An Unexplained Mystery
The following narrative was prepared originally—not for publication, but as a report to be laid before the police. The facts of the case having, however, entirely baffled detection, and the fate of the mysterious lady still being unknown, it has been thought best to give the story to the public in this form, in the hope that it may meet the eye of some one who shall at last be able to throw some light upon the matter.
STATEMENT OF ARTHUR LOVELL.
Five summers ago, when the civil war was raging at its height, and communication between North and South was difficult and uncertain, I left the city to spend the hot months at a hotel on Staten Island. My business was very absorbing, and I could there have the benefit of country air, and yet be in town every day. The house where I took up my abode was filled with a gay set of New Yorkers, of whom I saw very little, the daylight hours being passed in the city, and evenings spent in either visiting my friends or in solitary meditation over a pipe.
Thus some two weeks had glided away, when one night I went out to dine in town, and so reached my summer quarters at an unusually late hour. The front of the house was quite deserted; I heard sounds of music and dancing from the drawing-room, and turned aside into a small parlor where I generally found quiet. There, beside the table, reading by the shaded light, sat a lady whom I had never seen.
At my entrance she raised her head from her book and looked at me. That one glance haunts me yet. In that second of time a whole new world seemed to open before me, and I, who had never felt any interest in a woman, was from… Read More