FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137  
138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   >>  
ver you think might be done--" Again his teeth came down upon his lips, and, looking up, I saw his face was white. "Give me a day or two in which to see what can be done. And you won't mind if I ask Mr. Crimm's advice?" I seemed pushing the girl I'd heard talking to Mrs. Mundy behind me. "He hasn't been able to find Etta Blake yet. Do you suppose her disappearance could have any connection with Harrie's? It may be he really loves her." Selwyn turned away. "Love is hardly a term to be used in connection with an acquaintanceship such as theirs. A girl with a past, possibly--" "How about his past?" "I think you understand pretty well my opinion of his past. But as long as theories yield to accepted custom a man's past will be forgotten, a woman's remembered. Harrie, if married, would be received anywhere, provided he married a woman of his world. This little girl would have to pay her price and his, were she his wife, for no one would receive her. That's hardly the question before us, however. To find where Harrie is, find if anything is wrong, if he's ill--" The sharp, sudden ringing of the telephone on the table behind me made me start, and, jumping up like a frightened child, I stood close to Selwyn. "Who on earth-- It's half past twelve. Who can want me at this time of night?" I started to take the receiver from its hook, but, laughing at me, Selwyn got it first. "One would think a spook was going to spring at you. Central's given the wrong number, I guess. Hello! Who is that?" Watching with as strained eagerness as if I were hearing, I saw Selwyn lean forward, after admitting that the number wanted was the right one, and heard him ask again: "Who is it? Who did you say?" For the next five minutes there was snatchy, excited, and incoherent conversation over the telephone, during which Selwyn and I alternated in the talking in an effort to learn what Tom Cressy was saying at the other end of the line, and what it was he wanted me to do. Tom's voice was not distinct and caution was making it difficult to understand what we finally got from him, which was that he wanted to bring Madeleine down to spend the night with me; that they had started to go away to be married and missed the train by one minute, owing to an accident to the automobile they were in. The next train did not leave until 4 A.M. Could Madeleine stay with me until train time? "No, she can't!" Hand over the tel
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137  
138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   >>  



Top keywords:

Selwyn

 

wanted

 

Harrie

 

married

 

connection

 

understand

 
Madeleine
 

number

 

started

 

telephone


talking
 

hearing

 

forward

 

eagerness

 

strained

 

Watching

 

admitting

 

minutes

 
laughing
 

receiver


Central

 
spring
 

snatchy

 

finally

 

making

 
difficult
 

accident

 
automobile
 

minute

 

missed


caution

 

distinct

 

alternated

 

effort

 

excited

 

incoherent

 

conversation

 
Cressy
 

opinion

 

pretty


possibly
 
theories
 

remembered

 
pushing
 
received
 
forgotten
 

accepted

 

custom

 

disappearance

 

suppose