“She’s here! I thought
she would be. She’s one of the three young
ladies you see in the right-hand box near the proscenium.”
The gentleman thus addressed a
man of middle age and a member of the most exclusive
clubs turned his opera glass toward the
spot designated, and in some astonishment retorted:
“She? Why those are the Misses Pratt and ”
“Miss Violet Strange; no other.”
“And do you mean to say ”
“I do ”
“That yon silly little chit,
whose father I know, whose fortune I know, who is
seen everywhere, and who is called one of the season’s
belles is an agent of yours; a a ”
“No names here, please.
You want a mystery solved. It is not a matter
for the police that is, as yet, and
so you come to me, and when I ask for the facts, I
find that women and only women are involved, and that
these women are not only young but one and all of the
highest society. Is it a man’s work to
go to the bottom of a combination like this? No.
Sex against sex, and, if possible, youth against youth.
Happily, I know such a person a girl of
gifts and extraordinarily well placed for the purpose.
Why she uses her talents in this direction why,
with means enough to play the part natural to her
as a successful debutante, she consents to occupy
herself with social and other mysteries, you must ask
her, not me. Enough that I promise you her aid
if you want it. That is, if you can interest
her. She will not work otherwise.”
Mr. Driscoll again raised his opera glass.
“But it’s a comedy face,”
he commented. “It’s hard to associate
intellectuality with such quaintness of expression.
Are you sure of her discretion?”
“Whom is she with?”
“Abner Pratt, his wife, and daughters.”
“Is he a man to entrust his affairs unadvisedly?”
“Abner Pratt! Do you mean
to say that she is anything more to him than his daughters’
guest?”
“Judge. You see how merry
they are. They were in deep trouble yesterday.
You are witness to a celebration.”
“And she?”
“Don’t you observe how
they are loading her with attentions? She’s
too young to rouse such interest in a family of notably
unsympathetic temperament for any other reason than
that of gratitude.”
“It’s hard to believe.
But if what you hint is true, secure me an opportunity
at once of talking to this youthful marvel. My
affair is serious. The dinner I have mentioned
comes off in three days and ”
“I know. I recognize your
need; but I think you had better enter Mr. Pratt’s
box without my intervention. Miss Strange’s
value to us will be impaired the moment her connection
with us is discovered.”
“Ah, there’s Ruthven!
He will take me to Mr. Pratt’s box,” remarked
Driscoll as the curtain fell on the second act.
“Any suggestions before I go?”
“Yes, and an important one.
When you make your bow, touch your left shoulder with
your right hand. It is a signal. She may
respond to it; but if she does not, do not be discouraged.
One of her idiosyncrasies is a theoretical dislike
of her work. But once she gets interested, nothing
will hold her back. That’s all, except this.
In no event give away her secret. That’s
part of the compact, you remember.”
Driscoll nodded and left his seat
for Ruthven’s box. When the curtain rose
for the third time he could be seen sitting with the
Misses Pratt and their vivacious young friend.
A widower and still on the right side of fifty, his
presence there did not pass unnoted, and curiosity
was rife among certain onlookers as to which of the
twin belles was responsible for this change in his
well-known habits. Unfortunately, no opportunity
was given him for showing. Other and younger men
had followed his lead into the box, and they saw him
forced upon the good graces of the fascinating but
inconsequent Miss Strange whose rapid fire of talk
he was hardly of a temperament to appreciate.
Did he appear dissatisfied? Yes;
but only one person in the opera house knew why.
Miss Strange had shown no comprehension of or sympathy
with his errand. Though she chatted amiably enough
between duets and trios, she gave him no opportunity
to express his wishes though she knew them well enough,
owing to the signal he had given her.
This might be in character but it
hardly suited his views; and, being a man of resolution,
he took advantage of an absorbing minute on the stage
to lean forward and whisper in her ear:
“It’s my daughter for
whom I request your services; as fine a girl as any
in this house. Give me a hearing. You certainly
can manage it.”
She was a small, slight woman whose
naturally quaint appearance was accentuated by the
extreme simplicity of her attire. In the tier
upon tier of boxes rising before his eyes, no other
personality could vie with hers in strangeness, or
in the illusive quality of her ever-changing expression.
She was vivacity incarnate and, to the ordinary observer,
light as thistledown in fibre and in feeling.
But not to all. To those who watched her long,
there came moments say when the music rose
to heights of greatness when the mouth so
given over to laughter took on curves of the rarest
sensibility, and a woman’s lofty soul shone
through her odd, bewildering features.
Driscoll had noted this, and consequently
awaited her reply in secret hope.
It came in the form of a question
and only after an instant’s display of displeasure
or possibly of pure nervous irritability.
“What has she done?”
“Nothing. But slander is
in the air, and any day it may ripen into public accusation.”
“Accusation of what?” Her tone was almost
pettish.
“Of of theft,”
he murmured. “On a great scale,” he
emphasized, as the music rose to a crash.
“Jewels?”
“Inestimable ones. They
are always returned by somebody. People say, by
me.”
“Ah!” The little lady’s
hands grew steady, they had been fluttering
all over her lap. “I will see you to-morrow
morning at my father’s house,” she presently
observed; and turned her full attention to the stage.
Some three days after this Mr. Driscoll
opened his house on the Hudson to notable guests.
He had not desired the publicity of such an event,
nor the opportunity it gave for an increase of the
scandal secretly in circulation against his daughter.
But the Ambassador and his wife were foreign and any
evasion of the promised hospitality would be sure to
be misunderstood; so the scheme was carried forward
though with less eclat than possibly was expected.
Among the lesser guests, who were
mostly young and well acquainted with the house and
its hospitality, there was one unique figure, that
of the lively Miss Strange, who, if personally unknown
to Miss Driscoll, was so gifted with the qualities
which tell on an occasion of this kind, that the stately
young hostess hailed her presence with very obvious
gratitude.
The manner of their first meeting
was singular, and of great interest to one of them
at least. Miss Strange had come in an automobile
and had been shown her room; but there was nobody
to accompany her down-stairs afterward, and, finding
herself alone in the great hall, she naturally moved
toward the library, the door of which stood ajar.
She had pushed this door half open before she noticed
that the room was already occupied. As a consequence,
she was made the unexpected observer of a beautiful
picture of youth and love.
A young man and a young woman were
standing together in the glow of a blazing wood-fire.
No word was to be heard, but in their faces, eloquent
with passion, there shone something so deep and true
that the chance intruder hesitated on the threshold,
eager to lay this picture away in her mind with the
other lovely and tragic memories now fast accumulating
there. Then she drew back, and readvancing with
a less noiseless foot, came into the full presence
of Captain Holliday drawn up in all the pride of his
military rank beside Alicia, the accomplished daughter
of the house, who, if under a shadow as many whispered,
wore that shadow as some women wear a crown.
Miss Strange was struck with admiration,
and turned upon them the brightest facet of her vivacious
nature all the time she was saying to herself:
“Does she know why I am here? Or does she
look upon me only as an additional guest foisted upon
her by a thoughtless parent?”
There was nothing in the manner of
her cordial but composed young hostess to show, and
Miss Strange, with but one thought in mind since she
had caught the light of feeling on the two faces confronting
her, took the first opportunity that offered of running
over the facts given her by Mr. Driscoll, to see if
any reconcilement were possible between them and an
innocence in which she must henceforth believe.
They were certainly of a most damaging nature.
Miss Driscoll and four other young
ladies of her own station in life had formed themselves,
some two years before, into a coterie of five, called
The Inséparables. They lunched together,
rode together, visited together. So close was
the bond and their mutual dependence so evident, that
it came to be the custom to invite the whole five whenever
the size of the function warranted it. In fact,
it was far from an uncommon occurrence to see them
grouped at receptions or following one another down
the aisles of churches or through the mazes of the
dance at balls or assemblies. And no one demurred
at this, for they were all handsome and attractive
girls, till it began to be noticed that, coincident
with their presence, some article of value was found
missing from the dressing-room or from the tables
where wedding gifts were displayed. Nothing was
safe where they went, and though, in the course of
time, each article found its way back to its owner
in a manner as mysterious as its previous abstraction,
the scandal grew and, whether with good reason or
bad, finally settled about the person of Miss Driscoll,
who was the showiest, least pecuniarily tempted, and
most dignified in manner and speech of them all.
Some instances had been given by way
of further enlightenment. This is one: A
theatre party was in progress. There were twelve
in the party, five of whom were the Inséparables.
In the course of the last act, another lady in
fact, their chaperon missed her handkerchief,
an almost priceless bit of lace. Positive that
she had brought it with her into the box, she caused
a careful search, but without the least success.
Recalling certain whispers she had heard, she noted
which of the five girls were with her in the box.
They were Miss Driscoll, Miss Hughson, Miss Yates,
and Miss Benedict. Miss West sat in the box adjoining.
A fortnight later this handkerchief
reappeared and where? Among the cushions
of a yellow satin couch in her own drawing-room.
The Inséparables had just made their call and
the three who had sat on the couch were Miss Driscoll,
Miss Hughson, and Miss Benedict.
The next instance seemed to point
still more insistently toward the lady already named.
Miss Yates had an expensive present to buy, and the
whole five Inséparables went in an imposing group
to Tiffany’s. A tray of rings was set before
them. All examined and eagerly fingered the stock
out of which Miss Yates presently chose a finely set
emerald. She was leading her friends away when
the clerk suddenly whispered in her ear, “I
miss one of the rings.” Dismayed beyond
speech, she turned and consulted the faces of her
four companions who stared back at her with immovable
serenity. But one of them was paler than usual,
and this lady (it was Miss Driscoll) held her hands
in her muff and did not offer to take them out.
Miss Yates, whose father had completed a big “deal”
the week before, wheeled round upon the clerk.
“Charge it! charge it at its full value,”
said she. “I buy both the rings.”
And in three weeks the purloined ring
came back to her, in a box of violets with no name
attached.
The third instance was a recent one,
and had come to Mr. Driscoll’s ears directly
from the lady suffering the loss. She was a woman
of uncompromising integrity, who felt it her duty
to make known to this gentleman the following facts:
She had just left a studio reception, and was standing
at the curb waiting for a taxicab to draw up, when
a small boy a street arab darted
toward her from the other side of the street, and
thrusting into her hand something small and hard, cried
breathlessly as he slipped away, “It’s
yours, ma’am; you dropped it.” Astonished,
for she had not been conscious of any loss, she looked
down at her treasure trove and found it to be a small
medallion which she sometimes wore on a chain at her
belt. But she had not worn it that day, nor any
day for weeks. Then she remembered. She
had worn it a month before to a similar reception
at this same studio. A number of young girls had
stood about her admiring it she remembered
well who they were; the Inséparables, of course,
and to please them she had slipped it from its chain.
Then something had happened, something which
diverted her attention entirely, and she
had gone home without the medallion; had, in fact,
forgotten it, only to recall its loss now. Placing
it in her bag, she looked hastily about her.
A crowd was at her back; nothing to be distinguished
there. But in front, on the opposite side of the
street, stood a club-house, and in one of its windows
she perceived a solitary figure looking out.
It was that of Miss Driscoll’s father. He
could imagine her conclusion.
In vain he denied all knowledge of
the matter. She told him other stories which
had come to her ears of thefts as mysterious, followed
by restorations as peculiar as this one, finishing
with, “It is your daughter, and people are beginning
to say so.”
And Miss Strange, brooding over these
instances, would have said the same, but for Miss
Driscoll’s absolute serenity of demeanour and
complete abandonment to love. These seemed incompatible
with guilt; these, whatever the appearances, proclaimed
innocence an innocence she was here to
prove if fortune favoured and the really guilty person’s
madness should again break forth.
For madness it would be and nothing
less, for any hand, even the most experienced, to
draw attention to itself by a repetition of old tricks
on an occasion so marked. Yet because it would
take madness, and madness knows no law, she prepared
herself for the contingency under a mask of girlish
smiles which made her at once the delight and astonishment
of her watchful and uneasy host.
With the exception of the diamonds
worn by the Ambassadress, there was but one jewel
of consequence to be seen at the dinner that night;
but how great was that consequence and with what splendour
it invested the snowy neck it adorned!
Miss Strange, in compliment to the
noble foreigners, had put on one of her family heirlooms a
filigree pendant of extraordinary sapphires which
had once belonged to Marie Antoinette. As its
beauty flashed upon the women, and its value struck
the host, the latter could not restrain himself from
casting an anxious eye about the board in search of
some token of the cupidity with which one person there
must welcome this unexpected sight.
Naturally his first glance fell upon
Alicia, seated opposite to him at the other end of
the table. But her eyes were elsewhere, and her
smile for Captain Holliday, and the father’s
gaze travelled on, taking up each young girl’s
face in turn. All were contemplating Miss Strange
and her jewels, and the cheeks of one were flushed
and those of the others pale, but whether with dread
or longing who could tell. Struck with foreboding,
but alive to his duty as host, he forced his glances
away, and did not even allow himself to question the
motive or the wisdom of the temptation thus offered.
Two hours later and the girls were
all in one room. It was a custom of the Inséparables
to meet for a chat before retiring, but always alone
and in the room of one of their number. But this
was a night of innovations; Violet was not only included,
but the meeting was held in her room. Her way
with girls was even more fruitful of result than her
way with men. They might laugh at her, criticize
her or even call her names significant of disdain,
but they never left her long to herself or missed
an opportunity to make the most of her irrepressible
chatter.
Her satisfaction at entering this
charmed circle did not take from her piquancy, and
story after story fell from her lips, as she fluttered
about, now here now there, in her endless preparations
for retirement. She had taken off her historic
pendant after it had been duly admired and handled
by all present, and, with the careless confidence of
an assured ownership, thrown it down upon the end
of her dresser, which, by the way, projected very
close to the open window.
“Are you going to leave your
jewel there?” whispered a voice in her ear as
a burst of laughter rang out in response to one of
her sallies.
Turning, with a simulation of round-eyed
wonder, she met Miss Hughson’s earnest gaze
with the careless rejoinder, “What’s the
harm?” and went on with her story with all the
reckless ease of a perfectly thoughtless nature.
Miss Hughson abandoned her protest.
How could she explain her reasons for it to one apparently
uninitiated in the scandal associated with their especial
clique.
Yes, she left the jewel there; but
she locked her door and quickly, so that they must
all have heard her before reaching their rooms.
Then she crossed to the window, which, like all on
this side, opened on a balcony running the length
of the house. She was aware of this balcony, also
of the fact that only young ladies slept in the corridor
communicating with it. But she was not quite
sure that this one corridor accommodated them all.
If one of them should room elsewhere! (Miss Driscoll,
for instance). But no! the anxiety displayed
for the safety of her jewel precluded that supposition.
Their hostess, if none of the others, was within access
of this room and its open window. But how about
the rest? Perhaps the lights would tell.
Eagerly the little schemer looked forth, and let her
glances travel down the full length of the balcony.
Two separate beams of light shot across it as she
looked, and presently another, and, after some waiting,
a fourth. But the fifth failed to appear.
This troubled her, but not seriously. Two of the
girls might be sleeping in one bed.
Drawing her shade, she finished her
preparations for the night; then with her kimono on,
lifted the pendant and thrust it into a small box
she had taken from her trunk. A curious smile,
very unlike any she had shown to man or woman that
day, gave a sarcastic lift to her lips, as with a
slow and thoughtful manipulation of her dainty fingers
she moved the jewel about in this small receptacle
and then returned it, after one quick examining glance,
to the very spot on the dresser from which she had
taken it. “If only the madness is great
enough!” that smile seemed to say. Truly,
it was much to hope for, but a chance is a chance;
and comforting herself with the thought, Miss Strange
put out her light, and, with a hasty raising of the
shade she had previously pulled down, took a final
look at the prospect.
Its aspect made her shudder.
A low fog was rising from the meadows in the far distance,
and its ghostliness under the moon woke all sorts of
uncanny images in her excited mind. To escape
them she crept into bed where she lay with her eyes
on the end of her dresser. She had closed that
half of the French window over which she had drawn
the shade; but she had left ajar the one giving free
access to the jewels; and when she was not watching
the scintillation of her sapphires in the moonlight,
she was dwelling in fixed attention on this narrow
opening.
But nothing happened, and two o’clock,
then three o’clock struck, without a dimming
of the blue scintillations on the end of her dresser.
Then she suddenly sat up. Not that she heard anything
new, but that a thought had come to her. “If
an attempt is made,” so she murmured softly
to herself, “it will be by ”
She did not finish. Something she
could not call it sound set her heart beating
tumultuously, and listening listening watching watching she
followed in her imagination the approach down the
balcony of an almost inaudible step, not daring to
move herself, it seemed so near, but waiting with eyes
fixed, for the shadow which must fall across the shade
she had failed to raise over that half of the swinging
window she had so carefully left shut.
At length she saw it projecting slowly
across the slightly illuminated surface. Formless,
save for the outreaching hand, it passed the casement’s
edge, nearing with pauses and hesitations the open
gap beyond through which the neglected sapphires beamed
with steady lustre. Would she ever see the hand
itself appear between the dresser and the window frame?
Yes, there it comes, small, delicate, and
startlingly white, threading that gap darting
with the suddenness of a serpent’s tongue toward
the dresser and disappearing again with the pendant
in its clutch.
As she realizes this, she
is but young, you know, as she sees her
bait taken and the hardly expected event fulfilled,
her pent-up breath sped forth in a sigh which sent
the intruder flying, and so startled herself that
she sank back in terror on her pillow.
The breakfast-call had sounded its
musical chimes through the halls. The Ambassador
and his wife had responded, so had most of the young
gentlemen and ladies, but the daughter of the house
was not amongst them, nor Miss Strange, whom one would
naturally expect to see down first of all.
These two absences puzzled Mr. Driscoll.
What might they not portend? But his suspense,
at least in one regard, was short. Before his
guests were well seated, Miss Driscoll entered from
the terrace in company with Captain Holliday.
In her arms she carried a huge bunch of roses and
was looking very beautiful. Her father’s
heart warmed at the sight. No shadow from the
night rested upon her.
But Miss Strange! where
was she? He could not feel quite easy till he
knew.
“Have any of you seen Miss Strange?”
he asked, as they sat down at table. And his
eyes sought the Inséparables.
Five lovely heads were shaken, some
carelessly, some wonderingly, and one, with a quick,
forced smile. But he was in no mood to discriminate,
and he had beckoned one of the servants to him, when
a step was heard at the door and the delinquent slid
in and took her place, in a shamefaced manner suggestive
of a cause deeper than mere tardiness. In fact,
she had what might be called a frightened air, and
stared into her plate, avoiding every eye, which was
certainly not natural to her. What did it mean?
and why, as she made a poor attempt at eating, did
four of the Inséparables exchange glances of
doubt and dismay and then concentrate their looks
upon his daughter? That Alicia failed to notice
this, but sat abloom above her roses now fastened
in a great bunch upon her breast, offered him some
comfort, yet, for all the volubility of his chief
guests, the meal was a great trial to his patience,
as well as a poor preparation for the hour when, the
noble pair gone, he stepped into the library to find
Miss Strange awaiting him with one hand behind her
back and a piteous look on her infantile features.
“O, Mr. Driscoll,” she
began, and then he saw that a group of anxious
girls hovered in her rear “my pendant!
my beautiful pendant! It is gone! Somebody
reached in from the balcony and took it from my dresser
in the night. Of course, it was to frighten me;
all of the girls told me not to leave it there.
But I I cannot make them give it back, and
papa is so particular about this jewel that I’m
afraid to go home. Won’t you tell them
it’s no joke, and see that I get it again.
I won’t be so careless another time.”
Hardly believing his eyes, hardly
believing his ears, she was so perfectly
the spoiled child detected in a fault he
looked sternly about upon the girls and bade them
end the jest and produce the gems at once.
But not one of them spoke, and not
one of them moved; only his daughter grew pale until
the roses seemed a mockery, and the steady stare of
her large eyes was almost too much for him to bear.
The anguish of this gave asperity
to his manner, and in a strange, hoarse tone he loudly
cried:
“One of you did this. Which?
If it was you, Alicia, speak. I am in no mood
for nonsense. I want to know whose foot traversed
the balcony and whose hand abstracted these jewels.”
A continued silence, deepening into
painful embarrassment for all. Mr. Driscoll eyed
them in ill-concealed anguish, then turning to Miss
Strange was still further thrown off his balance by
seeing her pretty head droop and her gaze fall in
confusion.
“Oh! it’s easy enough
to tell whose foot traversed the balcony,” she
murmured. “It left this behind.”
And drawing forward her hand, she held out to view
a small gold-coloured slipper. “I found
it outside my window,” she explained. “I
hoped I should not have to show it.”
A gasp of uncontrollable feeling from
the surrounding group of girls, then absolute stillness.
“I fail to recognize it,”
observed Mr. Driscoll, taking it in his hand.
“Whose slipper is this?” he asked in a
manner not to be gainsaid.
Still no reply, then as he continued
to eye the girls one after another a voice the
last he expected to hear spoke and his daughter
cried:
“It is mine. But it was
not I who walked in it down the balcony.”
“Alicia!”
A month’s apprehension was in
that cry. The silence, the pent-up emotion brooding
in the air was intolerable. A fresh young laugh
broke it.
“Oh,” exclaimed a roguish
voice, “I knew that you were all in it!
But the especial one who wore the slipper and grabbed
the pendant cannot hope to hide herself. Her
finger-tips will give her away.”
Amazement on every face and a convulsive
movement in one half-hidden hand.
“You see,” the airy little
being went on, in her light way, “I have some
awfully funny tricks. I am always being scolded
for them, but somehow I don’t improve.
One is to keep my jewelry bright with a strange foreign
paste an old Frenchwoman once gave me in Paris.
It’s of a vivid red, and stains the fingers
dreadfully if you don’t take care. Not even
water will take it off, see mine. I used that
paste on my pendant last night just after you left
me, and being awfully sleepy I didn’t stop to
rub it off. If your finger-tips are not red,
you never touched the pendant, Miss Driscoll.
Oh, see! They are as white as milk.
“But some one took the sapphires,
and I owe that person a scolding, as well as myself.
Was it you, Miss Hughson? You, Miss Yates? or ”
and here she paused before Miss West, “Oh, you
have your gloves on! You are the guilty one!”
and her laugh rang out like a peal of bells, robbing
her next sentence of even a suggestion of sarcasm.
“Oh, what a sly-boots!” she cried.
“How you have deceived me! Whoever would
have thought you to be the one to play the mischief!”
Who indeed! Of all the five,
she was the one who was considered absolutely immune
from suspicion ever since the night Mrs. Barnum’s
handkerchief had been taken, and she not in the box.
Eyes which had surveyed Miss Driscoll askance now
rose in wonder toward hers, and failed to fall again
because of the stoniness into which her delicately-carved
features had settled.
“Miss West, I know you will
be glad to remove your gloves; Miss Strange certainly
has a right to know her special tormentor,” spoke
up her host in as natural a voice as his great relief
would allow.
But the cold, half-frozen woman remained
without a movement. She was not deceived by the
banter of the moment. She knew that to all of
the others, if not to Peter Strange’s odd little
daughter, it was the thief who was being spotted and
brought thus hilariously to light. And her eyes
grew hard, and her lips grey, and she failed to unglove
the hands upon which all glances were concentrated.
“You do not need to see my hands;
I confess to taking the pendant.”
“Caroline!”
A heart overcome by shock had thrown
up this cry. Miss West eyed her bosom-friend
disdainfully.
“Miss Strange has called it
a jest,” she coldly commented. “Why
should you suggest anything of a graver character?”
Alicia brought thus to bay, and by
one she had trusted most, stepped quickly forward,
and quivering with vague doubts, aghast before unheard-of
possibilities, she tremulously remarked:
“We did not sleep together last
night. You had to come into my room to get my
slippers. Why did you do this? What was in
your mind, Caroline?”
A steady look, a low laugh choked
with many emotions answered her.
“Do you want me to reply, Alicia?
Or shall we let it pass?”
“Answer!”
It was Mr. Driscoll who spoke.
Alicia had shrunk back, almost to where a little figure
was cowering with wide eyes fixed in something like
terror on the aroused father’s face.
“Then hear me,” murmured
the girl, entrapped and suddenly desperate. “I
wore Alicia’s slippers and I took the jewels,
because it was time that an end should come to your
mutual dissimulation. The love I once felt for
her she has herself deliberately killed. I had
a lover she took him. I had faith
in life, in honour, and in friendship. She destroyed
all. A thief she has dared to aspire
to him! And you condoned her fault. You,
with your craven restoration of her booty, thought
the matter cleared and her a fit mate for a man of
highest honour.”
“Miss West,” no
one had ever heard that tone in Mr. Driscoll’s
voice before, “before you say another word calculated
to mislead these ladies, let me say that this hand
never returned any one’s booty or had anything
to do with the restoration of any abstracted article.
You have been caught in a net, Miss West, from which
you cannot escape by slandering my innocent daughter.”
“Innocent!” All the tragedy
latent in this peculiar girl’s nature blazed
forth in the word. “Alicia, face me.
Are you innocent? Who took the Dempsey corals,
and that diamond from the Tiffany tray?”
“It is not necessary for Alicia
to answer,” the father interposed with not unnatural
heat. “Miss West stands self-convicted.”
“How about Lady Paget’s
scarf? I was not there that night.”
“You are a woman of wiles.
That could be managed by one bent on an elaborate
scheme of revenge.”
“And so could the abstraction
of Mrs. Barnum’s five-hundred-dollar handkerchief
by one who sat in the next box,” chimed in Miss
Hughson, edging away from the friend to whose honour
she would have pinned her faith an hour before.
“I remember now seeing her lean over the railing
to adjust the old lady’s shawl.”
With a start, Caroline West turned
a tragic gaze upon the speaker.
“You think me guilty of all
because of what I did last night?”
“Why shouldn’t I?”
“And you, Anna?”
“Alicia has my sympathy,” murmured Miss
Benedict.
Yet the wild girl persisted.
“But I have told you my provocation.
You cannot believe that I am guilty of her sin; not
if you look at her as I am looking now.”
But their glances hardly followed
her pointing finger. Her friends the
comrades of her youth, the Inséparables with their
secret oath one and all held themselves
aloof, struck by the perfidy they were only just beginning
to take in. Smitten with despair, for these girls
were her life, she gave one wild leap and sank on
her knees before Alicia.
“O speak!” she began. “Forgive
me, and ”
A tremble seized her throat; she ceased
to speak and let fall her partially uplifted hands.
The cheery sound of men’s voices had drifted
in from the terrace, and the figure of Captain Holliday
could be seen passing by. The shudder which shook
Caroline West communicated itself to Alicia Driscoll,
and the former rising quickly, the two women surveyed
each other, possibly for the first time, with open
soul and a complete understanding.
“Caroline!” murmured the one.
“Alicia!” pleaded the other.
“Caroline, trust me,”
said Alicia Driscoll in that moving voice of hers,
which more than her beauty caught and retained all
hearts. “You have served me ill, but it
was not all undeserved. Girls,” she went
on, eyeing both them and her father with the wistfulness
of a breaking heart, “neither Caroline nor myself
are worthy of Captain Holliday’s love.
Caroline has told you her fault, but mine is perhaps
a worse one. The ring the scarf the
diamond pins I took them all took
them if I did not retain them. A curse has been
over my life the curse of a longing I could
not combat. But love was working a change in me.
Since I have known Captain Holliday but
that’s all over. I was mad to think I could
be happy with such memories in my life. I shall
never marry now or touch jewels again my
own or another’s. Father, father, you won’t
go back on your girl! I couldn’t see Caroline
suffer for what I have done. You will pardon
me and help help ”
Her voice choked. She flung herself
into her father’s arms; his head bent over hers,
and for an instant not a soul in the room moved.
Then Miss Hughson gave a spring and caught her by the
hand. “We are inseparable,” said
she, and kissed the hand, murmuring, “Now is
our time to show it.”
Then other lips fell upon those cold
and trembling fingers, which seemed to warm under
these embraces. And then a tear. It came
from the hard eye of Caroline, and remained a sacred
secret between the two.
“You have your pendant?”
Mr. Driscoll’s suffering eye
shone down on Violet Strange’s uplifted face
as she advanced to say good-bye preparatory to departure.
“Yes,” she acknowledged,
“but hardly, I fear, your gratitude.”
And the answer astonished her.
“I am not sure that the real
Alicia will not make her father happier than the unreal
one has ever done.”
“And Captain Holliday?”
“He may come to feel the same.”
“Then I do not quit in disgrace?”
“You depart with my thanks.”
When a certain personage was told
of the success of Miss Strange’s latest manoeuvre,
he remarked: “The little one progresses.
We shall have to give her a case of prime importance
next.”