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The Greatest Works of Anna Katharine Green


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spirit in and out of those streets, meeting no one I knew, not even my brother, though he was wandering about in very much the same manner, and with very much the same apprehensions.

      “The duplicity of the woman became very evident to me the next morning. In my last interview with her she had shown no relenting in her purpose towards me, but when I entered my office after this restless night in the streets, I found lying on my desk her little hand-bag, which had been sent down from Mrs. Parker’s. In it was the letter, just as you divined, Miss Butterworth. I had hardly got over the shock of this most unexpected good fortune when the news came that a woman had been found dead in my father’s house. What was I to think? That it was she, of course, and that my brother had been the man to let her in there. Miss Butterworth,” this is how he ended, “I make no demands upon you, as I have made no demands upon the police, to keep the secret contained in that letter from my much-abused brother. Or, rather, it is too late now to keep it, for I have told him all there was to tell, myself, and he has seen fit to overlook my fault, and to regard me with even more affection than he did before this dreadful tragedy came to harrow up our lives.”

      Do you wonder I like Franklin Van Burnam?

      The Misses Van Burnam call upon me regularly, and when they say “Dear old thing!” now, they mean it.

      Of Miss Althorpe I cannot trust myself to speak. She was, and is, the finest woman I know, and when the great shadow now hanging over her has lost some of its impenetrability, she will be a useful one again, or I do not rightly read the patient smile which makes her face so beautiful in its sadness.

      Olive Randolph has, at my request, taken up her abode in my house. The charm which she seems to have exerted over others she has exerted over me, and I doubt if I shall ever wish to part with her again. In return she gives me an affection which I am now getting old enough to appreciate. Her feeling for me and her gratitude to Miss Althorpe are the only treasures left her out of the wreck of her life, and it shall be my business to make them lasting ones.

      The fate of Randolph Stone is too well known for me to enlarge upon it. But before I bid farewell to his name, I must say that after that curt confession of his, “Yes, I did it, in the way and for the motive she alleged,” I have often tried to imagine the contradictory feelings with which he must have listened to the facts as they came out at the inquest, and convinced, as he had every reason to be, that the victim was his wife, heard his friend Howard not only accept her for his, but insist that he was the man who accompanied her to that house of death. He has never lifted the veil from those hours, and he never will, but I would give much of the peace of mind which has lately come to me, to know what his sensations were, not only at that time, but when, on the evening, after the murder, he opened the papers and read that the woman whom he had left for dead with her brain pierced by a hat-pin, had been found on that same floor crushed under a fallen cabinet; and what explanation he was ever able to make to himself for a fact so inexplicable.

       Footnotes:

      Lost Man's Lane:

       A Second Episode in the Life of Amelia Butterworth

       Table of Contents

       Preface

       Book I. The Knollys Family

       I. A Visit From Mr. Gryce

       II. I Am Tempted

       III. I Succumb

       IV. A Ghostly Interior

       V. A Strange Household

       VI. A Sombre Evening

       VII. The First Night

       VIII. On the Stairs

       IX. A New Acquaintance

       X. Secret Instructions

       XI. Men, Women, and Ghosts

       XII. The Phantom Coach

       XIII. Gossip

       XIV. I Forget My Age, Or, Rather, Remember It

       Book II. The Flower Parlor

       XV. Lucetta Fulfils My Expectation of Her

       XVI. Loreen

       XVII. The Flower Parlor

       XVIII. The Second Night

       XIX. A Knot of Crape

       XX. Questions

       XXI.