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Part 19 (2/2)

She rose to leave the room, then sat down again hastily.

”I'm afraid I can't help you right now, either. I have mislaid my purse.

But when I find it I'll let you have the money. When York comes back maybe I can get it of him. Could you come over this afternoon?”

”Mebby York won't let you have it to loan where there ain't no big interest comin'. I'd ruther he didn't know it if you wasn't sure.”

Laura recalled what her brother had said about not becoming entangled with Stellar Bahrr, and she knew he would oppose the loan. She knew, too, that in the end he would consent to it, because he himself was continually befriending the poor, no matter how s.h.i.+ftless they might be.

”I think I can bring York round, all right,” Laura a.s.sured her caller.

”He's not unreasonable.”

”I'd ruther he didn't know. Men are so different from women, you know.

You say you lost your purse. Ain't that funny? Where?”

”The funny thing is I don't know where,” Laura replied.

Mrs. Bahrr had settled down, and, having accomplished her open purpose, began to train her batteries for her hidden motive.

”Things gits lost funny ways, queer ways, and sometimes ornery ways.

Ever' now an' then things is simply missin' here in this burg--just missin'. But again there's such queer folks even in what you call the best s'ciety. Now ain't that so?”

Laura agreed amiably. In truth, she wanted to get her mind away from its substratum of unpleasant and unusual thought for which she could not account. Nothing could take her farther from it than Mrs. Bahrr's small talk about people and things. She knew better than to accept the gossip for facts, but there was no courteous way of stopping Stellar now, anyhow. One had to meet her on the threshold for that.

”'Tain't always the little, petty thievin' sneak gits the things, even if they do git the blame of it. No, 'tain't.” Mrs. Bahrr rambled on, fixing her hook eyes square into her hostess at just the right moment for emphasis. ”I knowed the same thing happen twice. Once back in Indiany, where I come from--jist a little town on White River. There was a girl come to that town from”--hesitatingly--”from Californy; said to be rich, an' dressed it all right; had every man there crazy about her, an' her spendin' money like water pours over a mill-wheel in March. Tell you who she looked like--jist a mite like this Miss Swim stayin' at your house now--big eyes an' innocent-lookin' like her, but this Californy girl was a lot the best-lookin' of the two--a lot. An' she was rich--or so everybody thought. This un ain't. I got that out of Ponk 'fore he knowed it. An'--well, to make a story end somewhere this side of eternity, I never could bear them ramblin' kind of folks--first thing folks knowed a rich old bachelor got animated with her, just clear _animated_, an' literally swore by her. An'--well, things got to missin'

a little an' a little more, an', sir--well”--slowly and impressively--”it turned out at last that this girl who they said was so rich was a _thief_, takin' whatever she could get, 'cause she was hard up an' too proud to go back to Oregon to tell her folks. An' that rich bachelor jist defended her ever' way--'d say he took things accidental, an' then help her to git 'em back, or git away with them--it was like a real drammy jist like they acted out in the picture show t'other night down-town. There was lots of talk, an' it nearly broke his sister's--I mean his mother's--heart. But, pshaw! that all happened years ago down in Indiany on the White River. It's all forgot long 'go. Guess I'd never thought of it again if this Swim girl hadn't come here with her big eyes, remindin' me of that old forgot eppisode, an' your losin'

your purse mysterious. How things happen, year in an' year out, place after place, the same kind of things; good folks everywhere, though--everywhere. I was in York's office late yistyday afternoon, an'

this girl comes in. Too bad she's so poor an' so pretty.”

There was a venomous twist of the hooks at that word ”pretty.”

”But she's in trouble some way, all right, I know, an' York 'll help her out. _I_ wouldn't ask him. Men take more int'rist naturally in young an'

pretty women. But it's different with older women. I hope York never gits caught sometime like that man I knowed back in Indiany. He's too smart for that. Miss Swim must have told York about her money shortage yistyday. The postmaster said she'd been waitin' for a check considerable. I couldn't get nothin' out of _him_, whether it had come yet or not. But I guess not. But la! la! she's your guest; you wouldn't let her suffer; an' I ain't tellin' a soul what I know about things. I do know what they say, of course. York won't let her suffer. But I'm so much obliged to you. Four dollars will be all I need, an' I'll pay you with the first bakin's. I guess I'll set some folks thinkin' when they see I can make my own way--”

Laura Macpherson was on her feet and it was her eyes now that were holding the woman of the steel hooks.

”Miss Swaim is our guest, the daughter of an old friend of the Macphersons. Of course we--”

Oh what was the use? Laura's anger fell away. It was too ridiculous to engage in a quarrel with the town long-tongue. York was right. The only way to get along with Stellar Bahrr was not to traffic with her. Mrs.

Bahrr rose also, gripping at the chance for escape uninjured.

”I'll see you this afternoon if you still feel like helpin' me, an' York is willin'. I clear forgot to put out my ice-card. Good day. Good day.”

The woman shuffled away, leaving the mistress of ”Cluny Castle” in the grip of many evil spirits. The demon of anger, of doubt, of contempt, of incipient distrust, of self-accusation for even listening--these and others contended with the angel of the sense of humor and the natural courtesy of a well-bred woman.

And then the lost purse came up again.

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