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The Mystery Girl
“Yes; it didn’t seem to suit him at all.”
“No; he’s a conservative dresser. But that pin, – it’s a famous gem, – was given him by his own class, – I mean his graduating class, but long after they graduated, and he had to promise to wear it once a week, so he usually gets into it on Sundays. It’s a corking stone!”
“Yes,” said Miss Austin.
On reaching the Adams house, the girl said a quick good-by, and Pinky Payne found himself at liberty to go in and see the other members of the household, or to go home, for Miss Austin disappeared into the hall and up the staircase with the rapidity of a dissolving view.
Young Payne turned away and strolled slowly back to the Waring home, wondering what it was about the disagreeable young woman that made him pay any attention to her at all.
He found her the topic of discussion when he arrived.
“Of all rude people,” Mrs. Peyton declared, “she was certainly the worst!”
“She was!” Helen agreed. “I couldn’t make her out at all. And I don’t call her pretty, either.”
“I do,” observed Emily Bates. “I call her very pretty, – and possessed of great charm.”
“Charm!” scoffed Helen; “I can’t see it.”
“She isn’t rude,” Pinky defended the absent. “I’m sure, Mrs. Peyton, she made her adieux most politely. Why should she have stayed longer? She didn’t know any of us, – and, perhaps she doesn’t like any of us.”
“That’s it,” Gordon Lockwood stated. “She doesn’t like us, – I’m sure of that. Well, why should she, if she doesn’t want to?”
“Why shouldn’t she?” countered Tyler. “She’s so terribly superior, – I can’t bear her. She acts as if she owned the earth, yet nobody knows who she is, or anything about her.”
“Are we entitled to?” asked Lockwood. “Why should we inquire into her identity or history further than she chooses to enlighten us?”
“Where is Miss Austin?” asked Doctor Waring, returning, quite composed and calm.
“She went home,” informed Mrs. Bates. “Are you all right, John?”
“Oh, yes, dear. I wasn’t ill, or anything like that. The awkward accident touched my nerves, and I wanted to run away and hide.”
He smiled whimsically, looking like a naughty schoolboy, and Emily Bates took his hand and drew him down to a seat beside her.
“What made you drop it, John?” she said, with a direct look into his eyes.
He hesitated a moment, and his own glance wandered, then he said, “I don’t know, Emily; I suppose it was a sudden physical contraction of the muscles of my hand – and I couldn’t control it.”
Mrs. Bates didn’t look satisfied, but she did not pursue the subject. Then the discussion of Anita was resumed.
“How did you like her looks, Doctor Waring?” Helen Peyton asked.
“I scarcely saw her,” was the quiet reply. “Did you all admire her?”
“Some of us did.” Mrs. Bates answered; “I do, for one. Did you ever see her before, John?”
Doctor Waring stared at the question.
“Never,” he declared. “How could I have done so?”
“I don’t know, I’m sure,” Mrs. Bates laughed. “I just had a sort of an impression – ”
“No, dear, I never saw the girl before in my life,” Waring reasserted.
“And you need never want to see her again,” Robert Tyler informed him. “She’s sulky, silly and supercilious. She’s a mystery, they say, but I say she merely wants to be thought a mystery to make a little sensation. I can’t abide that sort.”
Helen Peyton heard this with undisguised satisfaction, for she had quite enough girls in her life to be jealous and envious of, without adding another to the list. Also, she especially wanted to retain the admiration of Robert Tyler, and was glad to know it was not newly endangered.
“Miss Austin is very beautiful,” Gordon Lockwood declared, in his usual way of summing up a discussion and announcing his own opinion as final. “Also, she is a mystery. I live in the same boarding house – ”
“So do I,” put in Tyler, “and she snubs us both.”
“She hasn’t snubbed me,” said Lockwood, simply.
“Never mind, Oscar, she will!” returned Tyler, and then laughed immoderately at his own would-be wit.
CHAPTER V
THE TRAGEDY
That same Sunday evening the Waring household dined alone. Oftener than not there were guests, but tonight there were only the two Peytons, Lockwood and John Waring himself.
Ito, the butler, had holiday Sunday afternoon and evening, and Nogi, the second and less experienced man, was trying his best to satisfy the exactions of Mrs. Peyton as to his service at table.
Helen Peyton was in a talkative mood and commented volubly on the caller of the afternoon, Miss Austin.
She met little response, for her mother was absorbed in the training of the Japanese, and the two men seemed indisposed to pursue the subject.
“Don’t you think she’s odd looking?” Helen asked, of Doctor Waring.
“Odd looking,” he repeated; “I don’t know. I didn’t notice her especially. She seemed to me a rather distinguished type.”
“Distinguished is the word,” agreed Lockwood. “What about the lecture tomorrow night, Doctor? Will Fessenden take care of it?”
“No; I must lecture myself tomorrow night. I’m sorry, for I’m busy with that book revision. However, I’ll look up some data this evening, and I shall be ready for it.”
“Of course you will,” laughed Mrs. Peyton. “You were never caught unready for anything!”
“But it means some work,” Waring added, as he rose from the table.
He went into the study, followed by Lockwood, whose experience made him aware of what books his chief would need, and he began at once to take them from the shelves.
“Right,” Waring said, looking over the armful of volumes Lockwood placed on the desk and seating himself in the swivel chair.
“Bring me Marcus Aurelius, too, please, and Martial.”
“The classic touch,” Lockwood smiled.
“Yes, it adds dignity, if one is a bit shy of material,” Waring admitted, good-naturedly. “That’s all, Lockwood. You may go, if you like.”
“No, sir. I’ll stay until eleven or so. I’m pretty busy with the reports, and, too, some one may call whom I can take care of.”
“Good chap you are, Lockwood. I appreciate it. Very well, then, don’t bother me unless absolutely necessary.”
The secretary left the room and closed the study door behind him.
This door gave on to the end of the cross hall, and the hall ended then, in a roomy window seat, and also held a book rack and table; altogether a comfortable and useful nook, frequently occupied by Gordon Lockwood. The window looked out on the beautiful lake view, as did the great study window, and it also commanded a view of the highroad on which stood, not far away, the Adams boarding-house.
Lockwood lodged there, as being more convenient, but most of his waking hours were spent in his employer’s home. A perfect secretary he had proved himself to be, for his prescience amounted almost to clairvoyance, and his imperturbability was exceedingly useful in keeping troublesome people or things away from John Waring.
So, he determined to stay on guard, lest a chance caller should come to disturb the Doctor at his work.
But Lockwood’s own work was somewhat neglected. Try as he would to concentrate upon it, he could not entirely dismiss from his mind a certain mysterious little face, whose meaning eluded him. For once, Gordon Lockwood, reader of faces, was baffled. He couldn’t classify the girl who was both rude and charming, both cruel and pathetic.
For cruelty was what this expert read in the knowing eyes and firm little mouth of Miss Mystery. And because of this indubitable element in her nature, he deemed her pathetic. Which shows how much she interested him.
At any rate he thought about her while his work waited. And, then, he thought of other things – for he had troubles of his own, had this supercilious young man. And troubles which galled him the more, that they were sordid – money troubles, in fact. His whole nature revolted at the mere thought of mercenary considerations, but if one is short of funds one must recognize the condition, distasteful though it be.
At nine-thirty, Nogi came with a tray bearing water and glasses. Under the watchful eye of Mrs. Peyton the Japanese tapped at the study door and, in response to the master’s bidding, went in with his tray. He left it punctiliously on the table directed, and with his characteristic bow, departed again.
At ten-thirty, Mrs. Peyton and Helen went upstairs to their rooms, the housekeeper having given Nogi strict and definite instructions, which included his remaining on duty until the master should also retire.
And the night wore on.
A clear, cold night, with a late-rising moon, past the full, but still with its great yellow disk nearly round.
It shone down on what seemed like fairyland, for the sleet storm that had covered the trees with a coating of ice, and had fringed eaves and fences with icicles, had ceased, and left the glittering landscape frozen and sparkling in the still, cold air.
And when, some hours later, the sun rose on the same chill scene its rays made no perceptible impression on the cold and the mercury stayed down at its lowest winter record.
And so even the stolid Japanese Ito, shivered, and his yellow teeth chattered as he knocked at Mrs. Peyton’s door in the early dawn of Monday morning.
“What is it?” she cried, springing from her bed to unbolt her door.
“Grave news, madam,” and the Oriental bowed before her.
“What has happened? Tell me, Ito.”
“I am not sure, madam – but, the master – ”
“Yes, what about Doctor Waring?”
“He is – he is asleep in his study.”
“Asleep in his study! Ito, what do you mean?”
“That, madam. His bed is unslept in. His room door ajar. I looked in the study – through from the dining-room – he is there by his desk – ”
“Asleep, Ito – you said asleep!”
“Yes – madam – but – I do not know. And Nogi – he is gone.”
“Gone! Where to?”
“That also, I do not know. Will madam come and look?”
“No; I will not! I know something has happened! I knew something would happen! Ito, he is not asleep – he is – ”
“Don’t say it, madam. We do not know.”
“Find out! Go in and speak to him.”
“But the door is locked. I tried it.”
“Locked! The study door locked, and Doctor Waring still in there? How do you know?”
“I peeped from the dining-room window – and I could see him, leaning down on his desk.”
“From the dining-room window! What do you mean?”
“The small little inside windows. Madam knows?”
The study had been added to the Waring house after the house had been built for some years. Wherefore, the dining-room, previously with a lake view from its windows, was cut off from that view. But, the windows, three small, square ones, remained, and so, looked into the new study.
However, the study, a higher ceiling being desired, had its floor sunken six feet or more, which brought the windows far too high to see through from the study side, but one could look through them from the dining-room. The original sashes had been replaced by beautiful stained glass, opaque save for a few tiny transparent bits through which a persistent and curious-minded person might discern some parts of the study.
The stained glass sashes were immovable, and were there more as a decoration than for utility’s sake.
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