Part 26 (1/2)
”But come; you are up here to be cheered, not lectured. Let us play billiards. I can hear John and Kate playing now. We'll play sides; and if we win against those two, I promise to call you Richard once a day while you are up here. Or, would you rather I played and sang?”
”Much rather,” brightening up a bit. ”There is always time to play billiards. But first, I want you to come with me into the reading-room. I have something to show you; I had almost forgotten.”
”The reading-room?” puzzled.
”Yes. Will you come?”
She nodded her a.s.sent, and the two entered the house. Warrington, having arrived at the writing-desk, bade her sit down. He had an idea.
Patty sat down.
”I want you to write something for me,” he said, pus.h.i.+ng the pen and tablet toward her.
”What's the matter with your hand?” she demanded.
”Nothing.”
”Then why do you want me to write?”
”I have never seen your handwriting. I'm something of an expert in that line. I'll read your future.”
”But I don't want my future read,” rebelliously.
”Well, then, your past.”
”Much less my past. Come; you are only beating about the bush. What is it you want?”
”I want to know,” he said quietly, ”why you have kept me in ignorance all this while.” He laid the letter on the desk, and placed a finger on the water-mark. ”It wasn't fair to let me compose panegyrics over it all the while you were laughing in your sleeve. Ah, I've caught you. You can't get away this time, Patty.”
”I haven't the slightest idea what you are talking about.” But she looked at the letter and not at him.
”Do you see those water-marks?” he demanded.
”Yes. You will find them in a thousand tablets like this. I bought a dozen of them in New York; cheap and handy.”
Warrington's confidence in his discovery began to shake. He braced himself and took a bold course.
”Patty, you wrote that letter; you know you did. You wrote it in New York, the day you bought the tablets.”
”I?”
”Yes. Confess.”
”My dear Mr. Warrington, you must prove it,” lightly. ”It would not be proper for me to admit that I had been so foolish as to write a letter like that.”
”But you've praised it!”
”Simply because praising it would please you; for no other reason.”
”Did you, or did you not write it?”
”Find out. You must prove that I wrote it. Certainly I have nothing to confess.”