<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_TWENTY" id="CHAPTER_TWENTY"></SPAN>CHAPTER TWENTY</h3>
<p>Throughout that afternoon adult members
of the Atwater family connection made
futile efforts to secure all the copies of the
week's edition of <i>The North End Daily Oriole</i>.
It could not be done.</p>
<p>It was a trying time for "the family." Great
Aunt Carrie said that she had the "worst afternoon of
any of 'em," because young Newland Sanders came
to her house at two and did not leave until five; all
the time counting over, one by one, the hours he'd
spent with Julia since she was seventeen and turned
out, unfortunately, to be a Beauty. Newland had
not restrained himself, Aunt Carrie said, and long
before he left she wished Julia had never been born—and
as for Herbert Illingsworth Atwater, Junior,
the only thing to do with him was to send him to some
strict Military School.</p>
<p>Florence's father telephoned to her mother from
downtown at three, and said that Mr. George Plum
and the ardent vocalist, Clairdyce, had just left his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325"></SPAN></span>
office. They had not called in company, however,
but coincidentally; and each had a copy of <i>The
North End Daily Oriole</i>, already somewhat worn
with folding and unfolding. Mr. Clairdyce's condition
was one of desperate calm, Florence's father
said, but Mr. Plum's agitation left him rather unpresentable
for the street, though he had finally
gone forth with his hair just as he had rumpled it,
and with his hat in his hand. They wished the
truth, they said: Was it true or was it not true?
Mr. Atwater had told them that he feared Julia was
indeed engaged, though he knew nothing of her
fiancé's previous marriage or marriages, or of the
number of his children. They had responded that
they cared nothing about that. This man Crum's
record was a matter of indifference to them, they
said. All they wanted to know was whether Julia
was engaged or not—and she was!</p>
<p>"The odd thing to <i>me</i>," Mr. Atwater continued
to his wife, "is where on earth Herbert could have
got his story about this Crum's being a widower, and
divorced, and with all those children. Do you know
if Julia's written any of the family about these
things and they haven't told the rest of us?"</p>
<p>"No," said Mrs. Atwater. "I'm sure she hasn't.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></SPAN></span>
Every letter she's written to any of us has passed all
through the family, and I know I've seen every one
of 'em. She's never said anything about him at all,
except that he was a lawyer. I'm sure <i>I</i> can't
imagine where Herbert got his awful information;
I never thought he was the kind of boy to just make
up such things out of whole cloth."</p>
<p>Florence, sitting quietly in a chair near by, with
a copy of "Sesame and Lilies" in her lap, listened to
her mother's side of this conversation with an expression
of impersonal interest; and if she could have
realized how completely her parents had forgotten
(naturally enough) the details of their first rambling
discussion of Julia's engagement, she might really
have felt as little alarm as she showed.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mr. Atwater, "I'm glad <i>our</i> branch
of the family isn't responsible. That's a comfort,
anyhow, especially as people are reading copies of
Herbert's dreadful paper all up and down the town,
my clerk says. He tells me that over at the Unity
Trust Company, where young Murdock Hawes is
cashier, they only got hold of one copy, but typewrote
it and multigraphed it, and some of 'em have
already learned it by heart to recite to poor young
Hawes. He's the one who sent Julia the three fivepound<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></SPAN></span>
boxes of chocolates from New York all at the
same time, you remember."</p>
<p>"Yes," Mrs. Atwater sighed. "Poor thing!"</p>
<p>"Florence is out among the family, I suppose?"
he inquired.</p>
<p>"No; she's right here. She's just started to read
Ruskin this afternoon. She says she's going to begin
and read all of him straight through. That's very
nice, don't you think?"</p>
<p>He seemed to muse before replying.</p>
<p>"I think that's very nice, at her age especially,"
Mrs. Atwater urged. "Don't you?"</p>
<p>"Ye-es! Oh, yes! At least I suppose so. Ah—you
don't think—of course she hasn't had anything
at all to do with this?"</p>
<p>"Well, I don't <i>see</i> how she could. You know
Aunt Fanny told us how Herbert declared before
them all, only last Sunday night, that Florence should
never have one thing to do with his printing-press,
and said they wouldn't even let her come near it."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's a fact. I'm glad Herbert made it
so clear that she can't be implicated. I suppose
the family are all pretty well down on Uncle Joseph?"</p>
<p>"Uncle Joseph is being greatly blamed," said
Mrs. Atwater primly. "He really ought to have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></SPAN></span>
known better than to put such an instrument as
a printing-press into the hands of an irresponsible
boy of that age. Of course it simply encouraged him
to print all kinds of things. We none of us think
Uncle Joseph ever dreamed that Herbert would
publish, anything exactly like <i>this</i>, and of course
Uncle Joseph says himself he never dreamed such a
thing; he's said so time and time and time again, all
afternoon. But of course he's greatly blamed."</p>
<p>"I suppose there've been quite a good many of
'em over there blaming him?" her husband inquired.</p>
<p>"Yes—until he telephoned to a garage and hired
a car and went for a drive. He said he had plenty of
money with him and didn't know when he'd be
back."</p>
<p>"Serves him right," said Mr. Atwater. "Does
anybody know where Herbert is?"</p>
<p>"Not yet!"</p>
<p>"Well——" and he returned to a former theme.
"I <i>am</i> glad we aren't implicated. Florence is right
there with you, you say?"</p>
<p>"Yes," Mrs. Atwater replied. "She's right here,
reading. You aren't worried about her, are you?"
she added.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, no; I'm sure it's all right. I only
thought——"</p>
<p>"Only thought what?"</p>
<p>"Well, it <i>did</i> strike me as curious," said Mr.
Atwater; "especially after Aunt Fanny's telling us
how Herbert declared Florence could never have a
single thing to do with his paper again——"</p>
<p>"Well, what?"</p>
<p>"Well, here's her poem right at the top of it, and
a <i>very</i> friendly item about her history mark of last
June. It doesn't seem like Herbert to be so complimentary
to Florence, all of a sudden. Just
struck me as rather curious; that's all."</p>
<p>"Why, yes," said Mrs. Atwater, "it does seem a
little odd, when you think of it."</p>
<p>"Have you <i>asked</i> Florence if she had anything to
do with getting out this week's <i>Oriole</i>?"</p>
<p>"Why, no; it never occurred to me, especially
after what Aunt Fanny told us," said Mrs. Atwater.
"I'll ask her now."</p>
<p>But she was obliged to postpone putting the intended
question. "Sesame and Lilies" lay sweetly
upon the seat of the chair that Florence had occupied;
but Florence herself had gone somewhere else.</p>
<p>She had gone for a long, long ramble; and pedestrians<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></SPAN></span>
who encountered her, and happened to notice
her expression, were interested; and as they went
on their way several of them interrupted the course
of their meditations to say to themselves that she
was the most thoughtful looking young girl they
had ever seen. There was a touch of wistfulness
about her, too; as of one whose benevolence must
renounce all hope of comprehension and reward.</p>
<p>Now, among those who observed her unusual
expression was a gentleman of great dimensions disposed
in a closed automobile that went labouring
among mudholes in an unpaved outskirt of the town.
He rapped upon the glass before him, to get the
driver's attention, and a moment later the car drew
up beside Florence, as she stood in a deep reverie
at the intersection of two roads.</p>
<p>Uncle Joseph opened the door and took his cigar
from his mouth. "Get in, Florence," he said. "I'll
take you for a ride." She started violently; whereupon
he restored the cigar to his mouth, puffed upon
it, breathing heavily the while as was his wont,
and added, "I'm not going home. I'm out for a
nice long ride. Get in."</p>
<p>"I was takin' a walk," she said dubiously. "I haf
to take a whole lot of exercise, and I ought to walk<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></SPAN></span>
and walk and walk. I guess I ought to keep on
walkin'."</p>
<p>"Get in," he said. "I'm out riding. I don't
know <i>when</i> I'll get home!"</p>
<p>Florence stepped in, Uncle Joseph closed the door,
and the car slowly bumped onward.</p>
<p>"You know where Herbert is?" Uncle Joseph
inquired.</p>
<p>"No," said Florence, in a gentle voice.</p>
<p>"I do," he said. "Herbert and your friend
Henry Rooter came to our house with one of the last
copies of the <i>Oriole</i> they were distributing to subscribers;
and after I read it I kind of foresaw that
the feller responsible for their owning a printing-press
was going to be in some sort of family trouble
or other. I had quite a talk with 'em and they
hinted they hadn't had much to do with this number
of the paper, except the mechanical end of it; but they
wouldn't come out right full with what they meant.
They seemed to have some good reason for protecting
a third party, and said quite a good deal
about their fathers and mothers being but mortal
and so on; so Henry and Herbert thought they
oughtn't to expose this third party—whoever she may
happen to be. Well, I thought they better not stay<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></SPAN></span>
too long, because I was compromised enough already,
without being seen in their company; and I gave
'em something to help 'em out with at the movies.
You can stay at movies an awful long time, and if
you've got money enough to go to several of 'em,
why, you're fixed for pretty near as long as you please.
A body ought to be able to live a couple o' months
at the movies for nine or ten dollars, I should think."</p>
<p>He was silent for a time, then asked, "I don't
suppose your papa and mamma will be worrying
about you, will they, Florence?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" she said quickly. "Not in the least!
There was nothin' at all for me to do at our house
this afternoon."</p>
<p>"That's good," he said, "because before we go
back I was thinking some of driving around by way
of Texas."</p>
<p>Florence looked at him trustfully and said nothing.
It seemed to her that he suspected something; she
was not sure; but his conversation was a little peculiar,
though not in the least sinister. Indeed she was
able to make out that he had more the air of an accomplice
than of a prosecutor or a detective. Nevertheless,
she was convinced that far, far the best course
for her to pursue, during the next few days, would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></SPAN></span>
be one of steadfast reserve. And such a course
was congenial to her mood, which was subdued, not
to say apprehensive; though she was sure her recent
conduct, if viewed sympathetically, would be found
at least Christian. The trouble was that probably it
would not be viewed sympathetically. No one would
understand how carefully and tactfully she had
prepared the items of the <i>Oriole</i> to lead suavely
up to the news of Aunt Julia's engagement and
break it to Noble Dill in a manner that would save
his reason.</p>
<p>Therefore, on account of this probable lack of
comprehension on the part of the family and public,
it seemed to her that the only wise and good course
to follow would be to claim nothing for herself, but to
allow Herbert and Henry to remain undisturbed
in full credit for publishing the <i>Oriole</i>. This involved
a disappointment, it is true; nevertheless, she
decided to bear it.</p>
<p>She had looked forward to surprising "the family"
delightfully. As they fluttered in exclamation about
her, she had expected to say, "Oh, the <i>poem</i> isn't so
much, I guess—I wrote it quite a few days ago and
I'm writing a couple new ones now—but I did
take quite a lot o' time and trouble with the rest of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></SPAN></span>
the paper, because I had to write every single word
of it, or else let Henry and Herbert try to, and 'course
they'd just of ruined it. Oh, it isn't so much to
talk about, I guess; it just sort of <i>comes</i> to me to do
things that way."</p>
<p>Thirteen attempts to exercise a great philanthropy,
and every grown person in sight, with the possible
exception of Great-Uncle Joseph, goes into wholly
unanticipated fits of horror. Cause and effect
have no honest relation: Fate operates without justice
or even rational sequence; life and the universe
appear to be governed, not in order and with system,
but by Chance, becoming sinister at any moment
without reason.</p>
<p>And while Florence, thus a pessimist, sat beside
fat Uncle Joseph during their long, long drive, relatives
of hers were indeed going into fits; at least, so
Florence would have described their gestures and incoherences
of comment. Moreover, after the movies,
straight into such a fitful scene did the luckless Herbert
walk when urged homeward by thoughts of
food, at about six that evening. Henry Rooter had
strongly advised him against entering the house.</p>
<p>"You better not," he said earnestly. "<i>Honest</i>,
you better not, Herbert!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, we got apple dumplings for dinner," Herbert
said, his tone showing the strain of mental
uncertainty. "Eliza told me this morning we were
goin' to have 'em. I kind of hate to go in, but I
guess I better, Henry."</p>
<p>"<i>You</i> won't see any apple dumplings," Henry
predicted.</p>
<p>"Well, I believe I better try it, Henry."</p>
<p>"You better come home with me. My father and
mother'll be perfectly willing to have you."</p>
<p>"I know that," said Herbert. "But I guess I
better go in and try it, anyhow, Henry. I didn't
have anything to do with what's in the <i>Oriole</i>.
It's every last word ole Florence's doing. I haven't
got any more right to be picked on for that than a
child."</p>
<p>"Yes," Henry admitted. "But if you go and tell
'em so, I bet she'd get even with you some way that
would probably get <i>me</i> in trouble, too, before we get
through with the job. <i>I</i> wouldn't tell 'em if I was
you, Herbert!"</p>
<p>"Well, I wasn't intending to," Herbert responded
gloomily; and the thought of each, unknown to the
other, was the same, consisting of a symbolic likeness
of Wallie Torbin at his worst. "I <i>ought</i> to tell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336"></SPAN></span>
on Florence; by rights I ought," said Herbert; "but
I've decided I won't. There's no tellin' what she
wouldn't do. Not that she could do anything to
<i>me</i>, particyourly——"</p>
<p>"Nor me, either," his friend interposed hurriedly.
"I don't worry about anything like that! Still, if I
was you I wouldn't tell. She's only a girl, we got to
remember."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Herbert. "That's the way <i>I</i> look at
it, Henry; and the way I look at it is just simply this:
long as she <i>is</i> a girl, why, simply let her go. You
can't tell what she'd do, and so what's the use to go
and tell on a girl?"</p>
<p>"That's the way <i>I</i> look at it," Henry agreed.
"What's the use? If I was in your place, I'd act just
the same way you do."</p>
<p>"Well," said Herbert, "I guess I better go on in
the house, Henry. It's a good while after dark."</p>
<p>"You're makin' a big mistake!" Henry Rooter
called after him. "<i>You</i> won't see any apple dumplings,
I bet a hunderd dollars! You better come on
home with me."</p>
<p>Herbert no more than half opened his front
door before he perceived that his friend's advice had
been excellent. So clearly Herbert perceived this,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337"></SPAN></span>
that he impulsively decided not to open the door any
farther, but on the contrary to close it and retire;
and he would have done so, had his mother not
reached forth and detained him. She was, in fact,
just inside that door, standing in the hall with one
of his great-aunts, one of his aunts, two aunts-by-marriage,
and an elderly unmarried cousin, who were
all just on the point of leaving. However, they
changed their minds and decided to remain, now
that Herbert was among them.</p>
<p>The captive's father joined them, a few minutes
later, but it had already become clear to Herbert
that <i>The North End Daily Oriole</i> was in one sense a
thing of the past, though in another sense this former
owner and proprietor was certain that he would
never hear the last of it. However, on account of
the life of blackmail and slavery now led by the
members of the old régime, the <i>Oriole's</i> extinction
was far less painful to Herbert than his father supposed;
and the latter wasted a great deal of severity,
insisting that the printing-press should be returned
that very night to Uncle Joseph. Herbert's heartiest
retrospective wish was that the ole printing-press had
been returned to Uncle Joseph long ago.</p>
<p>"If you can find him to give it to!" Aunt Harriet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></SPAN></span>
suggested. "Nobody <i>knows</i> where he goes when he
gets the way he did this afternoon when we were discussing
it with him! I only hope he'll be back to-night!"</p>
<p>"He can't stay away forever," Aunt Fanny remarked.
"That garage is charging him five dollars
an hour for the automobile he's in, and surely even
Joseph will decide there's a limit to wildness <i>some</i>
time!"</p>
<p>"I don't care when he comes back," Herbert's
father declared grimly. "Whenever he does he's got
to take that printing-press back—and Herbert will
be let out of the house long enough to carry it over.
His mother or I will go with him."</p>
<p>Herbert bore much more than this. He had
seated himself on the third step of the stairway, and
maintained as much dogged silence as he could.
Once, however, they got a yelp of anguish out of him.
It was when Cousin Virginia said: "Oh, Herbert,
Herbert! How could you make up that terrible
falsehood about Mr. Crum? And, <i>think</i> of it; right
on the same page with your cousin Florence's pure
little poem!"</p>
<p>Herbert uttered sounds incoherent but loud, and
expressive of a supreme physical revulsion. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></SPAN></span>
shocked audience readily understood that he liked
neither Cousin Virginia's chiding nor Cousin Florence's
pure little poem.</p>
<p>"Shame!" said his father.</p>
<p>Herbert controlled himself. It could be seen that
his spirit was broken, when Aunt Fanny mourned,
shaking her head at him, smiling ruefully:</p>
<p>"Oh, if boys could only be girls!"</p>
<p>Herbert just looked at her.</p>
<p>"The worst thing," said his father;—"that is, if
there's any part of it that's worse than another—the
worst thing about it all is this rumour about Noble
Dill."</p>
<p>"What about that poor thing?" Aunt Harriet
asked. "We haven't heard."</p>
<p>"Why, I walked up from downtown with old man
Dill," said Mr. Atwater, "and the Dill family are all
very much worried. It seems that Noble started
downtown after lunch, as usual, and pretty soon
he came back to the house and he had a copy of this
awful paper that little Florence had given him,
and——"</p>
<p>"<i>Who</i> gave it to him?" Aunt Fanny asked.
"<i>Who</i>?"</p>
<p>"Little Florence."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why, that's curious," Cousin Virginia murmured.
"I must telephone and ask her mother
about that."</p>
<p>The brooding Herbert looked up, and there was a
gleam in his dogged eye; but he said nothing.</p>
<p>"Go on," Aunt Harriet urged. "What did Noble
do?"</p>
<p>"Why, his mother said he just went up to his room
and changed his shoes and necktie——"</p>
<p>"I thought so," Aunt Fanny whispered. "Crazy!"</p>
<p>"And then," Mr. Atwater continued, "he left
the house and she supposed he'd gone down to the
office; but she was uneasy, and telephoned his father.
Noble hadn't come. He didn't come all afternoon,
and he didn't go back to the house; and they telephoned
around to every place he <i>could</i> go that they
know of, and they couldn't find him or hear anything
about him at all—not anywhere." Mr. Atwater
coughed, and paused.</p>
<p>"But what," Aunt Harriet cried;—"<i>what</i> do they
think's become of him?"</p>
<p>"Old man Dill said they were all pretty anxious,"
said Mr. Atwater. "They're afraid Noble has—they're
afraid he's disappeared."</p>
<p>Aunt Fanny screamed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then, in perfect accord, they all turned to look at
Herbert, who rose and would have retired upstairs
had he been permitted.</p>
<p>As that perturbing evening wore on, word gradually
reached the most outlying members of the
Atwater family connection that Noble Dill was missing.
Ordinarily, this bit of news would have caused
them no severe anxiety. Noble's person and intellect
were so commonplace—"insignificant" was
the term usually preferred in his own circle—that
he was considered to be as nearly negligible as it is
charitable to consider a fellow-being. True, there
was one thing that set him apart; he was found
worthy of a superlative when he fell in love with
Julia; and of course this distinction caused him to
become better known and more talked about than
he had been in his earlier youth.</p>
<p>However, the eccentricities of a person in such an
extremity of love are seldom valued except as comedy,
and even then with no warmth of heart for the
comedian, but rather with an incredulous disdain;
so it is safe to say that under other circumstances,
Noble might have been missing, indeed, and few
of the Atwaters would have missed him. But as
matters stood they worried a great deal about him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></SPAN></span>
fearing that a rash act on his part might reflect
notoriety upon themselves on account of their beautiful
relative—and <i>The North End Daily Oriole</i>.
And when nine o'clock came and Mrs. Dill reported
to Herbert's father, over the telephone, that nothing
had yet been heard of her son, the pressure of those
who were blaming the <i>Oriole</i> more than they
blamed Julia became so wearing that Herbert decided
he would rather spend the remaining days of his life
running away from Wallie Torbin than put in any
more of such a dog's evening as he <i>was</i> putting in.
Thus he defined it.</p>
<p>He made a confession; that is to say, it was a
proclamation. He proclaimed his innocence. He
began history with a description of events distinctly
subsequent to Sunday pastimes with Patty Fairchild,
and explained how he and Henry had felt that
their parents would not always be with them, and as
their parents wished them to be polite, they had
resolved to be polite to Florence. Proceeding, he
related in detail her whole journalistic exploit.</p>
<p>Of the matter in hand he told the perfect and absolute
truth—and was immediately refuted, confuted,
and demonstrated to be a false witness by Aunt
Fanny, Aunt Carrie, and Cousin Virginia, who had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_343" id="Page_343"></SPAN></span>
all heard him vehemently declare, no longer ago
than the preceding Sunday evening, that he and his
partner had taken secure measures to prevent
Florence from ever again setting foot within the
Newspaper Building. In addition, he was quite
showered with definitions; and these, though so
various, all sought to phrase but the one subject:
his conduct in seeking to drag Florence into the mire,
when she was absent and could not defend herself.
Poor Florence would answer later in the evening, he
was told severely; and though her cause was thus
championed against the slander, it is true that some
of her defenders felt stirrings of curiosity in regard
to Florence. In fact, there was getting to be something
almost like a cloud upon her reputation.
There were several things for her to explain;—among
them, her taking it upon herself to see that
Noble received a copy of the <i>Oriole</i>, and also her
sudden departure from home and rather odd protraction
of absence therefrom. It was not thought
she was in good company. Uncle Joseph had telephoned
from a suburb that they were dining at a
farmhouse and would thence descend to the general
region of the movies.</p>
<p>"<i>Nobody</i> knows what that man'll do, when he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></SPAN></span>
decides to!" Aunt Carrie said nervously. "Letting
the poor child stay up so late! She ought to be in
bed this minute, even if it is Saturday night! Or
else she ought to be here to listen to her own bad
little cousin trying to put his terrible responsibility
on her shoulders."</p>
<p>One item of this description of himself the badgered
Herbert could not bear in silence, although he had
just declared that since the truth was so ill-respected
among his persecutors he would open his mouth no
more until the day of his death. He passed over
"bad," but furiously stated his height in feet, inches,
and fractions of inches.</p>
<p>Aunt Fanny shook her head in mourning. "That
may be, Herbert," she said gently. "But you must
try to realize it can't bring poor young Mr. Dill back
to his family."</p>
<p>Again Herbert just looked at her. He had no
indifference more profound than that upon which
her strained conception of the relation between
cause and effect seemed to touch;—from his point of
view, to be missing should be the lightest of calamities.
It is true that he was concerned with the restoration
of Noble Dill to the rest of the Dills so
far as such an event might affect his own incomparable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></SPAN></span>
misfortunes, but not otherwise. He regarded
Noble and Noble's disappearance merely as unfair
damage to himself, and he continued to look at
this sorrowing great-aunt of his until his thoughts
made his strange gaze appear to her so hardened
that she shook her head and looked away.</p>
<p>"Poor young Mr. Dill!" she said. "If someone
could only have been with him and kept talking to
him until he got used to the idea a little!"</p>
<p>Cousin Virginia nodded comprehendingly. "Yes,
it might have tided him over," she said. "He
wasn't handsome, nor impressive, of course, nor
anything like that, but he always spoke so nicely
to people on the street. I'm sure he never harmed
even a kitten, poor soul!"</p>
<p>"I'm sure he never did," Herbert's mother agreed
gently. "Not even a kitten. I do wonder where he
is now."</p>
<p>But Aunt Fanny uttered a little cry of protest.
"I'm afraid we may hear!" she said. "Any moment!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></SPAN></span></p>
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