A Woman Named Smith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about A Woman Named Smith.

A Woman Named Smith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about A Woman Named Smith.

“Do, Sophy, let him keep it!” pleaded Alicia.

{~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~} { Turne Hellens Keye } { Three Tennes & Three } { Ye Watcher in ye Darke Thoult See } { } { (B) } { } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { . . . . . } { } { As Neede Shall Rise } { So Mote It Bee } { } ‘~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~’

“I’ll take the best care of it, Miss Smith; indeed I will!” The Author promised.  “Look here:  I’ll lock it in the clothes-closet, in the breast pocket of my coat.”  As he spoke, he opened the cedar-lined closet, that was almost as big as a modern hall bedroom, and put the paper in the breast pocket of his coat.  Locking the door, he placed the key under his pillow, and beside it a new and businesslike Colt automatic.

“There!” said The Author, confidently.  “Nobody can get into that closet without first tackling me.  Now you girls go to bed.  To-morrow we’ll tackle the unraveling.”

And we, remembering of a sudden that we were pig-tailed and kimonoed, and that The Author himself resembled a step-ladder with a shawl draped around it, departed hurriedly.

He was late at the breakfast-table next morning.  Gloom and abstraction sat visibly upon him.  He left his secretary to bear the brunt of conversation with the Westmacotes and Miss Emmeline.  For once he failed to do justice to Mary Magdalen’s hot biscuit, and ignored Fernolia’s astonished and concerned stare; even a whispered, “Honey, is you-all got a misery anywheres?” failed to rouse him.  I found him, after a while, waiting for me in the library.

“Miss Smith,”—­The Author strode restlessly up and down—­“this house has a peculiar effect upon people; a very peculiar effect.  Since I came here, I have learned to walk in my sleep.”  And seeing my look of astonishment, “I walked in my sleep last night.  And I took that bit of doggerel out of my coat pocket, locked the closet door, and replaced the key under my pillow.”

“How strange!  And where did you put it?” I wondered.

“Exactly:  where did I put it?” repeated The Author, rumpling his hair with both hands.  “That’s what I want to know, myself.  I’ve looked everywhere in my room, and in Johnson’s, and I can’t find the thing.  It’s gone,” and he stalked out, with his shoulders hunched to his ears.

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Project Gutenberg
A Woman Named Smith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.