The Daughter of Anderson Crow eBook

George Barr McCutcheon
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about The Daughter of Anderson Crow.

The Daughter of Anderson Crow eBook

George Barr McCutcheon
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about The Daughter of Anderson Crow.

The day was fast approaching when it would be necessary for him to leave the home of Mr. Crow.  He could no longer encroach upon the hospitality and good nature of the marshal—­especially as he had declined the proffered appointment to become deputy town marshal.  Together they had discussed every possible side to the abduction mystery and had laid the groundwork for a systematic attempt at a solution.  There was nothing more for them to do.  True to his promise, Bonner had put the case in the hands of one of the greatest detectives in the land, together with every known point in the girl’s history.  Tinkletown was not to provide the solution, although it contained the mystery.  On that point there could be no doubt; so, Mr. Bonner was reluctantly compelled to admit to himself that he had no plausible excuse for staying on.  The great detective from New York had come to town, gathered all of the facts under cover of strictest secrecy, run down every possible shadow of a clew in Boggs City, and had returned to the metropolis, there to begin the search twenty-one years back.

“Four weeks,” Bonner was saying to her reflectively, as they came homeward from their last visit to the abandoned mill on Turnip Creek.  It was a bright, warm February morning, suggestive of spring and fraught with the fragrance of something far sweeter.  “Four weeks of idleness and joy to me—­almost a lifetime in the waste of years.  Does it seem long to you, Miss Gray—­oh, I remember, I am to call you Rosalie.”

“It seems that I have known you always instead of for four weeks,” she said gently.  “They have been happy weeks, haven’t they?  My—­our only fear is that you haven’t been comfortable in our poor little home.  It’s not what you are accustomed—­”

“Home is what the home folks make it,” he said, striving to quote a vague old saying.  He was dimly conscious of a subdued smile on her part and he felt the fool.  “At any rate, I was more than comfortable.  I was happy—­never so happy.  All my life shall be built about this single month—­my past ends with it, my future begins.  You, Rosalie,” he went on swiftly, his eyes gleaming with the love that would not be denied, “are the spirit of life as I shall know it from this day forth.  It is you who have made Tinkletown a kingdom, one of its homes a palace.  Don’t turn your face away, Rosalie.”

But she turned her face toward him and her dark eyes did not flinch as they met his, out there in the bleak old wood.

“Don’t, please don’t, Wicker,” she said softly, firmly.  Her hand touched his arm for an instant.  “You will understand, won’t you?  Please don’t!” There was a world of meaning in it.

His heart turned cold as ice, the blood left his face.  He understood.  She did not love him.

“Yes,” he said, his voice dead and hoarse, “I think I understand, Rosalie.  I have taken too much for granted, fool that I am.  Bah!  The egotism of a fool!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Daughter of Anderson Crow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.