NOTHING of all this was communicated
to Edith. After a few weeks of prostration strength
came slowly back to mind and body, and with returning
strength her interest in her old work revived.
Her feet went down again into lowly ways, and her
hands took hold of suffering.
Immediately on receipt of Freeling’s
letter and affidavit, Mr. Dinneford had taken steps
to procure a pardon for George Granger. It came
within a few days after the application was made, and
the young man was taken from the asylum where he had
been for three years.
Mr. Dinneford went to him with Freeling’s
affidavit and the pardon, and placing them in his
hands, watched him closely to see the effect they
would produce. He found him greatly changed in
appearance, looking older by many years. His
manner was quiet, as that of one who had learned submission
after long suffering. But his eyes were clear
and steady, and without sign of mental aberration.
He read Freeling’s affidavit first, folded it
in an absent kind of way, as if he were dreaming,
reopened and read it through again. Then Mr.
Dinneford saw a strong shiver pass over him; he became
pale and slightly convulsed. His face sunk in
his hands, and he sat for a while struggling with
emotions that he found it almost impossible to hold
back.
When he looked up, the wild struggle was over.
“It is too late,” he said.
“No, George, it is never too
late,” replied Mr. Dinneford. “You
have suffered a cruel wrong, but in the future there
are for you, I doubt not, many compensations.”
He shook his head in a dreary way, murmuring,
“I have lost too much.”
“Nothing that may not be restored.
And in all you have not lost a good conscience.”
“No, thank God!” answered
the young man, with a sudden flush in his face.
“But for that anchor to my soul, I should have
long ago drifted out to sea a helpless wreck.
No thank God! I have not lost a good conscience.”
“You have not yet read the other
paper,” said Mr. Dinneford. “It is
your pardon.”
“Pardon!” An indignant
flash came into Granger’s eyes. “Oh,
sir, that hurts too deeply. Pardon! I am
not a criminal.”
“Falsely so regarded in the
eyes of the law, but now proved to be innocent, and
so expressed by the governor. It is not a pardon
in any sense of remission, but a declaration of innocence
and sorrow for the undeserved wrongs you have suffered.”
“It is well,” he answered,
gloomily—“the best that can be done;
and I should be thankful.”
“You cannot be more deeply thankful
than I am, George.” Mr. Dinneford spoke
with much feeling. “Let us bury this dreadful
past out of our sight, and trust in God for a better
future. You are free again, and your innocence
shall, so far as I have power to do it, be made as
clear as noonday. You are at liberty to depart
from here at once. Will you go with me now?”
Granger lifted a half-surprised look
to Mr. Dinneford’s face.
“Thank you,” he replied,
after a few moments’ thought. “I shall
never forget your kindness, but I prefer remaining
here for a few days, until I can confer with my friends
and make some decision as to the future.”
Granger’s manner grew reserved,
almost embarrassed. Mr. Dinneford was not wrong
in his impression of the cause. How could he help
thinking of Edith, who, turning against him with the
rest, had accepted the theory of guilt and pronounced
her sentence upon him, hardest of all to bear?
So it appeared to him, for he had nothing but the
hard fact before him that she had applied for and obtained
a divorce.
Yes, it was the thought of Edith that
drew Granger back and covered him with reserve.
What more could Mr. Dinneford say? He had not
considered all the hearings of this unhappy case; but
now that he remembered the divorce, he began to see,
how full of embarrassment it was, and how delicate
the relation he bore to this unhappy victim of his
wife’s dreadful crime.
What could he say for Edith?
Nothing! He knew that her heart had never turned
itself away from this man, though she had, under a
pressure she was not strong enough to resist, turned
her back upon him and cast aside his dishonored name,
thus testifying to the world that she believed him
base and criminal. If he should speak of her,
would not the young man answer with indignant scorn?
“Give me the address of your
friends, and I will call upon them immediately,”
said Mr. Dinneford, replying, after a long silence,
to Granger’s last remark. “I am here
to repair, to any extent that in me lies the frightful
wrongs you have suffered. I shall make your cause
my own, and never rest until every false tarnish shall
be wiped from your name. In honor and conscience
I am bound to this.”
Looking at the young man intently,
he saw a grateful response in the warmer color that
broke into his face and in the moisture that filled
his eyes.
“I would be base if I were not
thankful, Mr. Dinneford,” Granger replied.
“But you cannot put yourself in my place, cannot
know what I have suffered, cannot comprehend the sense
of wrong and cruel rejection that has filled my soul
with the very gall of bitterness. To be cast
out utterly, suddenly and without warning from heaven
into hell, and for no evil thought or act! Ah,
sir! you do not understand.”
“It was a frightful ordeal,
George,” answered Mr. Dinneford, laying his
hand on Granger with the tenderness of a father.
“But, thank God! it is over. You have stood
the terrible heat, and now, coming out of the furnace,
I shall see to it that not even the smell of fire
remain upon your garments.”
Still the young man could not be moved
from his purpose to remain at the asylum until he
had seen and conferred with his friends, in whose
hands Mr. Dinneford placed the governor’s pardon
and the affidavit of Lloyd Freeling setting forth
his innocence.
Mrs. Bray did not call on Mr. Dinneford,
as she had promised. She had quarreled with Pinky
Swett, as the reader will remember, and in a fit of
blind anger thrust her from the room. But in the
next moment she remembered that she did not know where
the girl lived, and if she lost sight of her now,
might not again come across her for weeks or months.
So putting on her hat and cloak hurriedly, she waited
until she heard Pinky going down stairs, and then came
out noiselessly, and followed her into the street.
She had to be quick in her movements, for Pinky, hot
with anger, was dashing off at a rapid speed.
For three or four blocks Mrs. Bray kept her in view;
but there being only a few persons in the street, she
had to remain at a considerable distance behind, so
as not to attract her attention. Suddenly, she
lost sight of Pinky. She had looked back on hearing
a noise in the street; turning again, she could see
nothing of the girl. Hurrying forward to the
corner which Pinky had in all probability turned,
Mrs. Bray looked eagerly up and down, but to her disappointment
Pinky was not in sight.
“Somewhere here. I thought
it was farther off,” said Mrs. Bray to herself.
“It’s too bad that I should have lost sight
of her.”
She stood irresolute for a little
while, then walked down one of the blocks and back
on the other side. Halfway down, a small street
or alley divided the block.
“It’s in there, no doubt,”
said Mrs. Bray, speaking to herself again. On
the corner was a small shop in which notions and trimmings
were sold. Going into this, she asked for some
trifling articles, and while looking over them drew
the woman who kept the shop into conversation.
“What kind of people live in
this little street?” she inquired, in a half-careless
tone.
The woman smiled as she answered,
with a slight toss of the head,
“Oh, all kinds.”
“Good, bad and indifferent?”
“Yes, white sheep and black.”
“So I thought. The black sheep will get
in. You can’t keep ’em out.”
“No, and ’tisn’t
much use trying,” answered the shop-keeper, with
a levity of manner not unmarked by Mrs. Bray, who
said,
“The black sheep have to live as well as the
white ones.”
“Just so. You hit the nail there.”
“And I suppose you find their money as good
as that of the whitest?”
“Oh yes.”
“And quite as freely spent?”
“As to that,” answered
the woman, who was inclined to be talkative and gossipy,
“we make more out of the black sheep than out
of the white ones. They don’t higgle so
about prices. Not that we have two prices, but
you see they don’t try to beat us down, and never
stop to worry about the cost of a thing if they happen
to fancy it. They look and buy, and there’s
the end of it.”
“I understand,” remarked
Mrs. Bray, with a familiar nod. “It may
be wicked to say so; but if I kept a store like this,
I’d rather have the sinners for customers than
the saints.”
She had taken a seat at the counter;
and now, leaning forward upon her arms and looking
at the shop-woman in a pleasant, half-confidential
way, said,
“You know everybody about here?”
“Pretty much.”
“The black sheep as well as the white?”
“As customers.”
“Of course; that’s all
I mean,” was returned. “I’d
be sorry if you knew them in any other way—some
of them, at least.” Then, after a pause,
“Do you know a girl they call Pinky?”
“I may know her, but not by
that name. What kind of a looking person is she?”
“A tall, bold-faced, dashing,
dare-devil sort of a girl, with a snaky look in her
eyes. She wears a pink hat with a white feather.”
“Yes, I think I have seen some
one like that, but she’s not been around here
long.”
“When did you see her last?”
“If it’s the same one
you mean, I saw her go by here not ten minutes ago.
She lives somewhere down the alley.”
“Do you know the house?”
“I do not; but it can be found, no doubt.
You called her Pinky.”
“Yes. Her name is Pinky Swett.”
“O-h! o-h!” ejaculated
the shop-woman, lifting her eyebrows in a surprised
way. “Why, that’s the girl the police
were after. They said she’d run off with
somebody’s child.”
“Did they arrest her?”
asked Mrs. Bray, repressing, as far as possible, all
excitement.
“They took her off once or twice,
I believe, but didn’t make anything out of her.
At any rate, the child was not found. It belonged,
they said, to a rich up-town family that the girl was
trying to black-mail. But I don’t see how
that could be.”
“The child isn’t about here?”
“Oh dear, no! If it was,
it would have been found long before this, for the
police are hunting around sharp. If it’s
all as they say, she’s got it hid somewhere
else.”
While Mrs. Bray talked with the shop-woman,
Pinky, who had made a hurried call at her room, only
a hundred yards away, was going as fast as a street-car
could take her to a distant part of the city.
On leaving the car at the corner of a narrow, half-deserted
street, in which the only sign of life was a child
or two at play in the snow and a couple of goats lying
on a cellar-door, she walked for half the distance
of a block, and then turned into a court lined on
both sides with small, ill-conditioned houses, not
half of them tenanted. Snow and ice blocked the
little road-way, except where a narrow path had been
cut along close to the houses.
Without knocking, Pinky entered one
of these poor tenements. As she pushed open the
door, a woman who was crouching down before a small
stove, on which something was cooking, started up with
a look of surprise that changed to one of anxiety
and fear the moment she recognized her visitor.
“Is Andy all right?” cried Pinky, alarm
in her face.
The woman tried to stammer out something,
but did not make herself understood. At this,
Pinky, into whose eyes flashed a fierce light, caught
her by the wrists in a grip that almost crushed the
bones.
“Out with it! where is Andy?”
Still the frightened woman could not speak.
“If that child isn’t here,
I’ll murder you!” said Pinky, now white
with anger, tightening her grasp.
At this, with a desperate effort,
the woman flung her off, and catching up a long wooden
bench, raised it over her head.
“If there’s to be any
murder going on,” she said, recovering her powers
of speech, “I’ll take the first hand!
As for the troublesome brat, he’s gone.
Got out of the window and climbed down the spout.
Wonder he wasn’t killed. Did fall—I
don’t know how far—and must have
hurt himself, for I heard a noise as if something heavy
had dropped in the yard, but thought it was next door.
Half an hour afterward, in going up stairs and opening
the door of the room where I kept him locked in, I
found it empty and the window open. That’s
the whole story. I ran out and looked everywhere,
but he was off. And now, if the murder is to
come, I’m going to be in first.”
And she still kept the long wooden
bench poised above her head.
Pinky saw a dangerous look in the woman’s eyes.
“Put that thing down,”
she cried, “and don’t be a fool. Let
me see;” and she darted past the woman and ran
up stairs. She found the window of Andy’s
prison open and the print of his little fingers on
the snow-covered sill outside, where he had held on
before dropping to the ground, a distance of many
feet. There was no doubt now in her mind as to
the truth of the woman’s story. The child
had made his escape.
“Have you been into all the
neighbors’ houses?” asked Pinky as she
came down hastily.
“Into some, but not all,” she replied.
“How long is it since he got away?”
“More than two hours.”
“And you’ve been sticking
down here, instead of ransacking every hole and corner
in the neighborhood. I can hardly keep my hands
off of you.”
The woman was on the alert. Pinky
saw this, and did not attempt to put her threat into
execution. After pouring out her wrath in a flood
of angry invectives, she went out and began a thorough
search of the neighborhood, going into every house
for a distance of three or four blocks in all directions.
But she could neither find the child nor get the smallest
trace of him. He had dropped out of sight, so
far as she was concerned, as completely as if he had
fallen into the sea.