Cynthia Wakeham's Money
ry landscape lying before them. Frank Etheridge wore an eager aspect, the aspect of the bright, hopeful, energetic lawyer which he was, and his quick searching gaze flashed r
all, well-made, and handsome, and, to draw at once a distinction between them which will effectually separate their personalities, Frank Etheridge was a man to attract the attention of men, and Edgar Sellick that of women; the former betraying at first glance all his good qual
ly down the road. The train was on time but Jerry was not, both of which facts
t will you do with Jerry? He's a mile too large, as y
little of his avoirdupois. As his future physician I shall prescribe it
anifest but cheerfully accepted discomfort. As they were riding off, Edg
im Jones has lit a bond-fire and Jack Skelton hoisted a flag, so glad they be to have you back. Old Dudgeon was
ich might mean so little and might mean so much, but whatever it mean
rofession?" Fran
e other questioningly for
rs. Law seems to be
have no other love, why not
aight before him at the lights in the vi
. "It is mighty fortunate for me, whatever it may be for you. You know all the
?" interrogated the other w
usiness, that I have hardly got used to the situation. I should be sorry, now I come to think of it, to say good-by to
twilight seemed to brighten at it! Edgar looked for a
intments. My soles cling to the ground and encounter there difficulty after difficulty. Hence the we
meal. Let us wait till then. At present I am interested in what
dually settling into sterner and sterner lines, nodded auto
uses? Old friends of y
se and for an instant allowed his e
e acknowledged, "but I suppo
ery frame had stiffened. Fr
twilight drive, and-haloo! this is an odd old place we a
gazed long and earnestly at the quaint old house and grounds which had attracted his attention. Edgar did not follow his example
an ideal Ghost's Walk, especially in this hour of falling shadows. I never saw anything so suggestive in a country landscape before. Each tree looks like a
fanciful," exclaimed the other, las
supper you would see it too. Come, give it a look. You may have observed it a hundred times before, b
end. What he saw has already been partially described. But details will not be amiss here, as the house and its surroundings w
as one of the remnants of that old time when a family homestead rambled in all directions under a huge roof which accommodated itself to each new projection, like the bark to its tree. In this case the roof sloped nearly to the ground on one side, while on the other it beetled over a vine-clad piazza. In front of the house and on both sides of it rose a brick wall that, including t
o lives there of course, but if you did not I wou
ient Edgar. For the woman who held the lamp was no common one, and the face which showed above it was one to stop any man who had an eye for the beautiful, the inscrutable, and the tragic. As Frank noted it and marked its exquisite lines, its faultless coloring, and that air of profound and mysterious melancholy which made it st
uty!" Frank whispered at last. "D
with Edgar's mos
she turns
he did not. On the contrary, his attitude betrayed a still deeper interest and longing, and murmuring, "How sad! poor girl!" he continued to gaze till Edgar, with one strange, almost shr
ent almost angrily at his companion, then he settled back in his seat, saying nothi
gar, and how did she
lieve, at least since I remember seeing her. It looks like the sca
ame, E
one Ca
know
mew
nt, shortly, intensely, and as if
ent to be as great as that of the other.
ed so short in your replies, and because, I might as well a
n their rear, and old Jerry came lumbering forward, just i