Part 14 (2/2)
The inventor placed the trinket in Robert Morton's hand.
”C. L. G.,” repeated he, as he deciphered the intertwined letters of the monogram. ”You are right, sure as fate! Jove!”
”They've sent you the wrong girl,” remarked Willie. ”It's clear as a bell on a still night. There must have been two girls an' two buckles, an' the jeweler's mixed 'em up; you've got the other lady's.”
”That's a nice mess!” Bob e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed irritably. ”Why, I'd rather have given a hundred dollars than have this happen. I'll wring that man's neck!”
”Easy, youngster! Easy!” cautioned Willie. ”Don't go heavin' all your cargo overboard 'till you find you're really sinkin'. 'Tain't likely Miss C. L. G. will care a row of pins for Miss D. L. H.'s buckle.
She'll be sendin' out an S. O. S. for her own an' will be ready to join you in flayin' the jeweler. Give the poor varmint time, an' he'll s.h.i.+ft things round all right.”
”But Miss Hathaway--”
”Delight's lived the best part of two weeks without that buckle, an'
she don't look none the worse for not havin' it. I saw her in the post-office only yesterday an'--”
”Did you?” cried Bob eagerly, then stopped short, flushed, and bit his lip.
”Yes, she was there,” Willie returned serenely, without appearing to have noticed his guest's agitation. ”Young Farwell from Cambridge--the one that has all the money--was talkin' to her, an' she had that Harvard professor who boards at the Brewsters' along too; Carlton his name is, Jasper Carlton. He's a mighty good-lookin' chap.” He stole a glance at the face that glowered out of the window. ”Had you chose to stroll down to the store with me like I asked you to, you might 'a'
seen her yourself.”
”Oh, I--I--didn't need to see her,” stammered Bob.
”Mebbe not,” was the tranquil answer. ”An' she didn't need to see you, neither, judgin' from the way she was talkin' an' laughin' with them other fellers. Still a young man is never the worse for chattin' with a nice girl. Now, son, if I was you, I wouldn't get stirred up over this jewelry business. We'll get a rise out of Miss C. L. G. pretty soon an' when she comes to the surface--”
”Who's that at the gate, Willie?” called Celestina from the kitchen.
”What?”
”There's somebody at the gate in a big red automobile. She's comin'
in. You go an' see what she wants, 'cause my ap.r.o.n ain't fresh.
Likely she's lost her way or else is huntin' board.”
Although Willie shuffled obediently into the hall he was not in time to prevent the sonorous peal of the bell.
”Yes, he's here,” they heard him say. ”Of course you can speak to him.
He's just inside. Won't you step in?”
Then without further ado, and with utter disregard of Celestina's rumpled ap.r.o.n, the door opened and the little inventor ushered into the string-entangled sitting room a dainty, city-bred girl in a sport suit of white serge. She was not only pretty but she was perfectly groomed and was possessed of a fascinating vivacity and charm. Everything about her was vivid: the gloss of her brown hair, the sparkle of her eyes, her color, her smile, her immaculate clothes--all were dazzling.
She carried her splendor with an air of complete sureness as if she was accustomed to the supremacy it won for her and expected it. Yet the audacity of her pose had in it a certain fitness and was piquant rather than offensive.
The instant she crossed the threshold, Robert Morton leaped to meet her with outstretched hands.
”Cynthia Galbraith!” he cried. ”How ever came you here?”
A ripple of teasing laughter came from the girl.
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