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

Читать онлайн.
Название The Mary E. Wilkins Freeman Megapack
Автор произведения Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
Жанр Контркультура
Серия
Издательство Контркультура
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781434442864



Скачать книгу

of Amanda’s, who was nearly fainting from the new mystery of the water-pitcher, that it was warm and she suffered a good deal in warm weather.

      Louisa Stark was stout and solidly built. She was much larger than either of the Gill sisters. She was a masterly woman inured to command from years of school-teaching. She carried her swelling bulk with majesty; even her face, moist and red with the heat, lost nothing of its dignity of expression.

      She was standing in the middle of the floor with an air which gave the effect of her standing upon an elevation. She turned when Sophia and Flora, carrying the water-pitcher, entered.

      “This is my sister Sophia,” said Amanda tremulously.

      Sophia advanced, shook hands with Miss Louisa Stark and bade her welcome and hoped she would like her room. Then she moved toward the closet. “There is a nice large closet in this room—the best closet in the house. You might have your trunk—” she said, then she stopped short.

      The closet door was ajar, and a purple garment seemed suddenly to swing into view as if impelled by some wind.

      “Why, here is something left in this closet,” Sophia said in a mortified tone. “I thought all those things had been taken away.”

      She pulled down the garment with a jerk, and as she did so Amanda passed her in a weak rush for the door.

      “I am afraid your sister is not well,” said the school-teacher from Acton. “She looked very pale when you took that dress down. I noticed it at once. Hadn’t you better go and see what the matter is? She may be going to faint.”

      “She is not subject to fainting spells,” replied Sophia, but she followed Amanda.

      She found her in the room which they occupied together, lying on the bed, very pale and gasping. She leaned over her.

      “Amanda, what is the matter; don’t you feel well?” she asked.

      “I feel a little faint.”

      Sophia got a camphor bottle and began rubbing her sister’s forehead.

      “Do you feel better?” she said.

      Amanda nodded.

      “I guess it was that green apple pie you ate this noon,” said Sophia. “I declare, what did I do with that dress of Aunt Harriet’s? I guess if you feel better I’ll just run and get it and take it up garret. I’ll stop in here again when I come down. You’d better lay still. Flora can bring you up a cup of tea. I wouldn’t try to eat any supper.”

      Sophia’s tone as she left the room was full of loving concern. Presently she returned; she looked disturbed, but angrily so. There was not the slightest hint of any fear in her expression.

      “I want to know,” said she, looking sharply and quickly around, “if I brought that purple dress in here, after all?”

      “I didn’t see you,” replied Amanda.

      “I must have. It isn’t in that chamber, nor the closet. You aren’t lying on it, are you?”

      “I lay down before you came in,” replied Amanda.

      “So you did. Well, I’ll go and look again.”

      Presently Amanda heard her sister’s heavy step on the garret stairs. Then she returned with a queer defiant expression on her face.

      “I carried it up garret, after all, and put it in the trunk,” said, she. “I declare, I forgot it. I suppose your being faint sort of put it out of my head. There it was, folded up just as nice, right where I put it.”

      Sophia’s mouth was set; her eyes upon her sister’s scared, agitated face were full of hard challenge.

      “Yes,” murmured Amanda.

      “I must go right down and see to that cake,” said Sophia, going out of the room. “If you don’t feel well, you pound on the floor with the umbrella.”

      Amanda looked after her. She knew that Sophia had not put that purple dress of her dead Aunt Harriet in the trunk in the garret.

      Meantime Miss Louisa Stark was settling herself in the southwest chamber. She unpacked her trunk and hung her dresses carefully in the closet. She filled the bureau drawers with nicely folded linen and small articles of dress. She was a very punctilious woman. She put on a black India silk dress with purple flowers. She combed her grayish-blond hair in smooth ridges back from her broad forehead. She pinned her lace at her throat with a brooch, very handsome, although somewhat obsolete—a bunch of pearl grapes on black onyx, set in gold filagree. She had purchased it several years ago with a considerable portion of the stipend from her spring term of school-teaching.

      As she surveyed herself in the little swing mirror surmounting the old-fashioned mahogany bureau she suddenly bent forward and looked closely at the brooch. It seemed to her that something was wrong with it. As she looked she became sure. Instead of the familiar bunch of pearl grapes on the black onyx, she saw a knot of blonde and black hair under glass surrounded by a border of twisted gold. She felt a thrill of horror, though she could not tell why. She unpinned the brooch, and it was her own familiar one, the pearl grapes and the onyx. “How very foolish I am,” she thought. She thrust the pin in the laces at her throat and again looked at herself in the glass, and there it was again—the knot of blond and black hair and the twisted gold.

      Louisa Stark looked at her own large, firm face above the brooch and it was full of terror and dismay which were new to it. She straightway began to wonder if there could be anything wrong with her mind. She remembered that an aunt of her mother’s had been insane. A sort of fury with herself possessed her. She stared at the brooch in the glass with eyes at once angry and terrified. Then she removed it again and there was her own old brooch. Finally she thrust the gold pin through the lace again, fastened it and turning a defiant back on the glass, went down to supper.

      At the supper table she met the other boarders—the elderly widow, the young clergyman and the middle-aged librarian. She viewed the elderly widow with reserve, the clergyman with respect, the middle-aged librarian with suspicion. The latter wore a very youthful shirt-waist, and her hair in a girlish fashion which the school-teacher, who twisted hers severely from the straining roots at the nape of her neck to the small, smooth coil at the top, condemned as straining after effects no longer hers by right.

      The librarian, who had a quick acridness of manner, addressed her, asking what room she had, and asked the second time in spite of the school-teacher’s evident reluctance to hear her. She even, since she sat next to her, nudged her familiarly in her rigid black silk side.

      “What room are you in, Miss Stark?” said she.

      “I am at a loss how to designate the room,” replied Miss Stark stiffly.

      “Is it the big southwest room?”

      “It evidently faces in that direction,” said Miss Stark.

      The librarian, whose name was Eliza Lippincott, turned abruptly to Miss Amanda Gill, over whose delicate face a curious colour compounded of flush and pallour was stealing.

      “What room did your aunt die in, Miss Amanda?” asked she abruptly.

      Amanda cast a terrified glance at her sister, who was serving a second plate of pudding for the minister.

      “That room,” she replied feebly.

      “That’s what I thought,” said the librarian with a certain triumph. “I calculated that must be the room she died in, for it’s the best room in the house, and you haven’t put anybody in it before. Somehow the room that anybody has died in lately is generally the last room that anybody is put in. I suppose you are so strong-minded you don’t object to sleeping in a room where anybody died a few weeks ago?” she inquired of Louisa Stark with sharp eyes on her face.

      “No, I do not,” replied Miss stark with emphasis.

      “Nor in the same bed?” persisted Eliza Lippincott with a kittenish reflection.

      The