A Mystery, and Its Solution
by Amy Randolph
“It isn’t the value of the thing that I think so much about,” said Miss Ada Sinclair, deliberately taking off her spectacles and placing them in their black morocco case; “but it’s the feeling that I cannot fully trust those around me.”
Here was an awkward silence. Charles Sinclair, the old lady’s nephew, went on flourishing his own name with innumerable up-and-down strokes with his aunt’s big gold pen, looking annoyed the while. Did Aunt Ada mean to insinuate that she suspected him of stealing her old-fashioned garnet clasps? Sylvia Heart, the old lady’s pretty little “companion,” blushed painfully as she bent over her fine stitching, and wished that Miss Sinclair would not say such disagreeable things.
“For I’ve looked everywhere,” went on Miss Ada, “and I’m just as positive as if I was on my Bible oath, that I laid them on the dressing bureau when I came in from church. And that isn’t the only thing I’ve missed lately either; my anchor breastpin is gone, and my Irish point lace collar.”
“Hallo!” quoth Charley; “matters begin to look serious now. Have we a band of burglars among us, Aunt Ada? Sylvia, are you certain you’re not in league with a lot of discreditable fellows with black masks over their faces?”
“Charles, how can you talk so!” cried poor little Sylvia in distressed accents.
“Indeed, Charles, it is not a subject for jesting,” said Miss Sinclair, drawing herself up. “Things cannot disappear without hands, and Hannah has lived with me full five-and-twenty years, come next Christmas. And as for John the gardener, I would trust him with… Read More