How bromidic to note it--we have many tastes in common!

EX-STRAWBERRY MAN.

The third letter from her correspondent of the Agony Column increased

in the mind of the lovely young woman at the Carlton the excitement and

tension the second had created. For a long time, on the Saturday morning

of its receipt, she sat in her room puzzling over the mystery of

the house in Adelphi Terrace. When first she had heard that Captain

Fraser-Freer, of the Indian Army, was dead of a knife wound over the

heart, the news had shocked her like that of the loss of some old

and dear friend. She had desired passionately the apprehension of his

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murderer, and had turned over and over in her mind the possibilities of

white asters, a scarab pin and a Homburg hat.

Perhaps the girl longed for the arrest of the guilty man thus keenly

because this jaunty young friend of hers--a friend whose name she did

not know--to whom, indeed, she had never spoken--was so dangerously

entangled in the affair. For from what she knew of Geoffrey West, from

her casual glance in the restaurant and, far more, from his letters, she

liked him extremely.

And now came his third letter, in which he related the connection of

that hat, that pin and those asters with the column in the Mail which

had first brought them together. As it happened, she, too, had copies

of the paper for the first four days of the week. She went to her

sitting-room, unearthed these copies, and--gasped! For from the

column in Monday's paper stared up at her the cryptic words to Rangoon

concerning asters in a garden at Canterbury. In the other three issues

as well, she found the identical messages her strawberry man had quoted.

She sat for a moment in deep thought; sat, in fact, until at her door

came the enraged knocking of a hungry parent who had been waiting a full

hour in the lobby below for her to join him at breakfast.

"Come, come!" boomed her father, entering at her invitation. "Don't sit

here all day mooning. I'm hungry if you're not."

With quick apologies she made ready to accompany him down-stairs.

Firmly, as she planned their campaign for the day, she resolved to put

from her mind all thought of Adelphi Terrace. How well she succeeded

may be judged from a speech made by her father that night just before

dinner: "Have you lost your tongue, Marian? You're as uncommunicative as a

newly-elected office-holder. If you can't get a little more life into

these expeditions of ours we'll pack up and head for home."




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