Without a Home eBook

Edward Payson Roe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Without a Home.

Without a Home eBook

Edward Payson Roe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Without a Home.

A subpoena was made out immediately and given to a policeman, with a few whispered and emphatic injunctions, and Roger was told to accompany him.

“This case is adjourned for the present.  You may sit with your mother within the railing,” he added kindly to Mildred.

The floor-walker had been watching the turn that the proceedings were taking with great uneasiness, and now was eager to depart, in order to caution the girl that Roger was in pursuit of against admitting the least knowledge of the affair; but the judge was too quick for him, and remarked that he was not through with him yet, and requested that he and the representative of the firm should remain.  The two women who had testified against Mildred were permitted to depart.  Then, as if dismissing the case from his mind, he proceeded to dispose of the other prisoners.

Belle joined her sister, and greeted her with great effusiveness, looking ready to champion her against the world; but they at last quieted her, and waited with trembling impatience and wonder for the outcome of Roger’s mission.

The girl who had been led to wrong Mildred so greatly returned to the shop that morning with many misgivings, which were much increased when she learned what had occurred.  She also felt that her accomplice had dealt treacherously in allowing such serious proceedings against Mildred, for he had promised that she should be merely taxed with theft and warned to seek employment elsewhere.  “If he deceives in one respect he will in another, and I’m not safe from arrest either,” she said to herself, and she made so many blunders in her guilty preoccupation that she excited the surprise of her companions.  As she was waiting on a customer she heard a voice remark, “That’s the girl,” and looking up she grew faint and white as she saw, standing before her, a policeman, who served his subpoena at once, saying, “You must go with me immediately.”

Frightened and irresolute, she stammered that she knew nothing about the affair.

“Well, then, you must come and tell his Honor so.”

“Must I go?” she appealed to one of the firm, who happened to be near.

“Certainly,” he replied, examining the subpoena; “go and tell all you know, or if you don’t know anything, say so.”

“I don’t see why I should be dragged into the case—­” she began brazenly.

“There’s the reason,” said the officer impatiently; “that subpoena has the power of bringing any man or woman in the city.”

Seeing that resistance was useless, she sullenly accompanied them to a street-car, and was soon in readiness to be called upon for her testimony.  The judge having disposed of the case then on trial, Mildred was again summoned to the bar, and the unwilling witness was sent for.  She only had time to cast a reproachful glance at the man who, she feared, had betrayed her, and who tried, by his manner, to caution her, when the judge demanded her attention, he having in the meantime noted the fellow’s effort.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Without a Home from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.