The Greatest Murder Mysteries of Mary Roberts Rinehart - 25 Titles in One Edition. Mary Roberts Rinehart. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Mary Roberts Rinehart
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 9788027244430
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as I have, she'll learn to let each day take care of itself—not to worry about yesterday or expect anything of to-morrow."

      "And how about to-day?" I asked, smiling at the contradiction of her pessimistic speech and her cheerful face.

      "And to work like the deuce to-day," she said, and went smiling down the hall.

      I had brought in some pink roses, and when I'd put Aggie's nightgown on her and the wool in her nose, I had Miss Lewis take me to Miss Blake's room.

      It was close at hand. If you know the Dunkirk Hospital, you know that the nurses' dormitory is directly beside the main building, and connected with it by doors on every floor. One of these doors was at the end of Tish's corridor, and Miss Blake's room was the first on the 'other side.

      Miss Lewis knocked and tried the door, but it was bolted.

      "Who's there?" asked a startled voice, quite close, as if it's owner had been standing just inside.

      "Miss Lewis, dear."

      "Just a moment."

      She opened the door almost immediately and admitted us. She had on only her night gown and slippers, and her hair was down in a thick braid. I have reached the time of life when I brush most of my hair by holding one end of it in my teeth, so I always notice hair.

      "You're up," said Miss Lewis accusingly.

      "Only to be sure the door was fastened," she protested, and got into her single bed again obediently.

      "Now don't be silly!" Miss Lewis said-"Why should you lock that door in the middle of the afternoon? I thought you were the girl who rescued the kitten from the ridge pole of the roof!"

      "That was different," said Miss Blake, and shut her eyes.

      "I don't want to disturb you," I said. "Only—my friend and I felt sorry that she caused you such a shock last night. And I want you to have these flowers."

      She seemed much pleased and Miss Lewis put them on the table by the bed, beside another bouquet already there, a Huge bunch of violets and lilies of the valley. Violets and lilies of the valley are Tommy's favorite combination!

      "Doctor Andrews been here this afternoon?" Miss Lewis asked, looking up from arranging the roses.

      "Once—twice," said the little nurse, with heightened color.

      "I see," said Miss Lewis. "And the husband of thirty-six telephoning all over the city for him."

      "The husband of thirty-six!" I repeated, astounded. They both laughed, and Miss Blake looked for a moment almost gay.

      "He is not a Mormon," she said. "It's a case of 'container for the thing contained.' Thirty-six is a room."

      I think the laugh did the little nurse good, but when we left, a few minutes later. Miss Lewis halted me a few steps from the door. We heard her cross the room quickly and the bolt of the door slip into place.

      "Queer, isn't it?" asked Miss Lewis. And I thought it was.

      Tommy Andrews came back late that night to see Aggie, but she had stopped sneezing and dropped into a doze. He beckoned me out into the hall.

      "How is she?" he asked. "Having been quick-silvered inside, I daresay she's been reflecting! Never mind. Miss Lizzie—I couldn't help that."

      "Tish wants to see you. Tommy," I said. "She—we found something this afternoon and I don't mind saying we are puzzled."

      "More mystery?" he asked, raising his eyebrows. "Don't tell me somebody else has shed his fleshy garment and hung it up— "

      "Please don't," I said, looking over my shoulder nervously. The hall was almost dark.

      "Look here," Tommy suggested in a whisper, "I'll make a bargain with you. I'll go in and listen to Aunt Tish without levity—I give you my word, no frivolity—if you'll come over and play propriety while I see Miss Blake."

      Seeing me eye him, he went on guiltily: "She's—sick, you know, and I've been there two or three times to-day already. If it gets out among the nurses— please, dear, good Aunt Lizzie!"

      Now, I'm not his aunt. For that matter, I'm a good ten years younger than Tish, but he's a handsome young rascal, and when a woman gets too old to be influenced by good looks, it's because she's gone blind with age, so I agreed on one condition.

      "Yes, if you'll see Tish first," I said, and he agreed.

      That was how we happened to be in Tish's room when Aggie screamed. Tish had just got to the footprint-on-the-wall part of her story, and even Tommy was looking rather queer, when Aggie sneezed. Then almost immediately she shrieked and the three of us were on our feet and starting for the door before she stopped. As we reached the hall, a nurse was running toward us, and the stillness in Aggie's room was horrible.

      It was dark. Which was strange, for Fd left the night light on at Aggie's request. Tommy pushed into the room first.

      "Where's the light switch?" he demanded. "Are you there. Miss Aggie?"

      There was no answer, but in the darkness every one heard a peculiar rustling sound, such as might be made by rubbing a hand over a piece of stiff silk. It was the nurse who found the switch almost instantly, and I think we expected nothing less than Aggie hanging by her neck to the chandelier. But she was lying quietly in bed, in a dead faint.

      When she came to, she muttered something about a dead foot and fainted again. By-eleven o'clock she seemed pretty much herself once more and even smiled sheepishly when Tommy suggested that it had been the fault of the thermometer. She thought herself that she had dreamed it, and Tish and I let her think so. But both of us had seen the same thing.

      Just over the head of Aggie's bed the pipe molding was wrenched loose and pulled down out of line!

      Chapter VI.

       Candle and Skylight

       Table of Contents

      Tish sent Miss Lewis in to sit with Aggie, and the three of us, including Tommy, met in Tish's room. She had brought her alcohol tea-kettle with her, and she insisted on making a cup of tea all around before we talked things over.

      "Besides," she remarked, measuring out the tea, "it's about a quarter of twelve now, and we may need a little tea-courage by midnight."

      "If that's the way you feel," Tommy said, from the bed, holding his empty cup ready for the tea. "I can get something from the medicine cupboard outside that has tea knocked out in the first round."

      "Not whiskey. Tommy!" Tish said with the tea pot in the air.

      "Certainly not! Spiritus frumenti," Tommy said with dignity, and Tish was reassured. But I knew what he meant, my great uncle having conducted a country pharmacy and done a large business among the farmers in that very remedy.

      When we'd had our tea and some salted wafers, Tish drew up a chair and faced Tommy and myself.

      "Now," she said, "what did Aggie see?"

      "Personally," Tommy remarked, balancing his teaspoon across the bridge of his nose, and holding his head far back to do it, "personally, I'm glad she only saw—or felt—a foot. It proves her really remarkable quality of mind. The ordinary woman, in a stew like that, would have seen an entire corpse, not to mention smelling sulphur." r

      Tish took the spoon off his nose and gave him a smart slap on the ear.

      "Thomas!" she said, "you will either be serious or go home. Do you remember what we told you about the room upstairs, a foot-mark on the wall not three feet from the ceiling?"

      Tommy nodded, with both hands covering his ears.

      "Do you realize," Tish went on, "that that room is directly over the one Aggie is occupying?''

      "Hadn't thought of it," said Tommy. "Is it?"