The Mary E. Wilkins Freeman Megapack. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

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niece will go home when I do, and not travel alone; and if I can’t wait here for her, in the house that used to be her mother’s and my sister’s home, I’ll go and board somewhere,” returned Rebecca with warmth.

      “Oh, you can stay here as long as you want to. You’re welcome,” said Mrs. Dent.

      Then Rebecca started. “There she is!” she declared in a trembling, exultant voice. Nobody knew how she longed to see the girl.

      “She isn’t as late as I thought she’d be,” said Mrs. Dent, and again that curious, subtle change passed over her face, and again it settled into that stony impassiveness.

      Rebecca stared at the door, waiting for it to open. “Where is she?” she asked presently.

      “I guess she’s stopped to take off her hat in the entry,” suggested Mrs. Dent.

      Rebecca waited. “Why don’t she come? It can’t take her all this time to take off her hat.”

      For answer Mrs. Dent rose with a stiff jerk and threw open the door.

      “Agnes!” she called. “Agnes!” Then she turned and eyed Rebecca. “She ain’t there.”

      “I saw her pass the window,” said Rebecca in bewilderment.

      “You must have been mistaken.”

      “I know I did,” persisted Rebecca.

      “You couldn’t have.”

      “I did. I saw first a shadow go over the ceiling, then I saw her in the glass there”—she pointed to a mirror over the sideboard opposite—“and then the shadow passed the window.”

      “How did she look in the glass?”

      “Little and light-haired, with the light hair kind of tossing over her forehead.”

      “You couldn’t have seen her.”

      “Was that like Agnes?”

      “Like enough; but of course you didn’t see her. You’ve been thinking so much about her that you thought you did.”

      “You thought you did.”

      “I thought I saw a shadow pass the window, but I must have been mistaken. She didn’t come in, or we would have seen her before now. I knew it was too early for her to get home from Addie Slocum’s, anyhow.”

      When Rebecca went to bed Agnes had not returned. Rebecca had resolved that she would not retire until the girl came, but she was very tired, and she reasoned with herself that she was foolish. Besides, Mrs. Dent suggested that Agnes might go to the church social with Addie Slocum. When Rebecca suggested that she be sent for and told that her aunt had come, Mrs. Dent laughed meaningly.

      “I guess you’ll find out that a young girl ain’t so ready to leave a sociable, where there’s boys, to see her aunt,” said she.

      “She’s too young,” said Rebecca incredulously and indignantly.

      “She’s sixteen,” replied Mrs. Dent; “and she’s always been great for the boys.”

      “She’s going to school four years after I get her before she thinks of boys,” declared Rebecca.

      “We’ll see,” laughed the other woman.

      After Rebecca went to bed, she lay awake a long time listening for the sound of girlish laughter and a boy’s voice under her window; then she fell asleep.

      The next morning she was down early. Mrs. Dent, who kept no servants, was busily preparing breakfast.

      “Don’t Agnes help you about breakfast?” asked Rebecca.

      “No, I let her lay,” replied Mrs. Dent shortly.

      “What time did she get home last night?”

      “She didn’t get home.”

      “What?”

      “She didn’t get home. She stayed with Addie. She often does.”

      “Without sending you word?”

      “Oh, she knew I wouldn’t worry.”

      “When will she be home?”

      “Oh, I guess she’ll be along pretty soon.”

      Rebecca was uneasy, but she tried to conceal it, for she knew of no good reason for uneasiness. What was there to occasion alarm in the fact of one young girl staying overnight with another? She could not eat much breakfast. Afterward she went out on the little piazza, although her hostess strove furtively to stop her.

      “Why don’t you go out back of the house? It’s real pretty—a view over the river,” she said.

      “I guess I’ll go out here,” replied Rebecca. She had a purpose: to watch for the absent girl.

      Presently Rebecca came hustling into the house through the sitting-room, into the kitchen where Mrs. Dent was cooking.

      “That rosebush!” she gasped.

      Mrs. Dent turned and faced her.

      “What of it?”

      “It’s a-blowing.”

      “What of it?”

      “There isn’t a mite of wind this morning.”

      Mrs. Dent turned with an inimitable toss of her fair head. “If you think I can spend my time puzzling over such nonsense as—” she began, but Rebecca interrupted her with a cry and a rush to the door.

      “There she is now!” she cried. She flung the door wide open, and curiously enough a breeze came in and her own gray hair tossed, and a paper blew off the table to the floor with a loud rustle, but there was nobody in sight.

      “There’s nobody here,” Rebecca said.

      She looked blankly at the other woman, who brought her rolling-pin down on a slab of pie-crust with a thud.

      “I didn’t hear anybody,” she said calmly.

      “I saw somebody pass that window!”

      “You were mistaken again.”

      “I know I saw somebody.”

      “You couldn’t have. Please shut that door.”

      Rebecca shut the door. She sat down beside the window and looked out on the autumnal yard, with its little curve of footpath to the kitchen door.

      “What smells so strong of roses in this room?” she said presently. She sniffed hard.

      “I don’t smell anything but these nutmegs.”

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