"Here is advertising enough to satisfy the greediest appetite for
print," she remarked grimly.
"He's on one of his brutal drunks." The words seemed to grit in the
girl's throat. "I wish he were dead! Oh, I wish he were dead!"
Miss Van Arsdale laid hold on her shoulders and shook her hard. "Listen
to me, Irene Welland. You're on the way to hysterics or some such
foolishness. I won't have it! Do you understand? Are you listening to
me?"
"I'm listening. But it won't make any difference what you say."
"Look at me. Don't stare into nothingness that way. Have you read this?"
"Enough of it. It ends everything."
"I should hope so, indeed. My dear!" The woman's voice changed and
softened. "You haven't found that you cared for him, after all, more
than you thought? It isn't that?"
"No; it isn't that. It's the beastliness of the whole thing. It's the
disgrace."
Miss Van Arsdale turned to the paper again.
"Your name isn't given."
"It might as well be. As soon as it gets back to New York, every one
will know."
"If I read correctly between the lines of this scurrilous thing, Mr.
Holmesley gave what was to have been his bachelor dinner, took too much
to drink, and suggested that every man there go on a separate search for
the lost bride offering two thousand dollars reward for the one who
found her.
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