Lavender and Old Lace - Page 8/104

Hepsey came in to light the lamp that hung by chains over the table,

but Miss Thorne rose, saying: "You needn't mind, Hepsey, as I am going

upstairs."

"Want me to help you unpack?" she asked, doubtless wishing for a view of

"city clothes."

"No, thank you."

"I put a pitcher of water in your room, Miss Thorne. Is there anything

else you would like?"

"Nothing more, thank you."

She still lingered, irresolute, shifting from one foot to the other.

"Miss Thorne--" she began hesitatingly.

"Yes?"

"Be you--be you a lady detective?" Ruth's clear laughter rang out on the

evening air. "Why, no, you foolish girl; I'm a newspaper woman, and I've

earned a rest--that's all. You mustn't read books with yellow covers."

Hepsey withdrew, muttering vague apologies, and Ruth found her at the

head of the stairs when she went up to her room. "How long have you been

with Miss Hathaway?" she asked.

"Five years come next June."

"Good night, Hepsey."

"Good night, Miss Thorne."

From sheer force of habit, Ruth locked her door. Her trunk was not a

large one, and it did not take her long to put her simple wardrobe into

the capacious closet and the dresser drawers. As she moved the empty

trunk into the closet, she remembered the box of money that she had

left in the attic, and went up to get it. When she returned she heard

Hepsey's door close softly.

"Silly child," she said to herself. "I might just as well ask her if she

isn't a'lady detective.' They'll laugh about that in the office when I

go back."

She sat down, rocking contentedly, for it was April, and she would not

have to go back until Aunt Jane came home, probably about the first of

October. She checked off the free, health-giving months on her tired

fingers, that would know the blue pencil and the typewriter no more

until Autumn, when she would be strong again and the quivering nerves

quite steady.

She blessed the legacy which had fallen into Jane Hathaway's lap and led

her, at fifty-five, to join a "personally conducted" party to the Old

World. Ruth had always had a dim yearning for foreign travel, but just

now she felt no latent injustice, such as had often rankled in her soul

when her friends went and she remained at home.

Thinking she heard Hepsey in the hall, and not caring to arouse further

suspicion, she put out her light and sat by the window, with the

shutters wide open.