Part 28 (2/2)

”I thought perhaps Mrs. Longstreet had told you how she happened to have it.”

Poor Jane Carew had n.o.body in whom to confide. For once she spoke her mind to her maid. ”She has not said one word. And, oh, Margaret, I don't know what to think of it.”

Margaret pursed her lips.

”What do YOU think, Margaret?”

”I don't know. Miss Jane.”

”I don't.”

”I did not mention it to Louisa,” said Margaret.

”Oh, I hope not!” cried Jane.

”But she did to me,” said Margaret. ”She asked had I seen Miss Viola's new comb, and then she laughed, and I thought from the way she acted that--” Margaret hesitated.

”That what?”

”That she meant Mr. Lind had given Miss Viola the comb.”

Jane started violently. ”Absolutely impossible!” she cried. ”That, of course, is nonsense. There must be some explanation. Probably Mrs.

Longstreet will explain before we go.”

Mrs. Longstreet did not explain. She wondered and expostulated when Jane announced her firm determination to leave, but she seemed utterly at a loss for the reason. She did not mention the comb.

When Jane Carew took leave of her old friend she was entirely sure in her own mind that she would never visit her again--might never even see her again.

Jane was unutterably thankful to be back in her own peaceful home, over which no shadow of absurd mystery brooded; only a calm afternoon light of life, which disclosed gently but did not conceal or betray. Jane settled back into her pleasant life, and the days pa.s.sed, and the weeks, and the months, and the years. She heard nothing whatever from or about Viola Longstreet for three years. Then, one day, Margaret returned from the city, and she had met Viola's old maid Louisa in a department store, and she had news. Jane wished for strength to refuse to listen, but she could not muster it. She listened while Margaret brushed her hair.

”Louisa has not been with Miss Viola for a long time,” said Margaret.

”She is living with somebody else. Miss Viola lost her money, and had to give up her house and her servants, and Louisa said she cried when she said good-by.”

Jane made an effort. ”What became of--” she began.

Margaret answered the unfinished sentence. She was excited by gossip as by a stimulant. Her thin cheeks burned, her eyes blazed. ”Mr. Lind,”

said Margaret, ”Louisa told me, had turned out to be real bad. He got into some money trouble, and then”--Margaret lowered her voice--”he was arrested for taking a lot of money which didn't belong to him. Louisa said he had been in some business where he handled a lot of other folks'

money, and he cheated the men who were in the business with him, and he was tried, and Miss Viola, Louisa thinks, hid away somewhere so they wouldn't call her to testify, and then he had to go to prison; but--”

Margaret hesitated.

”What is it?” asked Jane.

”Louisa thinks he died about a year and a half ago. She heard the lady where she lives now talking about it. The lady used to know Miss Viola, and she heard the lady say Mr. Lind had died in prison, that he couldn't stand the hard life, and that Miss Viola had lost all her money through him, and then”--Margaret hesitated again, and her mistress prodded sharply--”Louisa said that she heard the lady say that she had thought Miss Viola would marry him, but she hadn't, and she had more sense than she had thought.”

”Mrs. Longstreet would never for one moment have entertained the thought of marrying Mr. Lind; he was young enough to be her grandson,” said Jane, severely.

”Yes, ma'am,” said Margaret.

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