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The Ball at Dithmar’s 


A Thrilling Story


The name of Dithmar has been known in N— almost from its foundation, and members of that family had filled with honor many responsible positions in its gift. At the time of which I write, the head of the family was one Joseph Dithmar, a retired manufacturer of about sixty, a gentleman of culture as well as fortune. Mr. Dithmar’s household circle, besides himself, then consisted of his wife, by some years his junior, his son, Arthur, a young man of twenty, and two daughters, Helen and Mary. Helen was twenty-six, and though by no means ill-favored, bade fair always to remain a spinster of her own volition.

Mary, on the contrary, though much younger than her sister, did not share this strange aversion to marriage, and that was perhaps the reason that I had maintained for so long my acquaintance with and my friendship for the family. Mary was the belle of N—, and well merited the position on the score both of personal and intellectual beauty. She had numerous gentlemen friends, as was natural, but none that I considered my rivals.

There was, indeed, a certain Harry Duff—a sort of brainless, fashionable popinjay—who aspired to her favor, but his pretensions appeared so ridiculous to me that I did not give either him or them much thought or consideration. Besides, I had old Mr. Dithmar’s favor, and that went a long way toward strengthening my position and my complacency. Mary, too, seemed to lean toward me.

This was the state of affairs, when, one day in the winter of… Read More