She would
have told me anything.” Alice wrung her hands.
“I
must confess,” continued Mr. Chadwick to his nephew, in a lower voice, “I can’t
make you out. You used to be a word and a blow, and oftenest the blow first;
and now, when there is every cause for suspicion, you just do nought. Your
missus is a very good woman, I grant; but she may have been put upon as well as
other folk, I suppose. If you don’t send for the police, I shall.”
“Very
well,” replied Mr. Openshaw, surlily. “I can’t clear Norah. She won’t clear
herself, as I believe she might if she would. Only I wash my hands of it; for I
am sure the woman herself is honest, and she’s lived a long time with my wife,
and I don’t like her to come to shame.”
“But
she will then be forced to clear herself. That, at any rate, will be a good
thing.”
“Very
well, very well! I am heartsick of the whole business. Come, Alice, come up to
the babies they’ll be in a sore way. I tell you, uncle!” he said, turning round
once more to Mr. Chadwick, suddenly and sharply, after his eye had fallen on
Alice’s wan, tearful, anxious face; “I’ll have none sending for the police
after all. I’ll buy my aunt twice as handsome a brooch this very day; but I’ll
not have Norah suspected, and my missus plagued. There’s for you.”
He
and his wife left the room. Mr. Chadwick quietly waited till he was out of
hearing, and then aid to his wife; “For all Tom’s heroics, I’m just quietly
going for a detective, wench. Thou need’st know nought about it.”
He
went to the police station, and made a statement of the case. He was gratified
by the impression which the evidence against Norah seemed to make. The men all
agreed in his opinion, and steps were to be immediately taken to find out where
she was. Most probably, as they suggested, she had gone at once to the man,
who, to all appearance, was her lover. When Mr. Chadwick asked how they would
find her out? they smiled, shook their heads, and spoke of mysterious but
infallible ways and means. He returned to his nephew’s house with a very
comfortable opinion of his own sagacity. He was met by his wife with a penitent
face:
“Oh
master, I’ve found my brooch! It was just sticking by its pin in the flounce of
my brown silk, that I wore yesterday. I took it off in a hurry, and it must
have caught in it; and I hung up my gown in the closet. Just now, when I was
going to fold it up, there was the brooch! I’m very vexed, but I never dreamt
but what it was lost!”
Her
husband muttering something very like “Confound thee and thy brooch too! I wish
I’d never given it thee,” snatched up his hat, and rushed back to the station;
hoping to be in time to stop the police from searching for Norah. But a
detective was already gone off on the errand.
Where
was Norah? Half mad with the strain of the fearful secret, she had hardly slept
through the night for thinking what must be done. Upon this terrible state of
mind had come Ailsie’s questions, showing that she had seen the Man, as the
unconscious child called her father. Lastly came the suspicion of her honesty.
She was little less than crazy as she ran upstairs and dashed on her bonnet and
shawl; leaving all else, even her purse, behind her.
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