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I will teach you to love me. Let me comfort and protect you."
The girl lifted her head. "You dare ask that after what happened the other night?"
"G.o.d knows how I regret that awful mistake," he replied earnestly.
"But you know I was not myself. I am no worse than other men, and--"
He hesitated--"you must remember that it was through you that I drank too much. I could not refuse when you gave me the gla.s.s. I never was intoxicated before. Won't you forgive me this once and let me devote my life to righting the wrong?"
Amy's eyes fell. The seeming justice and truth of his words impressed her.
Again the man saw his advantage and talked to her of the life his wealth would help her to live. She would be free from every care. They would travel abroad until her father had forgotten his wrath, and could she doubt that all would be well when she returned as his wife?
Amy hesitated, and again he pointed out the awful danger of her trying to live alone. As he talked, the girl's utter helplessness overcame her, and rising to her feet she faltered, "Give me time to think; I will come to you here in an hour."
When she returned she said: "Mr. Whitley, I will marry you; but my people must not know until later."
Whitley started toward her eagerly, but she stepped back. "Not now.
Wait. We will go east on the evening train and will take every precaution to hide our course. We will travel in separate cars as strangers, and while stopping at hotels will register under a.s.sumed names, and will not even recognize each other. When we reach New York, I will become your wife."
Whitley could scarcely conceal his triumph; that she should so fully play into his hand was to him the greatest good luck. With every expression of love he agreed to everything; but when he would embrace her she put him away--"Not until we are married;" and lie was compelled to be satisfied.
For a while longer they talked, completing their plans. Then drawing out his pocket-book he said: "By-the-way, you will need money." But she shook her head: "Not until I have the right. Here are my jewels; sell them for me."
He protested and laughed at her scruples. But she insisted. And at last, he took the valuables and left the hotel. Going to a bank where he was known, he drew a large sum of money, and returning, placed a roll of bills in her hand. Thinking that it was the price of her rings, she accepted it without the slightest question.
That night, he bought a ticket for Chicago, over the Wabash from St.
Louis, taking a chair car, while she purchased one for a little town on the Alton, and traveled in a sleeper. But at St. Louis, they remained two days, stopping at a hotel agreed upon, but as strangers. Then they again took tickets for different stations, over another road, but stopped at Detroit. It was here that Amy's suspicions were aroused.
She was sitting at dinner, when Whitley entered the dining room with two traveling men who seemed to be well acquainted with him. The trio, laughing and talking boisterously, seated themselves at a table behind her. Recognizing Whitley's voice, she lifted her eyes to a mirror opposite, and to her horror, distinctly saw him point her out to his friends.
Amy's dinner remained untasted, and hiding her confusion as best she could, she rose to leave the room. As she pa.s.sed the table where Whitley and the men were eating, the two drummers looked at her in such a way that the color rushed to her pale cheeks in a crimson flame. Later, at the depot, she saw them again, and was sure, from Whitley's manner, that he had been drinking.
Once more aboard the train, the girl gave herself up to troubled thought. Worn out by the long journey under such trying circ.u.mstances, and the lonely hours among strangers at the hotels, and now thoroughly frightened at the possible outcome when they reached New York, the poor child worried herself into such a state that when they left the cars at Buffalo, Whitley became frightened, and in spite of her.
protests, registered at the hotel as her brother and called in a physician.
The doctor at once insisted that she be removed to a boarding place, where she could have perfect rest and quiet, and with his help, such a place was found; Whitley, as her brother, making all arrangements.
For three weeks the poor girl lay between life and death, and strangely enough, in her delirium, called not once for father or mother or brother, but always for d.i.c.k, and always begged him to save her from some great danger. Whitley was at the house every day, and procured her every attention that money could buy. But when at last she began to mend, something in her eyes as she looked at him, made him curse beneath his breath.
Day after day she put him off when he urged marriage, saying "When we get to New York." But at last the time came when she could offer no excuse for longer delay, and in a few firm words she told him that she could not keep her promise, telling him why and begging his forgiveness if she wronged him.
Then the man's true nature showed itself and he cursed her for being a fool; taunted her with using his money, and swore that he would force her to come to him.
That afternoon, the landlady came to her room, and placing a letter in her hand, asked, "Will you please be kind enough to explain that?"
Amy read the note, which informed the lady of the house that her boarder was a woman of questionable character, and that the man who was paying her bills was not her brother. With a sinking heart, Amy saw that the writing was Jim Whitley's. Her face flushed painfully. "I did not know that he was paying my bills," she said, slowly.
"Then it is true," exclaimed the woman. "He is not your brother?"
Amy was silent. She could find no words to explain.
"You must leave this house instantly. If it were not for the publicity I would hand you over to the police."
She went to a cheap, but respectable hotel, and the next morning, Whitley, who had not lost sight of her, managed to force an interview.
"Will you come to me now?" he asked. "You see what you may expect from the world."
Her only reply was, "I will take my own life before I would trust it in your hands." And he, knowing that she spoke the truth, left her to return to Boyd City.
A few days later, when d.i.c.k Falkner stepped from the cars at Buffalo, and hurried through the depot toward the hack that bore the name of the hotel where Whitley had left Amy, he did not notice that the girl he had come so far to find, was standing at the window of the ticket office, and while the proprietor of the hotel was explaining why Miss Wheeler had left his house, the west-bound train was carrying Amy toward Cleveland.
Whitley had written a letter to the landlord, explaining the character of the woman calling herself Miss Wheeler, and had just dropped it in the box, when d.i.c.k met him in the post office on the day of Jim's arrival home.
With the aid of the Buffalo police, d.i.c.k searched long and carefully for the missing girl, but with no results, and at last, his small savings nearly exhausted, he was forced to return to Boyd City, where he arrived just in time to take an active part in the new movement inaugurated by Rev. Cameron and the Young People's Union.
In Cleveland, Amy sought out a cheap lodging house, for she realized that her means were limited, and began a weary search for employment.
Day after day she went from place to place answering advertis.e.m.e.nts for positions which she thought she could fill. Walking all she could she took a car only when her strength failed, but always met with the same result; a cold dismissal because she could give no references; not a kind look; not an encouraging word; not a helpful smile. As the days went by, her face grew hard and her eyes had a hopeless, defiant look, that still lessened her chances of success, and gave some cause for the suspicious glances she encountered on every hand, though her features showed that under better circ.u.mstances she would be beautiful.
One evening as she stood on the street corner, tired out, s.h.i.+vering in the sharp wind, confused by the rush and roar of the city, and in doubt as to the car she should take, a tall, beautifully dressed woman stopped by her side, waiting also for a car.
Amy, trembling, asked if she would direct her. The lady looked at her keenly as she gave the needed information, and then added kindly, "You are evidently not acquainted in Cleveland."
Amy admitted that she was a stranger.
"And where is your home?"
"I have none," was the sad reply.
"You are stopping with friends, I suppose?"
Amy shook her head and faltered, "No, I know no one in the city."
The woman grew very kind. "You poor child," she said, "you look as though you were in distress. Can't I help you?"
Tears filled the brown eyes that were lifted pleadingly to the face of the questioner, and a dry sob was the only answer.
"Come with me, dear," said the woman, taking her kindly by the arm.
"This is my car. Come and let me help you."
They boarded the car, and after a long ride, entered a finely furnished house in a part of the city far from Amy's boarding place. The woman took Amy to her own apartments, and after giving her a clean bath and a warm supper, sat with her before the fire, while the girl poured out her story to the only sympathetic listener she had met.
When she had finished, the woman said, "You have not told me your name."
"You may call me Amy. I have no other name."
Again the woman spoke slowly: "You cannot find work. No one will receive you. But why should you care? You are beautiful."
Amy looked at her in wonder, and the woman explained how she had many girls in her home, who with fine dresses and jewels, lived a life of ease and luxury.