The Secret of the Tower eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about The Secret of the Tower.

The Secret of the Tower eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about The Secret of the Tower.

“And you can rest, too.  And you can laugh with us, and not at us.  Isn’t that, after all, a more human sort of laughter?”

She was smiling still as she gave him her hand, but he saw that tears stood in her eyes.  The next instant she gave a little sob.

“Doctor Mary!” he exclaimed in rueful expostulation.

“No, no, how stupid you are!” She laughed through her sob.  “It’s not unhappiness!” She pressed his hand tightly for an instant and then walked quickly out of the house, calling back to him, “Don’t come, please don’t come.  I’d rather go to Captain Alec by myself.”

Left alone in the cottage, now so quiet and so peaceful, Beaumaroy mused a while as he smoked his pipe.  Then he turned to his labors—­his final night of work in the Tower.  There was much to do, very much to do; he achieved his task towards morning.  When day dawned, there was nothing but water in the water-butt, and in the Tower no furnishings were visible save three chairs—­a high carved one by the fireplace, and two much smaller on the little platform under the window.  The faded old red carpet on the floor was the only attempt at decoration.  And in still one thing more the Tower was different from what it had been, Beaumaroy contented himself with pasting brown paper over the pane on which Mike had operated.  He did not replace the matchboarding over the window, but stowed it away in the coal-shed.  The place was horribly in need of sunshine and fresh air—­and the old gentleman was no longer alive to fear the draught!

When the undertaker came up to the cottage that afternoon, he glanced from the parlor, through the open door, into the Tower.

“Driving past on business, sir,” he remarked to Beaumaroy, “I’ve often wondered what the old gentleman did with that there Tower.  But it looks as if he didn’t make no use of it.”

“We sometimes stored things in it,” said Beaumaroy.  “But, as you see, there’s nothing much there now.”

But then the undertaker, worthy man, could not see through the carpet, or through the lid of Captain Duggle’s grave.  That was full—­fuller than it had been at any period of its history.  In it lay the wealth, the scepter, and the trappings of dead Majesty.  For wherein did Mr. Saffron’s dead Majesty differ from the dead Majesty of other Kings?

CHAPTER XVII

THE CHIEF MOURNERS

The attendance was small at Mr. Saffron’s funeral.  Besides meek and depressed Mrs. Wiles, and Beaumaroy himself, Doctor Mary found herself, rather to her surprise, in company with old Mr. Naylor.  On comparing notes she discovered that, like herself, he had come on Beaumaroy’s urgent invitation and, moreover, that he was engaged also to come on afterwards to Tower Cottage, where Beaumaroy was to entertain the chief mourners at a mid-day repast.  “Glad enough to show my respect to a neighbor,” said old Naylor.  “And I always liked the old man’s looks.  But really I don’t see why I should go to lunch.  However, Beaumaroy—­”

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The Secret of the Tower from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.