyburn, a queer look coming in his eyes. "You don't
+say! Well, you're in some luck, boy, with a girl like that! And, by the
+way, next time you see her, ask her to show you her wedding dress!"
+
+And not another word would Reyburn tell him, though he recurred
+frequently to the subject during the very excellent lunch which they had
+together in friendly companionship.
+
+They spent the afternoon composing the brief and comprehensive letter in
+response to the momentous one of the morning, and in the evening
+together they sought out Jane Carson, Reyburn staying only long enough
+to outline the ending of the Elizabeth Stanhope story, while Jimmie
+remained to hear the beginning, and get a glimpse of the wedding gown,
+which Reyburn assured Jane he was sure she need never return. He said he
+thought if the owner of it was married ever in the future she would be
+likely to want a gown that had no unpleasant associations.
+
+Great excitement prevailed in Tinsdale as the weeks went by. Betty had
+bought the lots either side of the Carson house, and wonderful
+improvements were in progress. A windmill was being erected and water
+pipes laid scientifically. Workmen arrived, some of them from the
+village, some from the city. Extensive excavations went on about the old
+house, and stone arrived. It began to be whispered about that "Miss
+Stanhope," as Betty was now called, was going to build the house all
+over and all of stone.
+
+The work went forward rapidly as work can go when there is money enough
+behind it, and the family, living in the little old part of the house,
+and still using the faithful tin bath-tub and shower of Bob's
+manufacture, now looked forward to real bathrooms on the bedroom floor,
+with tiled floors and porcelain fittings. Large windows cropped out on
+the new walls that were going up, a wide stone chimney and porches. A
+charming little stone affair in the back yard that went up so quietly it
+was hardly noticed until it was done suddenly became the home of a big
+gray car that arrived in town one morning. Betty gave up her position at
+the Hathaways so that she could have more time to superintend the work
+and see that it was just as she wanted it, and she and Bob spent hours
+going over the plans together, he making many wise suggestions. Mrs.
+Hathaway called her "Miss Stanhope" with elaborate ceremony, and made
+Elise kiss her whenever she met her.
+
+Betty went to a near-by town and bought some pretty clothes, and a lot
+of things for Ma and Emily and Bob. A beautiful new piano came by
+express and took the place of Mrs. Barlow's tinpanny one.
+
+Then Betty went up to the city and bought more things, furniture and
+silver and curtains and rugs, and brought Jane back with her to take a
+rest and see the little old house once more before it became the big new
+house, and stay until she was ready to be married; for Betty was
+determined to have the house ready for Jane's wedding.
+
+When all the new beautiful things began to arrive Betty told Ma that she
+had taken her in when she was poor and homeless and absolutely
+penniless, and now all these things were her reward, and Betty couldn't
+do enough ever to thank her for what she had done for her. They had
+offered a five-thousand-dollar reward for news of her, and Ma had done
+more than ten thousand and thousands of thousands of dollars' worth of
+holding back news about her, and she was never going to get done giving
+her her reward.
+
+Of course Betty brought Nellie home, too, and established her in a
+lovely new room just fit for a young girl, and began to pet her and fix
+her up with pretty things as any loving sister might do if she had money
+of her own.
+
+All this time Reyburn had much business to transact in Tinsdale, for
+Betty had asked him to look after all the little details about the
+building for her, and he had to come down every week-end and look things
+over to see that she was not being cheated. And once he brought Jimmie
+down with him for Ma to look over and approve and they had a wonderful
+time with the two best hens in the hen-coop for dinner. Ryan
+incidentally gave his approval to Betty.
+
+During these visits Reyburn was making great strides in the wisdom and
+the knowledge of the love of God. One could not be in that family over
+Sunday and not feel the atmosphere of a Christian home. Even Jimmie felt
+it and said he liked it; that he wanted his house to be that way when
+he had one. He went obediently to church with Jane, and marveled at the
+way social classes were getting all muddled up in his world.
+
+The Christmas time was coming on when the house finally got itself
+completed and was ready for living, and with holly and mistletoe and
+laurel they made it gay for the wedding. Betty spent several days with
+Jane in New York picking out Jane's "trooso" things, and then a few more
+days doing some shopping of her own, and at last the wedding day
+arrived.
+
+Nobody thought it queer, though Jimmie felt just the least bit shy when
+the two trustees of Betty's estate arrived the night before from Boston
+and incorporated themselves into the wedding party. Ma seemed to think
+it was all right, so nobody said anything about it.
+
+But after the ceremony when Jane and Jimmie were happily married, Jane
+looking very young and pretty indeed in Betty's old wedding gown, veil
+and slippers and all, and standing under the holly bell in the laurel
+arch to be congratulated just as it had been arranged, there suddenly
+came a hush over everybody. Jane noticed for the first time that Betty
+was not anywhere in the room. Then everybody's eyes went to the wide
+staircase, and here came Betty trailing down the stairs on the arm of
+Reyburn, wearing still the little white organdie she had worn a few
+minutes before as a bridesmaid, only she had thrown aside the
+rose-colored sash and put over her brow a simple tulle veil, and her
+arms were full of little pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley.
+
+Up they walked in front of the minister just where the others had stood,
+and were married with the same sweet simple service, and everybody was
+so surprised and delighted and excited and breathless that Bob simply
+couldn't stand it. He slipped into the little music room where the piano
+had been installed, turned a handspring on the floor, and then sat down
+and played chopsticks on the piano with all the pedals on, till Ma had
+to send Emily in to stop him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
+
+Repeated book title was removed.
+
+Page 30, "posible" changed to "possible" (the feathers as possible)
+
+Page 36, "Pood" changed to "Poor" (Poor soul! Candy!)
+
+Page 71, "beter" changed to "better" (you better go to)
+
+Page 77, "ominious" changed to "ominous" (the ominous silence)
+
+Page 90, repeated word "an" removed from text. Original read (by an an
+inch and)
+
+Page 121, "hrurrying" changed to "hurrying" (said Ma, hurrying)
+
+Page 131, "wante" changed to "wanted" (I kind of wanted)
+
+Page 131, "l" changed to "look". The space was there it just was not
+printed. (It doesn't look)
+
+Page 131, as above, "wh" changed to "when you" (you know, when you)
+
+Page 196, "suspicians" changed to "suspicions" (these suspicions which)
+
+Page 199, "tiptoing" changed to "tiptoeing" (and tiptoeing to the door)
+
+Page 220, "disapointment" changed to "disappointment" (great
+disappointment of Bi)
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXIT BETTY***
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Exit Betty, by Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Exit Betty
+
+
+Author: Grace Livingston Hill
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2009 [eBook #30759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXIT BETTY***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Emmy, and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+by
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOKS BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+
+ April Gold
+ Happiness Hill
+ The Beloved Stranger
+ The Honor Girl
+ Bright Arrows
+ Kerry
+ Christmas Bride
+ Marigold
+ Crimson Roses
+ Miranda
+ Duskin
+ The Mystery of Mary
+ Found Treasure
+ Partners
+ A Girl to Come Home To
+ Rainbow Cottage
+ The Red Signal
+ White Orchids
+ Silver Wings
+ The Tryst
+ The Strange Proposal
+ Through These Fires
+ The Street of the City
+ All Through the Night
+ The Gold Shoe
+ Astra
+ Homing
+ Blue Ruin
+ Job's Niece
+ Challengers
+ The Man of the Desert
+ Coming Through the Rye
+ More Than Conqueror
+ Daphne Deane
+ A New Name
+ The Enchanted Barn
+ The Patch of Blue
+ Girl from Montana
+ The Ransom
+ Rose Galbraith
+ The Witness
+ Sound of the Trumpet
+ Sunrise
+ Tomorrow About This Time
+ Amorelle
+ Head of the House
+ Ariel Custer
+ In Tune with Wedding Bells
+ Chance of a Lifetime
+ Maris
+ Crimson Mountain
+ Out of the Storm
+ Exit Betty
+ Mystery Flowers
+ The Prodigal Girl
+ Girl of the Woods
+ Re-Creations
+ The White Flower
+ Matched Pearls
+ Time of the Singing of Birds
+ Ladybird
+ The Substitute Guest
+ Beauty for Ashes
+ Stranger Within the Gates
+ The Best Man
+ Spice Box
+ By Way of the Silverthorns
+ The Seventh Hour
+ Dawn of the Morning
+ The Search
+ Brentwood
+ Cloudy Jewel
+ The Voice in the Wilderness
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+BY
+
+GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL
+
+Author of
+Marcia Schuyler, The Search, Dawn of the Morning, Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers New York
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+Copyright, 1919, by The Christian Herald
+
+Copyright, 1920, by J. B. Lippincott Company
+
+
+
+
+EXIT BETTY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+THE crowd gave way and the car glided smoothly up to the curb at the
+canopied entrance to the church. The blackness of the wet November night
+was upon the street. It had rained at intervals all day.
+
+The pavements shone wetly like new paint in the glimmer of the street
+lights, and rude shadows gloomed in every cranny of the great stone
+building.
+
+Betty, alone in the midst of her bridal finery, shrank back from the
+gaze of the curious onlookers, seeming very small like a thing of the
+air caught in a mesh of the earth.
+
+She had longed all day for this brief respite from everyone, but it had
+passed before she could concentrate her thoughts. She started forward, a
+flame of rose for an instant in her white cheeks, but gone as quickly.
+Her eyes reminded one of the stars among the far-away clouds on a night
+of fitful storm with only glimpses of their beauty in breaks of the
+overcast sky. Her small hands gripped one another excitedly, and the
+sweet lips were quivering.
+
+A white-gloved hand reached out to open the car door, and other hands
+caught and cared for the billow of satin and costly lace with which she
+was surrounded, as if it, and not she, were the important one.
+
+They led her up the curtained way, where envious eyes peeped through a
+furtive rip in the canvas, or craned around an opening to catch a better
+glimpse of her loveliness, one little dark-eyed foreigner even reached
+out a grimy, wondering finger to the silver whiteness of her train; but
+she, all unknowing, trod the carpeted path as in a dream.
+
+The wedding march was just beginning. She caught the distant notes, felt
+the hush as she approached the audience, and wondered why the ordeal
+seemed so much greater now that she was actually come to the moment. If
+she had known it would be like this--! Oh, why had she given in!
+
+The guests had risen and were stretching their necks for the first
+vision of her. The chaplet of costly blossoms sat upon her brow and
+bound her wedding veil floating mistily behind, but the lovely head was
+bowed, not lifted proudly as a bride's should be, and the little white
+glove that rested on the arm of the large florid cousin trembled
+visibly. The cousin was almost unknown until a few hours before. His
+importance overpowered her. She drooped her eyes and tried not to wish
+for the quiet, gray-haired cousin of her own mother. It was so strange
+for him to have failed her at the last moment, when he had promised long
+ago to let nothing hinder him from giving her away if she should ever be
+married. His telegram, "Unavoidably detained," had been received but an
+hour before. He seemed the only one of her kind, and now she was all
+alone. All the rest were like enemies, although they professed deep
+concern for her welfare; for they were leagued together against all her
+dearest wishes, until she had grown weary in the combat.
+
+She gave a frightened glance behind as if some intangible thing were
+following her. Was it a hounding dread that after all she would not be
+free after marriage?
+
+With measured tread she passed the long white-ribboned way, under arches
+that she never noticed, through a sea of faces that she never saw, to
+the altar smothered in flowers and tropical ferns. It seemed
+interminable. Would it never end? They paused at last, and she lifted
+frightened eyes to the florid cousin, and then to the face of her
+bridegroom!
+
+It was a breathless moment, and but for the deep tones of the organ now
+hushing for the ceremony, one of almost audible silence. No lovelier
+bride had trod those aisles in many a long year; so exquisite, so
+small, so young--and so exceeding rich! The guests were entranced, and
+every eye was greedily upon her as the white-robed minister advanced
+with his open book.
+
+"Beloved, we are met together to-night to join this man----!"
+
+At that word they saw the bride suddenly, softly sink before them, a
+little white heap at the altar, with the white face turned upward, the
+white eyelids closed, the long dark lashes sweeping the pretty cheek,
+the wedding veil trailing mistily about her down the aisle, and her big
+bouquet of white roses and maiden-hair ferns clasped listlessly in the
+white-gloved hands.
+
+For a moment no one stirred, so sudden, so unexpected it was. It all
+seemed an astonishing part of the charming spectacle. The gaping throng
+with startled faces stood and stared. Above the huddled little bride
+stood the bridegroom, tall and dark and frowning, an angry red surging
+through his handsome face. The white-haired minister, with two red spots
+on his fine scholarly cheeks, stood grave with troubled dignity, as
+though somehow he meant to hold the little still bride responsible for
+this unseemly break in his beautiful service. The organ died away with
+a soft crash of the keys and pedals as if they too leaped up to see; the
+scent of the lilies swept sickeningly up in a great wave on the top of
+the silence.
+
+In a moment all was confusion. The minister stooped, the best man sprang
+into the aisle and lifted the flower-like head. Some one produced a fan,
+and one of the ushers hurried for a glass of water. A physician
+struggled from his pew across the sittings of three stout dowagers, and
+knelt, with practiced finger on the little fluttering pulse. The bride's
+stepmother roused to solicitous and anxious attention. The organ came
+smartly up again in a hopeless tangle of chords and modulations, trying
+to get its poise once more. People climbed upon their seats to see, or
+crowded out in the aisle curiously and unwisely kind, and in the way.
+Then the minister asked the congregation to be seated; and amid the
+rustle of wedding finery into seats suddenly grown too narrow and too
+low, the ushers gathered up the little inert bride and carried her
+behind the palms across a hall and into the vestry room. The stepmother
+and a group of friends hurried after, and the minister requested the
+people to remain quietly seated for a few minutes. The organ by this
+time had recovered its poise and was playing soft tender melodies, but
+the excited audience was not listening:
+
+"I thought she looked ghastly when she came in," declared the mother of
+three frowsy daughters. "It's strange she didn't put on some rouge."
+
+"Um-mm! What a pity! I suppose she isn't strong! What did her own mother
+die of?" murmured another speculatively, preparing to put forth a theory
+before any one else got ahead of her.
+
+"Oh! The poor child!" sympathized a romantic friend. "They've been
+letting her do too much! Didn't they make a handsome couple? I'm crazy
+to see them come marching down the aisle. They surely wouldn't put off
+the wedding just for a faint, would they?"
+
+And all over the church some woman began to tell how her sister's child,
+or her brother's niece, or her nephew's aunt had fainted just before her
+wedding or during it, till it began to seem quite a common performance,
+and one furnishing a unique and interesting part of the program for a
+wedding ceremony.
+
+Meanwhile on a couch in the big gloomy vestry room lay Betty with a
+group of attendants about her. Her eyes were closed, and she made no
+move. She swallowed the aromatic ammonia that some one produced, and she
+drew her breath a little less feebly, but she did not open her eyes, nor
+respond when they spoke to her.
+
+Her stepmother stooped over finally and spoke in her ear:
+
+"Elizabeth Stanhope! sit up and control yourself!" she said sharply in a
+low tone. "You are making a spectacle of yourself that you can never get
+over. Your father would be ashamed of you if he were here!"
+
+It was the one argument that had been held a successful lash over her
+poor little quivering heart for the last five years, and Betty flashed
+open her sorrowful eyes and looked around on them with a troubled
+concentration as if she were just taking in what had happened:
+
+"I'm so tired!" she said in a little weary voice. "Won't you just let me
+get my breath a minute?"
+
+The physician nodded emphatically toward the door and motioned them out:
+
+"She'll be all right in just a minute. Step outside and give her a
+chance to get calm. She's only worn out with excitement."
+
+She opened her eyes and looked furtively about the room. There was no
+one there, and the door was closed. She could hear them murmuring in low
+tones just beyond it. She looked wildly about her with a frantic thought
+of escape. The two windows were deeply curtained, giving a narrow
+glimpse of blank wall. She sprang softly to her feet and looked out.
+There was a stone pavement far below. She turned silently and tried a
+door. It opened into a closet overflowing with musty hymn-books. She
+closed it quickly and slipped back to her couch just in time as the door
+opened and the doctor came back. She could catch a glimpse of the others
+through the half open door, anxiously peering in. She gathered all her
+self-control and spoke:
+
+"I'm all right now, Doctor," she said quite calmly. "Would you just ask
+them to send Bessemer here a minute?"
+
+"Certainly." The doctor turned courteously and went back to the door,
+half closing it and making her request in a low tone. Then her
+stepmother's excited sibilant whisper:
+
+"Bessemer! Why, he isn't here! He went down to the shore last night."
+
+"Sh-h-h!" came another voice, and the door was shut smartly.
+
+Betty's eyes grew wide with horror as she lay staring at the closed
+door, and a cold numbness seemed to envelop her, clutching at her
+throat, her heart and threatening to overwhelm her.
+
+Bessemer not here! What could it mean? Her mind seemed unable to grasp
+and analyze the nameless fear that awaited her outside that door. In a
+moment more they would all swarm in and surround her, and begin to
+clamor for her to go back into that awful church--and _she could
+not_--EVER! She would far rather die!
+
+She sprang to her feet again and glided noiselessly to the only
+remaining uninvestigated door in the room. If this was another closet
+she would shut herself inside and stay till she died. She had read tales
+of people dying in a small space from lack of air. At least, if she did
+not die she could stay here till she had time to think. There was a key
+in the lock. Her fingers closed around it and drew it stealthily from
+the keyhole, as she slid through the door, drawing her rich draperies
+ruthlessly after. Her fingers were trembling so that she scarcely could
+fit the key in the lock again and turn it, and every click of the metal,
+every creak of the door, sounded like a gong in her ears. Her heart was
+fluttering wildly and the blood seemed to be pouring in torrents behind
+her ear-drums. She could not be sure whether there were noises in the
+room she had just left or not. She put her hand over her heart, turned
+with a sickening dread to look about her prison, and behold, it was not
+a closet at all, but a dark landing to a narrow flight of stone steps
+that wound down out of sight into the shadows. With a shudder she
+gathered her white impediment about her and crept down the murky way,
+frightened, yet glad to creep within the friendly darkness.
+
+There were unmistakable sounds of footsteps overhead now, and sharp
+exclamations. A hand tried the door above and rattled it violently. For
+an instant her heart beat frightfully in her throat at the thought that
+perhaps after all she had not succeeded in quite locking it, but the
+door held, and she flew on blindly down the stairs, caring little where
+they led only so that she might hide quickly before they found the
+janitor and pried that door open.
+
+The stairs ended in a little hall and a glass door. She fumbled wildly
+with the knob. It was locked, but there was a key! It was a large one
+and stuck, and gave a great deal of trouble in turning. Her fingers
+seemed so weak!
+
+Above the noises grew louder. She fancied the door was open and the
+whole churchful of people were after her. She threw her full weight with
+fear in the balance, and the key turned. She wrenched it out of the
+rusty keyhole, slid out shutting the door after her, and stooping,
+fitted in the key again. With one more Herculean effort she locked it
+and stood up, trembling so that she could scarcely keep her balance. At
+least she was safe for a moment and could get her breath. But where
+could she go? She looked about her. High walls arose on either hand,
+with a murky sky above. A stone walk filled the space between and ran
+down the length of the church to a big iron gate. The lights of the
+street glistened fitfully on the puddles of wet in the depressions of
+the paving-stones. The street looked quiet, and only one or two people
+were passing. Was that gate locked also, and if so could she ever climb
+it, or break through? Somehow she must! She shuddered at the thought of
+what would happen if she did not get away at once. She strained at the
+buttons on her soft white gloves and pulled the fingers off, slipping
+her hands out and letting the glove hands hang limp at her wrists. Then
+with a quick glance backward at a flicker of light that appeared
+wavering beyond the glass door, she gathered her draperies again and
+fled down the long stone walk. Silently, lightly as a ghost she passed,
+and crouched at the gate as she heard footsteps, her heart beating so
+loudly it seemed like a bell calling attention to her. An old man was
+shuffling past, and she shrank against the wall, yet mindful of the
+awful glass door back at the end of the narrow passage. If they should
+come now she could not hope to elude them!
+
+She stooped and studied the gate latch. Yes, it was a spring lock, and
+had no key in it. Stealthily she tried it and found to her relief that
+it swung open. She stepped around it and peered out. The gateway was not
+more than a hundred feet from the brightly lighted corner of the main
+avenue where rows of automobiles were lined up waiting for the wedding
+ceremony to be over. She could see the chauffeurs walking back and forth
+and chatting together. She could hear the desultory wandering of the
+organ, too, from the partly open window near by. A faint sickening waft
+of lily sweetness swept out, mingled with a dash of drops from the maple
+tree on the sidewalk. In a panic she stepped forth and drew back again,
+suddenly realizing for the first time what it would be to go forth into
+the streets clad in her wedding garments? How could she do it and get
+away? It could not be done!
+
+Down the street, with a backward, wistful glance at the church, hurried
+a large woman with a market basket. Her curious eyes shone in the
+evening light and darkness of the street. There was something about her
+face that made Betty know instantly that this woman would love to tell
+how she had seen her, would gather a crowd in no time and pursue her.
+She shrank farther back, and then waited in awful fear and tried to
+listen again. Was that a rattling at the glass door? She must get away
+no matter what happened! Where? Was there an alleyway or anything across
+the block? Could she hope to cross the street between the shadows
+unnoticed?
+
+She looked out fearfully once more. A girl of her own age was
+approaching around the corner, paddling along in rubbers, and a long
+coat. She was chewing gum. Betty could see the outline of a strong
+good-natured jaw working contentedly as she was silhouetted against the
+light. She had her hands in her pockets, and a little dark hat worn
+boyishly on the back of her head, and she was humming a popular song.
+Betty had slipped behind the half open gate again and was watching her
+approach, her desperation driving her to thoughts that never would have
+entered her mind at another time. Suddenly, as the girl passed directly
+in front of the gate, Betty leaned forward and plucked at her sleeve:
+
+"Wait!" she said sharply; and then, with a pitiful pleading in her
+voice, "Won't you help me just a minute, please?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+THE girl came to a standstill abruptly and faced about, drawing away
+just a hair's-breadth from the detaining hand, and surveying her
+steadily, the boyish expression in her eyes changing to an amused
+calculation such as one would fancy a cowboy held up on his native
+plains by a stray lamb might have worn.
+
+"What's the little old idea!" asked the girl coldly, her eyes narrowing
+as she studied the other girl in detail and attempted to classify her
+into the known and unknown quantities of her world. Her face was
+absolutely expressionless as far as any sign of interest or sympathy was
+concerned. It was like a house with the door still closed and a
+well-trained butler in attendance.
+
+"I've got to get away from here at once before anybody sees me,"
+whispered Betty excitedly, with a fearful glance behind her.
+
+"Do you want me to call a cab for you?" sneered the girl on the
+sidewalk, with an envious glance at the white satin slippers.
+
+"Oh, no! Never!" cried Betty, wringing her hands in desperation. "I want
+you to show me somewhere to go out of sight, and if you will I'd like
+you to walk a block or so with me so I won't be so--so conspicuous! I'm
+so frightened I don't know which way to go."
+
+"What do you want to go at all for?" asked the girl bluntly, with the
+look of an inquisitor, and the intolerance of the young for its
+contemporary of another social class.
+
+"Because I _must_!" said Betty with terror in her voice. "They're
+coming! Listen! Oh, help me quick! I can't wait to explain!"
+
+Betty dashed out of the gate and would have started up the street but
+that a strong young arm came out like a flash and a firm young fist
+gripped her arm like a vise. The girl's keen ears had caught a sound of
+turning key and excited voices, and her quick eyes pierced the darkness
+of the narrow court and measured the distance back.
+
+"Here! You can't go togged out like that!" she ordered in quite a
+different tone. She flung off her own long coat and threw it around the
+shrinking little white figure, then knelt and deftly turned up the long
+satin draperies out of sight and fixed them firmly with a pin extracted
+from somewhere about her person. Quickly she stood up and pulled off her
+rubbers, her eye on the long dark passageway whence came now the
+decided sound of a forcibly opened door and footsteps.
+
+"Put these on, quick!" she whispered, lifting first one slippered foot
+and then the other and supporting the trembling Betty in her strong
+young arms, while she snapped on the rubbers.
+
+Lastly, she jerked the rakish hat from her own head, crammed it down
+hard over the orange-wreathed brow and gave her strange protegee a hasty
+shove.
+
+"Now beat it around that corner and wait till I come!" she whispered,
+and turning planted herself in an idle attitude just under the church
+window, craning her neck and apparently listening to the music. A second
+later an excited usher, preceded by the janitor, came clattering down
+the passageway.
+
+"Have you seen any one go out of this gate recently?" asked the usher.
+
+The girl, hatless and coatless in the chill November night, turned
+nonchalantly at the question, surveyed the usher coolly from the point
+of his patent leather shoes to the white gardenia in his buttonhole,
+gave his features a cursory glance, and then shook her head.
+
+"There might have been an old woman come out a while back. Dressed in
+black, was she? I wasn't paying much attention. I think she went down
+the avenoo," she said, and stretched her neck again, standing on her
+tiptoes to view the wedding guests. Her interest suddenly became real,
+for she spied a young man standing in the church, in full view of the
+window, back against the wall with his arms folded, a fine handsome
+young man with pleasant eyes and a head like that of a young nobleman,
+and she wanted to make sure of his identity. He looked very much like
+the young lawyer whose office boy was her "gentleman friend." Just to
+make sure she gave a little spring from the sidewalk that brought her
+eyes almost on a level with the window and gave her a brief glimpse,
+enough to see his face quite clearly; then she turned with satisfaction
+to see that the janitor and the usher had gone back up the passageway,
+having slammed the gate shut. Without more ado the girl wheeled and
+hurried down the street toward the corner where Betty crouched behind a
+tree trunk, watching fearfully for her coming.
+
+"Aw! You don't need to be that scared!" said the girl, coming up.
+"They've gone back. I threw 'em off the scent. Come on! We'll go to my
+room and see what to do. Don't talk! Somebody might recognize your
+voice. Here, we'll cut through this alley and get to the next block.
+It's further away and not so many folks passing."
+
+Silently they hurried through the dark alley and down the next street,
+Betty holding the long cloak close that no gleam of her white satin
+might shine out and give away her secret, her heart beating like a trip
+hammer in her breast, her eyes filled with unshed tears, the last words
+of her stepmother ringing in her ears. Was she making her father
+ashamed? Her dear dead father! Was she doing the wrong thing? So long
+that thought had held her! But she could not go back now. She had taken
+an irrevocable step.
+
+Her guide turned another corner abruptly and led her up some stone steps
+to the door of a tall, dingy brick house, to which she applied a
+latchkey.
+
+The air of the gloomy hall was not pleasant. The red wall-paper was
+soiled and torn, and weird shadows flickered from the small gas taper
+that blinked from the ceiling. There were suggestions of old dinners,
+stale fried potatoes and pork in all the corners, and one moving toward
+the stairs seemed to stir them up and set them going again like old
+memories.
+
+The stairs were bare and worn by many feet, and not particularly clean.
+Betty paused in dismay then hurried on after her hostess, who was
+mounting up, one, two, three flights, to a tiny hall bedroom at the
+back. A fleeting fear that perhaps the place was not respectable shot
+through her heart, but her other troubles were so great that it found no
+lodgment. Panting and trembling she arrived at the top and stood looking
+about her in the dark, while the other girl found a match and lighted
+another wicked little flickering gas-burner.
+
+Then her hostess drew her into the room and closed and locked the door.
+As a further precaution she climbed upon a chair and pushed the transom
+shut.
+
+"Now," she said with a sigh of evident relief, "we're safe! No one can
+hear you here, and you can say what you please. But first we'll get this
+coat and hat off and see what's the damage."
+
+As gently as if she were undressing a baby the girl removed the hat and
+coat from her guest, and shook out the wonderful shining folds of satin.
+It would have been a study for an artist to have watched her face as she
+worked, smoothing out wrinkles, shaking the lace down and uncrushing it,
+straightening a bruised orange-blossom, and putting everything in place.
+It was as if she herself were an artist restoring a great masterpiece,
+so silently and absorbedly she worked, her eyes full of a glad wonder
+that it had come to her once to be near and handle anything so rare and
+costly. The very touch of the lace and satin evidently thrilled her; the
+breath of the exotic blossoms was nectar as she drew it in.
+
+Betty was still panting from her climb, still trembling from her flight,
+and she stood obedient and meek while the other girl pulled and shook
+and brushed and patted her into shape again. When all was orderly and
+adjusted about the crumpled bride, the girl stood back as far as the
+limits of the tiny room allowed and surveyed the finished picture.
+
+"There now! You certainly do look great! That there band of flowers
+round your forehead makes you look like some queen. 'Coronet'--ain't
+that what they call it? I read that once in a story at the Public
+Library. Say! Just to think I should pick that up in the street! Good
+night! I'm glad I came along just then instead o' somebody else! This
+certainly is some picnic! Well, now, give us your dope. It must've been
+pretty stiff to make you cut and run from a show like the one they got
+up for you! Come, tune up and let's hear the tale. I rather guess I'm
+entitled to know before the curtain goes up again on this little old
+stage!"
+
+The two tears that had been struggling with Betty for a long time
+suddenly appeared in her eyes and drowned them out, and in dismay she
+brought out a faint little sorry giggle of apology and amusement and
+dropped on the tiny bed, which filled up a good two-thirds of the room.
+
+"Good night!" exclaimed the hostess in alarm, springing to catch her.
+"Don't drop down that way in those glad rags! You'll finish 'em! Come,
+stand up and we'll get 'em off. You look all in. I'd oughta known you
+would be!" She lifted Betty tenderly and began to remove her veil and
+unfasten the wonderful gown. It seemed to her much like helping an angel
+remove her wings for a nap. Her eyes shone with genuine pleasure as she
+handled the hooks deftly.
+
+"But I've nothing else to put on!" gurgled Betty helplessly.
+
+"I have!" said the other girl.
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a sudden thought. "I wonder! Would you be willing
+to exchange clothes? Have you perhaps got some things you don't need
+that I could have, and I'll give you mine for them? I don't suppose
+perhaps a wedding dress would be very useful unless you're thinking of
+getting married soon, but you could make it over and use it for the
+foundation of an evening dress----"
+
+The other girl was carefully folding the white satin skirt at the
+moment, but she stopped with it in her arms and sat down weakly on the
+foot of the bed with it all spread out in her lap and looked at her
+guest in wonder:
+
+"You don't mean you _wantta give it up_!" she said in an awed tone. "You
+don't mean you would be willing to take some of my old togs for it?"
+
+"I certainly would!" cried Betty eagerly. "I never want to see these
+things again! _I hate_ them! And besides, I want to get away somewhere.
+I can't go in white satin! You know that! But I don't like to take
+anything of yours that you might need. Do you think these things would
+be worth anything to you? You weren't thinking of getting married
+yourself some time soon, were you?"
+
+"Well, I might," said the other girl, looking self-conscious. "I got a
+gentleman friend. But I wasn't expectin' to get in on any trooso like
+this!" She let her finger move softly over the satin hem as if she had
+been offered a plume of the angel's wing. "Sure, I'll take it off you if
+I've got anything you're satisfied to have in exchange. I wouldn't mind
+havin' it to keep jest to look at now and then and know it's mine. It'd
+be somethin' to live for, jest to know you had that dress in the
+house!"
+
+Suddenly Betty, without any warning even to herself, dropped upon her
+knees beside the diminutive bed and began to weep. It seemed somehow so
+touching that a thing like a mere dress could make a girl glad like
+that. All the troubles of the days that were past went over her in a
+great wave of agony, and overwhelmed her soul. In soft silk and lace
+petticoat and camisole with her pretty white arms and shoulders shaking
+with great sobs she buried her face in the old patchwork quilt that her
+hostess had brought from her village home, and gave way to a grief that
+had been long in growing. The other girl now thoroughly alarmed, laid
+the satin on a chair and went over to the little stranger, gathering her
+up in a strong embrace, and gradually lifting her to the bed.
+
+"You poor little Kid, you! I oughtta known better! You're just all in!
+You ben gettin' ready to be married, and something big's been troubling
+you, and I bet they never gave you any lunch--er else you wouldn't eat
+it,--and you're jest natcheraly all in. Now you lie right here an' I'll
+make you some supper. My name's Jane Carson, and I've got a good mother
+out to Ohio, and a nice home if I'd had sense enough to stay in it; only
+I got a chance to make big money in a fact'ry. But I know what 'tis to
+be lonesome, an' I ain't hard-hearted, if I do know how to take care of
+misself. There! There!"
+
+She smoothed back the lovely hair that curled in golden tendrils where
+the tears had wet it.
+
+"Say, now, you needn't be afraid! Nobody'll getcha here! I know how to
+bluff 'em. Even if a policeman should come after yeh, I'd get around him
+somehow, and I don't care what you've done or ain't done, I'll stand by
+yeh. I'm not one to turn against anybody in distress. My mother always
+taught me that. After you've et a bite and had a cup of my nice tea with
+cream and sugar in it you'll feel better, and we'll have a real
+chin-fest and hear all about it. Now, you just shut your eyes and wait
+till I make that tea."
+
+Jane Carson thumped up the pillow scientifically to make as many of the
+feathers as possible and shifted the little flower-head upon it. Then
+she hurried to her small washstand and took a little iron contrivance
+from the drawer, fastening it on the sickly gas-jet. She filled a tiny
+kettle with water from a faucet in the hall and set it to boil. From
+behind a curtain in a little box nailed to the wall she drew a loaf of
+bread, a paper of tea and a sugar-bowl. A cup and saucer and other
+dishes appeared from a pasteboard box under the washstand. A small
+shelf outside the tiny window yielded a plate of butter, a pint bottle
+of milk, and two eggs. She drew a chair up to the bed, put a clean
+handkerchief on it, and spread forth her table. In a few minutes the
+fragrance of tea and toast pervaded the room, and water was bubbling
+happily for the eggs. As cosily as if she had a chum to dine with her
+she sat down on the edge of the bed and invited her guest to supper. As
+she poured the tea she wondered what her co-laborers at the factory
+would think if they knew she had a real society lady visiting her. It
+wasn't every working girl that had a white satin bride thrust upon her
+suddenly this way. It was like a fairy story, having a strange bride
+lying on her bed, and everything a perfect mystery about her. She eyed
+the white silk ankles and dainty slippers with satisfaction. Think of
+wearing underclothes made of silk and real lace!
+
+It seemed to Betty as if never before in all her life had she tasted
+anything so delicious as that tea and toast and soft boiled egg cooked
+by this wonderful girl on a gaslight and served on a chair. She wanted
+to cry again over her gladness at being here. It didn't seem real after
+all the trouble she had been through. It couldn't last! Oh, of course it
+couldn't last!
+
+This thought came as she swallowed the last bite of toast, and she sat
+up suddenly!
+
+"I ought to be doing something quick!" she said in sudden panic. "It is
+getting late and I must get away. They'll be watching the trains,
+perhaps. I ought to have gone at once. But I don't know where I can go.
+Give me some old things, please. I must get dressed at once."
+
+"Lie down first and tell me who you are and what it's all about. I can't
+do a thing for you till I know. I've got to go into this with my eyes
+open or I won't stir one step," she declared stubbornly.
+
+Betty looked at her with wide eyes of trouble and doubt. Then the doubt
+suddenly cleared away, and trust broke through.
+
+"I can trust you, I'm sure! You've been so good to me! But it seems
+dreadful to tell things about my family, even to one who has been so
+kind. My father would be so hurt----"
+
+"Your father? Where is your father? Why didn't he take care of you and
+keep you from getting into such big trouble, I'd like to know?"
+
+The blue eyes clouded with tears again.
+
+"My father died five years ago," she said, "but I've always tried to do
+as he would want to have me do. Only--this--I _couldn't_."
+
+"H'm!" said Jane Carson. "Then he prob'ly wouldn't of wanted you to.
+Suppose you take the rest of those togs off. I'll find you a warm
+nightgown and we'll get to bed. It's turning cold here. They take the
+heat off somewhere about six o'clock in the evening, and it gets like
+ice up here sometimes."
+
+Jane shivered and went to her small trunk, from which she produced a
+coarse but clean flanellete nightgown, and Betty, who had never worn
+anything but a dainty lingerie one before in all her life, crept into it
+thankfully and cuddled down with a warm feeling that she had found a
+real friend. It was curious why she did not shrink from this poor girl,
+but she did not, and everything looked clean and nice. Besides, this was
+a wonderful haven of refuge in her dire necessity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+MEANWHILE, in the stately mansion that Betty had called home, a small
+regiment of servants hastened with the last tasks in preparation for the
+guests that were soon expected to arrive. The great rooms had become a
+dream of paradise, with silver rain and white lilies in a mist of soft
+green depending from the high ceilings. In the midst of all, a fairy
+bower of roses and tropical ferns created a nook of retirement where
+everyone might catch a glimpse of the bride and groom from any angle in
+any room. The spacious vistas stretched away from an equally spacious
+hallway, where a wide and graceful staircase curved up to a low gallery,
+smothered in flowers and palms and vines; and even so early the
+musicians were taking their places and tuning their instruments. On the
+floor above, where room after room shone in beauty, with costly
+furnishings, and perfect harmonies, white-capped maids flitted about,
+putting last touches to dressing tables and pausing to gossip as they
+passed one another:
+
+"Well, 'twill all be over soon," sighed one, a wan-faced girl with
+discontented eyes. "Ain't it kind of a pity, all this fuss just for a
+few minutes?"
+
+"Yes, an' glad I'll be!" declared another, a fresh young Irish girl with
+a faint, pretty brogue. "I don't like the look of my Lady Betty. A
+pretty fuss Candace her old nurse would be makin' if she was here the
+night! I guess the madam knew what she was about when she give her her
+walkin' ticket! Candace never could bear them two bys, and _him_ was the
+worse of the two, she always said."
+
+"Well, a sight of good it would do for old Candace to make a fuss!" said
+the discontented one. "And anyhow, he's as handsome as the devil, and
+she's got money enough, so she oughtn't complain."
+
+"Money ain't everything!" sniffed Aileen. "I wouldn't marry a king if I
+wasn't crazy about him!"
+
+"Oh, you're young!" sneered Marie with disdain. "Wait till your looks
+go! You don't know what you'd take up with!"
+
+"Well I'd never take up with the likes of _him_!" returned the Irish
+girl grandly, "and what's more he knows it!" She tossed her head
+meaningfully and was about to sail away on her own business when a stir
+below stairs attracted their attention. A stout, elderly woman, dressed
+in a stiff new black silk and an apoplectic hat, came panting up the
+stairs looking furtively from side to side, as if she wished to escape
+before anyone recognized her:
+
+"It's Candace!" exclaimed Aileen. "As I live! Now what d'ye wantta know
+about that! Poor soul! Poor soul! Candy! Oh!--Candy! What iver brought
+ye here the night? This is no place for the loikes of you. You better
+beat it while the beatin' is good if ye know which side yer bread's
+buthered!"
+
+But the old nurse came puffing on, her face red and excited:
+
+"Is she here? Has she come, yet, my poor wee Betty?" she besought them
+eagerly.
+
+"Miss Betty's at the church now gettin' married!" announced Marie
+uppishly, "and you'd best be gettin' out of here right away, for the
+wedding party's due to arrive any minute now and madam'll be very angry
+to have a servant as doesn't belong snoopin' round at such a time!"
+
+"Be still, Marie! For shame!" cried Aileen. "You've no need to talk like
+that to a self-respectin' woman as has been in this house more years
+than you have been weeks! Come along, Candace, and I'll slip you in my
+room and tell you all about it when I can get away long enough. You see,
+Miss Betty's being married----"
+
+"But she's _not_!" cried Candace wildly. "I was at the church myself.
+Miss Betty sent me the word to be sure and come, and where to sit and
+all, so she'd see me; and I went, and she come up the aisle as white as
+a lily and dropped right there before the poolpit, just like a little
+white lamb that couldn't move another step, all of a heap in her pretty
+things! And they stopped the ceremony and everybody got up, and they
+took her away, and we waited till bime-by the minister said the bride
+wasn't well enough to proceed with the ceremony and would they all go
+home, and I just slipped out before the folks got their wraps on and
+took a side street with wings to my feet and got up here! Haven't they
+brought her home yet, the poor wee thing? I been thinkin' they might
+need me yet, for many's the time I've brought her round by my nursin'."
+
+The two maids looked wildly at one another, their glances growing into
+incredulity, the eyebrows of Marie moving toward her well-dressed hair
+with a lofty disapproval.
+
+"Well, you'd better come with me, Candy," said Aileen drawing the
+excited old servant along the hall to the back corridor gently. "I guess
+there's some mistake somewheres; anyway, you better stay in my room till
+you see what happens. We haven't heard anything yet, and they'd likely
+send word pretty soon if there's to be any change in the program. You
+say she fell----?"
+
+But just then sounds of excitement came distantly up to them and Aileen
+hastened back to the gallery to listen. It was the voice of Madam
+Stanhope angrily speaking to her youngest son:
+
+"You must get Bessemer on the 'phone at once and order him home! I told
+you it was a great mistake sending him away. If he had been standing
+there, where she could see him, everything would have gone through just
+as we planned it----"
+
+"Aw! Rot! Mother. Can't you shut up? I know what I'm about and I'm going
+to call up another detective. Bessemer may go to the devil for all I
+care! How do you know but he has, and taken her with him? The first
+thing to do is to get that girl back! You ought to have had more sense
+than to show your whole hand to my brother. You might have known he'd
+take advantage----"
+
+Herbert Hutton slammed into the telephone booth under the stairs and
+Madam Stanhope was almost immediately aware of the staring servants who
+were trying not to seem to have listened.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope stood in the midst of the beautiful empty rooms and
+suddenly realized her position. Her face froze into the haughty lines
+with which her menage was familiar, and she was as coldly beautiful in
+her exquisite heliotrope gown of brocaded velvet and chiffon with the
+glitter of jewels about her smooth plump neck, and in her carefully
+marcelled black hair as if she were quietly awaiting the bridal party
+instead of facing defeat and mortification:
+
+"Aileen, you may get Miss Betty's room ready to receive her. She has
+been taken ill and will be brought home as soon as she is able to be
+moved," she announced, without turning an eyelash. "Put away her things,
+and get the bed ready!" One could see that she was thinking rapidly. She
+was a woman who had all her life been equal to an emergency, but never
+had quite such a tragic emergency been thrust upon her to camouflage
+before.
+
+"James!" catching the eye of the butler, "there will be no reception
+to-night, of course, and you will see that the hired people take their
+things away as soon as possible, and say that I will agree to whatever
+arrangements they see fit to make, within reason, of course. Just use
+your judgment, James, and by the way, there will be telephone calls, of
+course, from our friends. Say that Miss Betty is somewhat better, and
+the doctor hopes to avert a serious nervous breakdown, but that she
+needs entire rest and absolute quiet for a few days. Say that and
+nothing more, do you understand, James?"
+
+The butler bowed his thorough understanding and Madam Stanhope sailed
+nobly up the flower-garlanded staircase, past the huddled musicians, to
+her own apartment. Aileen, with a frightened glance, scuttled past the
+door as she was closing it:
+
+"Aileen, ask Mr. Herbert to come to my room at once when he has finished
+telephoning, and when Mr. Bessemer arrives send him to me at once!" Then
+the door closed and the woman was alone with her defeat, and the placid
+enameled features melted into an angry snarl like an animal at bay. In a
+moment more Herbert stormed in.
+
+"It's all your fault, mother!" he began, with an oath. "If you hadn't
+dragged Bessemer into this thing I'd have had her fixed. I had her just
+about where I wanted her, and another day would have broken her in.
+She's scared to death of insane asylums, and I told her long ago that it
+would be dead easy to put a woman in one for life. If I had just hinted
+at such a thing she'd have married me as meek as a lamb!"
+
+"Now look here, Bertie," flared his mother excitedly, "you've got to
+stop blaming me! Haven't I given in to you all your life, and now you
+say it's all my fault the least little thing that happens! It was for
+your sake that I stopped you; you know it was. You couldn't carry out
+any such crazy scheme. Betty's almost of age, and if those trustees
+should find out what you had threatened, you would be in jail for life,
+and goodness knows what would become of me."
+
+"Trustees! How would the trustees find it out?"
+
+"Betty might tell them."
+
+"Betty might _not_ tell them, not if she was _my wife_!" He bawled out
+the words in a way that boded no blissful future to the one who should
+have the misfortune to become his wife. "I think I'd have her better
+trained than that. As for you, Mother, you're all off, as usual! What do
+you think could possibly happen to _you_? You're always saying you do
+everything for me, but when it comes right down to brass tacks I notice
+you're pretty much of a selfish coward on your own account."
+
+For a moment the baffled woman faced her angry uncontrolled son in
+speechless rage, then gathered command of the situation once more, an
+inscrutable expression on her hard-lined face. Her voice took on an
+almost pitiful reproach as she spoke in a low, even tone that could
+hardly fail to bring the instant attention of her spoiled son:
+
+"Bertie, you don't know what you're talking about!" she said, and there
+was a strained white look of fear about her mouth and eyes as she spoke.
+"I'm going to tell you, in this great crisis, what I did for you, what I
+risked that you might enjoy the luxury which you have had for the last
+five years. Listen! The day before Mr. Stanhope died he wrote a letter
+to the trustees of Betty's fortune giving very explicit directions about
+her money and her guardianship, tying things up so that not one cent
+belonging to her should pass through my hands, which would have left us
+with just my income as the will provided, and would have meant
+comparative poverty for us all except as Betty chose to be benevolent. I
+kept a strict watch on all his movements those last few days, of course,
+and when I found he had given Candace a letter to mail, I told her I
+would look after it, and I brought it up to my room and read it, for I
+suspected just some such thing as he had done. He was very fussy about
+Betty and her rights, you remember, and he had always insisted that this
+was Betty's house, her mother's wedding present from the grandfather,
+and therefore not ours at all, except through Betty's bounty. I was
+determined that we should not be turned out of here, and that you should
+not have to go without the things you wanted while that child had
+everything and far more than she needed. So I burned the letter! Now, do
+you see what the mother you have been blaming has done for you?"
+
+But the son looked back with hard glittering eyes and a sneer on his
+handsome lustful lips:
+
+"I guess you did it about as much for your own sake as mine, didn't
+you?" he snarled. "And I don't see what that's got to do with it,
+anyway. Those trustees don't know what they missed if they never got the
+letter, and you've always kept in with them, you say, and made them
+think you were crazy about the girl. They pay you Betty's allowance till
+she's of age, don't they? They can't lay a finger on you. You're a fool
+to waste my time talking about a little thing like that when we ought to
+be planning a way to get hold of that girl before the trustees find out
+about it. If we don't get her fixed before she's of age we shall be in
+the soup as far as the property is concerned. Isn't that so? Well, then,
+we've got to get her good and married----"
+
+"If you only had let her marry Bessemer quietly," whimpered his mother,
+"and not have brought in all this deception. It will look so terrible if
+it ever comes out. I shall never be able to hold up my head in society
+again----!"
+
+"There you are again! Thinking of yourself----!" sneered the dutiful
+son, getting up and stamping about her room like a wild man. "I tell
+you, Mother, that girl is _mine_, and I won't have Bessemer or anybody
+else putting in a finger. _She's mine!_ I told her so a long time ago,
+and she knows it! She can't get away from me, and it's going to go the
+harder with her because she's tried. I'm never going to forgive her
+making a fool out of me before all those people! I'll get her yet!
+Little fool!"
+
+Herbert was well on his way into one of those fits of uncontrollable
+fury that had always held his mother in obedience to his slightest whim
+since the days when he used to lie on the floor and scream himself black
+in the face and hold his breath till she gave in; and the poor woman,
+wrought to the highest pitch of excitement already by the tragic events
+of the evening, which were only the climax of long weeks of agitation,
+anxiety and plotting, dropped suddenly into her boudoir chair and began
+to weep.
+
+But this new manifestation on the part of his usually pliable mother
+only seemed to infuriate the young man. He walked up to her, and seizing
+her by the shoulder, shook her roughly:
+
+"Cut that out!" he said hoarsely. "This is no time to cry. We've got to
+make some kind of a plan. Don't you see we'll have the hounds of the
+press at our heels in a few hours? Don't you see we've got to make a
+plan and stick to it?"
+
+His mother looked up, regardless for once of the devastation those few
+tears had made of her carefully groomed face, a new terror growing in
+her eyes:
+
+"I've told James to answer all telephone calls and say that Betty is
+doing as well as could be expected, but that the doctor says she must
+have perfect quiet to save her from a nervous breakdown----" she
+answered him coldly. "I'm not quite a fool if you do think so----"
+
+"Well, that's all right for to-night, but what'll we say to-morrow if we
+don't find her----"
+
+"Oh! She'll come back," said the stepmother confidently. "She can't help
+it. Why, where would she go? She hasn't a place on earth since she's
+lost confidence in that cousin of her mother's because he didn't come to
+her wedding. She hasn't an idea that he never got her note asking him to
+give her away. Thank heaven I got hold of that before it reached the
+postman! If that old granny had been here we should have had trouble
+indeed. I had an experience with him once just before I married Betty's
+father, and I never want to repeat it. But we must look out what gets in
+the papers!"
+
+"It's rather late for that, I suspect. The bloodhounds 'ill be around
+before many minutes and you better think up what you want said. But I'm
+not so sure she wouldn't go there, and we better tell the detectives
+that. What's the old guy's address? I'll call him up long distance and
+say she was on a motoring trip and intended to stop there if she had
+time. I'll ask if she's reached there yet."
+
+"That's a good idea, although I'm sure she was too hurt about it to go
+to him. She cried all the afternoon. It's a wonder she didn't look
+frightful! But that's Betty! Cry all day and come out looking like a
+star without any paint either. It's a pity somebody that would have
+appreciated it couldn't have had her complexion."
+
+"That's you all over, Mother, talking about frivolous things when
+everything's happening at once. You're the limit! I say, you'd better be
+getting down to business! I've thought of another thing. How about that
+old nurse, Candace? Betty used to be crazy about her? What became of
+her?"
+
+Mrs. Stanhope's face hardened, and anxiety grew in her eyes.
+
+"She might have gone to her, although I don't believe she knows where
+she is. I'm sure I don't. I sent her away just before we began to get
+ready for the wedding. I didn't dare have her here. She knows too much
+and takes too much upon herself. I wouldn't have kept her so long, only
+she knew I took the trustee's letter, and she was very impudent about it
+once or twice, so that I didn't really dare to let her go until just a
+few days ago. I thought things would all be over here before she could
+do any harm, and Betty would be of age and have her money in her own
+right, and being your wife, of course there wouldn't be any more trouble
+about it."
+
+"Well, you better find out what's become of her!" said the young man
+with darkening face. "_She_ ought to be locked up somewhere! She's
+liable to make no end of trouble! You can't tell what she's stirred up
+already! Ring for a servant and find out if they know where she is. Ten
+to one that's where Betty is."
+
+Mrs. Stanhope, with startled face, stepped to the bell and summoned
+Aileen:
+
+"Aileen, have you any idea where we could find Miss Betty's old nurse,
+Candace?" she asked in a soothing tone, studying the maid's countenance.
+"I think it might be well to send for her in case Miss Betty needs her.
+She was so much attached to her!"
+
+Aileen lifted startled eyes to her mistress' face. There was reserve and
+suspicion in her glance:
+
+"Why, she was here a few minutes ago," she said guardedly. "It seems
+Miss Betty sent her an invitation, and when Miss Betty took sick she was
+that scared she ran out of the church and come here to find out how she
+was. She might not have gone yet. I could go see."
+
+"Here! Was she here?" Mrs. Stanhope turned her head to her son and her
+eyes said: "That's strange!" but she kept her face well under control.
+
+"Yes, you might go and see if you can find her, Aileen, and if you do,
+tell her I would like to see her a moment."
+
+Aileen went away on her errand and Mrs. Stanhope turned to her son:
+
+"Betty can't have gone to her unless there was some collusion. But in
+any case I think we had better keep her here until we know something."
+
+Quick trotting steps were heard hurrying along the hall and a little
+jerky knock announced unmistakably the presence of Candace.
+
+Mrs. Stanhope surveyed the little red-faced creature coolly and sharply:
+
+"Candace, you have broken one of my express commands in returning here
+without permission from me, but seeing it was done in kindness I will
+overlook it this time and let you stay. You may be useful if they bring
+my daughter home to-night and I presume she will be very glad to see
+you. Just now she is--umm----" she glanced furtively at her son, and
+lifting her voice a trifle, as if to make her statement more
+emphatic--"she is at a private hospital near the church where they took
+her till she should be able to come home. It will depend on her
+condition whether they bring her to-night or to-morrow or in a few days.
+Meantime, if you like you may go up to your old room and wait until I
+send for you. I shall have news soon and will let you know. Don't go
+down to the servant's quarters, I wish to have you where I can call you
+at a moment's notice."
+
+Candace gave her ex-mistress a long, keen suspicious stare, pinned her
+with a glance as steely as her own for an instant, in search of a
+possible ulterior motive, and then turning on her little fat heel,
+vanished like a small fast racer in the direction of her old room.
+
+"Now," said Mrs. Stanhope, turning with a sigh of relief, "she's safe!
+I'll set Marie to watch her and if there's anything going on between
+those two Marie will find it out."
+
+But Herbert Hutton was already sitting at his mother's desk with the
+telephone book and calling up Long Distance.
+
+All the long hours when he had expected to have been standing under the
+rose bower downstairs in triumph with his bride, Herbert Hutton sat at
+that telephone in his mother's boudoir alternately raging at his mother
+and shouting futile messages over the 'phone. The ancient cousin of
+Betty's mother was discovered to be seriously ill in a hospital and
+unable to converse even through the medium of his nurse, so there was
+nothing to be gained there. Messages to the public functionaries in his
+town developed no news. Late into the night, or rather far toward the
+morning, Bessemer was discovered at a cabaret where his persistent
+mother and brother had traced him, too much befuddled with his evening's
+carouse to talk connectedly. He declared Betty was a good old girl, but
+she might go to thunder for all he cared; he knew a girl "worth twice of
+her."
+
+His mother turned with disgust from his babbling voice, convinced that
+he knew nothing of Betty's whereabouts. Nevertheless, by means of a
+financial system of threats and rewards which she had used on him
+successfully for a number of years, she succeeded in impressing upon him
+the necessity of coming home at once, and just as the pink was beginning
+to dawn in the gray of the morning, Bessemer drove up in a hired car,
+and stumbled noisily into the house, demanding to know where the wedding
+was. He wanted to kiss the bride.
+
+Candace, still in her stiff black silk, stood in the shadowy hall, as
+near as she dared venture, and listened, with her head thoughtfully on
+one side. Betty in her note about the wedding had said she was going to
+be married to Bessemer. But Bessemer didn't sound like a bridegroom. Had
+Bessemer run away then, or what? But some things looked queer. She
+remembered that Aileen had spoken as if Herbert was the bridegroom, but
+she had taken it for a mere slip of the tongue and thought nothing of
+it. When Aileen next came that way, she asked her if she happened to
+have got hold of one of the invitations, and Aileen, with her finger on
+her lips, nodded, and presently returned with something under her apron:
+
+"I slipped it from the waste-basket," she said, "and Miss Betty got a
+holt of it, and there was a tremenjus fuss about something, I couldn't
+make out what; but I heard the missus say it was all a mistake as she
+gave the order over the 'phone, and she must have misspoke herself, but
+anyhow she thought she'd destroyed them all and given a rush order and
+they would be all right and sent out in plenty of time. So she sticks
+this back in the waste-basket and orders me to take the basket down and
+burn it, but I keeps this out and hides it well. I couldn't see nothin'
+the matter with it, can you?"
+
+"There's _all_ the matter with it!" declared the angry nurse as she
+glared at the name of Herbert Hutton thoughtfully, and read between the
+lines more than she cared to tell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+NOT two miles away, Betty lay safe and warm in the flanellette
+nightgown, and watched Jane Carson turn out the light and open the
+window. A light leaped up from the street and made a friendly spot of
+brightness on the opposite wall, and Betty had a sense of cosiness that
+she had not felt since she was in boarding school with a roommate.
+
+"Now," said Jane, climbing into bed and pulling up the covers carefully
+lest she should let the cold in on her guest, "let's hear!--You warm
+enough?"
+
+There was a curious tenderness in her voice as if she had brought home a
+young princess and must guard her carefully.
+
+"Oh, perfectly!" said Betty, giving a little nervous shiver. "And I'm so
+glad to be here safe away from them all! Oh, I've needed some one to
+advise with _so_ much! I haven't had a soul since they sent my old nurse
+away because she dared to take my part sometimes."
+
+Suddenly Betty buried her face in the pillow and began to sob and Jane
+reached out quick gentle arms and gathered her in a close comforting
+embrace. In a moment more Betty had gained control of herself and began
+to explain:
+
+"You see," she said, catching her breath bravely, "they were determined
+I should marry a man I can't _endure_, and when I wouldn't they tried to
+_trick_ me into it anyway. I never suspected until I got into the church
+and looked around and couldn't see Bessemer anywhere; only the other one
+with his evil eyes gloating over me, and then I knew! They thought they
+would get me there before all that church full of people and I wouldn't
+dare do anything. But when I realized it, I just dropped right down in
+the aisle. I couldn't stand up, I was so frightened."
+
+"But I don't understand," said Jane. "Were there _two_ men?"
+
+"Oh, yes," sighed Betty, "there were two."
+
+"Well, where was the other one, the one you _wanted_ to marry?"
+
+"I don't know----" said Betty with a half sob in her voice. "That's just
+what frightened me. You see they were my stepmother's two sons, and it
+was my father's dying wish that I should marry one of them. I didn't
+really _want_ to marry Bessemer, but I simply _loathed_ Herbert, the
+younger one, who was so determined to marry me. I was terribly afraid
+of him. He had been frightfully cruel to me when I was a child and when
+he grew up he was always tormenting me; and then when he tried to make
+love to me he was so repulsive that I couldn't bear to look at him. It
+really made me sick to think of ever marrying him. Oh--I _couldn't_--no
+matter who asked me. So Bessemer and I decided to get married to stop
+the trouble. They were always nagging him, too, and I was kind of sorry
+for him."
+
+"But why should you marry anybody you didn't want to, I'd like to know!"
+exclaimed Jane in horror. "This is a free country and nobody ever makes
+people marry anybody they don't like any more. Why didn't you just beat
+it?"
+
+"I thought about that a good many times," said Betty, pressing her tired
+eyes with her cold little fingers, "but I couldn't quite bring myself to
+do it. In the first place, I didn't know where to go, nor what to do.
+They never would let me learn to do anything useful, so I couldn't have
+got any work; and anyhow I had a feeling that it wouldn't be possible to
+get away where Herbert couldn't find me if he wanted to. He's that way.
+He always gets what he wants, no matter whom it hurts. He's
+_awful_--Jane--really!"
+
+There was a pitiful note in her voice that appealed to the mother in
+Jane, and she stooped over her guest and patted her comfortingly on the
+shoulder:
+
+"You poor little kid," she said tenderly, "you must have been worried
+something awful, but still I don't get you; what was the idea in
+sticking around and thinking you _had_ to marry somebody you didn't
+like? You coulda gone to some one and claimed pertection. You could uv
+appealed to the p'lice if worst came to worst----!"
+
+"Oh! But Jane I couldn't! That would have brought our family into
+disgrace, and father would have felt so _dreadfully_ about it if he had
+been alive! I couldn't quite bring myself, either, to go against his
+dying request. We had always been so much to each other, Daddy and I.
+Besides, I didn't mind _Bessemer_ so _much_--he was always kind--though
+we never had much to do with each other----"
+
+"Well, I don't think I'd have stopped around long to please a father
+that didn't care any more for me than to want me to marry somebody I
+felt that way about!" said Jane, indignantly. "I haven't much use for a
+father like that!"
+
+"Oh, but he wasn't like that!" said Betty, rising up in her eagerness
+and looking at Jane through her shining curls that were falling all
+about her eager, troubled young face, "and he did love me, Jane, he
+loved me better than anything else in the whole world! That was why I
+was willing to sacrifice almost anything to please him."
+
+"Well, I'll be darned!" said Jane Carson, sitting up squarely in bed and
+staring at the spot of light on the wall. "That gets my goat! How could
+a man love you and yet want to torment you?"
+
+"Well, you see, Jane, he hadn't been very fond of them when they were
+boys"--she spoke it with dignity and a little gasp as if she were
+committing a breach of loyalty to explain, but realized that it was
+necessary--"and he felt when he was dying that he wanted to make
+reparation, so he thought if I should marry one of them it would show
+them that he had forgiven them----"
+
+"It--may--be--so," drawled Jane slowly, nodding her head deliberately
+with each word, "but--I don't see it that _way_! What kind of a man was
+this father of yours, anyway?"
+
+"Oh, a wonderful man, Jane!" Betty eagerly hastened to explain. "He was
+all the world to me, and he used to come up to school week-ends and take
+me on beautiful trips and we had the best times together, and he would
+tell me about my own dear mother----"
+
+Betty's hand grasped Jane's convulsively and her voice died out, in a
+sudden sob. Jane's hand went quickly to the bright head on the pillow:
+
+"There! there!" she whispered tenderly, "don't take on so, I didn't mean
+anything. I was just trying to dope it out; get it through my bean what
+in thunder----! Say! Did _he_ TELL _you_ he wanted you to marry those
+guys?"
+
+"Oh, no, he left word--it was his dying request."
+
+"Who'd he request it to?"
+
+"My stepmother."
+
+"H'm! I thought so! How'd you know he did? How'd you know but she was
+lyin'?"
+
+"No," said Betty sorrowfully, "she wasn't lying, she showed me the paper
+it was written on. There couldn't be any mistake. And his name was
+signed to it, his dear hand-writing, just as he always wrote it with the
+little quirl to the S that wasn't like anybody else. It went through me
+just like a knife when I saw it, that my dear father should have asked
+me to do what was so very very hard for me to think of. It was so much
+harder to have it come that way. If he had only asked me himself and we
+could have talked it over, perhaps he would have helped me to be strong
+enough to do it, but to have _her_ have to _tell me_! She felt that
+herself. She tried to be kind, I think. She said she wanted to have him
+wake me up and tell me himself, but she saw his strength was going and
+he was so anxious to have her write it down quick and let him sign it
+that she did as he asked----"
+
+"Well, you may depend on it he never wrote it at all--or anyhow, never
+knew what he was signing. Like as not she dragged it out of him some way
+while he was out of his mind or so near dying he didn't know what he was
+about. Besides, they mightta some of 'em forged his name. It's easy to
+copy signatures. Lotsa people do it real good. If I was you I wouldn't
+think another mite about it. If he was a man like you say he is, he
+couldn'ta done a thing like that to his own little girl, not on his
+life! It ain't like real fathers and mothers to. I know, fer I've got a
+mother that's a peach and no mistake! No, you may depend on it, he never
+knew a thing about that, and marrying a guy like that is the last thing
+on earth he'd want you to do."
+
+"Oh, do you really think so? Oh, are you _sure_?" cried Betty, clinging
+to Jane eagerly, the tears raining down her white cheeks. "I've thought
+so a thousand times, but I didn't dare trust myself to decide."
+
+"Yes, I'm sure!" said Jane, gathering her in her arms and hugging her
+tight, just as she would have done with a little sister who had waked up
+in the night with a bad dream. "Now, look here, you stop crying and
+don't you worry another bit. Just tell me the rest if there's any rest,
+so I'll know what to bank on. Who is the other guy, the one you didn't
+mind marryin'? What became of him?"
+
+"Why, that's the queer part," said Betty, troubled again. "He didn't
+seem to be anywhere, and when they carried me into the room back of the
+church and fanned me and got water to bathe my face, a doctor came and
+gave me some medicine and sent them all out, and I asked him to send
+Bessemer to me. I wanted to find out why he hadn't been standing up
+there by the minister the way I expected. I heard the doctor go out and
+ask for Bessemer and I heard my stepmother's voice say, 'Why Bessemer
+isn't here! He's gone down to the shore!' and then somebody said,
+'Hush,' and they shut the door, and I was so frightened that I got up
+and tried all the doors till I found one that led down some stairs, and
+I locked it behind me and ran and found you!"
+
+"You poor little kid!" cried Jane, cuddling her again. "I sure am glad I
+was on the job! But now, tell me, what's your idea? Will they make a
+big noise and come huntin' you?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Betty wearily. "I suppose they will. I _know_ they will,
+in fact. Herbert won't be balked in anything he wants----Bessemer won't
+count. He never counts. I'm sort of sorry for him, though I don't like
+him much. You see they had been making an awful fuss with him, too,
+about some actress down at the shore that he was sending flowers to, and
+I knew he didn't have a very easy time. So when he came in one day and
+asked me why I didn't marry _him_ and settle the whole thing that way, I
+was horrified at first, but I finally thought perhaps that would be the
+best thing to do. He said he wouldn't bother me any, if I wouldn't
+bother him; and we thought perhaps the others would let us alone then.
+But I might have known Herbert wouldn't give in! Bessemer is easily
+led--Herbert could have hired him to go away to-night--or they may have
+_made_ him ask me to marry him. He's like that," sadly. "You can't
+depend on him. I don't know. You see, it was kind of queer about the
+invitations. They came with Herbert's name in them first, and my
+stepmother tried to keep me from seeing them. She said they were late
+and she had them all sent off; but I found one, and when I went to my
+stepmother with it she said it was a mistake. She hadn't meant me to be
+annoyed by seeing it; and she didn't know how it happened; she must have
+misspoken herself--but it had been corrected and they would rush it
+through and send them right from the store this time so there wouldn't
+be any delay. I tried to think it was all right, but it troubled me, for
+I saw that Herbert hadn't given up at all--though he pretended to go
+away, and I hoped I wouldn't have any more trouble--but I might have
+known! Herbert never gave up anything in his life, not even when father
+was living. He always managed to get his way, somehow----"
+
+"Did he love you so much?" Jane asked awesomely.
+
+Betty shuddered:
+
+"Oh, I don't know whether it was love or hate! It was all the same. I
+hate to think about him--he is--_unbearable_, Jane! Why, Jane, once he
+told me if he ever got me in his power he'd break my will or kill me in
+the attempt!"
+
+"Well, now, there, Kid! Don't you think another bit about him, the old
+brute! You just lie down and sleep as easy as if you was miles away.
+They won't any of 'em ever find you here with me, and I've pulled the
+washstand in front of the door, so you needn't be dreaming of anybody
+coming in and finding you. Now go to sleep, and to-morrow I'll sneak you
+away to a place where they can't ever find you. Good night, Kid!" and
+Jane leaned down and kissed the soft hair on the pillow beside her.
+Betty flung her arms about her new-found friend and kissed her tenderly:
+
+"Oh, you've been so good to me! What should I ever have done if I hadn't
+found you. You were like an angel. I think surely God must have sent you
+to help me."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if he did!" said Jane thoughtfully. "An angel in a
+mackintosh! Some angel!"
+
+Jane Carson with her eyes wide open lay staring into the darkness and
+thinking it all over. She did not waste much time marvelling over the
+wonder that it had all happened to her. That would do for afterward when
+there was nothing else to be done about it. Now there must be some plans
+made and she was the one to make them. It was quite plain that the
+wonderful and beautiful Elizabeth Stanhope, the plans for whose wedding
+had been blazoned in the papers for days beforehand, was not at present
+capable of making or carrying out anything effective. Jane was. She knew
+it. She was a born leader and promoter. She liked nothing better than
+to work out a difficult situation. But this was the most difficult
+proposition that she had ever come up against. When her father died and
+her mother was left with the little house and the three younger children
+to support in a small country village, and only plain sewing and now and
+then a boarder to eke out a living for them all, she had sought and
+found, through a summer visitor who had taught her Sunday school class
+for a few weeks, a good position in this big Eastern city. She had made
+good and been promoted until her wages not only kept herself with strict
+economy, but justified her in looking forward to the time when she might
+send for her next younger sister. Her deft fingers kept her meagre
+wardrobe in neatness--and a tolerable deference to fashion, so that she
+had been able to annex the "gentleman friend" and take a little outing
+with him now and then at a moving picture theatre or a Sunday evening
+service. She had met and vanquished the devil on more than one
+battlefield in the course of her experience with different department
+heads; and she was wise beyond her years in the ways of the world. But
+this situation was different. Here was a girl who had been brought up
+"by hand," as she would have said with a sneer a few hours before, and
+she would have despised her for it. She raised up on one elbow and
+leaned over once more to watch the delicate profile of this gentle
+maiden, in the dim fitful light of the city night that came through the
+one little window. There had been something appealing in the beauty and
+frankness of the girl bride, something appalling in the situation she
+had found herself in. Jane Carson didn't know whether she was doing
+right or not to help this stray bride. It made her catch her breath to
+think how she might be bringing all the power of the law and of money
+upon her reckless young head, but she meant to do it, just the same.
+
+Elizabeth Stanhope! What a beautiful name! It fitted right in with all
+the romance Jane had ever dreamed. If she only could write scenarios,
+what a thriller this would make!
+
+Then she lay down and fell to planning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+THE morning dawned, and still no word from the missing bride. But the
+brief guarded sentences which Herbert Hutton had telephoned to the
+newspapers had been somehow sidetracked, and in their place a ghastly
+story had leaked out which some poor, hard-pressed reporter had gleaned
+from the gossip in the church and hurried off to put into type before
+there was time for it to be denied. Hot foot the story had run, and
+great headlines proclaimed the escape of Betty even while the family
+were carefully paving the way for the report of a protracted illness and
+absence, if need be, till they could find trace of her. The sun rose
+brightly and made weird gleaming of the silver wire on which the dying
+roses hung. The air was heavy with their breath, and the rooms in the
+early garish light looked out of place as if some fairy wand had failed
+to break the incantation at the right hour and left a piece of Magicland
+behind. The parlor maid went about uncertainly, scarcely knowing what to
+do and what to leave undone, and the milk cars, and newsboys, and early
+laborers began to make a clatter of every day on the streets. The
+morning paper, flung across the steps with Betty's picture, where
+Betty's reluctant feet had gone a few hours before, seemed to mock at
+life, and upstairs the man that Betty thought she went out to marry, lay
+in a heavy stupor of sleep. Happy Betty, to be resting beneath the
+coarse sheet of the kindly working girl, sleeping the sleep of
+exhaustion and youth in safety, two miles from the rose-bowered rooms!
+
+Long before day had really started in the great city Jane Carson was up
+and at work. She dressed swiftly and silently, then went to her little
+trunk, and from it selected a simple wardrobe of coarse clean garments.
+One needed mending and two buttons were off. She sat by the dingy window
+and strained her eyes in the dawn to make the necessary repairs. She
+hesitated long over the pasteboard suit-box that she drew from under the
+bed. It contained a new dark blue serge dress for which she had saved a
+long time and in which she had intended to appear at church next
+Sabbath. She was divided between her desire to robe the exquisite little
+guest in its pristine folds and her longing to wear it herself. There
+was a sense of justice also which entered into the matter. If that
+elegant wedding dress was to be hers, and all those wonderful silk
+underclothes, which very likely she would never allow herself to wear,
+for they would be out of place on a poor working girl, it was not fair
+to repay their donor in old clothes. She decided to give the runaway
+bride her new blue serge. With just a regretful bit of a sigh she laid
+it out on the foot of the bed, and carefully spread out the tissue
+papers and folded the white satin garments away out of sight, finishing
+the bundle with a thick wrapping of old newspapers from a pile behind
+the door and tying it securely. She added a few pins to make the matter
+more sure, and got out a stub of a pencil and labeled it in large
+letters, "My summer dresses," then shoved it far back under the bed. If
+any seeking detective came he would not be likely to bother with that,
+and he might search her trunk in vain for white satin slippers and
+wedding veils.
+
+Breakfast was next, and she put on her cloak and hurried out for
+supplies for the larder had been heavily depleted the night before to
+provide for her guest. With a tender glance toward the sleeper she
+slipped the key from the lock and placed it in the outside of the door,
+silently locking her guest within. Now there would be no danger of any
+one spiriting her away while she was gone, and no danger that the girl
+might wake up and depart in her absence.
+
+She stopped a newsboy on his way to the subway and bought a paper,
+thrilling at the thought that there might be something in it about the
+girl who lay asleep in her little hall bedroom.
+
+While she waited for her bundles she stole a glance at her paper, and
+there on the front page in big letters ran the heading:
+
+ STANHOPE WEDDING
+ HELD UP AT ALTAR BY
+ UNCONSCIOUS BRIDE
+
+ _Relatives Seek Runaway Girl Who is
+ Thought to be Insane_
+
+She caught her breath and rolled the paper in a little wad, stuffing it
+carelessly into her pocket. She could not read any more of that in
+public. She hastened back to her room.
+
+Betty was still sleeping. Jane stood watching her for a full minute with
+awe in her face. She could not but recognize the difference between
+herself and this fine sweet product of civilization and wealth. With the
+gold curls tossed back like a ripple of sunshine, and a pathetic little
+droop at the corners of her sweet mouth, nothing lovelier could be. Jane
+hurried to the window and turned her back on the bed while she perused
+the paper, her rage rising at the theories put forth. It was even
+hinted that her mother had been insane. Jane turned again and looked
+hard at the young sleeper, and the idea crossed her mind that even she
+might be deceived. Still, she was willing to trust her judgment that
+this girl was entirely sane, and anyhow she meant to help her! She
+stuffed the paper down behind the trunk and began to get breakfast. When
+it was almost ready she gently awoke the sleeper.
+
+Betty started at the light touch on her shoulder and looked wildly
+around at the strange room and stranger face of the other girl. In the
+dim light of the evening she had scarcely got to know Jane's face. But
+in a moment all the happenings of the day before came back, and she sat
+up excitedly.
+
+"I ought to have got away before it was light," she said gripping her
+hands together. "I wonder where I could go, Jane?" It was pleasant to
+call this girl by her first name. Betty felt that she was a tower of
+strength, and so kind.
+
+"I have this ring," she said, slipping off an exquisite diamond and
+holding it out. "Do you suppose there would be any way I could get money
+enough to travel somewhere with this? If I can't I'll have to walk, and
+I can't get far in a day that way."
+
+Betty was almost light-hearted, and smiling. The night had passed and no
+one had come. Perhaps after all she was going to get away without being
+stopped.
+
+Jane's face set grimly.
+
+"I guess there won't be any walking for you. You'll have to travel
+regular. It wouldn't be safe. And you don't want no rich jewelry along
+either. Was that your wedding ring?"
+
+"Oh, no; father gave it to me. It was mother's, but I guess they'd want
+me to use it now. I haven't anything else."
+
+"Of course," said Jane shortly to hide the emotion in her voice. "Now
+eat this while I talk," thrusting a plate of buttered toast and a glass
+of orange marmalade at her, and hastening to pour an inviting cup of
+coffee.
+
+"Now, I been thinking," she said sitting down on the edge of the bed and
+eating bits of the piece of toast she had burned--Betty's was toasted
+beautifully--"I got a plan. I think you better go to Ma. She's got room
+enough for you for a while, and I want my sister to come over and take a
+place I can get fer her. If you was there she could leave. Mebbe you
+could help Ma with the kids. Of course we're poor and you ain't used to
+common things like we have them, but I guess you ain't got much choice
+in your fix. I got a paper this morning. They're huntin' fer you hot
+foot. They say you was temperary insane, an' 'f I was you I'd keep out
+o' their way a while. You lay low an' I'll keep my eye out and let you
+know, I've got a little money under the mattrass I can let you have till
+that ring gets sold. You can leave it with me an' I'll do the best I can
+if you think you can trust me. Of course I'm a stranger, but then, land!
+So are you! We just _gotta_ trust each other. And I'm sending you to my
+mother if you'll go!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, springing up and hugging her impulsively, "you're so
+good! To think I should find somebody just like that right in the street
+when I needed you so. I almost think God did it!"
+
+"Well, mebbe!" said Jane, in her embarrassment turning to hang up a
+skirt that had fallen from its hook. "That's what they say sometimes in
+Chrishun Deavor meetin'. Ever go to Chrishun Deavor? Better go when you
+get out home. They have awful good socials an' ice cream, and you'll
+meet some real nice folks. We've got a peach of a minister, and his wife
+is perfec'ly dandy. I tell you I missed 'em when I came to the city!
+They was always doing something nice fer the young folks."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty, wondering if she might really be going to
+live like other girls. Then the shadow of her danger fell over her once
+more, and her cheek paled.
+
+"If I can only get there safely," she shuddered. "Oh, Jane! You can't
+understand what it would be to have to go back!"
+
+"Well, you're not going back. You're going to Tinsdale, and nobody's
+going to find you ever, unless you want 'em to! See? Now, listen! We
+haven't any time to waste. You oughtta get off on the ten o'clock train.
+I put out some clothes there for yeh. They ain't like yours, but it
+won't do fer you to go dressed like a millionairess. Folks out to
+Tinsdale would suspect yeh right off the bat. You gotta go plain like
+me, and it's this way: You're a friend I picked up in the city whose
+mother is dead and you need country air a while, see? So I sent you home
+to stay with Ma till you got strong again. I'm wirin' Ma. She'll
+understand. She always does. I kinda run Ma anyhow. She thinks the sun
+rises an' sets in me, so she'll do just what I say."
+
+"I'm afraid I oughtn't to intrude," said Betty soberly, taking up the
+coarse, elaborately trimmed lingerie with a curious look, and trying not
+to seem to notice that it was different from any she had ever worn
+before.
+
+"Say! Looka here!" said Jane Carson, facing round from her coffee cup on
+the washstand. "I'm sorry to criticize, but if you could just talk a
+little slang or something. Folks'll never think you belong to me.
+_'Intrude!'_ Now, that sounds stuck up! You oughtta say 'be in the way,'
+or something natural like that. See?"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't," said Betty dubiously, "but I'll try."
+
+"You're all right, Kid," said Jane with compunction in her voice. "Just
+let yourself down a little like I do, and remember you don't wear silk
+onderclothes now. I'm afraid those stockings won't feel very good after
+yours, but you gotta be careful. An' 'f I was you I'd cut my hair off, I
+really would. It's an awful pity, it's so pretty, but it'll grow again.
+How old are you?"
+
+"Almost twenty-one," said Betty thoughtfully. "Just three months more
+and I'll be twenty-one."
+
+"H'm! Of age!" said Jane with a sharp significant look at her, as if a
+new thought had occurred. "Well, you don't look it! You could pass for
+fifteen, especially if you had your hair bobbed. I can do it for you if
+you say so."
+
+"All right," said Betty promptly without a qualm. "I always wanted it
+short. It's an awful nuisance to comb."
+
+"That's the talk!" said Jane. "Say 'awful' a lot, and you'll kinda get
+into the hang of it. It sounds more--well, _natural_, you know; not like
+society talk. Here, sit down and I'll do it quick before you get cold
+feet. I sure do hate to drop them curls, but I guess it's best."
+
+The scissors snipped, snipped, and the lovely strands of bright hair
+fell on the paper Jane had spread for them. Betty sat cropped like a
+sweet young boy. Jane stood back and surveyed the effect through her
+lashes approvingly. She knew the exact angle at which the hair should
+splash out on the cheek to be stylish. She had often contemplated
+cutting her own, only that her mother had begged her not to, and she
+realized that her hair was straight as a die and would never submit to
+being tortured into that alluring wave over the ear and out toward the
+cheekbone. But this sweet young thing was a darling! She felt that the
+daring deed had been a success.
+
+"I got a bottle of stuff to make your hair dark," she remarked. "I guess
+we better put it on. That hair of yours is kinda conspicuous, you know,
+even when it's cut off. It won't do you any harm. It washes off soon."
+And she dashed something on the yellow hair. Betty sat with closed eyes
+and submitted. Then her mentor burnt a cork and put a touch to the
+eyebrows that made a different Betty out of her. A soft smudge of dark
+under her eyes and a touch of talcum powder gave her a sickly complexion
+and when Betty stood up and looked in the glass she did not know
+herself. Jane finished the toilet by a smart though somewhat shabby
+black hat pulled well down over Betty's eyes, and a pair of gray cotton
+gloves, somewhat worn at the fingers. The high-laced boots she put upon
+the girl's feet were two sizes too large, and wobbled frightfully, but
+they did well enough, and there seemed nothing more to be desired.
+
+"Now," said Jane as she pinned on her own hat, "you've gotta have a name
+to go by. I guess you better be Lizzie Hope. It kinda belongs to yeh,
+and yet nobody'd recognize it. You don't need to tell Ma anything you
+don't want to, and you can tell her I'll write a letter to-night all
+about it. Now come on! We gotta go on the trolley a piece. I don't see
+havin' you leave from the General Station. We'll go up to the Junction
+and get the train there."
+
+With an odd feeling that she was bidding good-by to herself forever and
+was about to become somebody else, Betty gave one more glance at the
+slim boylike creature in the little mirror over the washstand and
+followed Jane out of the room, shuffling along in the big high-heeled
+boots, quite unlike the Betty that she was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+WARREN REYBURN laid down his pen and shoved back his office chair
+impatiently, stretching out his long muscular limbs nervously and
+rubbing his hands over his eyes as if to clear them from annoying
+visions.
+
+James Ryan, his office boy and stenographer, watched him furtively from
+one corner of his eye, while his fingers whirled the typewriter on
+through the letter he was typing. James wanted to take his girl to the
+movies that evening and he hadn't had a chance to see her the day
+before. He was wondering if Mr. Reyburn would go out in time for him to
+call her up at her noon hour. He was a very temperamental stenographer
+and understood the moods and tenses of his most temperamental employer
+fully. It was all in knowing how to manage him. James was most
+deferential, and knew when to keep still and not ask questions. This was
+one of the mornings when he went to the dictionary himself when he
+wasn't sure of a word rather than break the ominous silence. Not that
+Mr. Reyburn was a hard master, quite the contrary, but this was James's
+first place straight from his brief course at business school, and he
+was making a big bluff of being an old experienced hand.
+
+There was not much business to be done. This was Warren Reyburn's "first
+place" also in the world of business since finishing his law course, and
+he was making a big bluff at being very busy, to cover up a sore heart
+and an anxious mind. It was being borne in upon him gradually that he
+was not a shouting success in business so far. The rosy dreams that had
+floated near all through his days of hard study had one by one left him,
+until his path was now leading through a murky gray way with little hope
+ahead. Nothing but sheer grit kept him at it, and he began to wonder how
+long he could stick it out if nothing turned up.
+
+True, he might have accepted an offer that even now lay open on his
+desk; a tempting offer, too, from a big corporation who recognized the
+influence of his old family upon their particular line of business; but
+it was a line that his father and his grandfather had scorned to touch,
+and he had grown up with an honest contempt for it. He just could not
+bring himself to wrest the living from the poor and needy, and plunder
+the unsuspecting, and he knew that was what it would be if he closed
+with this offer. Not yet had he been reduced to such depths, he told
+himself, shutting his fine lips in a firm curve. "No, not if he
+starved!"
+
+That was the legitimate worry that ruffled his handsome brow as he sat
+before his desk frowning at that letter. He meant to begin dictation on
+its answer in another five minutes or so, but meantime he was forcing
+himself to go over every point and make it strong and clear to himself,
+so that he should say, "No!" strongly and clearly to the corporation. It
+might do harm to make his reason for declining so plain, but he owed it
+to his self-respect to give it nevertheless, and he meant to do so.
+After all, he had no business so far to harm, so what did it matter? If
+nothing turned up pretty soon to give him a start he would have to
+change his whole plan of life and take up something else where one did
+not have to wait for a reputation before he could have a chance to show
+what was in him.
+
+But underneath the legitimate reason for his annoyance this morning
+there ran a most foolish little fretting, a haunting discomfort.
+
+He had taken his cousin to a wedding the night before because her
+husband had been called away on business, and she had no one to escort
+her. They had been late and the church was crowded. He had had to
+stand, and as he idly looked over the audience he suddenly looked full
+into the great sad eyes of the sweetest little bride he had ever seen.
+He had not been a young man to spend his time over pretty faces,
+although there were one or two nice girls in whom he was mildly
+interested. He had even gone so far as to wonder now and then which of
+them he would be willing to see sitting at his table day after day the
+rest of his life, and he had not yet come to a satisfactory conclusion.
+His cousin often rallied him about getting married, but he always told
+her it would be time enough to think about that when he had an income to
+offer her.
+
+But when he saw that flower-face, his attention was held at once.
+Somehow he felt as if he had not known there was a face like that in all
+the world, so like a child's, with frank yet modest droop to the head,
+and the simplicity of an angel, yet the sadness of a sacrificial
+offering. Unbidden, a great desire sprang up to lift for her whatever
+burden she was bearing, and bring light into those sad eyes. Of course
+it was a passing sensation, but his eyes had traveled involuntarily to
+the front of the church to inspect the handsome forbidding face of the
+bridegroom, and with instant dissatisfaction he looked back to the girl
+once more and watched her come up to the altar, speculating as those
+who love to study humanity are wont to do when they find an interesting
+subject. How had those two types ever happened to come together? The
+man's part in it was plain. He was the kind who go about seeking whom
+they may devour, thought Warren Reyburn. But the woman! How could a
+wise-eyed child like that have been deceived by a handsome face? Well,
+it was all speculation of course, and he had nothing to do with any of
+them. They were strangers to him and probably always would be. But he
+had no conception at that time what a small world he lived in, nor how
+near the big experiences of life lie all about us.
+
+He watched the lovely bride as all the audience watched her until he saw
+her fall, and then he started forward without in the least realizing
+what he was doing. He found himself half way up the side aisle to the
+altar before he came to himself and forced his feet back to where his
+cousin was sitting. Of course he had no right up there, and what could
+he do when there were so many of her friends and relatives about her?
+
+His position near the side door through which they carried her made it
+quite possible for him to look down into her still face as they took her
+to the vestry room, and he found a great satisfaction in seeing that
+she was even more beautiful at close hand than at a distance. He
+wondered afterward why his mind had laid so much stress upon the fact
+that her skin was lovely like a baby's without any sign of cosmetics. He
+told himself that it was merely his delight to learn that there was such
+a type, and that it ran true.
+
+He was therefore not a little disappointed that the minister, after the
+congregation had waited an unconscionable time for the return of the
+bride, came out and announced that owing to her continued collapse the
+ceremony would have to be postponed. The clatter of polite wonder and
+gossip annoyed him beyond measure, and he was actually cross with his
+cousin on the way home when she ranted on about the way girls nowadays
+were brought up, coddled, so that a breath would blow them away. Somehow
+she had not looked like that kind of a girl.
+
+But when the morning papers came out with sensational headlines
+proclaiming that the bride had run away, and suggesting all sorts of
+unpleasant things about her, he felt a secret exultation that she had
+been brave enough to do so. It was as if he had found that her spirit
+was as wise and beautiful as her face had been. His interest in the
+matter exceeded all common sense and he was annoyed and impatient with
+himself more than he cared to own. Never before had a face lured his
+thoughts like this one. He told himself that his business was getting on
+his nerves, and that as soon as he could be sure about one or two little
+matters that he hoped would fall into his hands to transact, he would
+take a few days off and run down to the shore.
+
+Again and again the little white bride came across his vision and
+thoughts, and hindered the courteous but stinging phrases with which he
+had intended to illumine his letter. At last he gave it up and taking
+his hat went out in the keen November air for a walk to clear his brain.
+
+This was James Ryan's opportunity. It was almost twelve o'clock and no
+harm in calling the "forelady" in the cotton blouse department of the
+big factory. He swung to the telephone with alacrity.
+
+"I want to speak with Miss Carson, please. Yes, Miss J. Carson. Is that
+Miss Carson? Oh, hello, Jane, is that you?"
+
+"Yes, it is _Mister_ Ryan," answered Jane sweetly.
+
+"Jane!"
+
+"Well, didn't you 'Miss Carson' me?"
+
+"Give it up, Jane. You win. Say, Jane!"
+
+"Well, Jimmie?"
+
+"That's my girl, say how about that wedding veil? Been thinking any more
+about it?"
+
+There was silence for a moment, then a conscious giggle, the full
+significance of which James Ryan was not in a position to figure out.
+
+"Say, Jimmie, quit your kiddin'! You mustn't say things like that over
+the 'phone."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"'Cause. Folks might listen."
+
+"I should worry! Well, since you say so. How about seein' a show
+together to-night?"
+
+"Fine an' dandy, Jimmie! I'll be ready at the usual time. I gotta go
+now, the boss is comin'. So long, Jimmie!"
+
+"So long, darling!"
+
+But the receiver at the other end hung up with a click, while Jane with
+a smile on her lips thought of the pasteboard box under her bed and
+wondered what Jimmie would say if he could know. For Jane had fully made
+up her mind that Jimmie was not to know. Not at present, anyhow. Some
+time she might tell him if things turned out all right, but she knew
+just what lordly masculine advice and criticism would lie upon James
+Ryan's lips if she attempted to tell him about her strange and wonderful
+guest of the night before. Maybe she was a fool to have trusted a
+stranger that way. Maybe the girl would turn out to be insane or wrong
+somehow, and trouble come, but she didn't believe it; and anyhow, she
+was going to wait, until she saw what happened next before she got
+Jimmie mixed up in it. Besides, the secret wasn't hers to tell. She had
+promised Betty, and she always kept her promises. That was one reason
+why she was so slow in promising to think about a wedding veil in
+response to James Ryan's oft repeated question.
+
+That evening on the way to the movies Jane instituted an investigation.
+
+"Jimmie, what kind of a man is your boss?"
+
+"White man!" said Jimmie promptly.
+
+"Aw! Cut it out, James Ryan! I don't mean how'd s'e look, or what color
+is he; I mean what kind of a _man_ is he?"
+
+"Well, that's the answer. White man! What's the matter of that? I said
+it and I meant it. He's white if there ever was one!"
+
+"Oh, that!" said Miss Carson in scorn. "Of course I know he's a peach.
+If he wasn't you wouldn't be workin' for him. What I mean, is he a
+_snob_?"
+
+"No chance!"
+
+"Well, I saw him _with_ 'em last night. I was passin' that big church
+up Spruce Street and I saw him standin' with his arms folded so----" she
+paused on the sidewalk and indicated his pose. "It was a swell weddin'
+and the place was full up. He had a big white front an' a clawhammer
+coat. I know it was him 'cause I took a good look at him that time you
+pointed him out at church that evenin'. I wondered was he _in with_ them
+swells?"
+
+Her tone expressed scorn and not a little anxiety, as if she had asked
+whether he frequented places of low reputation.
+
+"Oh, if you mean, _could_ he be, why that's a diffrunt thing!" said
+James the wise. "_Sure_, he could be if he wanted, I guess. He's got a
+good family. His uncle's some high muckymuck, and you often see his
+aunts' and cousins' names in the paper giving teas and receptions and
+going places. But he don't seem to go much. I often hear folks ask him
+why he wasn't some place last night, or 'phone to know if he won't come,
+and he always says he can't spare the time, or he can't afford it, or
+something like that."
+
+"Ain't he rich, Jimmie?"
+
+"Well, no, not exactly. He may have some money put away, or left him by
+some one. If he don't have I can't fer the life of me see how he lives.
+But he certainly don't get it in fees. I often wonder where my salary
+comes from, but it always does, regular as the clock."
+
+"Jimmie, doesn't he have _any_ business at all?"
+
+"Oh, yes he has business, but it ain't the paying kind. Fer instance,
+there was a man in to-day trying to get his house back that another man
+took away from him, and my boss _took the case_! He took it _right off
+the bat_ without waiting to see whether the man could pay him anything
+or not! He can't! He's only a poor laboring man, and a rich man stole
+his house. Just out an' out stole it, you know. It's how he got rich.
+Like as not we'll lose it, too, those rich men have so many ways of
+crawling out of a thing and making it look nice to the world. Oh, he'll
+get a fee, of course--twenty-five dollars, perhaps--but what's
+twenty-five dollars, and like as not never get even the whole of that,
+or have to wait for it? Why, it wouldn't keep _me_ in his office long!
+Then there was a girl trying to get hold of the money her own father
+left her, and her uncle frittered away and pertends it cost him all
+that, and _he's_ been supporting _her_! Well, we took that, too, and we
+won't get much out of that even if we do win. Then there come along one
+of these here rich guys with a pocket full of money and a nice slick
+tongue wanting to be protected from the law in some devilment, and _him
+we turned down flat_! That's how it goes in our office. I can't just
+figger out how it's coming out! But he's a good guy, a white man if
+there ever was one!"
+
+"I should say!" responded Jane with shining eyes. "Say, Jimmie, what's
+the matter of us throwin' a little business in his way--real, payin'
+business, I mean?"
+
+"Fat chance!" said Jimmie dryly.
+
+"You never can tell!" answered Jane dreamily. "I'm goin' to think about
+it. Our fact'ry has lawyers sometimes. I might speak to the boss."
+
+"Do!" said Jimmie sarcastically! "And have yer labor for yer pains!
+We'll prob'ly turn _them_ down. Fact'ries are _always_ doing things they
+hadn't ought to."
+
+But Jane was silent and thoughtful, and they were presently lost in the
+charms of Mary Pickford.
+
+The evening papers came out with pictures of Elizabeth Stanhope and her
+bridegroom that was to have been. Jane cut away the bridegroom and
+pasted the bride's picture in the flyleaf of her Bible, then hid it away
+in the bottom of her trunk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+WHEN Betty found herself seated on the day coach of a way train, jogging
+along toward a town she had never seen and away from the scenes and
+people of her childhood, she found herself trembling violently. It was
+as if she had suddenly been placed in an airplane all by herself and
+started off to the moon without any knowledge of her motor power or
+destination. It both frightened and exhilarated her. She wanted to cry
+and she wanted to laugh, but she did neither. Instead she sat demurely
+for the first hour and a half looking out of the window like any
+traveler, scarcely turning her head nor looking at anything in the car.
+It seemed to her that there might be a detective in every seat just
+waiting for her to lift her eyes that he might recognize her. But
+gradually as the time dragged by and the landscape grew monotonous she
+began to feel a little more at her ease. Furtively she studied her
+neighbors. She had seldom traveled in a common car, and it was new to
+her to study all types as she could see them here. She smiled at a dirty
+baby and wished she had something to give it. She studied the careworn
+man and the woman in black who wept behind her veil and would not smile
+no matter how hard the man tried to make her. It was a revelation to her
+that any man would try as hard as that to make a woman smile. She
+watched the Italian family with five children and nine bundles, and
+counted the colors on a smart young woman who got in at a way station.
+Every minute of the day was interesting. Every mile of dreary November
+landscape that whirled by gave her more freedom.
+
+She opened the little shabby handbag that Jane had given her and got out
+the bit of mirror one inch by an inch and a half backed with pasteboard
+on which lingered particles of the original green taffeta lining and
+studied her own strange face, trying to get used to her new self and her
+new name. Jane had written it, Lizzie Hope, on the back of the envelope
+containing the address of Mrs. Carson. It seemed somehow an
+identification card. She studied it curiously and wondered if Lizzie
+Hope was going to be any happier than Betty Stanhope had been. And then
+she fell to thinking over the strange experiences of the last
+twenty-four hours and wondering whether she had done right or not, and
+whether her father would have been disappointed in her, "ashamed of
+her," as her stepmother had said. Somehow Jane had made her feel that
+he would not, and she was more light-hearted than she had been for many
+a day.
+
+Late in the afternoon she began to wonder what Tinsdale would be like.
+In the shabby handbag was her ticket to Tinsdale and eight dollars and a
+half in change. It made her feel richer than she had ever felt in her
+life, although she had never been stinted as to pocket money. But this
+was her very own, for her needs, and nobody but herself to say how she
+should spend either it or her time.
+
+Little towns came in sight and passed, each one with one or two
+churches, a schoolhouse, a lot of tiny houses. Would Tinsdale look this
+way? How safe these places seemed, yet lonely, too! Still, no one would
+ever think of looking for her in a lonely little village.
+
+They passed a big brick institution, and she made out the words, "State
+Asylum," and shuddered inwardly as she thought of what Jane had told her
+about the morning paper. Suppose they should hunt her up and _put her in
+an insane asylum_, just to show the world that it had not been their
+fault that she had run away from her wedding! The thought was appalling.
+She dropped her head on her hand with her face toward the window and
+tried to pretend she was asleep and hide the tears that would come, but
+presently a boy came in at the station with a big basket and she bought
+a ham sandwich and an apple. It tasted good. She had not expected that
+it would. She decided that she must have been pretty hungry and then
+fell to counting her money, aghast that the meager supper had made such
+a hole in her capital. She must be very careful. This might be all the
+money she would have for a very long time, and there was no telling what
+kind of an impossible place she was going to. She might have to get away
+as eagerly as she had come. Jane was all right, but that was not saying
+that her mother and sisters would be.
+
+It was growing dark, and the lights were lit in the car. All the little
+Italian babies had been given drinks of water, and strange things to
+eat, and tumbled to sleep across laps and on seats, anywhere they would
+stick. They looked so funny and dirty and pitiful with their faces all
+streaked with soot and molasses candy that somebody had given them. The
+mother looked tired and greasy and the father was fat and dark, with
+unpleasant black eyes that seemed to roll a great deal. Yet he was kind
+to the babies and his wife seemed to like him. She wondered what kind of
+a home they had, and what relation the young fellow with the shiny dark
+curls bore to them. He seemed to take as much care of the babies as did
+their father and mother.
+
+The lights were flickering out in the villages now and gave a friendly
+inhabited look to the houses. Sometimes when the train paused at
+stations Betty could see people moving back and forth at what seemed to
+be kitchen tables and little children bringing dishes out, all working
+together. It looked pleasant and she wondered if it would be like that
+where she was going. A big lump of loneliness was growing in her throat.
+It was one thing to run away from something that you hated, but it was
+another to jump into a new life where one neither knew nor was known.
+Betty began to shrink inexpressibly from it all. Not that she wanted to
+go back! Oh, no; far from it! But once when they passed a little white
+cemetery with tall dark fir trees waving guardingly above the white
+stones she looked out almost wistfully. If she were lying in one of
+those beside her father and mother how safe and rested she would be. She
+wouldn't have to worry any more. What was it like where father and
+mother had gone? Was it a real place? Or was that just the end when one
+died? Well, if she were sure it was all she would not care. She would be
+willing to just go out and not be. But somehow that didn't seem to be
+the commonly accepted belief. There was always a beyond in most people's
+minds, and a fear of just what Betty didn't know. She was a good deal of
+a heathen, though she did not know that either.
+
+Then, just as she was floundering into a lot of theological mysteries of
+her own discovery the nasal voice of the conductor called out:
+"Tinsdale! Tinsdale!" and she hurried to her feet in something of a
+panic, conscious of her short hair and queer clothes.
+
+Down on the platform she stood a minute trying to get used to her feet,
+they felt so numb and empty from long sitting. Her head swam just a
+little, too, and the lights on the station and in the houses near by
+seemed to dance around her weirdly. She had a feeling that she would
+rather wait until the train was gone before she began to search for her
+new home, and then when the wheels ground and began to turn and the
+conductor shouted "All aboard!" and swung himself up the step as she had
+seen him do a hundred times that afternoon, a queer sinking feeling of
+loneliness possessed her, and she almost wanted to catch the rail and
+swing back on again as the next pair of car steps flung by her.
+
+Then a voice that sounded a little like Jane's said pleasantly in her
+ear: "Is this Lizzie Hope?" and Betty turned with a thrill of actual
+fright to face Nellie Carson and her little sister Emily.
+
+"Bobbie'll be here in a minute to carry your suitcase," said Nellie
+efficiently; "he just went over to see if he could borrow Jake Peter's
+wheelbarrow in case you had a trunk. You didn't bring your trunk? O, but
+you're going to stay, aren't you? I'm goin' up to the city to take a
+p'sition, and Mother'd be awful lonesome. Sometime of course we'll send
+fer them to come, but now the children's little an' the country's better
+fer them. They gotta go to school awhile. You'll stay, won't you?"
+
+"How do you know you'll want me?" laughed Betty, at her ease in this
+unexpected air of welcome.
+
+"Why, of course we'd want you. Jane sent you. Jane wouldn't of sent you
+if you hadn't been a good scout. Jane knows. Besides, I've got two eyes,
+haven't I? I guess I can tell right off."
+
+Emily's shy little hand stole into Betty's and the little girl looked
+up:
+
+"I'm awful glad you come! I think you're awful pretty!"
+
+"Thank you!" said Betty, warmly squeezing the little confiding hand. It
+was the first time in her life that a little child had come close to her
+in this confiding way. Her life had not been among children.
+
+Then Bob whirled up, bareheaded, freckled, whistling, efficient, and
+about twelve years old. He grabbed the suitcase, eyed the stranger with
+a pleasant grin, and stamped off into the darkness ahead of them.
+
+It was a new experience to Betty to be walking down a village street
+with little houses on each side and lights and warmth and heads bobbing
+through the windows. It stirred some memory of long ago, before she
+could scarcely remember. She wondered, had her own mother ever lived in
+a small village?
+
+"That's our church," confided Emily, as they passed a large frame
+building with pointed steeple and belfry. "They're goin' to have a
+entertainment t'morra night, an' we're all goin' and Ma said you cud go
+too."
+
+"Isn't that lovely!" said Betty, feeling a sudden lump like tears in her
+throat. It was just like living out a fairy story. She hadn't expected
+to be taken right in to family life this way.
+
+"But how did you know I was coming on that train?" she asked the older
+girl suddenly. "Jane said she was going to telegraph, but I expected to
+have to hunt around to find the house."
+
+"Oh, we just came down to every train after the telegram came. This is
+the last train to-night, and we were awful scared for fear you wouldn't
+come till morning, an' have to stay on the train all night. Ma says it
+isn't nice for a girl to have to travel alone at night. Ma always makes
+Jane and me go daytimes."
+
+"It was just lovely of you," said Betty, wondering if she was talking
+"natural" enough to please Jane.
+
+"Did you bob you hair 'cause you had a fever?" asked Nellie enviously.
+
+"No," said Betty, "that is, I haven't been very well, and I thought it
+might be good for me," she finished, wondering how many questions like
+that it was going to be hard for her to answer without telling a lie. A
+lie was something that her father had made her feel would hurt him more
+deeply than anything else she could do.
+
+"I just love it," said Nellie enthusiastically. "I wanted to cut mine,
+an' so did Jane, but Ma wouldn't let us. She says God gave us our hair,
+an' we oughtta take care of it."
+
+"That's true, too," said Betty. "I never thought about that. But I guess
+mine will grow again after a while. I think it will be less trouble this
+way. But it's very dirty with traveling. I think I'll have to wash it
+before I put it on a pillow."
+
+That had troubled Betty greatly. She didn't know how to get rid of that
+hair dye before Jane's family got used to having it dark.
+
+"Sure, you can wash it, if you ain't 'fraid of takin' cold. There's lots
+of hot water. Ma thought you'd maybe want to take a bath. We've got a
+big tin bath-tub out in the back shed. Ma bought it off the Joneses when
+they got their porcelain one put into their house. We don't have no
+runnin' water but we have an awful good well. Here's our house. I guess
+Bob's got there first. See, Ma's out on the steps waitin' fer us."
+
+The house was a square wooden affair, long wanting paint, and trimmed
+with little scrollwork around the diminutive front porch. The color was
+indescribable, blending well into the surroundings either day or night.
+It had a cheerful, decent look, but very tiny. There was a small yard
+about it with a picket fence, and a leafless lilac bush. A cheerful
+barberry bush flanked the gate on either side. The front door was open
+into a tiny hall and beyond the light streamed forth from a glass lamp
+set on a pleasant dining-room table covered with a red cloth. Betty
+stepped inside the gate and found herself enveloped in two motherly
+arms, and then led into the light and warmth of the family dining-room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THERE was a kettle of stew on the stove in the kitchen, kept hot from
+supper for Betty, with fresh dumplings just mixed before the train came
+in, and bread and butter with apple sauce and cookies. They made her sit
+right down and eat, before she even took her hat off, and they all sat
+around her and talked while she ate. It made her feel very much at home
+as if somehow she was a real relative.
+
+It came over her once how different all this was from the house which
+she had called home all her life. The fine napery, the cut glass and
+silver, the stately butler! And here was she eating off a stone china
+plate thick enough for a table top, with a steel knife and fork and a
+spoon with the silver worn off the bowl. She could not help wondering
+what her stepmother would have said to the red and white tablecloth, and
+the green shades at the windows. There was an old sofa covered with
+carpet in the room, with a flannel patchwork pillow, and a cat cuddled
+up cosily beside it purring away like a tea-kettle boiling. Somehow,
+poor as it was, it seemed infinitely more attractive than any room she
+had ever seen before, and she was charmed with the whole family. Bobbie
+sat at the other end of the table with his elbows on the table and his
+round eyes on her. When she smiled at him he winked one eye and grinned
+and then wriggled down under the table out of sight.
+
+The mother had tired kind eyes and a firm cheerful mouth like Jane's.
+She took Betty right in as if she had been her sister's child.
+
+"Come, now, get back there, Emily. Don't hang on Lizzie. She'll be tired
+to death of you right at the start. Give her a little peace while she
+eats her supper. How long have you and Jane been friends, Lizzie?" she
+asked, eager for news of her own daughter.
+
+Betty's cheeks flushed and her eyes grew troubled. She was very much
+afraid that being Lizzie was going to be hard work:
+
+"Why, not so very long," she said hesitatingly.
+
+"Are you one of the girls in her factory?"
+
+"Oh, no!" said Betty wildly, wondering what would come next. "We--just
+met--that is--why--_out one evening_!" she finished desperately.
+
+"Oh, I see!" said the mother. "Yes, she wrote about going out sometimes,
+mostly to the movies. And to church. My children always make it a point
+to go to church wherever they are. I brought 'em up that way. I hope you
+go to church."
+
+"I shall love to," said Betty eagerly.
+
+"Is your mother living?" was the next question.
+
+"No," answered Betty. "Mother and father are both dead and I've been
+having rather a hard time. Jane was kind to me when I was in trouble."
+
+"I'll warrant you! That's Jane!" beamed her mother happily. "Jane always
+was a good girl, if I do say so. I knew Jane was at her tricks again
+when she sent me that telegram."
+
+"Ma's got you a place already!" burst out Nellie eagerly.
+
+"Now, Nellie, you said you'd let Ma tell that!" reproached Bob. "You
+never can keep your mouth shut."
+
+"There! There! Bob, don't spoil the evening with anything unkind,"
+warned the mother. "Yes, Lizzie, I got you a position. It just happened
+I had the chance, and I took it, though I don't really b'lieve that
+anythin' in this world just happens, of course. But it did seem
+providential. Mrs. Hathaway wanted somebody to look after her little
+girl. She's only three years old and she is possessed to run away every
+chance she gets. Course I s'pose she's spoiled. Most rich children are.
+Now, my children wouldn't have run away. They always thought too much
+of what I said to make me trouble. But that's neither here nor there.
+She does it, and besides her Ma is an invalid. She had an operation, so
+she has to lie still a good bit, and can't be bothered. She wants
+somebody just to take the little girl out walking and keep her happy in
+the house, an' all."
+
+"How lovely!" exclaimed Betty. "I shall enjoy it, I know."
+
+"She's awful pretty!" declared Emily eagerly. "Got gold curls and blue
+eyes just like you, and she has ever an' ever so many little dresses,
+and wears pink shoes and blue shoes, an' rides a tricycle."
+
+"How interesting!" said Betty.
+
+"You'll get good wages," said the mother. "She said she'd give you six
+dollars a week, an' mebbe more, an' you'd get some of your meals."
+
+"Then I can pay my board to you," cried Betty.
+
+"Don't worry about that, child. We'll fix that up somehow. We're awful
+glad to have you come, and I guess we shall like each other real well.
+Now, children, it's awful late. Get to bed. Scat! Lizzie can have her
+bath an' get to bed, too. Come, mornin's half way here already!"
+
+The children said good night and Betty was introduced to the tin bath
+tub and improvised bathroom--a neat little addition to the kitchen
+evidently intended originally for a laundry. She wanted to laugh when
+she saw the primitive makeshifts, but instead the tears came into her
+eyes to think how many luxuries she had taken all her life as a matter
+of course and never realized how hard it was for people who had none. In
+fact it had never really entered her head before that there were people
+who had no bathrooms.
+
+Betty was not exactly accustomed to washing her own hair, and with the
+added problem of the dye it was quite a task; but she managed it at
+last, using all the hot water, to get it so that the rinsing water was
+clear, and her hair felt soft. Then, attired in the same warm nightgown
+she had worn the night before, which Jane had thoughtfully put in the
+suitcase--otherwise filled with old garments she wished to send
+home--Betty pattered upstairs to the little room with the sloping roof
+and the dormer window and crept into bed with Nellie. That young woman
+had purposely stayed awake, and kept Betty as long as she could talk,
+telling all the wonderful things she wanted to know about city life, and
+Betty found herself in deep water sometimes because the city life she
+knew about was so very different from the city life that Jane would
+know. But at last sleep won, and Nellie had to give up because her last
+question was answered with silence. The guest was deep in slumber.
+
+The next morning the children took her over the house, out in the yard,
+showing her everything. Then they had to take her down to the village
+and explain all about the little town and its people. They were crazy
+about Betty's beautiful hair and much disappointed when she would insist
+on wearing her hat. It was a bright sunny morning, not very cold, and
+they told her that nobody wore a hat except to church or to go on the
+train, but Betty had a feeling that her hair might attract attention,
+and in her first waking hours a great shadow of horror had settled upon
+her when she realized that her people would leave no stone unturned to
+find her. It was most important that she should do or be nothing whereby
+she might be recognized. She even thought of getting a cap and apron to
+wear when attending her small charge, but Nellie told her they didn't do
+that in the country and she would be thought stuck up, so she desisted.
+But she drew the blue serge skirt up as high above her waistband as
+possible when she dressed in the morning so that she might look like a
+little girl and no one would suspect her of being a runaway bride. Also
+she had a consultation with herself in the small hours of the morning
+while Nellie was still fast asleep, and settled with her conscience just
+what she would tell about her past and what she would keep to herself.
+There was a certain reserve that any one might have, and if she was
+frank about a few facts no one would be likely to question further.
+
+So next morning she told Mrs. Carson that since her parents' death she
+had lived with a woman who knew her father well, but lately things had
+been growing very unpleasant and she found she had to leave. She had
+left under such conditions that she could not bring away anything that
+belonged to her, so she would have to work and earn some more clothes.
+
+Mrs. Carson looked into her sweet eyes and agreed that it was the best
+thing she could do; they might follow her up and make all sorts of
+trouble for her in her new home if she wrote for her things; and so the
+matter dropped. They were simple folks, who took things at their face
+value and were not over inquisitive.
+
+On the third day there arrived a long letter from Jane in which she gave
+certain suggestions concerning the new member of the family, and ended:
+"Ma, she's got a story, but don't make her tell any more of it than she
+wants. She's awful sensitive about it, and trust me, she's all right!
+She's been through a lot. Just make her feel she's got some folks that
+loves and trusts her."
+
+Ma, wise beyond her generation and experience, said no more, and took
+the little new daughter into her heart. She took the opportunity to
+inform the village gossips that a friend of Jane's had come to rest up
+and get a year's country air, boarding with them; and so the
+amalgamation of Betty Stanhope into the life of the little town began.
+
+The "job" proved to be for only part of the day, so that Betty was free
+most of the mornings to help around the house and take almost a
+daughter's place. That she was a rare girl is proved by the way she
+entered into her new life. It was almost as if she had been born again,
+and entered into a new universe, so widely was her path diverging from
+everything which had been familiar in the old life. So deep had been her
+distress before she came into it that this new existence, despite its
+hard and unaccustomed work, seemed almost like heaven.
+
+It is true there was much bad grammar and slang, but that did not
+trouble Betty. She had been brought up to speak correctly, and it was
+second nature to her, but no one had ever drummed it into her what a
+crime against culture an illiterate way of speaking could be. She never
+got into the way of speaking that way herself, but it seemed a part of
+these people she had come to know and admire so thoroughly, as much as
+for a rose to have thorns, and so she did not mind it. Her other world
+had been so all-wrong for years that the hardships of this one were
+nothing. She watched them patch and sacrifice cheerfully to buy their
+few little plain coarse new things. She marveled at their sweetness and
+content, where those of her world would have thought they could not
+exist under the circumstances.
+
+She learned to make that good stew with carrots and celery and parsley
+and potatoes and the smallest possible amount of meat, that had tasted
+so delicious the night she arrived. She learned the charms of the common
+little bean, and was proud indeed the day she set upon the table a
+luscious pan of her own baking, rich and sweet and brown with their
+coating of molasses well baked through them. She even learned to make
+bread and never let any one guess that she had always supposed it
+something mysterious.
+
+During the week that Nellie was preparing to go to the city, Betty had
+lessons in sewing. Nellie would bring down an old garment, so faded and
+worn that it would seem only fit for the rag-bag. She would rip and
+wash, dye with a mysterious little package of stuff, press, and behold,
+there would come forth pretty breadths of cloth, blue or brown or green,
+or whatever color was desired. It seemed like magic. And then a box of
+paper-patterns would be brought out, and the whole evening would be
+spent in contriving how to get out a dress, with the help of trimmings
+or sleeves of another material. Betty would watch and gradually try to
+help, but she found there were so many strange things to be considered.
+There, for instance, was the up and down of a thing and the right and
+wrong of it. It was exactly like life. And one had to plan not to have
+both sleeves for one arm, and to have the nap of the goods running down
+always. It was as complicated as learning a new language. But at the end
+of the week there came forth two pretty dresses and a blouse. Betty, as
+she sat sewing plain seams and trying to help all she could, kept
+thinking of the many beautiful frocks she had thrown aside in the years
+gone by, and of the rich store of pretty things that she had left when
+she fled. If only Nellie and Jane and little Emily could have them! Ah,
+and if only she herself might have them now! How she needed them! For a
+girl who had always had all she wanted it was a great change to get
+along with this one coarse serge and aprons.
+
+But the sewing and other work had not occupied them so fully that they
+had not had time to introduce Betty into their little world. The very
+next evening after she arrived she had been taken to that wonderful
+church entertainment that the girls had told her about on the way from
+the station, and there she had met the minister's wife and been invited
+to her Sabbath school class.
+
+Betty would not have thought of going if Nellie and her mother had not
+insisted. In fact, she shrank unspeakably from going out into the little
+village world. But it was plain that this was expected of her, and if
+she remained here she must do as they wanted her to do. It was the least
+return she could make to these kind people.
+
+The question of whether or not she should remain began to come to her
+insistently now. The children clamored every day for her to bind herself
+for the winter, and Jane's mother had made her most welcome. She saw
+that they really wanted her; why should she not stay? And yet it did
+seem queer to arrange deliberately to spend a whole year in a poor
+uncultured family. Still, where could she go and hope to remain unknown
+if she attempted to get back into her own class? It was impossible. Her
+mother had just the one elderly cousin whom she had always secretly
+looked to to help her in any time of need, but his failing her and
+sending that telegram without even a good wish in it, just at the last
+minute, too, made her feel it was of no use to appeal to him. Besides,
+that was the first place her stepmother would seek for her. She had many
+good society friends, but none who would stand by her in trouble. No one
+with whom she had ever been intimate enough to confide in. She had been
+kept strangely alone in her little world after all, hedged in by
+servants everywhere. And now that she was suddenly on her own
+responsibility, she felt a great timidity in taking any step alone.
+Sometimes at night when she thought what she had done she was so
+frightened that her heart would beat wildly as if she were running away
+from them all yet. It was like a nightmare that pursued her.
+
+Mrs. Hathaway had sent for her and made arrangements for her to begin
+her work with the little Elise the following week when the present
+governess should leave, and Betty felt that this might prove a very
+pleasant way to earn her living. The Hathaways lived in a great brick
+house away back from the street in grounds that occupied what in the
+city would have been a whole block. There was a high hedge about the
+place so that one could not see the road, and there were flower-beds, a
+great fountain, and a rustic summerhouse. Betty did not see why days
+passed in such a pleasant place would not be delightful in summertime.
+She was not altogether sure whether she would like to have to be a sort
+of servant in the house--and of course these cold fall days she would
+have to be much in the house--but the nursery had a big fireplace in it,
+a long chest under the window where toys were kept, and many comfortable
+chairs. That ought to be pleasant, too. Besides, she was not just out
+looking for pleasant things on this trip. She was trying to get away
+from unbearable ones, and she ought to be very thankful indeed to have
+fallen on such comfort as she had.
+
+There was another element in the Carson home that drew her strongly,
+although she was shy about even thinking of it, and that was the frank,
+outspoken Christianity. "Ma" tempered all her talk with it, adjusted all
+her life to God and what He would think about her actions, spoke
+constantly of what was right and wrong. Betty had never lived in an
+atmosphere where right and wrong mattered. Something sweet and pure like
+an instinct in her own soul had held her always from many of the ways
+of those about her, perhaps the spirit of her sweet mother allowed to be
+one of those who "bear them up, lest at any time they dash their feet
+against a stone." Or it might have been some memory of the teachings of
+her father, whom she adored, and who in his last days often talked with
+her alone about how he and her own mother would want her to live. But
+now, safe and quiet in this shelter of a real home, poor though it was,
+the God-instinct stirred within her, caused her to wonder what He was,
+why she was alive, and if He cared? One could not live with Mrs. Carson
+without thinking something about her God, for He was an ever-present
+help in all her times of need, and she never hesitated to give God the
+glory for all she had achieved, and for all the blessings she had
+received.
+
+The very first Sabbath in the little white church stirred still deeper
+her awakening interest in spiritual things. The minister's wife was a
+sweet-faced woman who called her "my dear" and invited her to come and
+see her, and when she began to teach the lesson Betty found to her
+amazement that it was interesting. She spoke of God in much the same
+familiar way that "Ma" had done, only with a gentler refinement, and
+made the girls very sure that whatever anybody else believed, Mrs.
+Thornley was a very intimate friend of Jesus Christ. Betty loved her at
+once, but so shy was she that the minister's wife never dreamed it, and
+remarked to her husband Sunday night after church, when they were having
+their little, quiet Sabbath talk together, that she was afraid she was
+going to have a hard time winning that little new girl that had come to
+live with Mrs. Carson.
+
+"Somehow I can't get away from the thought that she comes from
+aristocracy somewhere," she added. "It's the way she turns her head, or
+lifts her eyes or the quiet assurance with which she answers. And she
+smiles, Charles, never grins like the rest. She is delicious, but
+somehow I find myself wondering if I have remembered to black my shoes
+and whether my hat is on straight, when she looks at me."
+
+"Well, maybe she's the daughter of some black sheep who has gone down a
+peg, and our Father has sent her here for you to help her back again,"
+said her husband with an adorable look at his helper. "If anyone can do
+it you can."
+
+"I'm not so sure," she said, shaking her head. "She maybe doesn't need
+me. She has Mrs. Carson, remember, and she is a host in herself. If
+anybody can lead her to Christ she can, plain as she is."
+
+"Undoubtedly you were meant to help, too, dear, or she would not have
+been sent to you."
+
+His wife smiled brilliantly a look of thorough understanding: "Oh, I
+know. I'm not going to shirk any but I wish I knew more about her. She
+is so sad and quiet, I can't seem to get at her."
+
+Even at that moment Betty lay in her little cot bed under the roof
+thinking about the minister's wife and what she had said about Christ
+being always near, ready to show what to do, if one had the listening
+heart and the ready spirit. Would Christ tell her what to do, she
+wondered, now right here, if she were to ask him? Would He show her
+whether to stay in this place or seek further to hide herself from the
+world? Would He show her how to earn her living and make her life right
+and sweet as it ought to be.
+
+Then she closed her eyes and whispered softly under the sheltering
+bedclothes, "O Christ, if you are here, please show me somehow and teach
+me to understand."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+WHEN Betty had been in Tinsdale about a month it was discovered that she
+could play the piano. It happened on a rainy Sunday in Sunday school,
+and the regular pianist was late. The superintendent looked about
+helplessly and asked if there was anybody present who could play,
+although he knew the musical ability of everybody in the village. The
+minister's wife had already pleaded a cut finger which was well wrapped
+up in a bandage, and he was about to ask some one to start the tune
+without the piano when Mrs. Thornton leaned over with a sudden
+inspiration to Betty and asked:
+
+"My dear, you couldn't play for us, could you?"
+
+Betty smiled assent, and without any ado went to the instrument, not
+realizing until after she had done so that it would have been better
+policy for her to have remained as much in the background as possible,
+and not to have shown any accomplishments lest people should suspect her
+position. However, she was too new at acting a part to always think of
+these little things, and she played the hymns so well that they gathered
+about her after the hour was over and openly rejoiced that there was
+another pianist in town. The leader of Christian Endeavor asked her to
+play in their meeting sometimes, and Betty found herself quite popular.
+The tallest girl in their class, who had not noticed her before, smiled
+at her and patronized her after she came back from playing the first
+hymn, and asked her where she learned to play so well.
+
+"Oh, I used to take lessons before my father died," she said, realizing
+that she must be careful.
+
+Emily and Bob came home in high feather and told their mother, who had
+not been able to get out that morning, and she beamed on Betty with as
+warm a smile as if she had been her own daughter:
+
+"Now, ain't that great!" she said, and her voice sounded boyish just
+like Jane's. "Why, we'll have to get a pianna. I heard you could get 'em
+cheap in the cities sometimes--old-fashioned ones, you know. I heard
+they have so many old-fashioned ones that they have to burn 'em to get
+rid of 'em, and they even give 'em away sometimes. I wonder, could we
+find out and get hold of one?"
+
+"I guess 'twould cost too much to get it here," said Bob practically.
+"My! I wisht we had one. Say, Lizzie, 'f we had a pianna would you show
+me how to read notes?"
+
+"Of course," said Betty.
+
+"Well, we'll get one somehow! We always do when we need anything
+awfully. Look at the bathtub! Good-night! I'm goin' to earn one myself!"
+declared Bob.
+
+"Mrs. Crosby's gotta get a new one. P'raps she'll sell us her old one
+cheap."
+
+That was the way the music idea started, and nothing else was talked of
+at the table for days but how to get a piano. Then one day Emily came
+rushing home from school all out of breath, her eyes as bright as stars,
+and her cheeks like roses. "Mrs. Barlow came to our school to-day and
+talked to the teacher, and I heard her say she was going away for the
+winter. She's going to store her goods in the Service Company barn, but
+she wants to get somebody to take care of her piano. I stepped right up
+and told her my mother was looking for a piano, and we'd be real careful
+of it, and she's just delighted; and--it's coming to-morrow morning at
+nine o'clock! The man's going to bring it!"
+
+She gasped it out so incoherently that they had to make her tell it over
+twice to get any sense out of it; but when Bob finally understood he
+caught his little sister in his arms and hugged her with a big smacking
+kiss:
+
+"You sure are a little peach, Em'ly!" he shouted. "You're a pippin of
+the pippins! I didn't know you had that much nerve, you kid, you! I sure
+am proud of you! My! Think of havin' a pianna! Say, Betty, I can play
+the base of chopsticks now!"
+
+The next evening when Betty got home from the Hathaways there was the
+piano standing in the big space opposite the windows in the dining-room.
+Ma had elected to have it there rather than in the front room, because
+it might often be too cold in the front room for the children to
+practice, and besides it wouldn't be good for the piano. So the piano
+became a beloved member of the family, and Betty began to give
+instructions in music, wondering at herself that she knew how, for her
+own music had been most desultory, and nobody had ever cared whether she
+practiced or not. She had been allowed to ramble among the great masters
+for the most part unconducted, with the meagerest technique, and her own
+interpretation. She could read well and her sense of time and rhythm
+were natural, else she would have made worse work of it than she did.
+But she forthwith set herself to practicing, realizing that it might yet
+stand her in good stead since she had to earn her living.
+
+Little Emily and Bob stood one on either side and watched her as she
+played, with wondering admiration, and when Betty went to help their
+mother Bob would sit down and try to imitate what she had done. Failing,
+he would fall headlong into the inevitable chopsticks, beating it out
+with the air of a master.
+
+It was the piano that brought to Betty's realization the first real
+meaning of the Sabbath day. Bob came down early and went at the piano as
+usual banging out chopsticks, and a one-fingered arrangement of "The
+Long, Long Trail," while his mother was getting breakfast. Betty was
+making the coffee, proud of the fact that she had learned how. But Bob
+had accomplished only a brief hint of his regular program when the music
+stopped suddenly and Betty glanced through the kitchen door to see Ma
+standing with her hand on her son's shoulder and a look on her face she
+had not seen before: It was quite gentle, but it was decided:
+
+"No, Bob! We won't have that kinda music on Sunday," she said. "This is
+God's day, an' we'll have all we can rightly do to keep it holy without
+luggin' in week-day music to make us forget it. You just get t' work an'
+learn 'Safely Through Another Week,' an' if you can't play it right you
+get Lizzie to teach you."
+
+Bob pouted:
+
+"There ain't nothin' wrong with chopsticks, Ma. 'Tain't got words to
+it."
+
+"Don't make any diffrence. It b'longs to weekdays an' fun, an' anyhow it
+makes you think of other things, an' you can't keep your mind on God.
+That's what Sunday was made fer, to kinda tone us up to God, so's we
+won't get so far away in the week that we won't be any kind of ready for
+heaven some time. An' anyhow, 'tisn't seemly. You better go learn your
+Golden Text, Bob. The minister'll be disappointed if you don't have it
+fine."
+
+Betty stood by the window thoughtfully looking out. Was that what Sunday
+was made for, or was it only a quaint idea of this original woman? She
+wished she knew. Perhaps some time she would know the minister's wife
+well enough to ask. She would have liked to ask Ma more about it, but
+somehow felt shy. But Ma herself was started now, and when she came back
+to the kitchen, as if she felt some explanation was due the new inmate
+of the family, she said:
+
+"I don't know how you feel about it. I know city folks don't always hold
+to the old ways. But it always seemed to me God meant us to stick to
+Sunday, and make it diff'rent from other days. I never would let my
+children go visitin', nor play ball an' we always tried to have
+something good for supper fixed the night before. I heard somebody say a
+long time ago that it says somewhere in the Bible that Sunday was meant
+to be a sign forever between God and folks. The ones that keeps it are
+his'n, an' them as don't aren't. Anyhow, that's the only day we have got
+to kinda find out what's wanted of us. You wouldn't mind just playin'
+hymns and Sunday things t'day, would you?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Betty, interested. "I like it. It sounds so kind of safe,
+and as if God cared. I never thought much about it before. You think God
+really thinks about us and knows what we're doing then, don't you?"
+
+"Why, sure, child. I don't just think, I _know_ He does. Hadn't you
+never got onto that? Why, you poor little ducky, you! O' course He
+does."
+
+"I'd like to feel sure that He was looking out for me," breathed Betty
+wistfully.
+
+"Well, you can!" said Ma, hurrying back to see that her bacon didn't
+burn. "It's easy as rollin' off a log."
+
+"What would I have to do?"
+
+"Why, just b'lieve."
+
+"Believe?" asked Betty utterly puzzled. "Believe what?"
+
+"Why, believe that He'll do it. He said 'Come unto me, an' I will give
+you rest,' an' He said, 'Cast your burden on the Lord,' an' He said
+'Castin' all yer care 'pon Him, fer He careth fer you,' an' a whole lot
+more such things, an' you just got to take it fer straight, an' act on
+it."
+
+"But how could I?" asked Betty.
+
+"Just run right up to your room now, while you're feelin' that way, an'
+kneel down by your bed an' tell Him what you just told me," said Mrs.
+Carson, stirring the fried potatoes with her knife to keep them from
+burning. "It won't take you long, an' I'll tend the coffee. Just you
+tell Him you want Him to take care of you, an' you'll believe what I
+told you He said. It's all in the Bible, an' you can read it for
+yourself, but I wouldn't take the time now. Just run along an' speak it
+out with Him, and, then come down to breakfast."
+
+Betty was standing by the kitchen door, her hand on her heart, as if
+about to do some great wonderful thing that frightened her:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, suppose, maybe, He might not be pleased with me.
+Suppose I've done something that He doesn't like, something that makes
+Him ashamed of me."
+
+"Oh, why, didn't you know He fixed for all that when He sent His Son to
+be the Saviour of the world? We all do wrong things, an' everybody has
+sinned. But ef we're rightly sorry, He'll fergive us, and make us His
+children."
+
+Betty suddenly sat down in a chair near the door:
+
+"But, Mrs. Carson, I'm not sure I _am_ sorry--at least I know I'm _not_.
+I'm afraid I'd do it all over again if I got in the same situation."
+
+Mrs. Carson stood back from the stove and surveyed her thoughtfully a
+moment:
+
+"Well, then, like's not it wasn't wrong at all, and if it wasn't He
+ain't displeased. You can bank on that. You better go talk it out to
+Him. Just get it off your mind. I'll hold up breakfast a minute while
+you roll it on Him and depend on it he'll show you in plenty of time for
+the next move."
+
+Betty with her cheeks very red and her eyes shining went up to her
+little cot, and with locked door knelt and tried to talk to God for the
+first time in her life. It seemed queer to her, but when she arose and
+hurried back to her duties she had a sense of having a real Friend who
+knew all about her and could look after things a great deal better than
+she could.
+
+That night she went with Bob and Emily to the young people's meeting and
+heard them talk about Christ familiarly as if they knew Him. It was all
+strange and new and wonderful to Betty, and she sat listening and
+wondering. The old question of whether she was pleasing her earthly
+father was merging itself into the desire to please her Heavenly Father.
+
+There were of course many hard and unpleasant things about her new life.
+There were so many things to learn, and she was so awkward at work of
+all kinds! Her hands seemed so small and inadequate when she tried to
+wring clothes or scrub a dirty step. Then, too, her young charge, Elise
+Hathaway, was spoiled and hard to please, and she was daily tried by the
+necessity of inventing ways of discipline for the poor little neglected
+girl which yet would not bring down a protest from her even more
+undisciplined mother. If she had been independent she would not have
+remained with Mrs. Hathaway, for sometimes the child was unbearable in
+her naughty tantrums, and it took all her nerve and strength to control
+her. She would come back to the little gray house too weary even to
+smile, and the keen eye of Ma would look at her wisely and wonder if
+something ought not to be done about it.
+
+Betty felt that she must keep this place, of course, because it was
+necessary for her to be able to pay some board. She could not be
+beholden to the Carsons. And they had been so kind, and were teaching
+her so many things, that it seemed the best and safest place she could
+be in. So the days settled down into weeks, and a pleasant life grew up
+about her, so different from the old one that more and more the
+hallucination was with her that she had become another creature, and the
+old life had gone out forever.
+
+Of course as striking-looking a girl as Betty could not enter into the
+life of a little town even as humbly as through the Carson home, without
+causing some comment and speculation. People began to notice her. The
+church ladies looked after her and remarked on her hair, her complexion,
+and her graceful carriage, and some shook their heads and said they
+should think Mrs. Hathaway would want to know a little more about her
+before she put her only child in her entire charge; and they told weird
+stories about girls they had known or heard of.
+
+Down at the fire-house, which was the real clearing-house of Tinsdale
+for all the gossip that came along and went the rounds, they took up the
+matter in full session several evenings in succession. Some of the
+younger members made crude remarks about Betty's looks, and some of the
+older ones allowed that she was entirely too pretty to be without a
+history. They took great liberties with their surmises. The only two,
+the youngest of them all, who might have defended her, had been
+unconsciously snubbed by her when they tried to be what Bobbie called
+"fresh" with her, and so she was at their mercy. But if she had known it
+she probably would have been little disturbed. They seemed so far
+removed from her two worlds, so utterly apart from herself. It would not
+have occurred to her that they could do her any harm.
+
+One night the fire-house gang had all assembled save one, a little
+shrimp of a good-for-nothing, nearly hairless, toothless, cunning-eyed,
+and given to drink when he could lay lips on any. He had a wide loose
+mouth with a tendency to droop crookedly, and his hands were always
+clammy and limp. He ordinarily sat tilted back against the wall to the
+right of the engine, sucking an old clay pipe. He had a way of often
+turning the conversation to imply some deep mystery known only to
+himself behind the life of almost any one discussed. He often added
+choice embellishments to whatever tale went forth as authentic to go the
+rounds of the village, and he acted the part of a collector of themes
+and details for the evening conversations.
+
+His name was Abijah Gage.
+
+"Bi not come yet?" asked the fire chief settling a straw comfortably
+between his teeth and looking around on the group. "Must be somepin'
+doin'. Don't know when Bi's been away."
+
+"He went up to town this mornin' early," volunteered Dunc Withers.
+"Reckon he was thirsty. Guess he'll be back on the evenin' train. That's
+her comin' in now."
+
+"Bars all closed in the city," chuckled the chief. "Won't get much
+comfort there."
+
+"You bet Bi knows some place to get it. He won't come home thirsty,
+that's sure."
+
+"I donno, they say the lid's down pretty tight."
+
+"Aw, shucks!" sneered Dunc. "Bet I could get all I wanted."
+
+Just then the door opened and Abijah Gage walked in, with a toothless
+grin all around.
+
+"Hello, Bi, get tanked up, did yeh?" greeted the chief.
+
+"Well, naow, an' ef I did, what's that to you?" responded Bi, slapping
+the chief's broad shoulder with a folded newspaper he carried. "You
+don't 'spose I'm goin' to tell, an' get my frien's in trouble?"
+
+"Le's see yer paper, Bi," said Dunc, snatching at it as Bi passed to his
+regular seat.
+
+Bi surrendered his paper with the air of one granting a high favor and
+sank to his chair and his pipe.
+
+"How's crops in the city?" asked Hank Fielder, and Bi's tale was set
+a-going. Bi could talk; that was one thing that always made him welcome.
+
+Dunc was deep in the paper. Presently he turned it over:
+
+"Whew!" he said speculatively. "If that don't look like that little
+lollypop over to Carson's I'll eat my hat! What's her name?"
+
+They all drew around the paper and leaned over Dunc's shoulder squinting
+at the picture, all but Bi, who was lighting his pipe:
+
+"They're as like as two peas!" said one.
+
+"It sure must be her sister!" declared another.
+
+"Don't see no resemblance 'tall," declared the chief, flinging back to
+his comfortable chair. "She's got short hair, an she's only a kid. This
+one's growed up!"
+
+"She might a cut her hair," suggested one.
+
+Bi pricked up his ears, narrowed his cunning eyes, and slouched over to
+the paper, looking at the picture keenly:
+
+"Read it out, Dunc!" he commanded.
+
+"Five thousand dollars reward for information concerning Elizabeth
+Stanhope!"
+
+There followed a description in detail of her size, height, coloring,
+etc.
+
+An inscrutable look overspread Bi's face and hid the cunning in his
+eyes. He slouched to his seat during the reading and tilted back
+comfortably smoking, but he narrowed his eyes to a slit and spoke little
+during the remainder of the evening. They discussed the picture and the
+possibility of the girl in the paper being a relative of the girl at
+Carson's, but as Bi did not come forward with information the subject
+languished. Some one said he had heard the Carson kid call her Lizzie,
+he thought, but he wasn't sure. Ordinarily Bi would have known the full
+name, but Bi seemed to be dozing, and so the matter was finally dropped.
+But the hounds were out and on the scent, and it was well for Betty
+sleeping quietly in her little cot beneath the roof of the humble Carson
+home, that she had committed her all to her heavenly Father before she
+slept.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+"WELL, he gave me notice t'day," said James Ryan sadly as Jane and he
+rounded the corner from her boarding-house and turned toward their
+favorite movie theater. "I been expectin' it, an' now it's come!"
+
+Jane stopped short on the sidewalk appalled:
+
+"He gave you notice!" she exclaimed, as if she could not believe it was
+true. "Now, Jimmie! You don't mean it? Did he find any fault? He'd
+better not! B'leeve me, if he did he gets a piece of _my_ mind, even if
+I am a poor workin' girl!"
+
+"Oh, no, he didn't find any fault," said Jimmie cheerfully. "He was
+awful nice! He said he'd recommend me away up high. He's gonta give me
+time every day to hunt a new place, an' he's gonta recommend me to some
+of his rich friends."
+
+"But what's the matter of him keepin' you? Did you ast him that?"
+
+"Oh, he told me right out that things wasn't working the way he hoped
+when he started; the war and all had upset his prospects, and he
+couldn't afford to keep me. He's gonta take an office way down town and
+do his own letters. He says if he ever succeeds in business and I'm free
+to come to him he'll take me back. Oh, he's pleased with me all right!
+He's a peach! He certainly is."
+
+"Jimmie, what d'you tell him?"
+
+"Tell him? There wasn't much for me to tell him, only I was sorry, and I
+thanked him, and I told him I was gonta stick by him as long as I didn't
+have a place. Of course I can't live on air, but seeing he's willing I
+should go out and hunt a place every day, why I ain't that mean that I
+can't write a few letters for him now and then. He don't have that many,
+and it keeps me in practice. I s'pose I've got to get another place but
+I haven't tried yet. I can't somehow bring myself to give him up. I kind
+of wanted to stick in my first place a long time. It doesn't look well
+to be changing."
+
+"Well, if it ain't your fault, you know, when you can't help it,"
+advised Jane.
+
+They were seated in the theater by this time, and the screen claimed
+their attention. It was just at the end of the funny reel, and both
+forgot more serious matters in following the adventures of a dog and a
+bear who were chasing each other through endless halls and rooms, to say
+nothing of bathtubs, and wash boilers, and dining tables, and anything
+that came in their way, with a shock to the people who happened to be
+around when they passed. But suddenly the film ended and the
+announcements for the next week began to flash on the screen.
+
+"We must go to that, sure!" said Jimmie, nudging Jane, as the Mary
+Pickford announcement was put on.
+
+Then immediately afterward came the photograph of a beautiful girl, and
+underneath in great letters:
+
+ FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS' REWARD FOR ACCURATE
+ INFORMATION AS TO THE PRESENT WHEREABOUTS
+ OF ELIZABETH STANHOPE
+
+There followed further particulars and an address and the showing stayed
+on the screen for a full minute.
+
+Jane sat gripping the arms of the seat and trying to still the wild
+excitement that possessed her, while her eyes looked straight into the
+eyes of the little bride whom she had helped to escape on the night of
+her wedding.
+
+Jimmie took out his pencil and wrote down the address in shorthand, but
+Jane did not notice. She was busy thinking what she ought to do.
+
+"What do you s'pose they want her for?" she asked in a breathless
+whisper, as a new feature film began to dawn on the screen.
+
+"Oh, she's mebbe eloped," said the wise young man, "or there might be
+some trouble about property. There mostly is."
+
+Jane said no more, and the pictures began again, but her mind was not
+following them. She was very quiet on the way home, and when Jimmie
+asked her if she had a grouch on she shivered and said, no, she guessed
+she was tired. Then she suddenly asked him what time he was going out to
+hunt for another job. He told her he couldn't be sure. He would call her
+up about noon and let her know. Could she manage to get out a while and
+meet him? She wasn't sure either, but would see when he called her up.
+And so they parted for the night.
+
+The next morning when Reyburn entered his office Jimmie was already
+seated at his typewriter. On Reyburn's desk lay a neatly typed copy of
+the announcement that had been put on the screen the night before.
+
+"What's this, Ryan?" he questioned as he took his seat and drew the
+paper toward him.
+
+"Something I saw last night on the screen at the movies, sir. I thought
+it might be of interest."
+
+"Were you thinking of trying for the reward?" asked Reyburn with a
+comical smile. "What is it, anyway?" And he began to read.
+
+"Oh, no sir!" said Jimmie. "_I_ couldn't, of course; but I thought mebbe
+_you'd_ be able to find out something about her and get all that money.
+That would help you through until you got started in your own business."
+
+"H'm! That's kind of you, Ryan," said the young lawyer, reading the
+paper with a troubled frown. "I'm afraid it's hardly in my line,
+however. I'm not a detective, you know." He laid the paper down and
+looked thoughtfully out of the window.
+
+"Oh, of course not, sir!" Jimmie hastened to apologize. "Only you know a
+lot of society folks in the city, and I thought you might think of some
+way of finding out where she is. I know it isn't up to what you ought to
+be doing, sir, but it wouldn't do any harm. You could work it through
+me, you know, and nobody need ever know 'twas you got the reward. I'd be
+glad to help you out doing all I could, but of course it would take your
+brains to get the information, sir. You see, it would be to my interest,
+because then you could afford to keep me, and--I like you, Mr. Reyburn,
+I certainly do. I would hate to leave you."
+
+"Well, now, I appreciate that, Ryan. It's very thoughtful of you. I
+scarcely think there would be any possibility of my finding out anything
+about this girl, but I certainly appreciate your thoughtfulness. I'll
+make a note of it, and if anything turns up I'll let you know. I don't
+believe, however, that I would care to go after a reward even through
+someone else. You know, I was at that wedding, Ryan!" His eyes were
+dreamily watching the smoke from a distant funnel over the roof-tops in
+line with his desk.
+
+"You were!" said Jimmie, watching his employer with rapt admiration. He
+had no higher ambition than to look like Warren Reyburn and have an
+office of his own.
+
+"Yes, I was there," said Reyburn again, but his tone was so far off that
+Jimmie dared approach no nearer, and resumed the letter he was typing.
+
+About noon Jimmie called up the factory while Reyburn was out to lunch
+and told Jane that he expected to go out at two o'clock. Could she meet
+him and walk a little way with him? Jane said no, she couldn't, but she
+would try and see him the next day, then he could tell her how he had
+"made out."
+
+At exactly five minutes after two, Jane, having watched from a telephone
+booth in a drug store until Jimmie went by, hurried up to Reyburn's
+office and tapped on the door, her heart in her mouth lest he should be
+occupied with some one else and not be able to see her before her few
+minutes of leave which she had obtained from the factory should have
+expired.
+
+Reyburn himself opened the door to her, and treated her as if she had
+been a lady every inch, handing her a chair and speaking quite as if she
+were attired in sealskin and diamonds.
+
+She looked him over with bright eyes of approval. Jane was a born
+sentimentalist, fed on the movies. Not for anything would she have had a
+knight rescue her lady fair who did not look the part. She was entirely
+satisfied with this one. In fact, she was almost tongue-tied with
+admiration for the moment.
+
+Then she rallied to the speech she had prepared:
+
+"Mr. Reyburn," she said, "I came to see you about a matter of very great
+importance. I heard you was a great lawyer, and I've got a friend that's
+in trouble. I thought mebbe you could do something about it. But first,
+I want to ast you a question, an' I want you to consider it perfectly
+confidential!"
+
+Jane took great credit to herself that she had assembled all these words
+and memorized them so perfectly.
+
+"Certainly!" said Reyburn gravely, wondering what kind of a customer he
+had now.
+
+"I don't want you to think I can't pay for it," said Jane, laying down a
+five-dollar bill grandly. "I know you can't afford to waste your
+valuable time even to answer a question."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," said Reyburn heartily. "Let me hear what the
+question is first. There may be no charge."
+
+"No," said Jane hastily, laying the bill firmly on the desk before him.
+"I shan't feel right astin' unless I know it's to be paid for."
+
+"Oh, very well," said Reyburn, taking the bill and laying it to one
+side. "Now, what is the question?"
+
+"Well, Mr. Reyburn, will you please tell me what would anybody want to
+offer a reward, a big reward, like a thousand dollars--or several of
+them,--for information about any one? Could you think of any reason?"
+
+Reyburn started. Reward again! This was uncanny. Probably this girl had
+been to the movies and seen the same picture that Ryan had told him
+about. But he smiled gravely and answered, watching her quizzically the
+while:
+
+"Well, they might love the person that had disappeared," he suggested at
+random.
+
+"Oh, no!" said Jane decidedly. "They didn't! I know that fer a fac'!
+What else could it be?"
+
+"Well, they might have a responsibility!" he said thoughtfully.
+
+"No chance!" said Jane scornfully.
+
+"Couldn't they be anxious, don't you think?"
+
+"Not so's you'd notice it."
+
+"Well, there might be some property to be divided, perhaps."
+
+"I'd thought of that," said Jane, her face growing practical. "It would
+have to be a good deal of property to make them offer a big reward,
+wouldn't it?"
+
+"I should think so," answered Reyburn politely, watching her plain eager
+face amusedly. He could not quite get at her idea in coming to him.
+
+"Would her coming of age have anything to do with it?" put Jane,
+referring to a much folded paper she carried in her hand, as if she had
+a written catechism which she must go through.
+
+"It might." Reyburn was growing interested. This queer visitor evidently
+had thought something out, and was being very cautious.
+
+"I really can't answer very definitely without knowing more of the
+circumstances," he said with sudden alarm lest the girl might take some
+random answer and let serious matters hinge on his word.
+
+"Well, there's just one more," she said, looking down at her paper. "If
+a man was trying to make a girl marry him when she just hated him, could
+anybody make her do it, and would anybody have a right to put her in an
+insane 'sylum or anythin' ef she wouldn't?"
+
+"Why, no, of course not! Where did you ever get such a ridiculous idea?"
+He sat up suddenly, annoyed beyond expression over disturbing
+suggestions that seemed to rise like a bevy of black bats all around the
+borders of his mind.
+
+"See here," he said, sitting up very straight. "I really can't answer
+any more blind questions. I've got to know what I'm talking about. Why,
+I may be saying the most impossible things without knowing it."
+
+"I know," said Jane, looking at him gravely. "I've thought of that, but
+you've said just the things I thought you would. Well, say, if I tell
+you about it can you promise on yer honor you won't ever breathe a word
+of it? Not to nobody? Whether you take the case or not?"
+
+"Why, certainly, you can trust me to look out for any confidence you may
+put in me. If you can't I should prefer that you say nothing more."
+
+"Oh, I c'n trust you all right," said Jane smiling. "I just mean, would
+you be 'lowed to keep it under yer hat?"
+
+"Would I be allowed? What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean would the law let you? You wouldn't _have_ to go an' tell where
+she was or nothin' an' give her away? You'd be 'lowed to keep it on the
+q. t. an' take care of her?"
+
+"You mean would it be right and honorable for me to protect my client?
+Why, certainly."
+
+"Well, I mean you wouldn't get into no trouble if you did."
+
+"Of course not."
+
+"Well, then I'll tell you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+JANE opened a small shabby handbag, and took out a folded newspaper,
+opening it up and spreading it on the desk before him. "There!" she
+said, and then watched his face critically.
+
+Reyburn looked, and found himself looking into Betty's eyes. Only a
+newspaper cut, and poor at that, but wonderfully real and mournful, as
+they had struck him when she lifted them for that swift glance before
+she sank in the church aisle.
+
+"Where did you get this?" he asked, his voice suddenly husky.
+
+"Out o' the mornin' paper." Her tone was low and excited. "Were you
+wanting to try for the reward?" Reyburn asked.
+
+There was a covert sneer in the question from which the girl shrank
+perceptibly. She sprang to her feet, her eyes flashing:
+
+"If that's what you take me for, I better be goin'!" she snapped and
+reached out her hand for the paper. But Reyburn's hand covered the
+paper, and his tone was respectful and apologetic as he said:
+
+"Excuse me, I didn't quite understand, I see. Sit down, please. You and
+I must understand each other or there is no use in our talking. You can
+trust me to keep this conversation entirely to myself, whatever the
+outcome. Will you tell me what it is you want of me?"
+
+Jane subsided into a chair, tears of excitement springing into her eyes.
+
+"Well, you see, it's pretty serious business," she said, making a dab at
+the corner of one eye. "I thought I could trust you, or I wouldn't a
+come. But you gotta take me on trust, too."
+
+"Of course," said Reyburn. "Now, what have you to do with this girl? Do
+you know where she is?"
+
+"I certainly do!" said Jane, "but I ain't a-goin' ta tell until you say
+if there's anything you can do fer her. 'Cause you see, if you can't
+find a way to help her, I've gotta do it myself, an' it might get you
+into trouble somehow fer you to know what you ain't supposed to know."
+
+"I see," said Reyburn, meekly. "Well, what are you going to tell me? Am
+I allowed to ask that?"
+
+Jane grinned.
+
+"Say, you're kiddin' me! I guess you are all right. Well, I'll just tell
+you all about it. One night last November,--you can see the date there
+in the paper, I was goin' home to my boardin' house in Camac Street,
+an' I was passin' the side of that church on 18th an' Spruce, where the
+weddin' was--you know, fer you was there!"
+
+Reyburn looked at her astonished.
+
+"How did you know I was there?"
+
+"I saw you through the window, over against the wall to the street side
+of the altar," said Jane calmly.
+
+"How did you know me?"
+
+"Oh, somebody I know pointed you out once an' said you was goin' to be
+one of the risin' lawyers of the day," she answered nonchalantly, her
+face quite serious.
+
+A flicker of amusement passed like a ray of light through his eyes, but
+his face was entirely grave as he ignored the compliment.
+
+"Go on!"
+
+"I saw there was a weddin' an' I stopped to watch a minute, 'cause I
+expect to get married myself some day, an' I wanted to see how they did
+things. But I couldn't get near the door, an' the windows were all high
+up. I could only see folks who were standing up like you were. So I
+thought I'd go on. I turned the corner and went long-side the church
+listenin' to the music, an' just as I passed a big iron gate at the
+back end of the church somebody grabbed me an' begged me to help 'em. I
+looked round, an' there was the bride, all in her white togs, with the
+prettiest white satin slippers, in the wet an' mud! I tried to get her
+line, but she cried out somebody was comin' back in the passageway, so I
+slipped off my coat an' hat and whisked her into 'em an' clapped my
+rubbers over her satin shoes, and we beat it round the corner. I took
+her to my room, an' gave her some supper. She was all in. Then I put her
+to bed, an' she told me a little bit about it. She didn't tell me much.
+Only that they had been tryin' fer a long time back to make her marry a
+man she hated, an' now they'd almost tricked her into it, an' she'd die
+if she had to do it. She wanted to exchange clothes with me, cause, of
+course, she couldn't get anywhere togged out that way, so we changed
+things, an' I fixed her up. In the mornin' I ran out an' got a paper,
+an' found they was sayin' she was temporary insane, an' stuff like that,
+an' so I saw their game was tryin' to get her in a 'sylum till they
+could make her do what they wanted. I fixed her up an' got her off to a
+place I know where she'd be safe. An' she's got a job an' doin' real
+well. But now they've got this here reward business out everywhere in
+the papers an' the movies, she ain't safe nowhere. An' I want somebody
+that's wiser'n me to take a holt an' do somethin'. I can't pay much, but
+I'll pay a little every month as long's I live ef it takes that long to
+pay yer bill, an' I have a notion she may have some money herself,
+though she didn't say nothin' about it. But there's a ring she left with
+me to sell, to pay fer what I gave her. It oughtta be worth somethin'.
+It looks real. I ain't sold it. I couldn't. I thought she might want it
+sometime----"
+
+But Reyburn interrupted her excitedly.
+
+"Do you mean to say that Miss Stanhope is in the city and you know where
+she is?"
+
+"Now, don't get excited," warned Jane coolly. "I didn't say she was in
+this city, did I? I didn't say where she was, did I? I said she was
+safe."
+
+"But are you aware that you have told me a very strange story? What
+proof can you give me that it is true?"
+
+Jane looked at him indignantly.
+
+"Say, I thought you was goin' to trust me? I have to trust you, don't I?
+Course you don't know who I am, an' I haven't told you, but I've got a
+good p'sition myself, an' I don't go round tellin' privarications! An'
+there's the weddin' dress, an' veil and fixin's! I got them. You can see
+'em if you like,--that is pervided I know what you're up to! I ain't
+taking any chances till I see what you mean to do."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Reyburn, trying to smile assurance once more.
+"You certainly must own this whole thing is enough to make anybody
+doubt."
+
+"Yes, it is," said Jane. "I was some upset myself, havin' a thing like
+that happen to me, a real millionairess bride drop herself down on my
+hands just like that, an' I 'spose it _is_ hard to b'lieve. But I can't
+waste much more time now. I gotta get back to my job. Is there anything
+can be done to keep 'em from gettin' her again?"
+
+"I should most certainly think so," said Reyburn, "but I would have to
+know her side of the story, the whole of it, before I could say just
+what!"
+
+"Well, s'pose you found there wasn't anythin' you could do to help her,
+would you go an' tell on her?"
+
+Reyburn leaned back in his chair and smiled at his unique client:
+
+"I shall have to quote your own language. 'What do you take me for?'"
+
+"A white man!" said Jane suddenly, and showed all her fine teeth in an
+engaging smile. "Say, you're all right. Now, I gotta go. When will you
+tell me what you can do?" She glanced anxiously at her little
+leather-bound wrist watch. It was almost time for Jimmie to return.
+Jimmie mustn't find her here. He wouldn't understand, and what Jimmie
+didn't know wouldn't hurt him.
+
+"Well, this ought to be attended to, at once, if anything is to be
+done," he said eagerly. "Let me see. I have an engagement at five. How
+would seven o'clock do? Could I call at your boarding-house? Would there
+be any place where we could talk uninterrupted?"
+
+"Sure," said Jane, rising. "I'll get my landlady to let me have her
+settin' room fer an hour."
+
+"Meantime, I'll think it over and try to plan something."
+
+Jane started down the long flights of stairs, not daring to trust to the
+elevator, lest she should come face to face with Jimmie and have to
+explain.
+
+Reyburn stood with his back to the room, his hands in his pockets,
+frowning and looking out the window, when Jimmie entered a moment later.
+
+"I hope I'm not late, sir?" he said anxiously, as he hung up his hat and
+sat down at his typewriter. "I had to wait. The man was out."
+
+"Oh, that's all right, Ryan," said his employer, obviously not listening
+to his explanation. "I'm going out now, Ryan. I may not be back this
+afternoon. Just see that everything is all right."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+Reyburn went out, then opened the door and put his head back in the
+room.
+
+"I may have to go out of town to-night, Ryan. I'm not sure. Something
+has come up. If I'm not in to-morrow, could you--would you mind just
+staying here all day and looking after things? I may need you. Of course
+you'll lock up and leave the card out when you go to lunch."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+"I'll keep in touch with you in case I'm delayed," and Reyburn was off
+again. When the elevator had clanked down to the next floor Jimmie went
+to the window and looked dreamily out over the roofs of the city:
+
+"Aw!" he breathed joyously. "Now I'll bet he's going to do something
+about that reward!"
+
+Reyburn hurried down the street to the office of an old friend where he
+had a bit of business as an excuse, and asked a few casual questions
+when he was done. Then he went on to a telephone booth and called up a
+friend of his mother's, with whom he had a brief gossip, ostensibly to
+give a message from his mother, contained in her last letter to him.
+None of the questions that he asked were noticeable. He merely led the
+conversation into certain grooves. The lady was an old resident and well
+known in the higher social circles. She knew all there was to know about
+everybody and she loved to tell it. She never dreamed that he had any
+motive in leading her on.
+
+He dropped into a bank and asked a few questions, called up an address
+they gave him and made another inquiry, then dropped around to his
+cousin's home for a few minutes, where he allowed her to tell all she
+knew about the Stanhope wedding they had attended together, and the
+different theories concerning the escaped bride. Quite casually he asked
+if she knew whether the bride had property of her own, if so who were
+her guardians. His cousin thought she knew a lot, but, sifting it down,
+he discovered that it was nearly all hearsay or surmise.
+
+When he reached Jane Carson's boarding house he found that young woman
+ensconced in a tiny room, nine by twelve, a faded ingrain carpet on the
+floor, a depressed looking bed lounge against the bleary wall-paper,
+beneath crayon portraits of the landlady's dead husband and sons. There
+was a rocking-chair, a trunk, a cane-seat chair, and an oil stove turned
+up to smoking point in honor of the caller, but there was little room
+left for the caller. On the top of the trunk reposed a large pasteboard
+box securely tied.
+
+Jane, after a shy greeting, untied the strings and opened the cover,
+having first carefully slipped the bolt of the door.
+
+"You can't be too careful," she said. "You never can tell."
+
+Reyburn stood beside her and looked in a kind of awe at the glistening
+white, recognized the thick texture of the satin, the rare quality of
+the rose-point lace with which it was adorned, caught the faint
+fragrance of faded orange blossoms wafting from the filmy mist of the
+veil as Jane lifted it tenderly; then leaned over and touched a finger
+to the pile of whiteness, reverently, as though he were paying a tribute
+at a lovely shrine.
+
+Jane even unwrapped the little slippers, one at a time, and folded them
+away again, and they said no word until it was all tied back in its
+papers, Reyburn assisting with the strings.
+
+"Now, ef you don't mind waitin' a minute I guess it would be safer to
+put it away now," she said as she slipped the bolt and ran upstairs.
+
+She was back in a minute and sat down opposite to him, drawing out from
+the neck of her blouse a ribbon with a heavy glittering circlet at its
+end.
+
+"Here's the ring." She laid it in his palm. He took it, wondering, a
+kind of awe still upon him that he should be thus handling the intimate
+belongings of that little unknown bride whom he had seen lying
+unconscious in a strange church a few short months before. How strange
+that all this should have come to him when many wiser, more nearly
+related, were trying their best to get some clue to the mystery!
+
+He lifted the ring toward the insufficient gas jet to make out the
+initials inside, and copied them down in his note-book.
+
+"Take good care of that. It is valuable," he said as he handed it back
+to her.
+
+"Mebbe I better give it to you," she half hesitated.
+
+"You've taken pretty good care of it so far," he said. "I guess you've a
+better right to it than I. Only don't let anybody know you've got it.
+Now, I've been making inquiries, and I've found out a few things, but
+I've about come to the conclusion that I can't do much without seeing
+the lady. Do you suppose she would see me? Is she very far away?"
+
+"When do you want to go?" asked Jane.
+
+"At once," he answered decidedly. "There's no time to waste if she is
+really in danger, as you think."
+
+Jane's eyes glittered with satisfaction.
+
+"There's a train at ten-thirty. You'll get there in the morning. I've
+written it all down here on a paper so you can't make any mistakes. I've
+written her a letter so she'll understand and tell you everythin'. I'll
+wire Ma, too, so she'll let you see her. Ma might not size you up
+right."
+
+Reyburn wondered at the way he accepted his orders from this coolly
+impudent girl, but he liked her in spite of himself.
+
+In a few minutes more he was out in the street again, hurrying to his
+own apartment, where he put together a few necessities in a bag and went
+to the train.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+IT was one of those little ironies of fate that are spoken about so
+much, that when Warren Reyburn alighted from the train in Tinsdale
+Abijah Gage should be supporting one corner of the station, and
+contributing a quid now and then to the accumulations of the week
+scattered all about his feet.
+
+He spotted the stranger at once and turned his cunning little eyes upon
+him, making it obvious that he was bulging with information. It was,
+therefore, quite natural, when Reyburn paused to take his bearings, that
+Bi should speak up and inquire if he was looking for some one. Reyburn
+shook his head and passed on, but Bi was not to be headed off so easily
+as that. He shuffled after him:
+
+"Say!" he said, pointing to a shackley horse and buckboard that stood
+near, belonging to a pal over at the freight house. "Ef you want a lift
+I'll take you along."
+
+"Thank you, no," said Reyburn, smiling; "I'm not going far."
+
+"Say!" said Bi again as he saw his quarry about to disappear. "You name
+ain't Bains, is it?"
+
+"No!" said Reyburn, quite annoyed by the persistent old fellow.
+
+"From New York?" he hazarded cheerfully.
+
+"No," answered Reyburn, turning to go. "You must excuse me. I'm in a
+hurry."
+
+"That's all right," said Bi contentedly. "I'll walk a piece with you. I
+was lookin' fer a doctor to take down to see a sick child. A doctor from
+New York. You ain't by any chance a doctor, are you?" Bi eyed the big
+leather bag inquiringly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn, laughing in spite of his annoyance. "I'm only a
+lawyer." And with a bound he cleared the curb and hurried off down the
+street, having now recognized the direction described in Jane's diagram
+of Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage looked after him with twinkling eyes of dry mirth, and
+slowly sauntered after him, watching him until he entered the little
+unpainted gate of the Carson house and tapped at the old gray door. Then
+Bi lunged across the street and entered a path that ran along the
+railroad track for a few rods, curving suddenly into a stretch of vacant
+lots. On a convenient fence rail with a good outlook toward the west end
+of the village he ensconced himself and set about whittling a whistle
+from some willow stalks. He waited until he saw Bobbie Carson hurry off
+toward Hathaway's house and return with Lizzie Hope; waited hopefully
+until the stranger finally came out of the house again, touching his hat
+gracefully to the girl as she stood at the open door. Then he hurried
+back to the station again, and was comfortably settled on a tub of
+butter just arrived by freight, when Reyburn reached there. He was much
+occupied with his whistle, and never seemed to notice, but not a
+movement of the stranger escaped him, and when the Philadelphia express
+came by, and the stranger got aboard the parlor car, old Bi Gage swung
+his lumbering length up on the back platform of the last car. The hounds
+were hot on the trail now.
+
+It was several years since Bi Gage had been on so long a journey, but he
+managed to enjoy the trip, and kept in pretty good touch with the parlor
+car, although he was never in evidence. If anybody had told Warren
+Reyburn as he let himself into his apartment late that night that he was
+being followed, he would have laughed and told them it was an
+impossibility. When he came out to the street the next morning and swung
+himself into a car that would land him at his office, he did not see the
+lank flabby figure of the toothless Bi standing just across the block,
+and keeping tab on him from the back platform, nor notice that he slid
+into the office building behind him and took the same elevator up,
+crowding in behind two fat men and effacing himself against the wall of
+the cage. Reyburn was reading his paper, and did not look up. The figure
+slid out of the elevator after him and slithered into a shadow, watching
+him, slipping softly after, until sure which door he took, then waited
+silently until sure that the door was shut. No one heard the slouching
+footsteps come down the marble hall. Bi Gage always wore rubbers when he
+went anywhere in particular. He had them on that morning. He took
+careful note of the name on the door: "_Warren Reyburn_,
+Attorney-at-Law," and the number. Then he slid down the stairs as
+unobserved as he had come, and made his way to a name and number on a
+bit of paper from his pocket which he consulted in the shelter of a
+doorway.
+
+When Warren Reyburn started on his first trip to Tinsdale his mind was
+filled with varying emotions. He had never been able to quite get away
+from the impression made upon him by that little white bride lying so
+still amid her bridal finery, and the glowering bridegroom above her. It
+epitomized for him all the unhappy marriages of the world, and he felt
+like starting out somehow in hot pursuit of that bridegroom and making
+him answer for the sadness of his bride. Whenever the matter had been
+brought to his memory he had always been conscious of the first gladness
+he had felt when he knew she had escaped. It could not seem to him
+anything but a happy escape, little as he knew about any of the people
+who played the principal parts in the little tragedy he had witnessed.
+
+Hour after hour as he sat in the train and tried to sleep or tried to
+think he kept wondering at himself that he was going on this "wild goose
+chase," as he called it in his innermost thoughts. Yet he knew he had to
+go. In fact, he had known it from the moment James Ryan had shown him
+the advertisement. Not that he had ever had any idea of trying for that
+horrible reward. Simply that his soul had been stirred to its most
+knightly depths to try somehow to protect her in her hiding. Of course,
+it had been a mere crazy thought then, with no way of fulfilment, but
+when the chance had offered of really finding her and asking if there
+was anything she would like done, he knew from the instant it was
+suggested that he was going to do it, even if he lost every other
+business chance he ever had or expected to have, even if it took all his
+time and every cent he could borrow. He knew he had to try to find that
+girl! The thought that the only shelter between her and the great awful
+world lay in the word of an untaught girl like Jane Carson filled him
+with terror for her. If that was true, the sooner some one of
+responsibility and sense got to her the better. The questions he had
+asked of various people that afternoon had revealed more than he had
+already guessed of the character of the bridegroom to whom he had taken
+such a strong dislike on first sight.
+
+Thus he argued the long night through between the fitful naps he caught
+when he was not wondering if he should find her, and whether he would
+know her from that one brief sight of her in church. How did he know but
+this was some game put up on him to get him into a mix-up? He must go
+cautiously, and on no account do anything rash or make any promises
+until he had first found out all about her.
+
+When morning dawned he was in a state of perturbation quite unusual for
+the son and grandson of renowned lawyers noted for their calmness and
+poise under all circumstances. This perhaps was why the little incident
+with Abijah Gage at the station annoyed him so extremely. He felt he was
+doing a questionable thing in taking this journey at all. He certainly
+did not intend to reveal his identity or business to this curious old
+man.
+
+The little gray house looked exactly as Jane had described it, and as he
+opened the gate and heard the rusty chain that held it clank he had a
+sense of having been there before.
+
+He was pleasantly surprised, however, when the door was opened by Emily,
+who smiled at him out of shy blue eyes, and stood waiting to see what he
+wanted. It was like expecting a viper and finding a flower. Somehow he
+had not anticipated anything flower-like in Jane's family. The mother,
+too, was a surprise when she came from her ironing, and, pushing her
+wavy gray hair back from a furrowed brow lifted intelligent eyes that
+reminded him of Jane, to search his face. Ma did not appear flustered.
+She seemed to be taking account of him and deciding whether or not she
+would be cordial to him.
+
+"Yes, I had a telegram from Jane this morning," she was scanning his
+eyes once more to see whether there was a shadow of what she called
+"shiftiness" in them. "Come in," she added grudgingly.
+
+He was not led into the dining-room, but seated on one of the best
+varnished chairs in the "parlor," as they called the little unused front
+room. He felt strangely ill at ease and began to be convinced that he
+was on the very wildest of wild goose chases. To think of expecting to
+find Elizabeth Stanhope in a place like this! If she ever had been here
+she certainly must have flown faster than she had from the church on her
+wedding night.
+
+So, instead of beginning as he had planned, to put a list of logically
+prepared keen questions to a floundering and suspecting victim, he found
+the clear eyes of Ma looking into his unwaveringly and the wise tongue
+of Ma putting him through a regular orgy of catechism before she would
+so much as admit that she had ever heard of a girl named Lizzie Hope.
+Then he bethought him of her daughter's letter and handed it over for
+her to read.
+
+"Well," she admitted at last, half satisfied, "she isn't here at
+present. I sent her away when I found you was comin'. I wasn't sure I'd
+let you see her at all if I didn't like your looks."
+
+"That's right, Mrs. Carson," he said heartily, with real admiration in
+his voice. "I'm glad she has some one so careful to look out for her.
+Your daughter said she was in a good safe place, and I begin to see she
+knew what she was talking about."
+
+Then the strong look around Ma's lips settled into the sweeter one, and
+she sent Bob after the girl.
+
+"Are you a friend of hers?" she asked, watching him keenly.
+
+"No," said Reyburn. "I've never seen her but once. She doesn't know me
+at all."
+
+"Are you a friend of her--family?"
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+"Or any of her friends or relations?" Ma meant to be comprehensive.
+
+"No. I'm sorry I am not. I am a rather recent comer to the city where
+she made her home, I understand."
+
+Ma looked at him thoughtfully for a moment. It wouldn't have been called
+a stare, it was too kindly for that, but Reyburn thought to himself that
+he would not have liked to have borne her scrutiny if he had anything to
+conceal, for he felt as if she might read the truth in his eyes.
+
+"Are you--please excuse me for askin'--but are you a member of any
+church?"
+
+Reyburn flushed, and wanted to laugh, but was embarrassed in spite of
+himself:
+
+"Why, yes--I'm a member," he said slowly, then with a frank lifting of
+his eyes to her troubled gaze, "I united with the church when I was a
+mere kid, but I'm afraid I'm not much of a member. I really am not what
+you'd call 'working' at it much nowadays. I go to morning service
+sometimes, but that's about all. I don't want to be a hypocrite."
+
+He wondered as he spoke why he took the trouble to answer the woman so
+fully. Her question was in a way impertinent, much like the way her
+daughter talked. Yet she seemed wholly unconscious of it.
+
+"I know," she assented sorrowfully. "There's lots of them in the church.
+We have 'em, too, even in our little village. But still, after all, you
+can't help havin' confidence more in them that has 'named the name' than
+in them that has not."
+
+Reyburn looked at her curiously and felt a sudden infusion of respect
+for her. She was putting the test of her faith to him, and he knew by
+the little stifled sigh that he had been found wanting.
+
+"I s'pose lawyers don't have much time to think about being Christians,"
+she apologized for him.
+
+He felt impelled to be frank with her:
+
+"I'm afraid I can't urge that excuse. Unfortunately I have a good deal
+of time on my hands now. I've just opened my office and I'm waiting for
+clients."
+
+"Where were you before that? You did not just get through studying?"
+
+He saw she was wondering whether he was wise enough to help her protege.
+
+"No, I spent the last three years in France."
+
+"Up at the front?" The pupils of her eyes dilated eagerly.
+
+"Yes, in every drive," he answered, wondering that a woman of this sort
+should be so interested now that the war was over.
+
+"And you came back safe!" she said slowly, looking at him with a kind of
+wistful sorrow in her eyes. "My boy was shot the first day he went over
+the top."
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," said Reyburn gently, a sudden tightness in his throat.
+
+"But it was all right." She flashed a dazzling smile at him through the
+tears that came into her eyes. "It wasn't as if he wasn't ready. Johnny
+was always a good boy, an' he joined church when he was fourteen, an'
+always kep' his promises. He used to pray every night just as faithful,
+an' read his Bible. I've got the little Testament he carried all
+through. His chaplain sent it to me. It's got a bullet hole through it,
+and blood-marks, but it's good to me to look at, 'cause I know Johnny's
+with his Saviour. He wasn't afraid to die. He said to me before he left,
+he says: 'Ma, if anythin' happens to me it's all right. You know, Ma, I
+ain't forgettin' what you taught me, an' I ain't forgettin' Christ is
+with me.'"
+
+Mrs. Carson wiped her eyes furtively, and tried to look cheerful.
+Reyburn wished he knew how to comfort her.
+
+"It makes a man feel mean," he said at last, trying to fit his toe into
+the pattern of the ingrain carpet, "to come home alive and whole when so
+many poor fellows had to give their lives. I've often wondered how I
+happened to get through."
+
+She looked at him tenderly:
+
+"Perhaps your Heavenly Father brought you back to give you more chance
+to do things for Him, an' get ready to die when your time comes."
+
+There was something startling to this self-composed city chap in hearing
+a thing like this from the lips of the mother whose beloved son was gone
+forever beyond her teaching but had "been ready." Reyburn looked at her
+steadily, soberly, and then with a queer constriction in his throat he
+looked down at the floor thoughtfully and said:
+
+"Perhaps He did."
+
+"Well, I can't help bein' glad you're a church member, anyhow," said
+Mrs. Carson, rising to look out of the window. "She needs a Christian to
+help her, an' I'd sooner trust a Christian. If you really meant it when
+you joined church you've got somethin' to fall back on anyhow. Here she
+comes. I'll just go an' tell her you're in here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+BETTY, her eyes wide with fear, her face white as a lily, appeared like
+a wraith at the parlor door and looked at him. It gave Reyburn a queer
+sensation, as if a picture one had been looking at in a story book
+should suddenly become alive and move and stare at one. As he rose and
+came forward he still seemed to see like a dissolving view between them
+the little huddled bride on the floor of the church. Then he suddenly
+realized that she was trembling.
+
+"Please don't be afraid of me, Miss Stanhope," he said gently. "I have
+only come to help you, and if after you have talked with me you feel
+that you would rather I should have nothing to do with your affairs I
+will go away and no one in the world shall be the wiser for it. I give
+you my word of honor."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty, toppling into a chair near by. "I--guess--I'm not
+afraid of you. I just didn't know who you might be----!" She stopped,
+caught her breath and tried to laugh, but it ended sorrily, almost in a
+sob.
+
+"Well, I don't wonder," said Reyburn, trying to find something
+reassuring to say. "The truth is, I was rather upset about you. I
+didn't quite know who you might turn out to be, you see!"
+
+"Oh!" Betty's hand slipped up to her throat, and her lips quivered as
+she tried to smile.
+
+"Please don't feel that way," he said, "or I'll go away at once." He was
+summoning all his courage and hoping she wasn't going to break down and
+cry. How little she was, and sweet! Her eyes pleaded, just as they did
+in that one look in the church. How could anybody be unkind to her?
+
+"I'm quite all right," said Betty with a forced smile, siting up very
+straight.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better introduce myself," he said, trying to speak in a
+very commonplace tone. "I'm just a lawyer that your friend Miss Jane
+Carson sent out to see if I could be of any service to you. It may
+possibly make things a little easier for you if I explain that while I
+never had heard of you before, and have no possible connection with your
+family or friends, I happened to be at your wedding!"
+
+"Oh!" said Betty with a little agonized breath.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Bryce Cochrane?" he asked.
+
+Betty could not have got any whiter, but her eyes seemed to blanch a
+trifle.
+
+"A little," she said in a very small voice.
+
+"Well, she is my cousin."
+
+"Oh!" said Betty again.
+
+"Her husband was unable to accompany her to the wedding, and so I went
+in his place to escort Isabel. I knew nothing of your affairs either
+before or after the wedding, until this announcement was brought to my
+notice, and Miss Carson called on me."
+
+Betty took the paper in her trembling fingers, and looked into her own
+pictured eyes. Then everything seemed to swim before her for a moment.
+She pressed her hand against her throat and set her white lips firmly,
+looking up at the stranger with a sudden terror and comprehension.
+
+"You want to get that five thousand dollars!" she said, speaking the
+words in a daze of trouble. "Oh, I haven't got five thousand dollars!
+Not now! But perhaps I could manage to get it if you would be good
+enough to wait just a little, till I can find a way. Oh, if you knew
+what it means to me!"
+
+Warren Reyburn sprang to his feet in horror, a flame of anger leaping
+into his eyes.
+
+"Five thousand dollars be hanged!" he said fiercely. "Do I look like
+that kind of a fellow? It may seem awfully queer to you for an utter
+stranger to be butting into your affairs like this unless I did have
+some ulterior motive, but I swear to you that I have none. I came out
+here solely because I saw that you were in great likelihood of being
+found by the people from whom you had evidently run away. Miss Stanhope,
+I stood where I could watch your face when you came up the aisle at your
+wedding, and something in your eyes just before you dropped made me wish
+I could knock that bridegroom down and take care of you somehow until
+you got that hurt look out of your face. I know it was rather ridiculous
+for an utter stranger to presume so far, but when I saw that the sleuths
+were out after you, and when the knowledge of your whereabouts was put
+into my hands without the seeking, I wouldn't have been a man if I
+hadn't come and offered my services. I'm not a very great lawyer, nor
+even a very rising one, as your Miss Carson seems to think, but I'm a
+man with a soul to protect a woman who is in danger, and if that's you,
+I'm at your service. If not, you've only to say so and I'll take the
+next train home and keep my mouth shut!"
+
+He took his watch out and looked at it hastily, although he had not the
+slightest idea what it registered, nor what time the next train for home
+left. He looked very tall and strong and commanding as he stood in his
+dignity waiting for her answer, and Betty looked up like a little child
+and trusted him.
+
+"Oh! Please forgive me!" she cried. "I've been so frightened ever since
+Bob came after me. I couldn't think you had come for any good, because I
+didn't know any one in the world who would want to help me."
+
+"Certainly!" said Warren Reyburn with a lump in his throat, sitting down
+quickly to hide his emotion. "Please consider me a friend, and command
+me."
+
+"Thank you," said Betty taking a deep breath and trying to crowd back
+the tears. "I'm afraid there isn't any way to help me, but I'm glad to
+have a friend, and I'm sorry I was so rude."
+
+"You weren't rude, and that was a perfectly natural conclusion from my
+blundering beginning," he protested, looking at the adorable waves of
+hair that framed her soft cheeks. "But there is always a way to help
+people when they are in trouble, and I'm here to find out what it is. Do
+you think you could trust me enough to tell me what it's all about? Miss
+Carson didn't seem to know much or else she didn't feel free to say."
+
+"I didn't tell her much," said Betty, lifting her sea-blue eyes. "She
+was a stranger, too, you know."
+
+"Well, she's a mighty good friend of yours, I'll say, and she's acted
+in a very wise manner. She took more precautions than an old detective
+would have done. She told me only that some one was trying to make you
+marry a man you did not wish to marry. Is that correct?"
+
+Betty shivered involuntarily and a wave of color went over her white
+face.
+
+"It sounds queer," she said, "as if I hadn't any character or force
+myself, but you don't understand. No one would understand unless they
+knew it all, and had been through it for years. At first I didn't quite
+understand it myself. I'd better tell you the story. I thought I never
+could tell any one, because they were my father's family, and I know he
+would shrink so from having it known, but I'm sure he wouldn't blame me
+now."
+
+"He certainly would not blame you, Miss Stanhope. I have heard that your
+father was a wonderful man, with high principles. I feel sure he would
+justify you in appealing to some one who was willing to advise you in a
+strait like this. You know no woman need ever marry any man against her
+will."
+
+"Not if it were her father's dying wish?"
+
+"Certainly not. Miss Stanhope, did your father love you?"
+
+"Oh, I'm sure he did. He was the most wonderful father! I've often
+thought that he would never have asked it of me if he had realized----"
+
+"Did he ever during his lifetime seem to wish you to be unhappy?"
+
+"Never! That was the strange part of it. But you see he didn't know how
+I felt. I think I'd better tell you all about it."
+
+"That would be the better way, if it won't be too hard for you."
+
+Betty clasped her small hands together tightly and began:
+
+"My own mother died when I was quite a little girl, so father and I were
+a great deal to each other. He used to look after my lessons himself,
+and was always very careful what kind of teachers I had. He was mother
+and father both to me. When I was ten years old my governess died
+suddenly while father was away on a business trip, and one of our
+neighbors was very kind to me, coming in and looking after the servants
+and everything and keeping me over at her house for a few days till
+father got back. She had a widowed sister visiting her, a rather young
+woman who was very beautiful. At least I thought she was beautiful then,
+and she made a great pet of me, so that I grew fond of her, although I
+had not liked her at first.
+
+"After father came home she used to slip over every day to see me while
+he was at his business, and he was grateful to her for making me happy.
+Then he found out that she was in trouble, had lost her money or
+something, and wanted to get a position teaching. He arranged to have
+her teach me, and so she came to our house to stay.
+
+"Somehow after that I never seemed to see so much of my father as I used
+to do, for she was always there, but at first I didn't care, because she
+was nice to me, and always getting up things to keep me busy and happy.
+She would make my father buy expensive toys and books and games for me,
+and fine clothes, and so of course I was pleased. In about a year my
+father married her, and at first it seemed very beautiful to me to have
+a real mother, but little by little I began to see that she preferred to
+be alone with my father and did not want me around so much. It was very
+hard to give up the companionship of my father, but my stepmother kept
+me busy with other things, so that I really didn't think much about it
+while it was first happening.
+
+"But one day there came a letter. I remember it came while we were at
+breakfast, and my father got very white and stern when he read it, and
+handed it over to my mother and asked whether it was true, and then she
+began to cry and sent me from the table. I found out a few days after
+that that my stepmother had two sons, both older than myself, and that
+she had not told my father. It was through some trouble they had got
+into at school which required quite a large sum of money to cover
+damages that my father discovered it, and he was terribly hurt that she
+should have concealed it from him. I learned all this from the servants,
+who talked when they thought I was not within hearing. There were days
+and days when my father scarcely spoke at the table, and when he looked
+at me it made a pain go through my heart, he looked so stern and sad. My
+stepmother stayed a great deal in her room and looked as if she had been
+crying. But after a few weeks things settled down a good deal as they
+had been, only that my father never lost that sad troubled look. There
+was some trouble about my stepmother's sons, too, for there was a great
+deal of argument between her and my father, of which I only heard
+snatches, and then one day they came home to stay with us. Something had
+happened at the school where they were that they could not stay any
+longer. I can remember distinctly the first night they ate dinner with
+us. It seemed to me that it was like a terrific thunderstorm that never
+quite broke. Everybody was trying to be nice and polite, but underneath
+it all there was a kind of lightning of all kinds of feelings, hurt
+feelings and wrong ones and right ones all mixed up.
+
+"Only the two boys didn't seem to feel it much. They sort of took things
+for granted, as if that had always been their home, and they didn't act
+very polite. It seemed to trouble my father, who looked at them so
+severely that it almost choked me, and I couldn't go on eating my
+dinner. He didn't seem like my dear father when he looked like that. I
+always used to watch my father, and he seemed to make the day for me. If
+he was sad, then I was sad; and if he was glad then I was happy all
+over, until one day my stepmother noticed me and said: 'See, dear little
+Elizabeth is trembling. You ought not to speak that way before her,
+Charles.' And then father looked at me, and all suddenly I learned to
+smile when I didn't feel like it. I smiled back to him just to let him
+know it didn't matter what he did, I would love him anyhow!"
+
+During the recital Reyburn had sat with courteous averted gaze as though
+he would not trouble her with more of his presence than was absolutely
+necessary. Now he gave her a swift glance.
+
+Betty's eyes were off on distance, and she was talking from the depths
+of her heart, great tears welling into her eyes. All at once she
+remembered the stranger:
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said, and brushed her hand across her eyes. "I
+haven't gone over it to any one ever, and I forgot you would not be
+interested in details."
+
+"Please don't mind me. I am interested in every detail you are good
+enough to give me. It all makes the background of the truth, you know,
+and that is what I am after," said Reyburn, deeply touched. "I think you
+are wonderful to tell me all this. I shall regard it most sacredly."
+
+Betty flashed a look of gratitude at him, and noticed the sympathy in
+his face. It almost unnerved her, but she went on:
+
+"The oldest boy was named Bessemer, and he wasn't very good-looking. He
+was very tall and awkward, and always falling over things. He had little
+pale eyes, and hardly any chin. His teeth projected, too, and his hair
+was light and very straight and thin. His mother didn't seem to love him
+very much, even when he was a little boy. She bullied him and found
+fault with him continually, and quite often I felt very sorry for him,
+although I wasn't naturally attracted to him. He wasn't really
+unpleasant to me. We got along very nicely, although I never had much to
+do with him. There wasn't much to him.
+
+"The other brother, Herbert, was handsome like his mother, only dark,
+with black curly hair, black wicked eyes, and a big, loose, cruel mouth.
+His mother just idolized him, and he knew it. He could make her do
+anything on earth. He used to force Bessemer into doing wrong things,
+too, things that he was afraid to do himself, because he knew father
+would not be so hard on Bessemer as on him. For father had taken a great
+dislike to Herbert, and it was no wonder. He seemed to have no idea at
+all that he was not owner of the house. He took anything he pleased for
+his own use, even father's most sacred possessions, and broke them in a
+fit of anger, too, sometimes, without ever saying he was sorry. He
+talked very disrespectfully of father and to him, and acted so to the
+servants that they gave notice and left. Every few days there would be a
+terrible time over something Herbert had done. Once I remember he went
+to the safe and got some money out that belonged to father and went off
+and spent it in some dreadful way that made father very angry. Of course
+I was still only a little girl, and I did not know all that went on.
+Father was very careful that I should not know. He guarded me more than
+ever, but he always looked sad when he came to kiss me good-night.
+
+"Herbert took especial delight in tormenting me," she went on with a sad
+far-away look in her eyes as if she were recalling unpleasant memories.
+She did not see the set look on Reyburn's face nor notice his low
+exclamation of anger. She went steadily on: "He found out that I did not
+like June-bugs, and once he caught hundreds of them and locked me into a
+room with them with all the lights turned on. I was almost frightened to
+death, but it cured me of being afraid of June-bugs." A little smile
+trembled out on Betty's lips. "Just because I wouldn't give him the
+satisfaction of letting him hear me scream." She finished. "Then he
+caught a snake and put it in my room, and he put a lot of burdocks in my
+hat so they would get in my hair. Foolish things those were, of course,
+but he was a constant nightmare to me. Sometimes he would tie a wire
+across the passages in the upper hall where I had to pass to my room,
+and when I fell my hands went down against a lot of slimy toads in the
+dark, for he always somehow managed to have the light go out just as I
+fell. There were hundreds of things like that, but I needn't multiply
+them. That's the kind of boy he was. And because he discovered that my
+father loved me very much, and because he knew my father disliked him,
+he spent much time in trying to torment me in secret. I couldn't tell my
+father, because he always looked so sad whenever there was trouble, and
+there was sure to be trouble between him and my stepmother if my father
+found out that Herbert had done anything wrong. One day my father came
+upon us just as Herbert had caught me and was trying to cut my curls
+off. I didn't care about the curls, but I knew my father did. I began to
+scream. Herbert gripped me so I thought I would die with the pain,
+putting his big strong fingers around my throat and choking me so I
+could not make any noise."
+
+Reyburn clenched his hands until the knuckles went white and uttered an
+exclamation, but Betty did not notice:
+
+"There was a terrible time then, and I was sent away to a school, a good
+many miles from home, where I stayed for several years. Father always
+came up to see me every week end, for a few hours at least, and we had
+wonderful times together. Sometimes in vacation he would bring my
+stepmother along and she would bring me beautiful presents and smile and
+pet me, and say she missed me so much and she wished I would ask my
+father to let me come back and go to school in the city. But I never
+did, because I was afraid of Herbert. As I grew older I used to have an
+awful horror of him. But finally one vacation father and mother both
+came up and said they wanted me at home. My stepmother went to my room
+with me and told me I needn't be afraid of Herbert any more, that he was
+quite grown up and changed and would be good to me, and that it would
+please my father to have all his family together happily again. I
+believed her and I told father I would like to go. He looked very happy,
+and so I went home. Herbert had been away at school himself most of the
+time, and so had Bessemer, although they had been in trouble a good many
+times, so the servants told me, and had to change to new schools. They
+were both away when I got home. I had a very happy time for three weeks,
+only that I never saw father alone once. My stepmother was always there.
+But she was kind and I tried not to mind. Then all of a sudden one night
+I woke up and heard voices, and I knew that the boys were back from the
+camp to which they had been sent. I didn't sleep much the rest of the
+night, but in the morning I made up my mind that it was only a little
+while before I could go back to school, and I would be nice to the boys
+and maybe they wouldn't trouble me.
+
+"I found that it was quite true that Herbert had grown up and changed.
+He didn't want to torment me any more, he wanted to make love to me,
+and I was only a child yet. I wasn't quite fifteen. It filled me with
+horror, and after he had caught me in the dark--he always loved to get
+people in the dark--and tried to kiss me, I asked father to let me go
+back to school at once. I can remember how sad he looked at me as if I
+had cut him to the heart when I asked him."
+
+During this part of the tale Reyburn sat with stern countenance, his
+fingers clenched around the arms of the chair in which he sat, but he
+held himself quiet and listened with compressed lips, watching every
+expression that flitted across the sweet pale face.
+
+"That was the last time I was at home with my father," she said, trying
+to control her quivering lips. "He took me back to school, and he came
+three times to see me, though not so often as before. The last time he
+said beautiful things to me about trying to live a right life and being
+kind to those about me, and he asked me to forgive him if he had ever
+done anything to hurt me in any way. Of course I said he hadn't. And
+then he said he hoped I wouldn't feel too hard at him for marrying again
+and bringing those boys into my life. I told him it was all right, that
+some day they would grow up and go away and he and I would live together
+again! And he said some awful words about them under his breath. But he
+asked me to forgive him again and kissed me and went away.
+
+"He was taken very sick when he got home, and they never let me know
+until he was dead. Of course I went home to the funeral, but I didn't
+stay; I couldn't. I went back to school alone. My stepmother had been
+very kind, but she said she knew it was my father's wish that I should
+finish my school year. When vacation came she was traveling for her
+health. She wrote me a beautiful letter telling me how she missed me,
+and how much she needed me now in her bereavement, and how she hoped
+another summer would see us together; but she stayed abroad two years
+and the third year she went to California. I was sent to another school,
+and because I was not asked about it and there didn't seem anything else
+to do, I went. Every time I would suggest doing something else my
+stepmother would write and say how sorry she was she could not give her
+consent, but my father had left very explicit directions about me and
+she was only trying to carry out his wishes. She knew me well enough to
+be sure I would want to do anything he wished for me. And I did, of
+course."
+
+Reyburn gave her a look of sympathy and getting up began to pace the
+little room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+"IT was not until last spring that she sent for me to come home," went
+on Betty, "and was very effusive about how much she needed me and how
+she was so much better, and meant to be a real mother to me now, helping
+me see the world and have a good time. She took me from one summer
+resort to another. Of course it was pleasant after having been shut up
+in school all those years, but she kept me close with her all the time,
+and I met only the people she chose to have me meet. All the time she
+kept talking about 'dear Herbert' and telling how wonderful he was and
+how he had grown to be 'such a dear boy.' Finally he arrived and began
+the very first evening he was with us to coax me to marry him. At first
+he was very courteous and waited upon me whenever I stirred, and I
+almost thought his mother was right about his being changed. But when I
+told him that I did not love him and could not ever marry him I caught a
+look on his face like an angry snarl, and I heard him tell his mother I
+was a crazy little fool, and that he would break my neck for me after he
+got me good and married. Then his mother began to come to me and cry
+and tell me how dear Herbert was almost heart-broken, that he would
+never lift up his head again, and that I would send him to ruin. It was
+simply awful, and I didn't know how to endure it. I began to wonder
+where I could go. Of course I had never been brought up to do anything,
+so I could not very well expect to go out into the world and make my
+living."
+
+"Didn't you have any money at all?" interrupted Reyburn suddenly.
+
+"Oh, yes," she said, looking up as if she had just remembered his
+presence. "I had always plenty of spending money, but if I went away
+where they couldn't find me, why, of course, I would have to give that
+up."
+
+"Why, where did your money come from? Was it an allowance from your
+stepmother, or did your father leave it to you, or what?"
+
+"I'm not just sure," said Betty, with troubled brow. "I never really
+knew much about the money affairs. When I asked, they always put me off
+and said that I was too young to be bothered with business yet, I would
+be told all about it when I came of age. My stepmother harped a great
+deal on keeping me young as long as possible. She said it was my
+father's wish that I should be relieved of all care until I came of
+age. But there were some trustees in Boston. I know that, because I had
+to write to them, about once or twice a year. My stepmother was most
+particular about that. I think they were old friends of my own mother,
+though I don't know when I learned that. Father told me once that mother
+had left me enough to keep me comfortably even without what he would
+leave me, so I'm sure I shall have enough to repay you if I could once
+get it."
+
+"Don't worry about me!" he exclaimed. "It seems so terrible for you to
+have been alone in a situation like that! Wasn't there any one you could
+appeal to for help?"
+
+"No, not any one whom I thought it would be right to tell. You see, in a
+way it was my father's honor. She was his wife, and I'm sure he loved
+her--at least at first--and she really was very good to me, except when
+it was a question of her son."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't agree with you there!" he said sternly. "I think she
+was a clever actress. But excuse me. Go on, please."
+
+"At last, when things had got so bad that I thought I must run away
+somewhere, my stepmother came into my room one morning and locked the
+door. She had been weeping, and she looked very sweet and pitiful. She
+said she had something to tell me. She had tried not to have to do it,
+for she was afraid it would grieve me and might make me have hard
+feelings against my father. I told her that was impossible. Then she
+told me that my father on his deathbed had called her to him and told
+her that it was his wish that I should marry one of her sons, and he
+wanted her to tell me. He felt that he had wronged them by hating them
+for my sake and he felt that I could make it all right by marrying one
+of them. My stepmother said that when she saw how infatuated dear
+Herbert was with me she hoped that she would be spared having to tell
+me, but now that I was treating him so she felt bound to deliver the
+message. Then she handed me a paper which said virtually the same thing
+which she had told me, and was signed by my father in his own
+handwriting."
+
+"Was the paper written or printed?" interrupted Reyburn.
+
+"I think it was typewritten, but the signature was papa's. There could
+be no mistake about that, and he wouldn't have signed something he
+didn't mean." Betty sighed as if it were a subject she had worn into her
+heart by much sorrowful thought.
+
+"It might be quite possible for him to have done that under influence
+or delirium, or when he was too sick to realize."
+
+"Oh, do you think so?" Betty caught at the hope. "It seems so awful to
+go against papa's last request."
+
+"There is nothing awful but the idea of your being tied to that--beast!"
+said Reyburn with unexpected fervor. Betty looked at him gratefully and
+went on:
+
+"I was simply appalled. I couldn't think, and I made my stepmother go
+away and leave me for a little while, but things got blacker and blacker
+and I thought I was going crazy. I couldn't marry Herbert even to please
+my father. The next day Bessemer arrived. He had been worrying his
+mother a lot about money, and when he arrived I couldn't help hearing
+what they said to him. They charged him with all sort of dreadful
+things. They called him a disgrace, and threatened to let him be
+arrested, and a great many more such things. Finally his mother ended up
+by telling him she never had loved him and that if he made any more
+trouble about money she would cut him off without a cent. I was sitting
+upstairs in my room with my windows open, and all their talk floated
+right up to me. It made me feel sick, and yet I felt sorry for Bessemer,
+for lately whenever he had been around he had been kind to me, and
+sometimes I had stayed near him to get rid of Herbert. We often talked
+over our troubles together and sympathized with one another. He felt
+sorry for me, but he was weak himself and couldn't see any way out for
+either of us.
+
+"They had pretty stormy times all that day. Late in the afternoon
+Herbert and Bessemer went to their mother's room and were closeted with
+her for two hours, after which Herbert went away in the car with his
+suitcase and bags as if he were not coming back soon. I watched him from
+my window, and in great relief went down to take a little walk, for I
+had stayed closely in my room all day trying to plan what to do. One
+thing that held me from running away was that it would be such a
+disgrace to the family, and I knew my father would have felt it so
+keenly. That was always the great trouble when the boys got into scrapes
+at college, my father would groan and say he felt disgraced to be so
+conspicuous before the world. So I hesitated to do what would have been
+a sorrow to him had he been alive.
+
+"Half an hour later I was sitting alone in the twilight on one of the
+porches, and Bessemer came out and sat down beside me.
+
+"He looked so sort of homely and lonesome that I put my hand on his arm
+and told him I was awfully sorry for him, and suddenly he turned around
+and said:
+
+"'Say, Betty, why don't you marry _me_? Then they can't say a word to
+either of us. Your father's wishes will be carried out and Herb'll have
+to whistle.'
+
+"At first I was horrified, but we talked a long time about it, and he
+told me how lonely he had always been, and how nobody had ever loved
+him, and he knew he wasn't attractive, and all that; and then he said
+that if I married him we would go away and live by ourselves and he
+would let me do just as I wanted to. He wouldn't bother me about
+anything. If I didn't love him he would keep out of my sight, and things
+like that, till I got very sorry for him, and began to think that
+perhaps after all it was the best thing that would ever come for either
+of us. So I said I would.
+
+"It surprised me a little that my stepmother took it so calmly when we
+told her. She cried a little, but did it very prettily, and kissed
+Bessemer, and told him he was fortunate. Then she kissed me and said I
+was a darling, and that she would be so happy if it only weren't for
+poor dear Herbert.
+
+"But after that they began to rush things for a grand wedding, and I let
+them do it because I didn't see anything else in the world for me."
+
+Betty raised her eyes and encountered the clear grave gaze of Reyburn
+fixed on her, and the color flew into her cheeks:
+
+"I know you think I'm dreadful," she said, shrinking. "I've thought so
+myself a thousand times, but truly I didn't realize then what an awful
+thing it would be to marry a man I didn't love. I only wanted to hurry
+up and get it done before Herbert came home. They said he had been
+called away by important business and might be at home any day. I gave
+my consent to everything they wanted to do, and they fixed it all just
+as they pleased. One thing that happened upset me terribly. When the
+wedding invitations came home my stepmother carried them off to her
+room. I was too sad to pay much attention anyway. But the next morning I
+happened to be down in the kitchen looking over the papers that the maid
+had taken down from the waste baskets to search for a missing letter and
+there in the pile I found one of the invitations partly addressed and
+flung aside, and the invitation was still in the envelope. I pulled it
+out with a ghastly kind of curiosity to see how I looked on paper, and
+there it read, Mrs. Charles Garland Stanhope invites you to be present
+at the marriage of her daughter Elizabeth to _Mr. Herbert Hutton_!
+
+"My heart just stood still. With the paper in my hand I rushed up to my
+stepmother's room and demanded to know what that meant. She smiled and
+said she was so sorry I had been annoyed that way, that that was a
+mistake, the invitations had come wrongly engraved and she had had to
+send them back and have them done over again. She was afraid I might be
+superstitious about it, so she hadn't told me. She was very gentle and
+sweet and tried to soothe me, and called me 'Betty,' the name my father
+always had for me, and at last I went back to my room feeling quite
+comfortable. She had said she always felt troubled for poor Bessemer,
+that nobody could love him right, he was so homely, and now I was going
+to make everything right by marrying him. She was going to try to forget
+what I had done to poor dear Herbert, and just be happy about Bessemer.
+She talked so nicely that I kissed her, a thing I hadn't done in years,
+not since she was first married to father. But somehow the shock of
+seeing Herbert's name on the invitation stayed with me, and I began to
+feel gloomier about it all and to wonder if perhaps I had done right.
+The last day I was terribly depressed and when I got to the church that
+night it suddenly came to me that perhaps after all I was not going to
+be free at all as I had hoped, but was just tying myself up to them all
+for life. I was thinking that as I walked up the aisle, and my throat
+had a big lump in it the way it always does when I am frightened, and
+then I looked up hoping a glimpse of poor Bessemer's face would steady
+me and he wasn't there at all! And right over me, waiting beside the
+minister, to marry me stood _Herbert_! My knees just gave way under me,
+and everything got black so I couldn't go on another step, nor even
+stand up. I had to drop. I wasn't unconscious as you all thought--I
+heard everything that went on, but I couldn't do anything about it.
+
+"After they had carried me into the other room and given me things to
+drink, and I could get my breath again I saw it all clearly. Herbert
+hadn't given up at all. He meant to marry me anyway. He had had the
+invitations printed with his name on purpose and they probably hadn't
+been changed at all. Everybody in that great church out there was
+_expecting_ me to marry Herbert Hutton, and I _was not going to do it_!
+I didn't quite know how I was going to stop it, but I knew I had to! You
+see I was brought up to think a great deal about what people would think
+of me if I did anything out of the usual, and it seemed to me I had
+disgraced myself forever by dropping down in the aisle. I knew Herbert
+well enough to be sure he would carry that wedding through now if he had
+to hold me up in his arms till the ceremony was over, and I was
+desperate. I would have given everything I had in the world if the floor
+had opened and swallowed me up then, but of course I knew wild thoughts
+like that wouldn't get me anywhere, so I just shut my eyes and tried to
+think of a way; and then I asked them all to go out a minute and let me
+be quiet. The doctor who had come out of the church told them to go. I
+shall always bless that man, whoever he was! Then when they were gone I
+opened a door that had a key in it, and I locked it behind me and ran
+away down some stairs and out a passage that led to the street. That
+girl, Jane Carson, was passing and she put her own coat on me and took
+me to her room and sent me here. Oh, it's been so good to get here! Do
+you think they can take me away against my will?"
+
+"Certainly not!" said the young man. "Not without some foul play, but I
+don't intend to give them any chance for that. By the way, when do you
+come of age?"
+
+"In three weeks," said Betty, looking troubled. "Why, would I be safe
+after I was of age?"
+
+"You certainly would not be under their guardianship any longer," said
+the young lawyer, "and they would have no right to control your actions,
+unless of course you were incapacitated somehow and unfit to manage your
+own affairs."
+
+Betty looked troubled.
+
+"I've thought sometimes, ever since I saw that paper in which they
+hinted that I was temporarily insane, that they might try to shut me up
+in an insane asylum. Herbert wouldn't stop at anything. Could he do
+that?"
+
+"They would have to get a doctor to swear that you were mentally
+unsound," said Reyburn, looking troubled. "Does he really love you, do
+you think or does he only want to get you in his power for some reason?"
+
+"It is more like that," said Betty sorrowfully, "he couldn't really love
+anybody but himself."
+
+"Well, don't you worry. I'm going at the case at once, and I'll put
+those people where they'll have to walk a chalk line before many hours
+are over. The first thing I must do is to see those trustees of yours.
+Can you give me the names and addresses?"
+
+He got out his fountain pen, and Betty told him all he wanted to know,
+that is, all she knew herself, and then suddenly it was train time and
+he hurried away. On the steps he paused and said in a low tone:
+
+"Are you perfectly comfortable with these people for a few days until I
+can get you better accommodations where you will be safe?"
+
+"Entirely," said Betty eagerly. "I wouldn't want to go elsewhere."
+
+"But it must be very hard for one like you to be thrown constantly with
+illiterate, uncultured people."
+
+Betty smiled dreamily:
+
+"I don't think they are exactly uncultured," she said slowly.
+"They--well, you see, they make a friend of God, and somehow I think
+that makes a difference. Don't you think it would?"
+
+"I should think it would," said Warren Reyburn reverently with a light
+in his eyes. "I think, perhaps, if you don't mind my saying it, that
+you, too, have been making a friend of God."
+
+"I've been trying to," said Betty softly, with a shy glow on her face
+that he remembered all the way back to the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+CANDACE CAMERON paced her little gabled room restively, with face
+growing redder and more excited at every step. For several weeks now she
+had been virtually a prisoner--albeit a willing enough one--in the house
+of Stanhope. But the time had come when she felt that she must do
+something.
+
+She had gone quietly enough about a proscribed part of the house, doing
+little helpful things, making herself most useful to the madam, slipping
+here and there with incredible catlike tread for so plump a body,
+managing to overhear important conversations, and melting away like a
+wraith before her presence was discovered. She had made herself so
+unobtrusive as to be almost forgotten by all save the maid Marie, who
+had been set to watch her; and she had learned that if she went to bed
+quite early in the evening, Marie relaxed her watch and went down to the
+servants' quarters, or even sometimes went out with a lover for a while,
+that is, if the madam herself happened to be out also. On several such
+occasions she had made valuable tours of investigation through the
+madam's desk and private papers.
+
+That she was overstepping her privileges as a servant in the house went
+without saying, but she silenced her Scotch conscience, which until this
+period of her existence had always kept her strictly from meddling with
+other people's affairs, by declaring over and over again to herself that
+she was doing perfectly right because she was doing it for the sake of
+"that poor wee thing that was being cheated of her rights."
+
+Several weeks had passed since her sudden re-establishment in the
+family, and the reports of Betty, so hastily readjusted and refurbished
+to harmonize with the newspaper reports, had not been any more
+satisfying. Mrs. Stanhope had explained to the servants the day after
+the excitement that Miss Betty had become temporarily deranged, and
+later that she had escaped from the private hospital where she had been
+taken, and they were doing all in their power to find her. In reply to
+Candace's gimlet-like questions she had given the name of a hospital
+where she said Betty had been taken at first, and everything seemed
+altogether plausible. But as the days went by and the horror of her
+absence grew into the soul of the lonely woman whose care Betty had been
+for years, Candace became more and more restive and suspicious. It was
+these suspicions which sent her on her investigations, and made her
+uncannily wise to pry open secret locks and cover all trace of her
+absence after she had gleaned what knowledge she sought.
+
+On this particular evening her excitement was due to having come across
+some correspondence bearing the signature of a man to whom a certain
+letter had been addressed, which had been entrusted to her charge by
+Betty's dying father and taken from her by his wife. For years she had
+been worried about that, and yet she had no absolute reason to doubt
+that the madam had not sent it to its destination, except as she knew
+its contents and read Mrs. Stanhope's character beneath the excellent
+camouflage. But to-night, even the briefest glance through the bundle of
+letters showed plainly that those men in Boston never knew the master's
+wishes, or at least, if they knew them, they were utterly disregarding
+them.
+
+Aroused on one point, her suspicions began to extend further. Where was
+Betty? Did her stepmother know, and was she somewhere suffering, alone,
+perhaps being neglected because she had not done as they wanted her to
+do? If the stepmother was capable of destroying a letter, was she
+perhaps not also capable of putting Betty out of the way? There were
+points of detail which of course did not harmonize with any such theory
+as this. Candace was no logician, but she was keen enough to feel that
+something was wrong. As for that theory of Betty's insanity she scouted
+it with a harsh laugh whenever it was mentioned in her hearing.
+Betty--keen, sweet, trusting little Betty _insane_! Nonsense! It was
+unthinkable. If she was in an asylum anywhere she was there without
+warrant, and it behoved her faithful old nurse to find a way out for
+her. This she meant to do against all odds, for she was thoroughly
+aroused now.
+
+She went to the window and looked down into the lighted street. Over
+there not four blocks away rose the steeple of the church where Betty
+had gone to be married! Around the corner was the great brick pile of
+the hospital where her stepmother said she had been taken from the
+church, and from which she was believed by the other servants to have
+escaped.
+
+Standing thus looking out into the light-starred city, Candace began to
+form a plan, her plump tightly garmented chest rising and falling
+excitedly as she thought it all out. It was up to her to find out what
+had become of Betty. But how was she to get away without being
+suspected? Somehow she must do it. She knew perfectly the address that
+had been on that letter. She had written it down carefully from memory
+as soon as it had been taken away from her. She must go to Boston and
+find that man to whom it had been written, and discover whether he had
+ever received it. But she could not go until she found out certainly
+whether or not Betty had ever really escaped from the hospital. Who knew
+but that she was shut up there yet, and the madam telling this tale all
+about and advertising with a five thousand dollar reward! In the movies,
+too! Such a disgrace on the family! How the master would have writhed at
+the publicity of his beloved daughter--"poor wee thing!"
+
+Candace turned from the window with her lips set, and tiptoeing to the
+door, listened. Yes, it was Aileen who was coming lightly up the stairs,
+singing in a low tone. It was Aileen's evening out. That meant that
+Marie would be more than usually active on the upper floor. She must
+manage it before Aileen left and Marie was called upstairs, or there
+would be no opportunity to get away without Marie seeing her.
+
+Hastily she gathered her silk dress, her cloak and her apoplectic hat
+into a bundle with her purse and her gloves, and tied them into an old
+apron, with the strings hanging free. Then stealthily opening the
+window, she dropped them out into the kitchen area below, close to the
+region of the ash cans. It was a risk, of course, but one must take some
+chances, and the servants would all be in the kitchen just now, laughing
+and talking. They would scarcely have heard it fall.
+
+She listened a tense instant, then closed the window, and possessing
+herself of a few little things, gathered hastily about the room, which
+she could stuff in her pockets, she opened her door softly, closed it
+behind her, and trotted off down the stairs just as if she were going
+about her ordinary duty. Listening a minute outside the kitchen door she
+slipped stealthily down the cellar stairs, and tiptoed over to the area
+door where the ashman took out the ashes. Softly slipping the bolt she
+opened the door and drew in her bundle. Then standing within, she
+quickly slipped the black silk over her housemaid's gown, donned her
+coat and hat and gloves, and sallied forth. A moment more and she was in
+the next street with the consciousness that she "might have done the
+like any time sooner, if she'd wanted, in spite of that little spy-cat
+Marie."
+
+"If I want to go back I'll just say I went after my insurance book," she
+chuckled to herself as she sped down the street in the direction of the
+hospital.
+
+Arrived at the big building she asked to see the list of patients taken
+in on the day of Betty's wedding, and succeeded in getting a pretty
+accurate description of each one, sufficient at least to satisfy her
+that Betty was not among them. Then she asked a few more bold questions,
+and came away fully convinced that Betty had never been in that
+hospital.
+
+By this time it was nine o'clock, and she meant to take the evening
+train for Boston, which left, she was sure, somewhere near midnight. She
+took a trolley to her old lodgings where she had been since Mrs.
+Stanhope had sent her away the first time, and hastily packed a small
+hand bag with a few necessities, made a few changes in her garments,
+then went to see a fellow lodger whom she knew well, and where she felt
+sure she could easily get a check cashed, for she had a tidy little bank
+account of her own, and was well known to be reliable.
+
+Having procured the necessary funds, she made her way to the station and
+found that she had still an hour to spare before the Boston train left.
+
+Settled down at last in the back seat of a common car, she made herself
+as comfortable as her surroundings would allow, and gave herself up to
+planning the campaign that was before her.
+
+Canny Candace did not go at once to the office of the brothers, James
+and George McIntyre, though she looked them up in the telephone book the
+very first thing when the train arrived in Boston even before she had
+had a bite to eat, and her cup of tea which meant more to her than the
+"bite." She reasoned that they would be busy in the early hours and not
+be able to give her their undivided attention. She had not lived out all
+her life for nothing. She knew the ways of the world, and she had very
+strict ideas about the best ways of doing everything. So it happened
+that when she was at last shown into the office of the McIntyres, Warren
+Reyburn who had traveled to Boston on the sleeper of the same train that
+she had taken the night before, was just arising from an earnest
+conference with the two men. With her first glance, as the three emerged
+from the inner office, Candace saw that the two elder gentlemen were
+much disturbed and it flitted through her mind that she had come at an
+inopportune moment. Then her quick eye took in the younger man and her
+little alert head cocked to one side with a questioning attitude. Where
+had she seen him before? Candace had the kind of a mind that kept people
+and events card-indexed even to the minutest detail, and it didn't take
+many seconds for her to place Warren Reyburn back in the church at the
+wedding, standing against the wall with his arms folded. She had noticed
+him particularly because he was so courteous to a little old lady who
+came in too late to get a seat. She had studied him as he stood there,
+waiting for the wedding march, and she had thought how handsome he
+looked and how fine it would have been if her wee Betty had been getting
+a man like that in place of the weak-faced Bessemer Hutton. She had
+watched to see who he was with, and felt deep satisfaction when she
+noticed him lean over and speak to Mrs. Bryce Cochrane as if he belonged
+to her. He wasn't her husband, because she knew Mr. Cochrane, who had
+been a favorite with Mr. Stanhope and much at the house. This man might
+be Mrs. Cochrane's brother "or the likes," and she had pleased herself
+watching him till Betty arrived and took all her thoughts. So now she
+stood with her little round head in its hectic hat tilted interestedly
+to one side, watching, ears on the keen to catch any word, for all the
+world like a "bit brown sparrow" saucily perched on another man's
+window, where it really had no right to be.
+
+At last one of the McIntyre's shook hands gravely with the younger man,
+and the other one attended him to the door, talking in low tones. The
+McIntyre thus set at liberty, turned questioningly toward the stranger,
+who was not slow in getting to her feet and coming forward.
+
+"You will maybe be Mr. James McIntyre?" she asked, lifting her sea-blue
+eyes set in her apple-red face, and fixing her firm little lips in
+dignity. Candace was a servant and knew her place, but she felt the
+importance of her mission, and meant to have no disrespect done to it.
+
+"I am Mr. George McIntyre," the gentleman replied, and, indicating the
+man at the door, "Mr. James McIntyre will be at liberty in a moment, but
+perhaps I will do as well?"
+
+Candace cocked a glance toward the elderly back at the door; and then
+returned her look to Mr. George:
+
+"You'll maybe be knowing Mr. Charles Stanhope?" she propounded, as if
+she were giving him a riddle, and her blue eyes looked him through and
+through:
+
+"Oh, surely, surely! He was a very close friend! You--knew him?"
+
+"I was Miss Betty's nurse who cooked the griddle cakes for you the
+morning after the funeral----" she said, and waited with breathless
+dignity to see how he would take it.
+
+"Oh! Is that so!" He beamed on her kindly. "Yes, yes, I remember those
+cakes. They were delicious! And what can I do for you? Just sit down.
+Why, bless me, I don't know but that your coming may be very opportune!
+Can you tell me anything of Miss Betty?"
+
+Candace pressed her lips together with a knowing smile as much as to say
+she might tell volumes if it were wise, and she cast a glance at the
+other brother who was shaking hands now with his visitor and promising
+to meet him a little later:
+
+"Yon man'll be knowing a bit, too, I'll be thinking," she hazarded
+nodding toward Reyburn as he left. "He was at the wedding, I'm most
+sure----!"
+
+The elder McIntyre gave her a quick glance and signalled to his brother
+to come near:
+
+"This is Miss Stanhope's nurse, the one who cooked breakfast for us at
+the time of the funeral," he said, and to Candace, "This is Mr. James
+McIntyre."
+
+Candace fixed him with another of her inquisitive little glances:
+
+"I've some bit papers put by that I thought ye might like to see," she
+said with a cautious air. "I've kept them fer long because I thought
+they might be wanted sometime, yet I've never dared bring them to your
+notice before lest I would be considered meddlin', and indeed I wasn't
+sure but you had them already. Will you please to look over them papers
+and see if you've ever seen them before?" She drew forth an envelope
+from her bag and handed it to them. "It's a bit letter that Mr. Stanhope
+wrote the day he was dyin' an' then copied and give to me to mail, and
+his lady took it away, sayin' she would attend to it. What I want to
+know is, did ye ever get the letter? If ye did it's all right and none
+of my business further, an' I'll go on my way back home again and think
+no more about it; but if ye didn't then there it is, an' you ought to
+see it, that's sure!"
+
+The two men drew eagerly together and studied the trembling lines:
+
+"It's his writing all right," murmured one, under his breath, and the
+brother nodded gravely:
+
+"You say that this was the original of a letter that was given to you to
+mail to us?"
+
+Candace nodded.
+
+"It's what he wrote first, and got ink on it, an' then wrote it over. I
+can't say what changes he made, as I didn't read it, but this he gave to
+me to burn, and before I gets it burned my lady comes in and takes the
+letter from me while he was sleepin'; and so I hid the bit papers,
+thinkin' they might be a help to wee Betty sometime. And oh, can ye
+tell me anything of my little Lady Betty? Is she safe? Did she come to
+you for refuge? You needn't be afraid to tell me. I'll never breathe a
+word----!"
+
+The two brothers exchanged quick glances of warning and the elder man
+spoke:
+
+"My good woman, we appreciate your coming, and these papers may prove
+very useful to us. We hope to be able to clear up this matter of Miss
+Stanhope's disappearance very soon. She did not come to us, however, and
+she is not here. But if you will step into the room just beyond and wait
+for a little while we may be able to talk this matter over with you."
+
+Very courteously he ushered the plump, apprehensive little woman into
+the next room and established her in an easy leather chair with a
+quantity of magazines and newspapers about her, but she kept her little
+head cocked anxiously on one side, and watched the door like a dog whose
+master has gone in and shut the way behind him; and she never sat back
+in her chair nor relaxed one iota during the whole of the two hours that
+she had to wait before she was called at last to the inner office where
+she found the handsome young man whom she remembered seeing at the
+wedding.
+
+She presently found that Reyburn was as keen as he was handsome, but if
+she hadn't remembered him at the wedding as a friend of that nice Mrs.
+Cochrane, she never would have made it as easy as she did for him to
+find out things from her, for she could be canny herself on occasion if
+she tried, and she did not trust everybody.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+THE mysterious disappearance of Candace from the Stanhope house caused
+nothing short of a panic. Herbert and his mother held hourly wrangles,
+and frantically tried one thing and then another. Day after day the
+responses came in from the advertisements they had caused to be put
+forth. Everyone was hot-foot for the reward, but so far little of
+encouragement had been brought out. More and more the young man was
+fixing his mind on the idea that Candace had something to do with
+Betty's disappearance, so he was leaving no stone unturned to find the
+nurse as well as the girl. To this end he insisted on seeing personally
+and cross-examining every person who came claiming to have a clue to the
+lost girl.
+
+That morning, at about the same hour when Candace walked into the office
+of the McIntyre Brothers in Boston, James, the butler, much against his
+dignity, was ushering a curious person into the presence of the son of
+the house. James showed by every line of his noble figure that he
+considered this duty beneath his dignity, and that it was only because
+the occasion was unusual that he tolerated it for a moment, but the man
+who ambled observantly behind him, stretching his neck to see everything
+that was to be seen in this part of the great house, that he might tell
+about it at the fire-house, failed to get the effect. He was wondering
+why in thunder such rich people as these seemed to be, couldn't afford
+carpets big enough to cover their whole floors, instead of just having
+skimpy little bits of pieces dropped around here and there, that made
+you liable to skid all over the place if you stepped on one of them
+biasly.
+
+Herbert Hutton lifted his head and watched Abijah Gage slouch into the
+room. He measured him keenly and remained silent while Abijah opened up.
+There had been many other applicants for that reward that day, with
+stories cunningly woven, and facts, substantiated by witnesses, in one
+case a whole family brought along to swear to the fabrication; but as
+yet Herbert had not found a promising clue to his missing bride, and the
+time was going by. In a few days it would be too late, and his
+undisciplined spirit raged within him. It was not only his bride he
+wanted, it was her fortune, which was worth any trouble he might take;
+and every day, every hour, every minute now, it was slipping, slipping,
+slipping from his eager grasp.
+
+Abijah was a little overawed in the presence of this insolent man of the
+world, but he felt he had, for almost the first time in his life, Truth
+on his side, and he was strong in the power of it. With a cunning equal
+to the one that matched him he dealt out his information bit by bit,
+giving only enough at a time to make his victim sure it was the real
+thing this time; and then he halted stubbornly and would say no more
+until that five thousand dollars was signed and sealed over to him. They
+had a long argument, but in the end Bi won, and was given certain
+documents which he was satisfied would stand in court. A little later
+the telephone in Reyburn's office rang sharply, and when Jimmie Ryan
+responded a voice that he had never heard before asked for Mr. Warren
+Reyburn.
+
+"He's out of town," Jimmie replied.
+
+"How soon will he be back?" The voice was like a snarl.
+
+"I'm not quite sure. He's called to Boston on business," swelled Jimmie
+loyally.
+
+An oath ripped over the wire, and Jimmie raged within and quailed. Was
+his idol then losing a great case?
+
+"He might be back in a few hours," insinuated Jimmie. "Who shall I say
+called up if he should have me over long distance?"
+
+"You needn't say anybody! I'll call up again," growled the voice, and
+the man hung up.
+
+Jimmie sat for a long time in blissful reverie. "He's getting there!" he
+whispered to himself. "He'll get the big cases yet, and I can keep my
+first place. I must see Jane to-night and tell her."
+
+Meanwhile, back at Tinsdale improvements had been going on at the
+Carsons'. Bob, always handy with tools, had been putting in a tank over
+the bathtub. They had one at the house on the hill, only it was run by a
+windmill. Bob had a friend who was a plumber's son, and from him had
+obtained some lengths of second-hand water-pipe and an old faucet. He
+had conceived the idea of a tank on the roof, and his first plan had
+been only a rainwater tank, but gradually as his vision widened he
+included a force pump in the outfit of desires. He hung around the
+plumber's until they unearthed an old force pump somewhat out of repair,
+and for a few days' assisting the plumber Bob acquired it, together with
+after-hour help to put it into operation. The next object was a tank,
+which seemed at first to represent the impossible; but the grocer at
+last offered a suggestion in the shape of several large empty hogsheads
+which he readily accepted at the price of four Saturdays' work in the
+store.
+
+All Bob's extra time was put into these improvements, and he was as
+excited every night when it grew dark and he was forced to come to
+supper because he couldn't see any longer to work, as if he had been
+building an airship.
+
+The day the hogsheads were marshaled and connected and the force pump
+sent its first stream into them was a great occasion. The family
+assembled in the yard, with Elise Hathaway, who had been allowed to come
+over for a few minutes with Betty. Bob and his plumber friend pumped,
+and Emily climbed to the attic window, which overlooked the row of
+hogsheads, ranged so that the water would flow from one to the other,
+and acted as pilot to the new enterprise. As the first stream from the
+force pump, which Bob had lavishly painted red, crept its way up the
+pipes and began to wet the bottom of the first and highest hogshead
+Emily gave a little squeal of delight and shouted "It's come! It's come!
+The water's come!" and the family below fairly held their breath with
+the wonder of it. Not that such a thing could be, but that their own
+freckled, grinning Bob should have been able to achieve it.
+
+There was an elaborate system of tin conductors which conveyed the waste
+water from the bathtub out through a hole in the wall of the little
+laundry bathroom, and distributed it along the garden beds wherever its
+controller desired to irrigate. Thus the system became practical as well
+as a luxury. There was also an arrangement of gutter pipes for carrying
+off any surplus water from the hogsheads, so saving the Carson house
+from possible inundation at any time of heavy storms.
+
+After the plumbing was finished Bob painted the laundry neatly inside
+with beautiful white paint and robin's-egg blue for the ceiling, and
+Betty told him it almost made one think of going swimming in the ocean.
+Next he began to talk about a shower bath. Betty told him what one was
+like and he began to spend more days down at the plumber's asking
+questions and picking up odd bits of pipe, making measurements, and
+doing queer things to an old colander for experiment's sake. The day
+that Warren Reyburn came for the first time Bob had the shower part
+finished and ready to erect, and the next day saw it complete with a rod
+for the rubber curtain that Betty had promised to make for him. He and
+she were planning how they would make further improvements on the house
+before Jane and Nellie should come home for their summer vacation week.
+Betty had thoroughly entered into the life of the little household now,
+and was a part of it. She saved her own small wages, and grudged all
+she had to spend for necessary clothes, that she might contribute
+further to the comfort and beauty of the general home.
+
+After Warren Reyburn's visit the last barrier between Betty and Ma
+seemed to be broken down. As soon as she had closed the door she flew
+into the other room and flung her arms around Ma's neck, bursting into
+soft weeping on her motherly shoulder. Ma had done a rapid turning act
+when she heard her coming, for in truth she had been peeping behind the
+green window-shade to watch the handsome stranger go down the street,
+but she would have dropped the iron on her foot and pretended to be
+picking it up rather than let Betty suspect her interest in the visitor.
+
+"Oh, mother," she murmured in Mrs. Carson's willing ear, "I have been so
+frightened----"
+
+"I know, dearie!" soothed the mother, quite as if she had been her own.
+"I know!"
+
+"But he was very kind," she said lifting her head with an April effect
+of tears. "He's going to try to fix things for me so that I don't need
+ever to be afraid of any one making trouble for me any more. You see, I
+sort of ran away. There was somebody I was afraid of who troubled me a
+great deal."
+
+"Yes, dearie, I thought as much," said Ma. "Jane kind of gave me to
+understand there was something like that. I'm real glad there's
+somebody goin' to look into your affairs an' fix things right for you. I
+knew you was restless an' worried. Now it'll get all straightened out.
+He's got a nice face. I trusted him first off. He's a church member, an'
+that's somethin'. They ain't all spiritual, but they're mostly clean an'
+just an' kindly, when they're anythin' at all but just plain hypocrites,
+which, thank the Lord, there ain't so many as some would have us
+believe. Now wash your face, dearie, an' run back to your place so you
+can come home early, for we're goin' to have the old hen with dumplin's
+for supper to celebrate."
+
+That was one charming thing about that household: they celebrated every
+blessed little trifle that came into their lives, so that living with
+them was like a procession of beautiful thanksgivings.
+
+It was while Betty was eating the gala "hen," delicious in its festive
+gravy and dumplings, that she looked off across the little dining-room
+to the dark window with its twinkling village lights in the distance and
+thought of the stranger. A dark fear flashed across her sweet face and
+sparkled in the depths of her eyes for just an instant. Was it perhaps
+the distant bay of the hounds on her trail, coming nearer every moment?
+Then she remembered the heavenly Father and her new-found faith, and
+turned back to the cheery little room and the children's pleasant
+clatter, resolved to forget the fear and to trust all to Him who cared
+for her. Perhaps he had sent the pleasant stranger, and the thought
+brought a quiet little smile to settle about her lips. She laughed with
+Bob and Emily at how they had got wet with a sudden unexpected shower
+from the new bath while they were arranging the curtain on the rod, and
+Emily had turned the faucet on without knowing it. The patient-eyed
+mother watched them all and was satisfied.
+
+How good it is that we cannot hear all the noises of the earth at the
+same time, nor know of every danger that lurks near as we are passing
+by! We grumble a great deal that God does not send us as much as we
+think he might, but we give scarce a thought to our escape from the many
+perils, lying close as our very breath, of which we never even dream.
+
+At that moment, as they sat quietly eating their happy meal, a deadly
+particular peril was headed straight for Tinsdale.
+
+Abijah Gage and Herbert Hutton boarded the evening train for Tinsdale
+together and entered the sleeper. Abijah shuffled behind, carrying the
+bags, a most extraordinary and humiliating position for him. He had
+never been known to carry anything, not even himself if he could help
+it, since the day his mother died and ceased to force him to carry in
+wood and water for her at the end of a hickory switch. He glanced
+uneasily round with a slight cackle of dismay as he arrived in the
+unaccustomed plush surroundings and tried to find some place to dump his
+load. But the well-groomed Herbert strode down the long aisle unnoticing
+and took possession of the section he had secured as if he owned the
+road.
+
+"You can sit there!" he ordered Bi with a condescending motion, dropping
+into his own seat and opening a newspaper.
+
+Bi sat down on the edge of the seat, and held on to the arm in a
+gingerly way as if he were afraid to trust himself to anything so
+different. He looked furtively up and down the car, eyed the porter, who
+ignored him contemptuously and finally came back and demanded his
+sleeper ticket with a lordliness that Bi did not feel he could take from
+a negro. But somehow the ticket got tangled in his pocket, and Bi had a
+hard time finding it, which deepened his indignation at the porter.
+
+"I ain't takin' no sass from no one. My seat's paid fer all right," he
+said distinctly for the enlightenment of the other passengers, and
+Herbert Hutton reached out a discreet arm and dropped something in the
+porter's hand which sent him on his way and left Bi snorting audibly
+after him.
+
+"You'd better shut up!" growled the dictator to Bi. "We don't want to be
+conspicuous, you know. If you can't hold your tongue and act as if you
+had ever traveled before, I'll get off this train at the next station
+and you can whistle for your reward. Do you understand?"
+
+Bi dropped his toothless lower jaw a trifle and his little eyes grew
+narrow. This was no way to manage affable Bi. He loved a good visit, and
+he had counted on one all the way to Tinsdale. He had no idea of sitting
+silent.
+
+"I understand," he drawled, "an' I'll be gormed ef I'll agree. I ain't
+told you yet where we get off, an' I don't have to ef I don't wantta. Ef
+you can't treat me like a gen'l'man you know where you can get off, an'
+I ain't havin' to state it."
+
+Herbert Hutton drew his arrogant brows in a frown of annoyance, and
+whirled around to placate his guide:
+
+"Now see here, you old popinjay, what's got into you?"
+
+"No, sir, I ain't nobody's papa," babbled Bi, seeing he had scored a
+point. "I have enough to do to support myself without any family."
+
+"That's all right, have it your own way, only shut up or we'll have
+somebody listening. Have a cigar. Take two. But you can't smoke 'em in
+here, you'll have to go to the smoking-room. Wait! I'll see if we can
+get the drawing-room."
+
+The porter appeared and the change was effected, to the great
+disappointment of Bi, who kept continually poking his head out to get a
+glimpse of the fine ladies. He would much have preferred staying out in
+the main car and getting acquainted with people. His cunning had
+departed with the need. He had put things in the hands of this surly
+companion, and now he meant to have a good time and something to tell
+the gang about when he got home.
+
+About midnight the train drew into a station and Herbert Hutton roused
+himself and looked out of the window. Bi, whose cunning had returned,
+followed his example. Suddenly he leaned forward excitedly and tapped
+the glass with a long finger:
+
+"That's him! That's the guy," he whispered excitedly as another train
+drew in and passengers began to hurry down the platform and across to
+the waiting sleeper.
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Sartin!"
+
+"You mean the one with the coat over his arm, and the two men behind?"
+He stopped short with an exclamation.
+
+Bi looked up cunningly. Now what was up? He saw a thunder-cloud on the
+face of his companion.
+
+With embellishments Herbert Hutton asked if Bi had ever seen the two
+tall gray-haired men who were walking with their prey.
+
+Bi narrowed his eyes and denied any knowledge, but perceived there were
+more sides than two to the enigma. Now, what could he figure out of
+those two guys? Were there more rewards to be offered? If so, he was a
+candidate. He wondered what chance there was of getting away from H. H.
+and sauntering through the train. He found, however, a sudden
+willingness on the part of his companion to vanish and let him do the
+scout work for the rest of the night.
+
+With a sense of being on a vacation and a chance at catching big fish Bi
+swung out through the train. Bumping down among the now curtained
+berths, adjusting his long form to the motion of the express, lurching
+to right and to left as they went round a curve, falling over an
+occasional pair of shoes and bringing down lofty reproaches from the
+sleepy porter, he penetrated to the day coaches and at last located his
+quarry.
+
+They were sitting in a double seat, the younger man facing the two older
+ones, and had evidently been unable to get sleepers. Bi hung around the
+water-cooler at the far end of the car until he had laid out his plans;
+then he sauntered up to the vacant seat behind the three men and dropped
+noiselessly into its depths, drawing his hat down well over his face,
+and apparently falling into instant slumber, with a fair sample of
+Tinsdale snoring brought in at moderate distances.
+
+The conversation was earnest, in well-modulated voices, and hard to
+follow connectedly, for the men knew how to talk without seeming to the
+outside world to be saying anything intelligible. Occasionally a
+sentence would come out clear cut in an interval of the rhythm of the
+train, but for the most part Bi could make little or nothing of it.
+
+"In all the years we've been trustees of that estate we haven't seen her
+but twice," said one of the older men; "once at her father's second
+marriage, and again at his funeral. Then we only saw her at a distance.
+Her stepmother said she was too grief-stricken to speak with any one,
+and it was by the utmost effort she could be present at the service."
+
+"She looked very frail and young," said the other old man; "and her
+hair--I remember her hair!"
+
+Bi changed his position cautiously and tried to peer over the back of
+his seat, but the voices were crowded together now, and the younger man
+was talking earnestly. He could not catch a syllable. "Trustees!" That
+word stayed with him. "Estate" was another promising one, and the fact
+that her hair had been remembered. He nodded his old head sagaciously,
+and later when the three men settled back in their seats more
+comfortably with their eyes closed he slid back to the water-cooler and
+so on through the sleeper to the drawing-room.
+
+Hutton was sleeping the sleep of the unjust, which means that he woke at
+the slightest breath, and Bi's breath was something to wake a heavier
+sleeper. So they sat and planned as the train rushed on through the
+night. Now and again Bi took a pilgrimage up to the day coach and back
+to report the three travelers still asleep.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the train slowed down, and finally came
+to a thrashing halt, waking the sleepers uncomfortably and making them
+conscious of crunching feet in the cinders outside, and consulting
+voices of trainmen busy with a hammer underneath the car somewhere. Then
+they drowsed off to sleep again and the voices and hammering blended
+comfortably into their dreams.
+
+The passengers in the day coach roused, looked at their watches,
+stretched their cramped limbs, squinted out to see if anything serious
+was the matter, and settled into a new position to sleep once more.
+
+Bi, stretched for the nonce upon the long couch of the drawing-room
+while his superior occupied the more comfortable berth, roused to
+instant action, slipped out to the platform and took his bearings. He
+had lived in that part of the country all his life and he knew where
+they ought to be by that time. Yes, there was the old saw mill down by
+Hague's Crossing, and the steeple over by the soft maple grove just
+beyond Fox Glove. It would not be a long walk, and they had a garage at
+Fox Glove!
+
+He sauntered along the cinder path; discovered that the trouble with the
+engine was somewhat serious, requiring to wait for help, took a glimpse
+into the day coach ahead to assure himself that the three men were still
+safely asleep, and sauntered back to the drawing-room.
+
+His entrance roused the sleeper, who was on the alert instantly.
+
+"Say, we got a hot box an' a broken engyne!" Bi announced. "It'll take
+us some time. We ain't fur from Fox Glove. We could santer over an' git
+a car an' beat 'em to it!"
+
+"We could?" said Hutton. "You sure? No chances, mind you!"
+
+"Do it easy. Those guys are asleep. They won't get to the Junction 'fore
+ten o'clock, mebbe later, an' they can't possibly get to our place 'fore
+'leven."
+
+"Lead the way!" ordered Hutton, cramming himself into his coat and hat.
+
+"Better slide down on the other side," whispered Bi as they reached the
+platform. "We kin go back round the train an' nobody'll notice."
+
+As if they were only come out to see what was the matter they idled
+along the length of the train around out of sight, slid down the bank,
+took a shortcut across a meadow to a road, and were soon well on their
+way to Fox Glove in the early cool of the spring morning, a strangely
+mated couple bent on mischief.
+
+Back on the cinder track the express waited, dreamily indifferent, with
+a flagman ahead and behind to guard its safety, and while men slept the
+enemy took wings and flew down the white morning road to Tinsdale, but
+no one ran ahead with a little red flag to the gray cottage where slept
+Betty, to warn her, though perchance an angel with a flaming sword stood
+invisibly to guard the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+BOB had just finished feeding the chickens when the automobile drew up
+at the door, and he hurried around the house to see who it might be. He
+was rather looking for the return of that nice lawyer again. He felt the
+family expected him some time soon. Perhaps he would be to breakfast and
+mother would want some fresh eggs.
+
+They had dropped Bi at the edge of the village and there were only
+Hutton and the driver who had brought them. Bi had no mind to get mixed
+up in this affair too openly. He valued his standing in his home town,
+and did not wish to lose it. He had an instinct that what he was doing
+might make him unpopular if it became known. Besides, he had another ax
+to grind.
+
+Bob did not like the looks of the strange dark man who got out of the
+car and came into the yard with the air of a thrashing machine bolting
+into whatever came in his way. He stood sturdily and waited until he was
+asked who lived there, and admitted with a stingy "yes" that it was Mrs.
+Carson's house. A thundering knock on the front door followed, and the
+other man in the car got out and came into the yard behind the first.
+
+"Well, you needn't take the door down," snapped Bob, and scuttled around
+the house to warn his mother, aware that he had been rude, and glad of
+it.
+
+It was Betty who came to the door, for Ma was frying bacon and eggs for
+breakfast, and Bob hadn't been quite soon enough. She started back with
+a scream, and eluding the hand that reached for her arm, fairly flew
+back to the kitchen, taking refuge behind Mrs. Carson, with her eyes
+wild with fear and her hand on her heart, while Hutton strode after her.
+
+Mrs. Carson wheeled around with her knife in her hand and faced him:
+
+"What do you mean by coming into my house this way, I'd like to know?"
+she demanded angrily, putting her arm around Betty.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Hutton, a poor apology for courtesy slipping
+into his manner. "I don't suppose you know it, but that is my wife you
+are harboring there, and she ran away from home several months ago! I
+have just discovered her whereabouts and have come to take her away!"
+
+Ma straightened up with the air of a queen and a judge, while Betty
+stifled a scream and in a small voice full of terror cried: "It isn't
+true, Mrs. Carson, it isn't true! Oh, _mother_, don't let him take me!"
+
+Mrs. Carson pushed Betty behind her, the knife still in her other hand,
+and answered with dignity:
+
+"You've made a big mistake, Mr. Herbert Hutton; this isn't your wife at
+all. I know all about you."
+
+Hutton put on a look of instant suavity.
+
+"Oh, of course, madam, she has told you that, but I'm sorry to have to
+tell you that she is not in her right mind. She made her escape from the
+insane asylum."
+
+"Oh, rats!" shouted Bob, and vanished out the kitchen door, slamming it
+behind him.
+
+Emily, frightened and white, stood just outside, and he nearly knocked
+her over in his flight. He pulled her along with him, whispering in her
+ear excitedly:
+
+"You beat it down to the fire gong and hit it for all you're worth!
+Quick!"
+
+Emily gave him one frightened look and sprang to action. Her little feet
+sped down the path to the lot where hung the big fire gong, like two
+wild rabbits running for their life, and in a moment more the loud whang
+of alarm rang through the little town, arousing the "gang" and greatly
+disconcerting Bi, who was craning his neck at the station and watching
+the fast-growing speck down the railroad track. That sure was the train
+coming already. How had they made it so soon?
+
+But Bob was on his stomach in the road scuttling the ship that was to
+have carried away the princess. The chauffeur was fully occupied in the
+house, for he had been ordered to follow and be ready to assist in
+carrying away an insane person, and he had no thought for his car at
+present. It was an ugly job, and one that he didn't like, but he was
+getting big pay, and such things had to be done.
+
+Bob's knife was sharp. He always kept it in good condition. It did many
+of the chores about the house, and was cunning in its skill. It cut
+beautiful long punctures in the four tires, until there was no chance at
+all of that car's going on its way for some time to come. Then he
+squirmed his way out on the opposite side from the house, slid along by
+the fence to the side door, around to the back like a flash and without
+an instant's hesitation hauled up his elaborate system of drainage. He
+stuck the longest conductor pipe through the open window of the old
+laundry, clutched at the sill and swung inside, drawing the pipe in
+after him.
+
+The altercation in the kitchen had reached white heat. Hutton's suavity
+was fast disappearing behind a loud angry tone. He had about sized up
+Ma and decided to use force.
+
+It was a tense moment when Bob, his hasty arrangements made, silently
+swung open the laundry door in full range of the uninvited guests and
+waited for the psychological moment. Mrs. Carson had dropped her knife
+and seized the smoking hot frying-pan of bacon as a weapon. She was cool
+and collected, but one could see in her eyes the little devil of battle
+that sometimes sat in Bob's eyes as she swung the frying-pan back for a
+blow. Suddenly out flashed a cold steel eye, menacing, unanswerable,
+looking straight into her own.
+
+At that instant, unannounced and unobserved, through the laundry door
+lumbered a long ugly tin conductor pipe, and the deluge began. Straight
+into the eyes of the would-be husband it gushed, battering swashingly
+down on the cocked revolver, sending it harmlessly to the floor, where
+it added to the confusion by going off with a loud report, and sending
+the chauffeur to the shelter of the parlor. Bob never knew how near he
+came to killing some one by his hasty service, and Ma never had the
+heart to suggest it. Instead she acted promptly and secured the weapon
+before the enemy had time to recover from his shock.
+
+Bob, in the laundry, standing on a chair mounted on a board across the
+bathtub, sturdily held his wobbling conductor pipe and aimed it straight
+to the mark. Of course he knew that even a well-filled phalanx of
+hogsheads could not hold the enemy forever, but he was counting on the
+fire company to arrive in time to save the day.
+
+Gasping, clawing the air, ducking, diving here and there to escape the
+stream, Herbert Hutton presented a spectacle most amusing and satisfying
+to Bob's boy mind.
+
+"Beat it, Lizzie, beat it! Beat it!" he shouted above the noise of the
+pouring waters. But Betty, white with horror, seemed to have frozen to
+the spot. She could not have moved if she had tried, and her brain
+refused to order her to try. She felt as if the end of everything had
+come and she were paralyzed.
+
+Down the street with dash and flourish, licking up excitement like a
+good meal, dashed the gang, the fire chief ostentatiously arraying
+himself in rubber coat and helmet as he stood on the side of the engine,
+while the hysterical little engine bell banged away, blending with the
+sound of the bell of the incoming train at the station. Bi, with his
+mouth stretched wide, and one foot holding him for the train while the
+other urged toward the fire and excitement, vibrated on the platform, a
+wild figure of uncertainty. Where Duty and Inclination both called,
+Cupidity still had the upper hand.
+
+For once Bi did not have to act a part as he stood watching the three
+travelers descend from the train. The excitement in his face was real
+and his gestures were quite natural, even the ones made by his one and
+only long waving top-lock of gray hair that escaped all bounds as his
+hat blew off with the suction of the train. Bi rushed up to the three
+men wildly:
+
+"Say, was you goin' down to Carson's house after that Hope girl?" he
+demanded loudly.
+
+The three men surveyed him coldly, and the young one gave him a decided
+shove:
+
+"That will do, my friend," he said firmly. "We don't need any of your
+assistance."
+
+"But I got a line on this thing you'll want to know," he insisted,
+hurrying alongside. "There's a guy down there in a car goin' to take her
+away. He ain't been gone long, but you won't find her 'thout my help.
+He's goin' to take her to a insane institution. I let on I was helpin'
+him an' I found out all about it."
+
+"What's all this?" said Reyburn, wheeling about and fixing the old
+fellow with a muscular young shake that made his toothless jaws chatter.
+"How long ago did he go? What kind of a looking man was he?"
+
+"Lemme go!" whined Bi, playing to make time, one cunning eye down the
+road. "I ain't as young as I used to be, an' I can't stand gettin'
+excited. I got a rig here a purpose, an' I'll take you all right down,
+an' then ef he's gone, an' I s'pose he must be, 'cause your train was
+late, why, we'll foller."
+
+"Well, quick, then!" said Reyburn, climbing into the shackley spring
+wagon that Bi indicated, the only vehicle in view. The two trustees
+climbed stiffly and uncertainly into the back seat as if they felt they
+were risking their lives, and Bi lumbered rheumatically into the
+driver's place and took up the lines. It appeared that the only living
+thing in Tinsdale that wasn't awake and keen to go to the fire was that
+horse, and Bi had to do quite a little urging with the stump of an old
+whip. So, reluctantly, they joined the procession toward the Carson
+house.
+
+As the stream from the hogshead gurgled smaller, and the victim writhed
+out of its reach and began to get his bearings, suddenly the outside
+kitchen door burst open and a crew of rubber-coated citizens sprang in,
+preceded by a generous stream of chemicals which an ardent young member
+of the company set free indiscriminately in his excitement. It struck
+the right man squarely in the middle and sent him sprawling on the
+floor.
+
+Bob dropped the conductor pipe in exhausted relief and flew to the scene
+of action. It had been fearful to be held from more active service so
+long. Emily, outside, could be seen dancing up and down excitedly and
+directing the procession, with frightened shouts, "In there! In the
+kitchen! Quick!" as the neighbors and townsmen crowded in and filled the
+little kitchen demanding to know where the fire was.
+
+Mrs. Carson with dignity stepped forward to explain:
+
+"There ain't any fire, friends, an' I don't know how you all come to get
+here, but I reckon the Lord sent you. You couldn't a-come at a better
+moment. We certainly was in some trouble, an' I'll be obliged to you all
+if you'll just fasten that man up so't he can't do any more harm. He
+came walkin' in here tryin' to take away a member of my family by force,
+an' he pointed this at me!"
+
+She lifted the incriminating weapon high where they could all see.
+
+Herbert Hutton, struggling to his feet in the crowd, began to understand
+that this was no place for him, and looked about for an exit, but none
+presented itself. The chauffeur had vanished and was trying to make out
+what had happened to his car.
+
+Hutton, brought to bay, turned on the crowd like a snarling animal,
+although the effect was slightly spoiled by his drabbled appearance, and
+roared out insolently:
+
+"The woman doesn't know what she's talking about, men; she's only
+frightened. I came here after my wife, and I intend to take her away
+with me! She escaped from an insane asylum some time ago, and we've been
+looking for her ever since. This woman is doing a very foolish and
+useless thing in resisting me, for the law can take hold of her, of
+course."
+
+The crowd wavered and looked uncertainly at Mrs. Carson and at Betty
+cowering horrified behind her, and Hutton saw his advantage:
+
+"Men," he went on, "there is one of your own townsmen who knows me and
+can vouch for me. A Mr. Gage. Abijah Gage. If you will just look him
+up--he was down at the station a few minutes ago. He knows that all I am
+saying is true!"
+
+A low sound like a rumble went over the little audience and they seemed
+to bunch together and look at one another while some kind of an
+understanding traveled from eye to eye. An articulate syllable, "Bi!"
+breathed in astonishment, and then again "Bi!" in contempt. Public
+opinion, like a panther crouching, was forming itself ready to spring,
+when suddenly a new presence was felt in the room. Three strangers had
+appeared and somehow quietly gotten into the doorway. Behind them,
+stretching his neck and unable to be cautious any longer, appeared Bi's
+slouching form. Crouching Public Opinion caught sight of him and showed
+its teeth, but was diverted by the strangers.
+
+Then suddenly, from the corner behind Ma, slipped Betty with
+outstretched hands, like a lost thing flying to its refuge, straight to
+the side of the handsome young stranger.
+
+He put out his hands and drew her to his side with a protecting motion,
+and she whispered:
+
+"Tell, them, please; oh, make them understand."
+
+Then Reyburn, with her hand still protectingly in his, spoke:
+
+"What that man has just said is a lie!"
+
+Hutton looked up, went deadly white and reeled as he saw the two elderly
+men.
+
+The crowd drew a united breath and stood straighter, looking relieved.
+Bi blanched, but did not budge. Whatever happened he was in with both
+crowds. Reyburn continued:
+
+"I carry papers in my pocket which give authority to arrest him. If the
+sheriff is present will he please take charge of him. His name is
+Herbert Hutton, and he is charged with trying to make this lady marry
+him under false pretenses in order to get control of her property. She
+is not his wife, for she escaped before the ceremony was performed. I
+know, for I was present. These two gentlemen with me are the trustees of
+her estate."
+
+Estate!
+
+The neighbors looked at Betty respectfully.
+
+Bi dropped his jaw perceptibly and tried to figure out how that would
+affect him. The sheriff stepped forward to magnify his office, and the
+silence was impressive, almost reverent. In the midst of it broke Bob's
+practical suggestion:
+
+"Shut him in the coal shed. It's got a padlock an' is good an' strong.
+He can't kick it down."
+
+Then the law began to take its course, the fire gang stepped out, and
+Mrs. Carson set to work to clean up. In the midst of it all Reyburn
+looked down at Betty, and Betty looked up at Reyburn, and they
+discovered in some happy confusion that they still had hold of hands.
+They tried to cover their embarrassment by laughing, but something had
+been established between them that neither could forget.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE days that followed were full of bliss and peace to Betty. With
+Hutton safely confined in the distant city, and a comfortable sum of her
+accumulated allowance in the Tinsdale bank, with a thorough
+understanding between herself and her trustees and the knowledge that
+her estate was large enough to do almost anything in reason that she
+wished to do with it, and would be hers in three weeks, life began to
+take on a different look to the poor storm-tossed child. The days in the
+Carson home were all Thanksgivings now, and every member of the family
+was as excited and happy as every other member. There were arguments
+long and earnest between Betty and her benefactor as to how much she
+might in reason be allowed to do for the family now that she had plenty
+of money, but in the end Betty won out, declaring that she had wished
+herself on this family in her distress, and they took her as a man does
+when he marries, for better for worse. Now that the worse had passed by
+she was theirs for the better, and she intended to exercise the
+privilege of a daughter of the house for the rest of her natural life.
+
+Bi Gage was worried. He was still trying to get something out of the
+estate for his part in the exercises, and he vibrated between Tinsdale
+and Warren Reyburn's office working up his case. The five-thousand-dollar
+reward was as yet unpaid, and the papers he held didn't seem to impress
+the functionaries nearly so much as he had expected. It began to look as
+though Bi had missed his chances in life once more, and when he took his
+old seat in the fire-house and smoked, he said very little. Popular
+Opinion was still crouching with her eye in his direction and it
+behooved him to walk cautiously and do nothing to offend. So while he
+smoked he cogitated in his cunning little brain, and hatched out a plan
+by which he might get in with the heiress later, perhaps, when things
+had quieted down a little and she had her money.
+
+Betty received a pitiful letter from her stepmother, trying to explain
+away her part in the affair and professing to be so relieved at the news
+that Betty was still alive and well that she cared nothing about
+anything else, not even the fact that poor dear Herbert was landed in
+jail, or that the fortune which she had schemed so long to keep in her
+own power was wrested from her so ignominiously. She begged Betty to
+come back to their home and "be happy again together."
+
+But Betty was so happy where she was that she could afford to be
+generous and try to forget her wrongs. She wrote a decent little note
+gently but firmly declining to come "home" ever again, making it quite
+plain that she was no longer deceived by honeyed phrases, and closing
+with a request that if in future any communication might be necessary it
+should be made through her lawyer, Mr. Warren Reyburn.
+
+This same Warren Reyburn had returned to his city office in a very much
+exalted state of mind. He could not get away from that little hand of
+Betty's that had been laid so tremblingly and confidingly in his; and
+yet how could he, a poverty-stricken lawyer with absolutely no prospects
+at all, ever dare to think of her, a lady of vast estates. Still, there
+was some comfort in the fact that he had still some business to transact
+for her, and would have to return to Tinsdale again. He might at least
+see her once more. So he solaced himself on his return trip, feeling
+that he had done some good work, and that he would have a pleasant
+report to give to Jane Carson when he called upon her, as he meant to do
+the next day.
+
+He arrived at home to find James Ryan in a great state of excitement. A
+pile of mail had arrived, and he had memorized the return addresses on
+the outside of all the envelopes. One was from a big corporation, and
+another bore a name widely spoken of in the circles of the world of
+finance, Jimmie in close council with Jane Carson, had decided that it
+must be from that person who called up twice on the 'phone and swore
+such terrible oaths when he found that Reyburn was away.
+
+Jimmie hovered nervously about, putting things to rights, while Reyburn
+read his mail. He had come to the smallest envelope of all, a plain
+government envelope now, and nothing had developed. Jimmie saw his first
+place fast slipping away from him and his heart grew heavy with fear.
+Perhaps after all nothing good had turned up yet.
+
+Suddenly Reyburn sprang up and came toward him with an open letter,
+holding out his hand in a joyous greeting:
+
+"Read that, Ryan! We're made at last, and I shan't have to let you go
+after all!"
+
+Ryan read, the letters dancing before his delighted eyes, every one
+wearing an orange blossom on its brow. It was from an old established
+and influential firm, asking Reyburn to take full charge of all their
+law business, and saying they had been referred to him by two old
+friends in Boston, who by the way were Betty's two trustees.
+
+"Come on, Ryan, come out to lunch with me! We've got to celebrate," said
+Reyburn. "I have a hunch somehow that you have been the one that brought
+me this good luck. You and a Miss Jane Carson. You both share alike, I
+guess, but you were the first with your five-thousand-dollar reward
+story."
+
+"Jane Carson!" said Jimmie mystified. "Why, _she's_ my _girl_!"
+
+"Your girl?" said Reyburn, a queer look coming in his eyes. "You don't
+say! Well, you're in some luck, boy, with a girl like that! And, by the
+way, next time you see her, ask her to show you her wedding dress!"
+
+And not another word would Reyburn tell him, though he recurred
+frequently to the subject during the very excellent lunch which they had
+together in friendly companionship.
+
+They spent the afternoon composing the brief and comprehensive letter in
+response to the momentous one of the morning, and in the evening
+together they sought out Jane Carson, Reyburn staying only long enough
+to outline the ending of the Elizabeth Stanhope story, while Jimmie
+remained to hear the beginning, and get a glimpse of the wedding gown,
+which Reyburn assured Jane he was sure she need never return. He said he
+thought if the owner of it was married ever in the future she would be
+likely to want a gown that had no unpleasant associations.
+
+Great excitement prevailed in Tinsdale as the weeks went by. Betty had
+bought the lots either side of the Carson house, and wonderful
+improvements were in progress. A windmill was being erected and water
+pipes laid scientifically. Workmen arrived, some of them from the
+village, some from the city. Extensive excavations went on about the old
+house, and stone arrived. It began to be whispered about that "Miss
+Stanhope," as Betty was now called, was going to build the house all
+over and all of stone.
+
+The work went forward rapidly as work can go when there is money enough
+behind it, and the family, living in the little old part of the house,
+and still using the faithful tin bath-tub and shower of Bob's
+manufacture, now looked forward to real bathrooms on the bedroom floor,
+with tiled floors and porcelain fittings. Large windows cropped out on
+the new walls that were going up, a wide stone chimney and porches. A
+charming little stone affair in the back yard that went up so quietly it
+was hardly noticed until it was done suddenly became the home of a big
+gray car that arrived in town one morning. Betty gave up her position at
+the Hathaways so that she could have more time to superintend the work
+and see that it was just as she wanted it, and she and Bob spent hours
+going over the plans together, he making many wise suggestions. Mrs.
+Hathaway called her "Miss Stanhope" with elaborate ceremony, and made
+Elise kiss her whenever she met her.
+
+Betty went to a near-by town and bought some pretty clothes, and a lot
+of things for Ma and Emily and Bob. A beautiful new piano came by
+express and took the place of Mrs. Barlow's tinpanny one.
+
+Then Betty went up to the city and bought more things, furniture and
+silver and curtains and rugs, and brought Jane back with her to take a
+rest and see the little old house once more before it became the big new
+house, and stay until she was ready to be married; for Betty was
+determined to have the house ready for Jane's wedding.
+
+When all the new beautiful things began to arrive Betty told Ma that she
+had taken her in when she was poor and homeless and absolutely
+penniless, and now all these things were her reward, and Betty couldn't
+do enough ever to thank her for what she had done for her. They had
+offered a five-thousand-dollar reward for news of her, and Ma had done
+more than ten thousand and thousands of thousands of dollars' worth of
+holding back news about her, and she was never going to get done giving
+her her reward.
+
+Of course Betty brought Nellie home, too, and established her in a
+lovely new room just fit for a young girl, and began to pet her and fix
+her up with pretty things as any loving sister might do if she had money
+of her own.
+
+All this time Reyburn had much business to transact in Tinsdale, for
+Betty had asked him to look after all the little details about the
+building for her, and he had to come down every week-end and look things
+over to see that she was not being cheated. And once he brought Jimmie
+down with him for Ma to look over and approve and they had a wonderful
+time with the two best hens in the hen-coop for dinner. Ryan
+incidentally gave his approval to Betty.
+
+During these visits Reyburn was making great strides in the wisdom and
+the knowledge of the love of God. One could not be in that family over
+Sunday and not feel the atmosphere of a Christian home. Even Jimmie felt
+it and said he liked it; that he wanted his house to be that way when
+he had one. He went obediently to church with Jane, and marveled at the
+way social classes were getting all muddled up in his world.
+
+The Christmas time was coming on when the house finally got itself
+completed and was ready for living, and with holly and mistletoe and
+laurel they made it gay for the wedding. Betty spent several days with
+Jane in New York picking out Jane's "trooso" things, and then a few more
+days doing some shopping of her own, and at last the wedding day
+arrived.
+
+Nobody thought it queer, though Jimmie felt just the least bit shy when
+the two trustees of Betty's estate arrived the night before from Boston
+and incorporated themselves into the wedding party. Ma seemed to think
+it was all right, so nobody said anything about it.
+
+But after the ceremony when Jane and Jimmie were happily married, Jane
+looking very young and pretty indeed in Betty's old wedding gown, veil
+and slippers and all, and standing under the holly bell in the laurel
+arch to be congratulated just as it had been arranged, there suddenly
+came a hush over everybody. Jane noticed for the first time that Betty
+was not anywhere in the room. Then everybody's eyes went to the wide
+staircase, and here came Betty trailing down the stairs on the arm of
+Reyburn, wearing still the little white organdie she had worn a few
+minutes before as a bridesmaid, only she had thrown aside the
+rose-colored sash and put over her brow a simple tulle veil, and her
+arms were full of little pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley.
+
+Up they walked in front of the minister just where the others had stood,
+and were married with the same sweet simple service, and everybody was
+so surprised and delighted and excited and breathless that Bob simply
+couldn't stand it. He slipped into the little music room where the piano
+had been installed, turned a handspring on the floor, and then sat down
+and played chopsticks on the piano with all the pedals on, till Ma had
+to send Emily in to stop him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
+
+Repeated book title was removed.
+
+Page 30, "posible" changed to "possible" (the feathers as possible)
+
+Page 36, "Pood" changed to "Poor" (Poor soul! Candy!)
+
+Page 71, "beter" changed to "better" (you better go to)
+
+Page 77, "ominious" changed to "ominous" (the ominous silence)
+
+Page 90, repeated word "an" removed from text. Original read (by an an
+inch and)
+
+Page 121, "hrurrying" changed to "hurrying" (said Ma, hurrying)
+
+Page 131, "wante" changed to "wanted" (I kind of wanted)
+
+Page 131, "l" changed to "look". The space was there it just was not
+printed. (It doesn't look)
+
+Page 131, as above, "wh" changed to "when you" (you know, when you)
+
+Page 196, "suspicians" changed to "suspicions" (these suspicions which)
+
+Page 199, "tiptoing" changed to "tiptoeing" (and tiptoeing to the door)
+
+Page 220, "disapointment" changed to "disappointment" (great
+disappointment of Bi)
+
+
+
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+
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