How Janice Day Won - BestLightNovel.com
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The storekeeper's wife had carried Lottie back to the sitting room.
The child was still asleep and 'Rill was undressing her.
"What is the matter, Janice?" she asked curiously. "Has Mr. Bowman gone? What did he want?"
"He didn't want to buy anything. He wanted to see me. I--I am going out with him a little while, Miss 'Rill."
The latter nodded her head knowingly. "I know," she said. "You are going across the street. I am glad Mr. Bowman feels an interest in Mr.
Haley's affairs."
"Yes!" gasped Janice, feeling that she was perilously near an untruth, for she was allowing 'Rill to deceive herself.
"Will you put the window lamps out before you go, dear?" the storekeeper's wife said.
"Certainly," Janice answered, and proceeded to do so before putting on her coat and hat.
"Don't be long," 'Rill observed softly. "It's after eleven now."
Janice came and kissed her--oh, so tenderly! They stood above the sleeping child. 'Rill had eyes only for the half naked, plump limbs and body of the little girl, or she might have seen something in Janice's tearful glance to make her suspicious.
Janice thought of a certain famous picture of the "Madonna and Child"
as she tiptoed softly from the room, looking back as she went 'Rill yearned over the little one as only a childless and loving woman does.
Perhaps 'Rill had married Hopewell Drugg as much for the sake of being able to mother little Lottie as for any other reason.
Yet, what a shock that tender, loving heart was about to receive--what a blow! Janice shrank from the thought of being one of those to bring this hovering trouble home to the trusting wife.
Could she not escape it? There was her handbag on the end of the counter. She was tempted to seize it, run out of the store, and make her way homeward as fast as possible.
She could leave Frank Bowman to settle the matter with his own conscience. He had brought the knowledge of this trouble to the little store on the side street. Let him solve the problem as best he might.
Then Janice gave the civil engineer a swift glance, and her heart failed her. She could not leave that unhappy looking specimen of helplessness to his own devices.
Frank's pompadour was ruffled, his eyes were staring, and his whole countenance was a troubled mask. In that moment Janice Day realized for the first time the main duty of the female in this world. That is, she is here to pull the incompetent male out of his difficulties!
She thought of Nelson, thoughtful and sensible as he was, actually appalled by his situation in the community. And here was Frank Bowman, a very efficient engineer, unable to engineer this small matter of getting Hopewell Drugg home from the dance, without her a.s.sistance.
"Oh, dear me! what would the world be without us women?" thought Janice--and gave up all idea of running away and leaving Frank to bungle the situation.
The two went out of the store together and closed the door softly behind them. Janice could not help glancing across at the lighted front windows of Mrs. Beaseley's cottage.
"There's trouble over yonder," said young Bowman gently. "I went in to see him after supper. He said you'd been there to help him buck up, Janice. Really, you're a wonderful girl."
"I'm sorry," sighed Janice.
"What?" cried Frank.
"Yes. I am sorry if I am wonderful. If I were not considered so, then not so many unpleasant duties would fall my way."
Frank laughed at that. "I guess you're right," he said. "Those that seem to be able to bear the burdens of life certainly have them to bear. But poor Nelson needs somebody to hold up his hands, as it were.
He's up against it for fair, Janice."
"Oh! I can't believe that the committee will continue this persecution, when they come to think it over," the girl cried.
"It doesn't matter whether they do or not, I fear," Bowman said, with conviction. "The harm is done. He's been accused."
"Oh, dear me! I know it," groaned Janice.
"And unless he is proved innocent, Nelson Haley is bound to have trouble here in Polktown."
"Do you believe so, Frank?"
"I hate to say it. But we--his friends--might as well face the fact first as last," said the civil engineer, sheltering Janice beneath the umbrella he carried. It was misting heavily and she was glad of this shelter.
"Oh, I hope they will find the real thief very quickly!"
"So do I. But I see nothing being done toward that. The committee seems satisfied to accuse Nelson--and let it go at that."
"It is too, too bad!"
"They are following the line of least resistance. The real thief is, of course, well away--out of Polktown, and probably in some big city where the coins can be disposed of to the best advantage."
"Do you really believe so?" cried the girl.
"I do. The thief was some tramp or traveling character who got into the schoolhouse by stealth. That is the only sensible explanation of the mystery."
"Do you really believe so?" repeated Janice.
"Yes. Think of it yourself. The committee and Benny Thread are not guilty. Nelson is not guilty. Only two keys to the building and those both accounted for.
"Some time--perhaps on Friday afternoon or early evening--this tramp I speak of crept into the cellar when the bas.e.m.e.nt door of the schoolhouse was open, with the intention of sleeping beside the furnace. In the morning he slips upstairs and hides from the janitor and keeps in hiding when the four committeemen appear.
"He sees the trays of coins," continued Frank Bowman, waxing enthusiastic with his own story, "and while the committeemen are downstairs, and before Nelson comes in, he takes the coins."
"Why _before_ Nelson entered?" asked Janice sharply.
"Because Nelson tells me that he did not see the trays on the table in the committee room when he looked in there. The thief had removed them, and then put the trays back. Had Nelson seen them he would have stopped to examine the coins, at least. You see, they were brought over from Middletown and delivered to Ma.s.sey, who kept them in his safe all night. Nelson never laid eyes on them."
"I see! I see!" murmured Janice.
"So this fellow stole the coins and slipped out of the building with them. They may even be melted down and sold for old gold by this time; although that would scarcely be possible. At any rate, the committee will have to satisfy the owner of the collection. That is sure."
"And that is going to make them all just as mad as they can be,"
declared the girl. "They want to blame somebody----"
"And they have blamed Nelson. It remains that he must prove himself innocent--before public opinion, not before a court. There they have to prove guilt. He is guilty already in the eyes of half of Polktown.
No chance of waiting to be proved guilty before he is considered so."
Janice flushed and her answer came sharply: "And how about the other half of Polktown?"