"Of course she doesn't expect him to come back," said Mr. Larramie,

"because it must now be four years since the time of his supposed

murder--"

"Supposed!" I cried, with much more excited interest than I would have

shown if I had taken proper thought before speaking.

"Well," said Mr. Larramie, "that is a fine point. I said 'supposed'

because the facts of the case are not definitely known. There can be

no reasonable doubt, however, that he is dead, for even if this fact

had not been conclusively proved by the police investigations, it

might now be considered proved by his continued absence. It would have

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been impossible for Mr. Chester alive to keep away from his wife for

four years--they were devoted to each other. Furthermore, the exact

manner of his death is not known--although it must have been a

murder--and for these reasons I used the word 'supposed.' But, really,

so far as human judgment can go, the whole matter is a certainty. I

have not the slightest doubt in the world that Mrs. Chester so

considers it, and yet, as she does not positively know it--as she has

not the actual proofs that her husband is no longer living--she

refuses in certain ways, in certain ways only, to consider herself a

widow."

"And what ways are those?" I asked, in a voice which, I hope,

exhibited no undue emotion.

"She declines to marry again," said Mrs. Larramie, now taking up the

conversation. "Of course, such a pretty woman--I may say, such a

charming woman--would have admirers, and I know that she has had some

most excellent offers, but she has always refused to consider any of

them. There was one gentleman, a man of wealth and position, who had

proposed to her before she married Mr. Chester, who came on here to

offer himself again, but she cut off everything he had to say by

telling him that as she did not positively know that her husband was

not living, she could not allow a word of that sort to be said to her.

I know this, because she told me so herself."

There was a good deal more talk of the sort, and of course it

interested me greatly, although I tried not to show it, but I could

not help wondering why the subject had been brought forward in such an

impressive manner upon the present occasion. It seemed to me that

there was something personal in it--personal to me. Had that boy Percy

been making reports?

In the evening I found out all about it, and in a very straightforward

and direct fashion. I discovered Miss Edith by herself, and asked her

if all that talk about Mrs. Chester had been intended for my benefit,

and, if so, why.

She laughed. "I expected you to come and ask me about that," she said,

"for of course you could see through a good deal of it. It is all

father's kindness and goodness. Percy was a little out of temper when

he came back, and he spun a yarn about your being sweet on Mrs.

Chester, and how he could hardly get you away from her, and all that.

He had an idea that you wanted to go there and live, at least for the

summer. Something a boy said to him made him think that. So father

thought that if you had any notions about Mrs. Chester you ought to

have the matter placed properly before you without any delay, and I

expect his reason for mentioning it at the supper-table was that it

might then seem like a general subject of conversation, whereas it

would have been very pointed indeed if he had taken you apart and

talked to you about it."




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