Complete Works of L. Frank Baum

Home > Childrens > Complete Works of L. Frank Baum > Page 442
Complete Works of L. Frank Baum Page 442

by L. Frank Baum

CHAPTER XIV

  LUCY’S GHOST

  Kenneth had sent word to Tom Gates, asking the young man to come to Elmhurst, but it was not until two days after the lawn party that Tom appeared and asked permission to see Mr. Forbes.

  Beth and Louise were with Kenneth at the time, and were eager to remain during the interview, so the young man was shown into the library.

  Beth could scarcely recognize in him the calm and cheerful Tom Gates they had visited in the county jail; for his face was drawn with care and anxiety, eyes were bloodshot, and his former neat appearance was changed to one careless and untidy.

  Kenneth scrutinized him closely.

  “What have you been up to, Tom?” he asked.

  “I’ve been searching for Lucy, sir, night and day. I haven’t slept a wink since I heard the awful news of her sickness and escape. Where do you think she can be, sir?”

  His question was full of agonized entreaty, and his manner pitifully appealing.

  “I don’t know,” answered Kenneth. “Where have you searched?”

  “Everywhere, sir, that she might be likely to go. I’ve inquired in every town, and along every road leading out of the county. She didn’t take a train, because poor Lucy hadn’t any money — and I’ve asked at all the stations. And — and — along the river they say no girl answering her description has been seen.”

  “It’s strange,” remarked Kenneth, thoughtfully, while the girls regarded the youth with silent sympathy.

  “If you knew Lucy, sir, you’d realize how strange it is,” went on young Gates, earnestly. “She was such a gentle, shrinking girl, as shy and retiring as a child. And she never did a thing that would cause anyone the least worry or unhappiness. But she was out of her head, sir, and didn’t know what she was about. That was the reason she went away. And from the moment she left her home all trace of her was lost.”

  “One would think,” observed Kenneth, “that a poor, demented girl, wandering about the country, would be noticed by scores of people. Did she take any clothing with her?”

  “Only the dress she had on, sir, and not even a hat or a shawl.”

  “What was her dress like?” asked Beth, quickly.

  “It was a light grey in color, and plainly made. She wore a white collar, but that is all we can be certain she had on. You see her mother is blind, and old Will doesn’t observe very closely.”

  “Does Lucy resemble her mother?” inquired Beth.

  “Very much, miss. She was a beautiful girl, everyone acknowledged. And it’s all my fault — all my fault. I thought to save her, and drove her mad, instead!”

  “You might have known that,” declared Kenneth. “A girl of her character, sensitive to a fault, would be greatly shocked to find the man she loved a criminal.”

  “It was for her sake.”

  “That is a poor excuse. If you had waited Lucy would have proved her innocence.”

  “They threatened to arrest her, sir. It would have killed her.”

  “They wouldn’t dare arrest her on suspicion.”

  “The Squierses would dare do anything. You don’t know old Mrs. Squiers.”

  “I know the law, sir, and in any event it was a foolish thing, as well as criminal, to forge a check to get the money they demanded.”

  “You are right, sir,” replied Tom Gates, despondently. “It was foolish and criminal. I wouldn’t mind my own punishment, but it drove my Lucy mad.”

  “See here,” said Kenneth, sternly, “you are getting morbid, young man, and pretty soon you’ll be mad yourself. If Lucy is found do you want her to see you in this condition?”

  “Can she be found, sir, do you think?”

  “We are trying to find her,” replied Kenneth. “You have failed, it seems, and Will Rogers had failed. I’ve had one of the cleverest detectives of Chicago trying to find her for the last three days.”

  “Oh, Kenneth!” exclaimed Beth. “I didn’t know that. How good of you!”

  “It must have been the detective that came to see Mrs. Rogers,” said Tom, musingly. “She told me a strange man had been there from Mr. Forbes, to inquire all about Lucy.”

  “Yes; he makes a report to me every evening,” remarked Kenneth; “and Mr. Burke says this is the most mystifying case he has ever encountered. So far there isn’t a clew to follow. But you may rest assured that what any man can do, Burke will do.”

  “I’m so grateful, sir!” said Tom.

  “Then you must show it by being a man, and not by giving way to your trouble in this foolish manner.”

  “I’ll try, sir, now that there’s something to hope for.”

  “There’s a good deal to hope for. Despair won’t help you. You must go to work.”

  “I will. It won’t be very easy to get work, for I’ve disgraced myself in this neighborhood, and I can’t leave here till something is known of Lucy’s fate. But I’ll do something — any kind of work — if I can get it.”

  “I need someone to assist me in my correspondence,” said Kenneth. “Would you like to be my secretary?”

  “Me, Mr. Forbes — me!”

  “Yes, Tom. I’ll pay you twenty dollars a week to start with, and more if you serve me faithfully. And you’ll board here, of course.”

  Then Tom Gates broke down and began to cry like a child, although he tried hard to control himself.

  “You — you must forgive me, Mr. Forbes,” he said, penitently; “I — I’ve been without sleep for so long that I haven’t any nerves left.”

  “Then you must go to sleep now, and get a good rest.” He turned to Beth. “Will you see Martha,” he asked, “and have her give Tom Gates a room?”

  She went on her errand at once, and gradually the young man recovered his composure.

  “I can do typewriting and stenography, Mr. Forbes,” he said, “and I can keep accounts. I’ll serve you faithfully, sir.”

  “We’ll talk of all this by and by, Tom,” replied Kenneth, kindly. “Just now you must have some sleep and get your strength back. And don’t worry about Lucy. Burke will do everything that can be done, and I am confident he will be able to trace the girl in time.”

  “Thank you, sir.”

  Then he followed the butler away to his room, and after the girls had discussed him and expressed their sympathy for the unfortunate fellow, they all turned their attention to the important matter of the campaign. The debate with Hopkins was the thing that occupied them just now, and when Patsy joined the group of workers they began to discuss some means of scoring a decisive victory at the Fairview Opera House. The Honorable Erastus still insisted upon making the anti-sign fight the prominent issue of the campaign, and they must reply forcibly to the misleading statements made in his last hand-bill.

  Meantime Tom Gates was sunk in the deep sleep of physical exhaustion, and the day wore away before he wakened. When at last he regained consciousness he found the sun sinking in the west and feared he had been guilty of indiscretion. He remembered that he was Mr. Forbes’s secretary now, and that Mr. Forbes might want him. He was not yet thoroughly rested, but night was approaching and he reflected that he could obtain all the sleep that he needed then.

  So, greatly refreshed, and in a quieter mood than he had been for days, the young man dressed and entered the hall to find his way downstairs.

  It happened that Beth, whose room was near this rear corridor, had just gone there to dress for dinner, and as she was closing her door she heard a wild, impassioned cry:

  “Lucy!”

  Quickly she sprang out into the hall and turned the corner in time to see a strange tableau.

  Young Gates was standing with his arms outstretched toward Eliza Parsons, who, a few paces away, had her back to the door of her own chamber, from which she had evidently just stepped. She stood motionless, looking curiously at the youth who confronted her.

  “Lucy! don’t you know me?” he asked, his voice trembling with emotion.

  “To begin with,” said the girl, composedly, “my name happens to
be Eliza. And as we’ve not been properly introduced I really don’t see why I should know you,” she added, with a light laugh.

  Tom Gates shrank away from her as if he had been struck.

  “You can’t be Lucy!” he murmured. “And yet — and yet — oh, you must be Lucy! You must know me! Look at me, dear — I’m Tom. I’m your own Tom, Lucy!”

  “It’s very gratifying, I’m sure, young man,” said the girl, a touch of scorn in her tones. “If you’re my own Tom you’ll perhaps stand out of my way and let me go to my work.”

  Without another word he backed up again; the wall and permitted her to sweep by him, which she did with a gesture of disdain.

  When Eliza Parsons had disappeared down the back stairs Beth drew a long breath and approached Tom Gates, who still stood by the wall staring at the place where the girl had disappeared.

  “I overheard,” said Beth. “Tell me, Tom, is she really like Lucy?”

  He looked at her with a dazed expression, as if he scarcely comprehended her words.

  “Could you have been mistaken?” persisted the questioner.

  He passed his hand over his eyes and gave a shudder.

  “Either it was Lucy or her ghost,” he muttered.

  “Eliza Parsons is no ghost,” declared Beth. “She’s one of the maids here at Elmhurst, and you’re quite likely to see her again.”

  “Has she been here long?” he asked, eagerly.

  “No; only a few days.”

  “Oh!”

  “When I first saw her I was struck by her resemblance to Mrs. Rogers,” continued the girl.

  “But she’s so different,” said Tom, choking back a sob. “Lucy couldn’t be so — so airy, so heartless. She isn’t at all that style of a girl, miss.”

  “She may be acting,” suggested Beth.

  But he shook his head gloomily.

  “No; Lucy couldn’t act that way. She’s quick and impulsive, but she — she couldn’t act. And she wouldn’t treat me that way, either, Miss Beth. Lucy and I have been sweethearts for years, and I know every expression of her dear face. But the look that this girl gave me was one that my Lucy never could assume. I must have been mistaken. I — I’m sure I was mistaken.”

  Beth sighed. She was disappointed.

  “I suppose,” continued Tom, “that I’ve thought of Lucy so long and so much, lately, and worried so over her disappearance, that I’m not quite myself, and imagined this girl was more like her than she really is. What did you say her name was?”

  “Eliza Parsons.”

  “Thank you. Can you tell me where I’ll find Mr. Forbes?”

  “He’s getting ready for dinner, now, and won’t need you at present.”

  “Then I’ll go back to my room. It — it was a great shock to me, that likeness, Miss DeGraf.”

  “I can well believe it,” said Beth; and then she went to her own apartment, greatly puzzled at a resemblance so strong that it had even deceived Lucy Rogers’s own sweetheart.

  CHAPTER XV

  SIGNS OF THE TIMES

  “If she is really Lucy Rogers, she’ll be missing tomorrow morning,” said Beth when she had told her cousins of the encounter in the corridor.

  But Eliza Parsons was still at Elmhurst the next day, calmly pursuing her duties, and evidently having forgotten or decided to ignore the young man who had so curiously mistaken her for another. Beth took occasion to watch her movements, so far as she could, and came to the conclusion that the girl was not acting a part. She laughed naturally and was too light-hearted and gay to harbor a care of any sort in her frivolous mind.

  But there was a mystery about her; that could not be denied. Even if she were but a paid spy of Erastus Hopkins there was a story in this girl’s life, brief as it had been.

  Beth was full of curiosity to know this story.

  As for Tom Gates, he had been so horrified by his mistake that he tried to avoid meeting Eliza again. This was not difficult because the girl kept pretty closely to the linen room, and Tom was chiefly occupied in the library.

  Kenneth had little chance to test his secretary’s abilities just then, because the girls pounced upon the new recruit and used his services in a variety of ways. Tom Gates’s anxiety to give satisfaction made him willing to do anything, but they refrained from sending him often to town because he was sensitive to the averted looks and evident repulsion of those who knew he had recently been a “jail-bird.” But there was plenty for him to do at Elmhurst, where they were all as busy as bees; and whatever the young man undertook he accomplished in a satisfactory manner.

  Saturday forenoon the three girls, with Kenneth, Mr. Watson and Uncle John, rode over to Fairview to prepare for the debate that was to take place in the afternoon, leaving only Tom Gates at home. As Mr. Hopkins had thrust upon his opponent the task of naming the place and time, the Republican candidate was obliged to make all the arrangements, and pay all the costs. But whatever the girl managers undertook they did well. So the Opera House had been in the hands of a special committee for two days, the orchestra had been hired, and the news of the joint debate had spread far and wide.

  The party from Elmhurst lunched at the Fairview Hotel, and then the girls hurried to the Opera House while Kenneth remained to attend a conference of the Republican Committee. These gentlemen were much worried over the discovery of a scheme to trade votes that had been sprung, and that Forbes and Reynolds were being sacrificed for Hopkins and Cummings. Mr. Cummings was called into the meeting, and he denied that the trading was being done with his consent, but defiantly refused to make a public announcement to that effect.

  The matter was really serious, because every vote lost in that way counted as two for the other side, and Hopkins’s rabid hand-bills had influenced many of the more ignorant voters and created endless disputes that were not of benefit to the Republican party.

  “As nearly as we can figure from our recent canvass,” said Mr. Cunningham, the chairman, “we are fast losing ground, and our chances of success are smaller than if no interest in the election had been aroused. Hopkins has cut our majority down to nothing, and it will be a hard struggle to carry our ticket through to success. This is the more discouraging because Mr. Forbes has spent so much money, while Hopkins’s expenses have been very little.”

  “I do not mind that,” said Kenneth, quietly. “It was my desire that the voters should fully understand the issues of the campaign. Then, if they vote against me, it is because they are not worthy of honest representation in the Legislature, and I shall in the future leave them to their own devices.”

  The committee adjourned a little before two o’clock with rather grave faces, and prepared to attend the debate at the Opera House. Mr. Cunningham feared this debate would prove a mistake, as it would give Hopkins a chance to ridicule and brow-beat his opponent in public, and his greatest talent as a speaker lay in that direction.

  As Kenneth and his supporters approached the Opera House they heard loud cheering, and from a band-wagon covered with bunting and banners, in which he had driven to the meeting, descended the Honorable Erastus. He met Kenneth face to face, and the latter said pleasantly:

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Hopkins.”

  “Ah, it’s Forbes, isn’t it?” replied Hopkins, slightingly. “I’ve met you before, somewheres, haven’t I?”

  “You have, sir.”

  “Glad you’re here, Forbes; glad you’re here,” continued the Representative, airily, as he made his way through the crowd that blocked the entrance. “These meetings are educational to young men. Girls all well, I hope?”

  There was a boisterous laugh at this sally, and Mr. Hopkins smiled and entered the Opera House, while Kenneth followed with the feeling that he would take great delight in punching the Honorable Erastus’s nose at the first opportunity.

  The house was packed full of eager spectators who had come to see “the fun.” Although the girls had taken charge of all the arrangements they had devoted the left side of the ample stage to the use
of the Hopkins party, where a speaker’s table and chairs for important guests had been placed. The right side was similarly arranged for the Forbes party, and between the two the entire center of the stage was occupied by a group of fifty young girls. Above this group a great banner was suspended, reading: “The Signs of the Times,” a catchword Mr. Hopkins had employed throughout the campaign. But the most astonishing thing was the appearance of the group of girls. They all wore plain white slips, upon which a variety of signs had been painted in prominent letters. Some costumes advertised baking-powders, others patent medicines, others soaps, chewing tobacco, breakfast foods, etc. From where they were seated in full view of the vast audience the girls appeared as a mass of advertising signs, and the banner above them indicated quite plainly that these were the “Signs of the Times.”

  Mr. Hopkins, as he observed this scene, smiled with satisfaction. He believed some of his friends had prepared this display to assist him and to disconcert the opposition, for nothing could have clinched his arguments better than the pretty young girls covered with advertisements of well known products. Even the Eagle Eye Breakfast Food was well represented.

  After the orchestra had finished a selection, Mr. Hopkins rose to make the first argument and was greeted with cheers.

  “We are having a jolly campaign, my dear friends,” he began; “but you musn’t take it altogether as a joke; because, while Mr. Forbes’s erratic views and actions have done little real harm, we have been educated to an appreciation of certain benefits we enjoy which otherwise might have escaped our attention.

  “This is a progressive, strenuous age, and no section of the country has progressed more rapidly than this, the Eighth District of our great and glorious State. I may say without danger of contradiction that the people I have the honor to represent in the State Legislature, and expect to have the honor of representing the next term, are the most intelligent, the most thoughtful and the most prosperous to be found in any like district in the United States. (Cheers.) Who, then, dares to denounce them as fools? Who dares interfere with these liberties, who dares intrude uninvited into their premises and paint out the signs they have permitted to occupy their fences and barns and sheds? Who would do these things but an impertinent meddler who is so inexperienced in life that he sets his own flimsy judgment against that of the people?”

 

‹ Prev