The Shadow of the Rope by E. W. (Ernest William) Hornung
page 57 of 301 (18%)
page 57 of 301 (18%)
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few moments she was timorously knocking at the door of a house with a
card in the window. "It's you!" cried the woman who came, almost shutting the door in Rachel's face, leaving just space enough for her own. "You have a room to let," said Rachel, steadily. "But not to you," said the woman, quickly; and Rachel was not surprised, the other was so pale, so strangely agitated. "But why?" she asked. "I have been acquitted--thanks partly to your own evidence--and yet you of all women will not take me in! Do you mean to tell me that you actually think I did it still?" Rachel fully expected an affirmative. She was prepared for that opinion now from all the world; but for once a surprise was in store for her. The pale woman shifted her eyes, then raised them doggedly, and the look in them brought a sudden glow to Rachel's heart. "No, I don't think that, and never did," said the one independent witness for the defence. "But others do, and I am too near where it happened; it might empty my house and keep it empty." Rachel seized her hand. "Never mind, never mind," she whispered. "It is better, ten thousand times, that you should believe in me, that any woman should! Thank you, and God bless you, for that!" |
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