<h3>A POINT GAINED</h3>
<p>He was surprised, for all his attempts to conceal it.</p>
<p>"No?" said he. "Who, then? You are becoming interesting, Miss
Butterworth."</p>
<p>This I thought I could afford to ignore.</p>
<p>"Yesterday," I proceeded, "I would have declared it to be Silly Rufus,
in the face of God and man, but after what I saw in William's room
during the hurried survey I gave it, I am inclined to doubt if the
explanation we have to give to this affair is so simple as that would
make it. Mr. Gryce, in one corner of that room, from which the victim
had so lately been carried, was a pair of shoes that could never have
been worn by any boy-tramp I have ever seen or known of."</p>
<p>"They were Loreen's, or possibly Lucetta's."</p>
<p>"No, Loreen and Lucetta both have trim feet, but these were the shoes of
a child of ten, very dainty at that, and of a cut and make worn by
women, or rather, I should say, by girls. Now, what do you make of
that?"</p>
<p>He did not seem to know what to make of it. Tap, tap went his finger on
his seasoned palm, and as I watched the slowness with which it fell, I
said to myself, "I have proposed a problem this time that will tax even
Mr. Gryce's powers of deduction."</p>
<p>And I had. It was minutes before he ventured an opinion, and then it was
with a shade of doubt in his tone that I acknowledge to have felt some
pride in producing.</p>
<p>"They were Lucetta's shoes. The emotions under which you labored—very
pardonable emotions, madam, considering the circumstances and the
hour——"</p>
<p>"Excuse me," said I. "We do not want to waste a moment. I was excited,
suitably and duly excited, or I would have been a stone. But I never
lose my head under excitement, nor do I part with my sense of
proportion. The shoes were not Lucetta's. She never wore any approaching
them in smallness since her tenth year."</p>
<p>"Has Simsbury a daughter? Has there not been a child about the house
some time to assist the cook in errands and so on?"</p>
<p>"No, or I should have seen her. Besides, how would the shoes of such a
person come into William's room?"</p>
<p>"Easily. Secrecy was required. You were not to be disturbed; so shoes
were taken off that quiet might result."</p>
<p>"Was Lucetta shoeless or William or even Mother Jane? You have not told
me that you were requested to walk in stocking feet up the hall. No, Mr.
Gryce, the shoes were the shoes of a girl. I know it because it was
matched by a dress I saw hanging up in a sort of wardrobe."</p>
<p>"Ah! You looked into the wardrobe?"</p>
<p>"I did and felt justified in doing so. It was after I had spied the
shoes."</p>
<p>"Very good. And you saw a dress?"</p>
<p>"A little dress; a dress with a short skirt. It was of silk too; another
anomaly—and the color, I think, was blue, but I cannot swear to that
point. I was in great haste and took the briefest glance. But my brief
glances can be trusted, Mr. Gryce. That, I think, you are beginning to
know."</p>
<p>"Certainly," said he, "and as proof of it we will now act upon these two
premises—that the victim in whose burial I was an innocent partaker was
a human being and that this human being was a girl-child who came into
the house well dressed. Now where does that lead us? Into a maze, I
fear."</p>
<p>"We are accustomed to mazes," I observed.</p>
<p>"Yes," he answered somewhat gloomily, "but they are not exactly
desirable in this case. I want to find the Knollys family innocent."</p>
<p>"And I. But William's character, I fear, will make that impossible."</p>
<p>"But this girl? Who is she, and where did she come from? No girl has
been reported to us as missing from this neighborhood."</p>
<p>"I supposed not."</p>
<p>"A visitor—But no visitor could enter this house without it being known
far and wide. Why, I heard of your arrival here before I left the train
on which I followed you. Had we allowed ourselves to be influenced by
what the people about here say, we would have turned the Knollys house
inside out a week ago. But I don't believe in putting too much
confidence in the prejudice of country people. The idea they suggested,
and which you suggest without putting it too clearly into words, is much
too horrible to be acted upon without the best of reasons. Perhaps we
have found those reasons, yet I still feel like asking, Where did this
girl come from and how could she have become a prisoner in the Knollys
house without the knowledge of—Madam, have you met Mr. Trohm?"</p>
<p>The question was so sudden I had not time to collect myself. But perhaps
it was not necessary that I should, for the simple affirmation I used
seemed to satisfy Mr. Gryce, who went on to say:</p>
<p>"It is he who first summoned us here, and it is he who has the greatest
interest in locating the source of these disappearances, yet he has seen
no child come here."</p>
<p>"Mr. Trohm is not a spy," said I, but the remark, happily, fell
unheeded.</p>
<p>"No one has," he pursued. "We must give another turn to our
suppositions."</p>
<p>Suddenly a silence fell upon us both. His finger ceased to lay down the
law, and my gaze, which had been searching his face inquiringly, became
fixed. At the same moment and in much the same tone of voice we both
spoke, he saying, "Humph!" and I, "Ah!" as a prelude to the simultaneous
exclamation:</p>
<p>"The phantom coach!"</p>
<p>We were so pleased with this discovery that we allowed a moment to pass
in silent contemplation of each other's satisfaction. Then he quietly
added:</p>
<p>"Which on the evening preceding your arrival came from the mountains and
passed into Lost Man's Lane, from which no one ever saw it emerge."</p>
<p>"It was no phantom," I put in.</p>
<p>"It was their own old coach bringing to the house a fresh victim."</p>
<p>This sounded so startling we both sat still for a moment, lost in the
horror of it, then I spoke:</p>
<p>"People living in remote and isolated quarters like this are naturally
superstitious. The Knollys family know this, and, remembering the old
legend, forbore to contradict the conclusions of their neighbors.
Loreen's emotion when the topic was broached to her is explained by this
theory."</p>
<p>"It is not a pleasant one, but we cannot be wrong in contemplating it."</p>
<p>"Not at all. This apparition, as they call it, was seen by two persons;
therefore it was no apparition but a real coach. It came from the
mountains, that is, from the Mountain Station, and it glided—ah!"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Gryce, it was its noiselessness that gave it its spectral
appearance. Now I remember a petty circumstance which I dare you to
match, in corroboration of our suspicions."</p>
<p>"You do?"</p>
<p>I could not repress a slight toss of my head. "Yes, I do," I repeated.</p>
<p>He smiled and made the slightest of deprecatory gestures.</p>
<p>"You have had advantages——" he began.</p>
<p>"And disadvantages," I finished, determined that he should award me my
full meed of praise. "You are probably not afraid of dogs. I am. You
could visit the stables."</p>
<p>"And did; but I found nothing there."</p>
<p>"I thought not!" I could not help the exclamation. It is so seldom one
can really triumph over this man. "Not having the cue, you would not be
apt to see what gives this whole thing away. I would never have thought
of it again if we had not had this talk. Is Mr. Simsbury a neat man?"</p>
<p>"A neat man? Madam, what do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Something important, Mr. Gryce. If Mr. Simsbury is a neat man, he will
have thrown away the old rags which, I dare promise you, cumbered his
stable floor the morning after the phantom coach was seen to enter the
lane. If he is not, you may still find them there. One of them, I know,
you will not find. He pulled it off of his wheel with his whip the
afternoon he drove me down from the station. I can see the sly look he
gave me as he did it. It made no impression on me then, but now——"</p>
<p>"Madam, you have supplied the one link necessary to the establishment of
this theory. Allow me to felicitate you upon it. But whatever our
satisfaction may be from a professional standpoint, we cannot but feel
the unhappy nature of the responsibility incurred by these discoveries.
If this seemingly respectable family stooped to such subterfuge, going
to the length of winding rags around the wheels of their lumbering old
coach to make it noiseless, and even tying up their horse's feet for
this same purpose, they must have had a motive dark enough to warrant
your worst suspicions. And William was not the only one involved.
Simsbury, at least, had a hand in it, nor does it look as if the girls
were as innocent as we would like to consider them."</p>
<p>"I cannot stop to consider the girls," I declared. "I can no longer
consider the girls."</p>
<p>"Nor I," he gloomily assented. "Our duty requires us to sift this
matter, and it shall be sifted. We must first find if any child alighted
from the cars at the Mountain Station on that especial night, or, what
is more probable, from the little station at C., five miles farther back
in the mountains."</p>
<p>"And—" I urged, seeing that he had still something to say.</p>
<p>"We must make sure who lies buried under the floor of the room you call
the Flower Parlor. You may expect me at the Knollys house some time
to-day. I shall come quietly, but in my own proper person. You are not
to know me, and, unless you desire it, need not appear in the matter."</p>
<p>"I do not desire it."</p>
<p>"Then good-morning, Miss Butterworth. My respect for your abilities has
risen even higher than before. We part in a similar frame of mind for
once."</p>
<p>And this he expected me to regard as a compliment.</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="XXVII" id="XXVII"></SPAN>XXVII</h2>
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