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  </ul>Sir Humphrey," said I. "'Tis very simple: Mistress Mary hath the goods for which she sent to England."<br>"Master Wingfield, you know those are my Lady Culpeper's goods, and I have no right to them," cried Mary. But I bowed and said, "Madam, the goods are yours, and not Lady Culpeper's."<br>"But I--I lied when I gave the list to my grandmother," she cried out, half sobbing, for she was, after all,<p></p><p>cheap jordan shoes</p><p></p>, little more than a child tiptoed to womanhood by enthusiasm.<br>"Madam," said I, and I bowed again. "You mistake yourself; Mistress Mary Cavendish cannot lie, and the goods are in truth yours."<br>She and Sir Humphrey looked at each other; then Harry made a stride forward, and forcing back his horse with one hand, grasped me with the other. "Harry, Harry," he said in a whisper. "Tell me, for God's sake, what have you done."<br>"The goods are Mistress Mary Cavendish's," said I. They looked at me as I have seen folk look at a page of Virgil.<br>"Were they, after all, not my Lady Culpeper's?" asked Sir Humphrey.<br>"They are Mistress Mary Cavendish's," said I.<br>Mary turned suddenly to Sir Humphrey. "'Tis time you were gone now, Humphrey," she said, softly. "'Twas only last night you were here, and there is need of caution, and your mother--"<br>But Humphrey was loth to go. "'Tis not late," he said, "and I would know more of this matter."<br>"You will never know more of Master Wingfield, if that is what you wait for," she returned, with a half laugh, "and, Humphrey, your sister Cicely said but this morning that your mother was over-curious. I pray you, go, and Master Wingfield will take me home. I pray you,<p></p><p>cheap jordans</p><p></p>, go!"<br>Sir Humphrey took her hand and bent low over it, and murmured something; then, before he sprang to his saddle, he came close to me again. "Harry," he whispered, "she should not be in this business, and I would have not had it so could I have helped it, and, I pray you, have a care to her safety." This he spoke so low that Mary could not hear, and, moreover, she, with one of those sudden turns of hers that made her have as many faces of delight as a diamond in the sun, had thrown an arm around the neck of Sir Humphrey's mare, and was talking to her in such dulcet tones as her lovers would have died for the sake of hearing in their ears.<br>"Have no fears for her safety," I whispered back. "So far as the goods go, there is no more danger."<br>"What did you, Harry?"<br>"Sir Humphrey," I whispered back, while Mary's sweet voice in the mare's delicate ear sounded like a song, "sometimes an unguessed riddle hath less weight than a guessed one, and some fish of knowledge had best be left in the stream. I tell thee she is safe." So saying, I looked him full in his honest, boyish face, which was good to see, though sometime I wished, for the maid's sake, that it had more shrewdness of wit in it. Then he gave me a great grasp of the hand, and whispered something hoarsely. "Thou art a good fellow, Harry, in spite of, in spite of--" then he bent low over Mary's hand for the second time, and sprang to his saddle, and was off toward Jamestown on his white mare, flashing along the moonlit road like a whiter moonbeam.<br>Then Mary came close to me, and did what she had never before done since she was a child. She laid her little hand on my arm of her own accord. "Master Wingfield,<p></p><p>/</p><p></p>," said she, softly, "what about the goods?"<br>"The goods for which you sent to England are yours and in the great house," said I, and I heard my voice tremble.<br>She drew her hand away and stood looking at me, and her sweet forehead under her golden curls was all knitted with perplexity.<br>"You know, you know I--lied," she whispered like a guilty child.<br>"You cannot lie," I answered, "and the goods are yours."<br>"And not my Lady Culpeper's?"<br>"And not my Lady Culpeper's."<br>Mary continued looking at me, then all at once her forehead cleared.<br>"Catherine, 'twas Catherine," she cried out. "She said not, but well I know her; she would not own to it--the sweetheart. Sure a falsehood to hide a loving deed is the best truth of the world. 'Twas Catherine, 'twas Catherine, the sweetheart, the darling. She sent for naught for herself, and hath been saving for a year's time and maybe sold a ring or two. Somehow she discovered about the plot, what I had done. And she hath heard me say, that I know well, that I thought 'twas a noble list of Lady Culpeper's, and I wished I were a governor's wife or daughter, that I could have such fine things. I remember me well that I told her thus before ever the Golden Horn sailed for England, that time after Cicely Hyde slept with me and told me what she had from Cate Culpeper. A goodly portion of the
 
  </ul>Sir Humphrey," said I. "'Tis very simple: Mistress Mary hath the goods for which she sent to England."<br>"Master Wingfield, you know those are my Lady Culpeper's goods, and I have no right to them," cried Mary. But I bowed and said, "Madam, the goods are yours, and not Lady Culpeper's."<br>"But I--I lied when I gave the list to my grandmother," she cried out, half sobbing, for she was, after all,<p></p><p>cheap jordan shoes</p><p></p>, little more than a child tiptoed to womanhood by enthusiasm.<br>"Madam," said I, and I bowed again. "You mistake yourself; Mistress Mary Cavendish cannot lie, and the goods are in truth yours."<br>She and Sir Humphrey looked at each other; then Harry made a stride forward, and forcing back his horse with one hand, grasped me with the other. "Harry, Harry," he said in a whisper. "Tell me, for God's sake, what have you done."<br>"The goods are Mistress Mary Cavendish's," said I. They looked at me as I have seen folk look at a page of Virgil.<br>"Were they, after all, not my Lady Culpeper's?" asked Sir Humphrey.<br>"They are Mistress Mary Cavendish's," said I.<br>Mary turned suddenly to Sir Humphrey. "'Tis time you were gone now, Humphrey," she said, softly. "'Twas only last night you were here, and there is need of caution, and your mother--"<br>But Humphrey was loth to go. "'Tis not late," he said, "and I would know more of this matter."<br>"You will never know more of Master Wingfield, if that is what you wait for," she returned, with a half laugh, "and, Humphrey, your sister Cicely said but this morning that your mother was over-curious. I pray you, go, and Master Wingfield will take me home. I pray you,<p></p><p>cheap jordans</p><p></p>, go!"<br>Sir Humphrey took her hand and bent low over it, and murmured something; then, before he sprang to his saddle, he came close to me again. "Harry," he whispered, "she should not be in this business, and I would have not had it so could I have helped it, and, I pray you, have a care to her safety." This he spoke so low that Mary could not hear, and, moreover, she, with one of those sudden turns of hers that made her have as many faces of delight as a diamond in the sun, had thrown an arm around the neck of Sir Humphrey's mare, and was talking to her in such dulcet tones as her lovers would have died for the sake of hearing in their ears.<br>"Have no fears for her safety," I whispered back. "So far as the goods go, there is no more danger."<br>"What did you, Harry?"<br>"Sir Humphrey," I whispered back, while Mary's sweet voice in the mare's delicate ear sounded like a song, "sometimes an unguessed riddle hath less weight than a guessed one, and some fish of knowledge had best be left in the stream. I tell thee she is safe." So saying, I looked him full in his honest, boyish face, which was good to see, though sometime I wished, for the maid's sake, that it had more shrewdness of wit in it. Then he gave me a great grasp of the hand, and whispered something hoarsely. "Thou art a good fellow, Harry, in spite of, in spite of--" then he bent low over Mary's hand for the second time, and sprang to his saddle, and was off toward Jamestown on his white mare, flashing along the moonlit road like a whiter moonbeam.<br>Then Mary came close to me, and did what she had never before done since she was a child. She laid her little hand on my arm of her own accord. "Master Wingfield,<p></p><p>/</p><p></p>," said she, softly, "what about the goods?"<br>"The goods for which you sent to England are yours and in the great house," said I, and I heard my voice tremble.<br>She drew her hand away and stood looking at me, and her sweet forehead under her golden curls was all knitted with perplexity.<br>"You know, you know I--lied," she whispered like a guilty child.<br>"You cannot lie," I answered, "and the goods are yours."<br>"And not my Lady Culpeper's?"<br>"And not my Lady Culpeper's."<br>Mary continued looking at me, then all at once her forehead cleared.<br>"Catherine, 'twas Catherine," she cried out. "She said not, but well I know her; she would not own to it--the sweetheart. Sure a falsehood to hide a loving deed is the best truth of the world. 'Twas Catherine, 'twas Catherine, the sweetheart, the darling. She sent for naught for herself, and hath been saving for a year's time and maybe sold a ring or two. Somehow she discovered about the plot, what I had done. And she hath heard me say, that I know well, that I thought 'twas a noble list of Lady Culpeper's, and I wished I were a governor's wife or daughter, that I could have such fine things. I remember me well that I told her thus before ever the Golden Horn sailed for England, that time after Cicely Hyde slept with me and told me what she had from Cate Culpeper. A goodly portion of the
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== David. You've done a big thing for me--for the Argus ==
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"And you have made it serve your turn, too?"<br>"No." Kent's voice was sharp and crisp.<br>"Isn't that what you got it for?"<br>"Yes."<br>"Then why don't you use it,<p></p><p>cheap jordan shoes</p><p></p>?"<br>"That was what Bucks wanted to know a little while ago when he came to my rooms to try to buy me off. I don't think I succeeded in making him understand why I couldn't traffic with it; and possibly you wouldn't understand."<br>"I guess I do. It's public property,<p></p><p>and you couldn't divert it into private channels. Is that the way it struck you?"<br>"It is the way it struck a friend of mine whose sense of ultimate right and wrong hasn't lost its fine edge in the world-mill,<p></p><p>cheap jordans</p><p></p>. I did not want to do it."<br>"Naturally," said the editor. "Giving it up means the loss of all you have been working for in the railroad game. I wish I could use it, just as it stands."<br>"Can't you?"<br>"I am afraid not--effectively. It would make an issue in a campaign; or, sprung on the eve of an election, it might down the ring conclusively. I think it would. But this is the off year, and the people won't rise to a political issue--couldn't make themselves felt if they should."<br>"I don't agree with you. You have your case all made out, with the evidence in sound legal form. What is to prevent your trying it?"<br>"The one thing that you ought to be lawyer enough to see at a glance. There is no court to try it in. With the Assembly in session we might do something: as it is, we can only yap at the heels of the ringsters, and our yapping won't help you in the railroad fight. What do you hear from Boston?"<br>"Nothing new. The stock is still flat on the market, with the stock-holders' pool holding a bare majority, and the Plantagould brokers buying in driblets wherever they can find a small holder who is willing to let go. It is only a question of time; and a very short time at that."<br>The editor wagged his head in sympathy.<br>"I wish I could help you, David. You've done a big thing for me--for the Argus; and all I have to hand you in return is a death sentence. MacFarlane is back."<br>"Here? In town?"<br>"Yes. And that isn't the worst of it. The governor sent for him."<br>"Have you any idea what is in the wind?" asked Kent, dry-lipped.<br>"I am afraid I have. My young men have been nosing around in the Trans-Western affair, and several things have developed. Matters are approaching a crisis. The cut-rate boom is about to collapse, and there is trouble brewing in the labor organizations. If Bucks doesn't get his henchmen out of it pretty soon, they will be involved in the smash--which will be bad for them and for him, politically."<br>"I developed most of that a good while ago," Kent cut in.<br>"Yes; I know. But there is more to follow. The stock-smashing plan was all right, but it is proving too slow. Now they are going to do something else."<br>"Can you give it a name?" asked Kent, nerving himself.<br>"I can. But first tell me one thing: as matters stand, could Guilford dispose of the road--sell it or lease it?"<br>"No; he would first have to be made permanent receiver and be given authority by the court."<br>"Ah! that explains Judge MacFarlane's return. Now what I am going to tell you is the deadest of secrets. It came to me from one of the Overland officials, and I'm not supposed to gossip. Did you know the Overland Short

Revision as of 03:20, 15 September 2013