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A Make-Believe Story


A Clever Woman’s Ruse with a Supposed Detective


 George Dunlap was hurrying through the railroad station at Springfield to catch the train for Montreal. He was a little late, and the knowledge of this fact so heightened the susceptibility of his nerves that, when a tall woman with her arms full of parcels fell heavily against him, dropping her parcels, some of which burst and scattered their contents in every direction, only the sense of the politeness due to her sex kept him from using an ejaculation that would at least have expressed great impatience. She had clutched him nervously as she slipped and he supported her a moment while he inquired if she was hurt.

“I don’t know,” she said, panting, “I turned my ankle—I feel terribly jarred.”

When she recovered herself sufficiently to stand without his help, he could do no less than to offer to gather up her parcels, and he had the satisfaction of feeling that he was doing his duty, and seeing his train steam out of the station at one and the same time.

“Well, as I have lost my train—” he began, as he stood holding some of her bundles in his arms.

“Was that your train?” she exclaimed, still visibly agitated. “It was mine, too, I think—I am not sure—I am a stranger, I want to go to Hartford.”

“This was not your train then,” he answered, “yours starts from the other side.”

“I was late, I had no time to get a ticket. What time does the next train go to Hartford?” she murmured, brokenly, lifting appealing eyes to his.

“I will find out for you,” he said, feeling quite compassionate toward her, though she was neither young nor pretty, and therefore had no legitimate claim to a stranger’s protection.

He conducted her to the waiting room and presently returned from the ticket office with the information that she would have to… Read More