<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII" />VII</h2>
<p>Three days later Tryon Dunham entered
the office of Judge Blackwell by appointment.
After the business was completed the Judge
said with a smile, "Well, our mystery is
solved. The little girl is all safe. She telephoned
me just after you had left the other
day, and sent her maid after her hat. It
seems that while she stood by the window,
looking down into the street, she saw an automobile
containing some of her friends. It
stopped at the next building. Being desirous
of speaking with a girl friend who was seated
in the auto, she hurried out to the elevator,
hoping to catch them. The elevator boy
who took her down-stairs went off duty immediately,
which accounts for our not finding
any trace of her, and he was kept at home
by illness the next morning. The young
woman caught her friends, and they insisted
that she should get in and ride to the station
with one of them who was leaving the city
at once. They loaned her a veil and a wrap,
and promised to bring her right back for her
papers and other possessions, but the train
was late, and when they returned the building
was closed. The two men who called for
her were her brother and a friend of his, it
seems. I must say they were not so attractive
as she is. However, the mystery is solved,
and I got well laughed at by my wife for
my fears."</p>
<p>But the young man was puzzling how this
all could be if the hat belonged to the girl
he knew—to "Mary." When he left the
Judge's office, he went to his club, determined
to have a little quiet for thinking it over.</p>
<p>Matters at home had not been going pleasantly.
There had been an ominous cloud over
the breakfast table. The bill for the hat had
arrived from Madame Dollard's, and Cornelia
had laid it impressively by his plate. Even
his mother had looked at him with a glance
that spoke volumes as she remarked that it
would be necessary for her to have a new
rain-coat before another storm came.</p>
<p>There had been a distinct coolness between
Tryon Dunham and his mother and sister ever
since the morning when the loss of the hat
and rain-coat was announced. Or did it date
from the evening of that day when both
mother and sister had noticed the beautiful
ring which he wore? They had exclaimed
over the flash of the diamond, and its peculiar
pureness and brilliancy, and Cornelia had been
quite disagreeable when he refused to take
it off for her to examine. He had replied
to his mother's question by saying that the
ring belonged to a friend of his. He knew
his mother was hurt by the answer, but what
more could he do at present? True, he might
have taken the ring off and prevented further
comment, but it had come to him to mean
loyalty to and belief in the girl whom he
had so strangely been permitted to help. It
was therefore in deep perplexity that he betook
himself to his club and sat down in a far
corner to meditate. He was annoyed when
the office-boy appeared to tell him, there were
some packages awaiting him in the office.
"Bring them to me here, Henry."</p>
<p>The boy hustled away, and soon came back,
bearing two hat-boxes—one of them in a crate—and
the heavy leather suit-case.</p>
<p>With a start of surprise, Dunham sat up
in his comfortable chair.</p>
<p>"Say, Henry, those things ought not to
come in here." He glanced anxiously about,
and was relieved to find that there was only
one old gentleman in the room, and that he
was asleep. "Suppose we go up to a private
room with them. Take them out to the
elevator, and I'll come in a moment."</p>
<p>"All right, sah."</p>
<p>"And say, Henry, suppose you remove that
crate from the box. Then it won't be so
heavy to carry."</p>
<p>"All right, sah. I'll be thah in jest a
minute."</p>
<p>The young man hurried out to the elevator,
and he and Henry made a quick ascent to
a private room. He gave the boy a round
fee, and was left in quiet to examine his
property.</p>
<p>As he fumbled with the strings of the first
box his heart beat wildly, and he felt the
blood mounting to his face. Was he about
to solve the mystery which had surrounded
the girl in whom his interest had now grown
so deep that he could scarcely get her out
of his mind for a few minutes at a time?</p>
<p>But the box was empty, save for some
crumpled white tissue-paper. He took up the
cover in perplexity and saw his own name
written by himself. Then he remembered.
This was the box he had sent down to the
club by the cabman, to get it out of his way.
He felt disappointed, and turned quickly to
the other box and cut the cord. This time
he was rewarded by seeing the great black
hat, beautiful and unhurt in spite of its
journey to Chicago. The day was saved, and
also the reputation of his mother's maid. But
was there no word from the beautiful
stranger? He searched hurriedly through the
wrappings, pulled out the hat quite unceremoniously,
and turned the box upside down,
but nothing else could he find. Then he went
at the suit-case. Yes, there was the rain-coat.
He took it out triumphantly, for now
his mother could say nothing, and, moreover,
was not his trust in the fair stranger justified?
He had done well to believe in her. He began
to take out the other garments, curious to
see what had been there for her use.</p>
<p>A long, golden brown hair nestling on the
collar of the bathrobe gleamed in a chance
ray of sunlight. He looked at it reverently,
and laid the garment down carefully, that it
might not be disturbed. As he lifted the
coat, he saw the little note pinned to the
lapel, and seized it eagerly. Surely this would
tell him something!</p>
<p>But no, there was only the message that
she had arrived safely, and her thanks. Stay,
she had signed her name "Mary." She had
told him he might call her that. Could it
be that it was her real name, and that she
had meant to trust him with so much of her
true story?</p>
<p>He pondered the delicate writing of the
note, thinking how like her it seemed, then
he put the note in an inner pocket and
thoughtfully lifted out the evening clothes.
It was then that he touched the silken lined
cloth of her dress, and he drew back almost
as if he had ventured roughly upon something
sacred. Startled, awed, he looked upon it,
and then with gentle fingers lifted it and laid
it upon his knee. Her dress! The one she
had worn to the dinner with him! What did
it all mean? Why was it here, and where was
she?</p>
<p>He spread it out across his lap and looked
at it almost as if it hid her presence. He
touched with curious, wistful fingers the lace
and delicate garniture about the waist, as if
he would appeal to it to tell the story of
her who had worn it.</p>
<p>What did its presence here mean? Did it
bear some message? He searched carefully,
but found nothing further. Had she reached
a place of safety where she did not need the
dress? No, for in that case, why should she
have sent it to him? Had she been desperate
perhaps, and——? But no, he would not
think such things of her.</p>
<p>Gradually, as he looked, the gown told its
own story, as she had thought it would: how
she had been obliged to put on a disguise, and
this was the only way to hide her own dress.
Gradually he came to feel a great pleasure
in the fact that she had trusted him with
it. She had known he would understand, and
perhaps had not had time to make further
explanation. But if she had need of a disguise,
she was still in danger! Oh, why had
she not given him some clue? He dropped his
head upon his hand in troubled perplexity.</p>
<p>A faint perfume of violets stole upon his
senses from the dress lying across his knee.
He touched it tenderly, and then half shamefacedly
laid his cheek against it, breathing
in the perfume. But he put it down quickly,
looking quite foolish, and reminded himself
that the girl was still a stranger, and that
she might belong to another.</p>
<p>Then he thought again of the story the
Judge had told him, and of his own first
conviction that the two young women were
identical. Could that be? Why could he not
discover who the other girl was, and get some
one to introduce him? He resolved to interview
the Judge about it at their next meeting.
In the meantime, he must wait and
hope for further word from Mary. Surely
she would write him again, and claim her
ring perhaps, and, as she had been so thoughtful
about returning the hat and coat at once,
she would probably return the money he had
loaned her. At least, he would hear from
her in that way. There was nothing to do
but be patient.</p>
<p>Yes, there was the immediate problem of
how he should restore his sister's hat and
his mother's coat to their places, unsuspected.</p>
<p>With a sigh, he carefully folded up the
cloth gown, wrapped it in folds of tissue
paper from the empty hat-box, and placed
it in his suit-case. Then he transferred the
hat to its original box, rang the bell, and
ordered the boy to care for the box and suit-case
until he called for them.</p>
<p>During the afternoon he took occasion to
run into the Judge's office about some unimportant
detail of the business they were
transacting, and as he was leaving he said:</p>
<p>"By the way, Judge, who was your young
woman who gave you such a fright by her
sudden disappearance? You never told me
her name. Is she one of my acquaintances,
I wonder?"</p>
<p>"Oh, her name is Mary Weston," said the
Judge, smiling. "I don't believe you know
her, for she was from California, and was
visiting here only for a few days. She
sailed for Europe the next day."</p>
<p>That closed the incident, and, so far as
the mystery was concerned, only added perplexity
to it.</p>
<p>Dunham purposely remained down-town,
merely having a clerk telephone home for him
that he had gone out of the city and would
not be home until late, so they need not
wait up. He did this because he did not
wish to have his mother or his sister ask him
any more questions about the missing hat
and coat. Then he took a twenty-mile trolley
ride into the suburbs and back, to make good
his word that he had gone out of town; and
all the way he kept turning over and over
the mystery of the beautiful young woman,
until it began to seem to him that he had
been crazy to let her drift out into the world
alone and practically penniless. The dress
had told its tale. He saw, of course, that
if she were afraid of detection, she must have
found it necessary to buy other clothing, and
how could she have bought it with only nine
dollars and seventy-five cents? He now felt
convinced that he should have found some
way to cash a check and thus supply her with
what she needed. It was terrible. True, she
had those other beautiful rings, which were
probably valuable, but would she dare to sell
them? Perhaps, though, she had found some
one else as ready as he had been to help her.
But, to his surprise, that thought was distasteful
to him. During his long, cold ride
in solitude he discovered that the thing he
wanted most in life was to find that girl
again and take care of her.</p>
<p>Of course he reasoned with himself most
earnestly from one end of the trolley line
to the other, and called himself all kinds of
a fool, but it did not the slightest particle
of good. Underneath all the reasoning, he
knew he was glad that he had found her once,
and he determined to find her again, and to
unravel the mystery. Then he sat looking
long and earnestly into the depths of the
beautiful white stone she had given to him,
as if he might there read the way to find
her.</p>
<p>A little after midnight he arrived at the
club-house, secured his suit-case and the hat-box,
and took a cab to his home. He left
the vehicle at the corner, lest the sound of
it waken his mother or sister.</p>
<p>He let himself silently into the house with
his latch-key, and tiptoed up to his room.
The light was burning low. He put the hat-box
in the farthest corner of his closet, then
he took out the rain-coat, and, slipping off
his shoes, went softly down to the hall closet.</p>
<p>In utter darkness he felt around and finally
hung the coat on a hook under another long
cloak, then gently released the hanging loop
and let the garment slip softly down in an
inconspicuous heap on the floor. He stole
upstairs as guiltily as if he had been a
naughty boy stealing sugar. When he
reached his room, he turned up his light, and,
pulling out the hat-box, surveyed it thoughtfully.
This was a problem which he had not
yet been able to solve. How should he dispose
of the hat so that it would be discovered
in such a way as to cast no further suspicion
upon the maid? How would it do to place
the hat in the hall-closet, back among the
coats? No, it might excite suspicion to find
them together. Could he put it in his own
closet and profess to have found it there?
No, for that might lead to unpleasant questioning,
and perhaps involve the servants
again. If he could only put it back where
he had found it! But Cornelia, of course,
would know it had not been there in her
room all this week. It would be better to
wait until the coast was clear and hide it in
Cornelia's closet, where it might have been
put by mistake and forgotten. It was going
to be hard to explain, but that was the best
plan he could evolve.</p>
<p>He took the hat out and held it on his
hand, looking at it from different angles and
trying to remember just how the girl had
looked out at him from under its drooping
plumes. Then with a sigh he laid it carefully
in its box again and went to bed.</p>
<p>The morning brought clearer thought, and
when the summons to breakfast pealed through
the hall he took the box boldly in his hand
and descended to the dining-room, where he
presented the hat to his astonished sister.</p>
<p>"I am afraid I am the criminal, Cornelia,"
he said in his pleasantest manner. "I'm sorry
I can't explain just how this thing got on
my closet-shelf. I must have put it there myself
through some unaccountable mix-up. It's
too bad I couldn't have found it before and
so saved you a lot of worry. But you are
one hat the richer for it, for I paid the bill
yesterday. Please accept it with my compliments."</p>
<p>Cornelia exclaimed with delight over the
recovered hat.</p>
<p>"But how in the world could it have got
into your closet, Tryon? It was impossible.
I left it my room, I know I did, for I spoke
to Norah about it before I left. How do you
account for it?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't attempt to account for it,"
he said, with a gay wave of his hand. "I've
been so taken up with other things this past
week, I may have done almost anything. By
the way, Mother, I'm sure you'll be glad to
hear that Judge Blackwell has made me a
most generous offer of business relations, and
that I have decided to accept it."</p>
<p>Amid the exclamations of delight over this
bit of news, the hat was forgotten for a time,
and when the mother and sister finally reverted
to it and began to discuss how it could
have gotten on the closet shelf, he broke in
upon their questions with a suggestion.</p>
<p>"I should advise, Mother, that you make
a thorough search for your rain-coat. I am
sure now that you must have overlooked it.
Such things often happen. We were so excited
the morning Cornelia missed the hat
that I suppose no one looked thoroughly."</p>
<p>"But that is impossible, Tryon," said his
mother, with dignity. "I had that closet
searched most carefully."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless, Mother, please me by looking
again. That closet is dark, and I would
suggest a light."</p>
<p>"Of course, if you wish it," said his mother
stiffly. "You might look, yourself."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I shall not have time this morning,"
professed the coward. "But suppose
you look in your own closets, too, Mother.
I'm sure you'll find it somewhere. It couldn't
get out of the house of itself, and Norah is
no thief. The idea is preposterous. Please
have it attended to carefully to-day. Good-by.
I shall have to hurry down-town, and
I can't tell just what time I shall get back this
evening. 'Phone me if you find the coat anywhere.
If you don't find it, I'll buy you
another this afternoon."</p>
<p>"I shall <i>not</i> find the rain-coat," said his
mother sternly, "but of course I will look
to satisfy you. I <i>know</i> it is not in this
house."</p>
<p>He beat a hasty retreat, for he did not
care to be present at the finding of the rain-coat.</p>
<p>"There is something strange about this,"
said Mrs. Dunham, as with ruffled dignity she
emerged from the hall closet, holding her
lost rain-coat at arm's length. "You don't
suppose your brother could be playing some
kind of a joke on us, do you, Cornie? I never
did understand jokes."</p>
<p>"Of course not," said practical Cornelia,
with a sniff. "It's my opinion that Norah
knows all about the matter, and Tryon has
been helping her out with a few suggestions."</p>
<p>"Now, Cornelia, what do you mean by
that? You surely don't suppose your brother
would try to deceive us—his mother and
sister?"</p>
<p>"I didn't say that, Mother," answered
Cornelia, with her head in the air. "You've
got your rain-coat back, but you'd better
watch the rest of your wardrobe. I don't
intend to let Norah have free range in my
room any more."</p>
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