The Beloved Stranger

Chapter 14




There was a sense of peace in Sherrill’s room the next morning. The fragrance of the pansies pervaded the place. The delicate perfume spoke to her at once even before she opened her eyes. It brought the memory of the pleasant stranger, as if his presence were still lingering not far away to help.

Then she opened her eyes to see the pansies on the low bedside table where she had placed them. She reveled in their soft brightness and was glad they were just pansies, not any of the more conventional flowers. They seemed to emphasize the simple frank friendship that had begun on the street, just plain honest friends helping one another. Pansies might grow in anybody’s garden, only these of course were sort of glorified pansies. But it was a comfort that they did not recall the bridal bouquet nor any of the flowers in the church. Just simple pansies that she might love and lay her face against.

She reached out for the card that lay beside them on the table. Somehow that hastily penned line seemed to have a deeper meaning than just a wish that she was rested physically. It seemed to carry a desire that she might be healed in spirit from the deep hurt to her life that he could not help knowing that wedding must have been to her.

Little memories of the kindness in his eyes, merry eyes that yet held tenderness, came back to her; the turn of a sentence that made her laugh when he must have seen the tears were very near to coming; his pleasant grin. They all filled her with a warmth and comfort that were restful and almost happy.

She lay there thinking about him. How kind he had been! She was rejoicing in the presence of the pansies in their lovely fern setting when Gemmie tapped at the door and entered with a breakfast tray.

“Miss Patricia said you better eat before you get up,” she announced, setting her tray down on a low table and drawing back the silk curtains.

Gemmie brought her negligee and put it about her, adjusting her pillows. Then she bustled over to the hearth and lighted a fire that was ready, though it was scarcely needed that bright spring morning. Sherrill began to perceive that Gemmie had something on her mind. She never bustled unless she was ill at ease. But Sherrill was too comfortable just at that moment to try to find out what it was, so she let Gemmie go on setting things straight on the dressing table and then setting them crooked again. At last she spoke.

“It’s right awful about that necklace being gone, Miss Sherrill!”

Boom! A great burden of stone seemed suddenly to land back again in Sherrill’s heart, just where it had been the day before, only a trifle heavier if possible.

“Yes,” quavered Sherrill, pausing in her first comforting swallow of coffee.

“Seems like we ought to do something about it right away,” went on Gemmie. “Seems like we oughtn’t to let the time get away with us.”

“Yes, Gemmie,” said Sherrill distressedly, “but Aunt Pat wants to work it out in her own way. I think she had some idea about it, though she doesn’t want to tell it yet. We are not to tell anybody about it, you know.”

“Yes, I know,” said Gemmie severely as if she disapproved greatly. “But Miss Sherrill, it doesn’t seem reasonable, does it? That necklace didn’t have legs. It couldn’t run away of itself, could it?”

“Not very well, Gemmie.” Sherrill lay back against her pillows with distress in her eyes.

“There was only one stranger there, wasn’t there, Miss Sherrill? I was wondering if you knew him real well. Was you right sure about him?”

“Stranger?” said Sherrill coldly. “Did you mean the clerk who came in to witness the license papers signed?”

“Oh, laws! No! Not him. I’ve known him for years. He used to live next door to my best friend, and he wouldn’t steal a pin. He’s too honest, if you know what I mean. But wasn’t there a stranger there, Miss Sherrill? I came across him in the back hall just after I got back from the church. I went up to leave my hat and coat, and I found him wandering around trying doors all along the hall.”

“Oh, you mean my friend Mr. Copeland,” said Sherrill with elaborate coolness. “No, I brought him there, Gemmie. He’d just come from the train and brought his suitcase to change here. I met him at the church. He’s from out near my old home in the West, you know, Gemmie. I put him in that little end room where we afterward signed the papers. He’s quite all right!”

Sherrill explained it all out slowly, her voice growing more assured as she went on, and ending with a ripple of laughter, though she felt that awful haunting doubt creeping into her mind again with the accompanying heaviness of heart.

“You know him right well, do you? You’re sure he wouldn’t yield to temptation, are you? You know those stones are wonderful costly, Miss Sherrill!”

“Oh, for pity’s sake, Gemmie! What an awful suggestion to make about a friend and guest of ours! You’d better not say that to Aunt Pat. She certainly would not be pleased. Of course he is entirely above suspicion. Why, he is a friend, Gemmie!”

“Well! I didn’t know how well you knew him,” said Gemmie offendedly. “I never heard you speak of him before, and I didn’t know but what he might be somebody you hadn’t seen in a long time, and didn’t know how he’d turned out now he’s growed up.”

Sherrill managed a real laugh now and answered, “No, Gemmie, nothing like that! Now, if you’ll take this tray, I’ll get up. I want to get at those presents again. We got a lot done yesterday, didn’t we?”

“Yes, Miss Sherrill, but you’ve not eaten your breakfast, and Miss Patricia will be all upset.”

“All right, Gemmie, I’ll eat a little more if you’ll run and see if the morning mail has come yet. I’m expecting a letter. Aren’t my flowers lovely, Gemmie? Mr. Copeland’s the one that sent them to me.”

Gemmie eyed the flowers half suspiciously.

“Yes,” admitted Gemmie reluctantly, “for flowers that aren’t roses, they’re above most.”

Then Gemmie, leaving a mist of insidious doubt in her wake, swept firmly out of the room, and Sherrill had a silly feeling that she wanted to throw the whole breakfast after her and burst into tears. How outrageous of the stupid old thing to get such a notion and try to rub it in! Of course her kind stranger friend was all right! She would not let such sickening doubts creep into her mind. Aunt Pat didn’t think any such thing. She didn’t herself. As she remembered the fine merry countenance and wide frank eyes, she felt that it was utterly ridiculous to suspect such a man even though he was a stranger. Yet there was that heaviness planted for the day again, planted in the very pit of her stomach just like yesterday.

Then she suddenly put her face down into her pillows and cried a few hot, tempestuous, worried tears till she remembered Gemmie would soon return with the mail and she mustn’t have red eyes. So she stopped the tears, and before Gemmie could come into the room again, she sprang up and buried her face in the dewy sweetness of the pansies, touching her lips to their coolness hungrily. Oh, why did evil and suspicion and sin have to come in and spoil a world that would otherwise be bright? She would not, would not believe or entertain the slightest suspicion against Graham Copeland. They had made a compact of trust and friendship, and she would abide by her own intuition. Yes, and by Aunt Pat’s judgment also.

And so when Gemmie entered, Sherrill was bending over her flowers, touching them delicately with her fingertips, lifting a pansy’s chin lightly to look better into its face, and smiling into their cheerful little faces with a whimsical fancy that some were grinning just as their donor had done.

But Gemmie wore an offended air all that day, and went about poking into corners everywhere trying to find that necklace.

“I don’t see why Miss Patricia won’t have the police up here!” she declared. “I shan’t be happy till that necklace is found! Who was that girl anyway, that bride? Did you ever see her before? Seems to me this is the strangest doings that ever was had about this house. I don’t understand it myself. We never had doings around here that was out of the ordinary before. I mus’ say I don’t like it myself. Did you know that girl, Miss Sherrill?”

“Oh yes, Gemmie,” said Sherrill, summoning a brave tone. “She was an old friend of Mr. McArthur’s. In fact, they had been sort of engaged for several years, and—then—well, they got separated….”

Sherrill’s voice trailed off vaguely. She knew she was treading on very thin ice. How was she to make this all quite plausible to this sharp-eyed, jealous servant who loved her because she belonged to her beloved Miss Patricia, and yet not tell all the startling facts?

“You see, Gemmie,” she went on bravely, taking up the tale and thinking fast, “she came just after you left with a message for Mr. McArthur, and I happened to find out about it, so we had a little talk and fixed it up this way. It was rather quick work getting us dressed all over again, but I think we got by pretty well, don’t you?” Sherrill finished with a little light laugh that sounded very natural, and Gemmie eyed her suspiciously.

“I ought to have stayed here!” she declared firmly. “I knew I oughtn’t to’ve gone when I went. That was your wedding dress, not hers, and she had no business with it!”

“Oh, that!” laughed Sherrill cheerfully. “What did that matter? You see, she didn’t happen to have her own things with her, so we fixed it up that way, and I thought everything came off very well. She looked sweet, didn’t she?”

“I didn’t take notice to her,” said Gemmie sourly. “When I saw it wasn’t you, I was that put out I could hardly keep my seat. I didn’t think you’d be up to any tricks like that, Miss Sherrill, or I wouldn’t have left you. If I’d have been here, I’d not have let her by having your wedding dress, not if she never got married. And your wedding, too. It was a shame!”

“Oh no, Gemmie, it was lovely! Because you see, when I found out a few things, I didn’t want to get married myself just then, so it turned out quite all right. I wouldn’t want to marry a man who loved another woman, would you, Gemmie?”

“I wouldn’t want to marry any man that lives!” sniffed Gemmie. “They’re all a selfish, deceiving lot. Not one good enough for a good girl like you.”

“There you are, Gemmie! You think that and yet you are angry that I let another girl marry him!”

“Well, he was yours by rights after he’d went that far!” sniffed Gemmie, getting out her primly folded handkerchief and dabbing at her eyes.

“Well, I didn’t happen to want him when I found he really belonged to another girl,” said Sherrill soberly, and she wished that her heart didn’t give such a sick plunge when she said the words. They were true, of course, and yet her soul was crying out for the lover she had thought she had, though she didn’t intend that this sharp-eyed woman should find it out. “And now, Gemmie, keep it all to yourself and let’s forget about it. I’m back here to stay awhile, and I’m going to have the best time a girl can have. Do you happen to know where that little pale green knit dress of mine is, with the white blouse? I think I’d feel at home in that. Hasn’t it got back from the cleaner’s yet?”

“Yes, it came back three days ago, but I put it away in the third-floor closet. I didn’t think you’d be needing it yet awhile.”

“Oh, get it for me, Gemmie, will you? That’s a dear! It’s just the thing for this morning.”

Sherrill hurried with her dressing, and when Gemmie came back with the dress, she slipped into it and with a happy little wave of her hand hurried downstairs, looking much brighter than she felt.



The next two days were full of hard work. It seemed that Miss Catherwood was in a great rush to get those presents out of the way.

But there does come an end to all things, even unpleasant ones, and Sherrill finally came to her aunt and laid a neatly written envelope in her lap.

“There, Aunt Pat, that’s the last one of those awful notes I have to write. The very last one! And I’m glad! glad! glad! Now, what next?” and she looked drearily out of the window across the wide sweep of lawn and garden.

“Next we’re going to rest,” said the old lady, leaning back in her chair with a gray look about her lips. “I believe I’m tired, and I know you are. I’ve watched you getting thinner and thinner hour by hour. You’ve been a good sport, but now we’ve got to rest a little.”

Sherrill sprang into alarm at once.

“You dear precious Aunt Pattie!” she cried, and was down on her knees beside her aunt’s chair with her arm about her, looking earnestly into the tired old face.

“Oh, it’s nothing,” said Aunt Pat crisply, trying to rouse herself. “I just want a nap. I guess I’ve caught a bit of a cold perhaps. You need a nap, too, and then afterward we’ll plan what we’ll do next. How would you like to take a trip somewhere? You can be thinking about it while you’re going to sleep.”





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