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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. THE PARAGRAPH </h2>
<p>I was up betimes. Would Mrs. Packard appear at breakfast? I hardly thought
so. Yet who knows? Such women have great recuperative powers, and from one
so mysteriously affected anything might be expected. Ready at eight, I
hastened down to the second floor to find the lady, concerning whom I had
had these doubts, awaiting me on the threshold of her room. She was
carefully dressed and looked pale enough to have been up for hours. An
envelope was in her hand, and the smile which hailed my approach was cold
and constrained.</p>
<p>“Good morning,” said she. “Let us go down. Let us go down together. I
slept wretchedly and do not feel very strong. When did Mr. Packard come
in?”</p>
<p>“Late. He went directly to the library. He said that he had but a short
time in which to rest, and would take what sleep he could get on the
lounge, when I told him of your very natural nervous attack.”</p>
<p>She sighed—a sigh which came from no inconsiderable depths—then
with a proud and resolute gesture preceded me down-stairs.</p>
<p>Her husband was already in the breakfast-room. I could hear his voice as
we turned at the foot of the stairs. Mrs. Packard, hearing it, too, drew
herself up still more firmly and was passing bravely forward, when Nixon’s
gray head protruded from the doorway and I heard him say:</p>
<p>“There’s company for breakfast, ma’am. His Honor could not spare Mr.
Steele and asked me to set a place for him.”</p>
<p>I noted a momentary hesitation on Mrs. Packard’s part, then she silently
acquiesced and we both passed on. In another instant we were receiving the
greetings and apologies of the gentlemen. If Mr. Steele had expected that
his employer’s wife would offer him her hand, he was disappointed.</p>
<p>“I am happy to welcome one who has proved so useful to my husband,” she
remarked with cool though careful courtesy as we all sat down at the
table; and, without waiting for an answer, she proceeded to pour the
coffee with a proud grace which gave no hint of the extreme feeling by
which I had seen her moved the night before.</p>
<p>Had I known her better I might have found something extremely unnatural in
her manner and the very evident restraint she put upon herself through the
whole meal; but not having any acquaintance with her ordinary bearing
under conditions purely social, I was thrown out of my calculations by the
cold ease with which she presided at her end of the table, and the set
smile with which she greeted all remarks, whether volunteered by her
husband or by his respectful but affable secretary. I noticed, however,
that she ate little.</p>
<p>Nixon, whom I dared not watch, did not serve with his usual precision,—this
I perceived from the surprised look cast at him by Mayor Packard on at
least two occasions. Though to the ordinary eye a commonplace meal, it had
elements of tragedy in it which made the least movement on the part of
those engaged in it of real moment to me. I was about to leave the table
unenlightened, however, when Mrs. Packard rose and, drawing a letter from
under the tray before which she sat, let her glances pass from one
gentleman to the other with a look of decided inquiry. I drew in my breath
and by dropping my handkerchief sought an excuse for lingering in the room
an instant longer.</p>
<p>“Will—may I ask one of you,” she stammered with her first show of
embarrassment during the meal, “to—to post this letter for me?”</p>
<p>Both gentlemen were standing and both gentlemen reached for it; but it was
into the secretary’s hand she put it, though her husband’s was much the
nearer. As Mr. Steele received it he gave it the casual glance natural
under the circumstances,—a glance which instantly, however, took on
an air of surprise that ended in a smile.</p>
<p>“Have you not made some mistake?” he asked.</p>
<p>“This does not look like a letter.” And he handed her back the paper she
had given him. With an involuntary ingathering of her breath, she seemed
to wake out of some dream and, looking down at the envelope she held, she
crushed it in her hand with a little laugh in which I heard the note of
real gaiety for the first time.</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” she exclaimed; and, meeting his amused gaze with one equally
expressive, she carelessly added: “I certainly brought a letter down with
me.”</p>
<p>Bowing pleasantly, but with that indefinable air of respect which bespeaks
the stranger, he waited while she hastened back to the tray and drew from
under it a second paper.</p>
<p>“Pardon my carelessness,” she said. “I must have caught up a scrawl of the
baby’s in taking this from my desk.”</p>
<p>She brought forward a letter and ended the whole remarkable episode by
handing it now to her husband, who, with an apologetic glance at the
other, put it in his pocket.</p>
<p>I say remarkable; for in the folded slip which had passed back and forth
between her and the secretary, I saw, or thought I saw, a likeness to the
paper she had brought the night before out of the attic.</p>
<p>If Mayor Packard saw anything unusual in his wife’s action he made no
mention of it when I went into his study at nine o’clock. And it was so
much of an enigma to me that I was not ready to venture a question
regarding it.</p>
<p>Her increased spirits and more natural conduct were the theme of the few
sentences he addressed me, and while he urged precaution and a continued
watch upon his wife, he expressed the fondest hope that he should find her
fully restored on his return at the end of two weeks.</p>
<p>I encouraged his hopes, and possibly shared them; but I changed my mind,
as he probably did his, when a few minutes later we met her in the hall
hurrying toward us with a newspaper in her hand and a ghastly look on her
face. “See! see! what they have dared to print!” she cried, with a look,
full of anguish, into his bewildered face.</p>
<p>He took the sheet, read, and flushed, then suddenly grew white.
“Outrageous!” he exclaimed. Then tenderly, “My poor darling! that they
should dare to drag your name into this abominable campaign!”</p>
<p>“And for no reason,” she faltered; “there is nothing wrong with me. You
believe that; you are sure of that,” she cried. I saw the article later.
It ran something like this:</p>
<p>“Rumor has it that not even our genial mayor’s closet is free from the
proverbial skeleton. Mrs. Packard’s health is not what it was,—and
some say that the causes are not purely physical.”</p>
<p>He tried to dissimulate. Putting his arm about her, he kissed her fondly
and protested with mingled energy and feeling:</p>
<p>“I believe you to be all you should be—a true woman and true wife.”</p>
<p>Her face lighted and she clung for a moment in passionate delight to his
breast; then she caught his look, which was tender but not altogether
open, and the shadows fell again as she murmured:</p>
<p>“You are not satisfied. Oh, what do you see, what do others see, that I
should be the subject of doubt? Tell me! I can never right myself till I
know.”</p>
<p>“I see a troubled face when I should see a happy one,” he answered
lightly; then, as she still clung in very evident question to his arm, he
observed gravely: “Two weeks ago you were the life of this house, and of
every other house into which your duties carried you. Why shouldn’t you be
the same to-day? Answer me that, dear, and all my doubts will vanish, I
assure you.”</p>
<p>“Henry,”—drooping her head and lacing her fingers in and out with
nervous hesitation,—“you will think me very foolish,—I know
that it will sound foolish, childish even, and utterly ridiculous; but I
can explain myself no other way. I have had a frightful experience—here—in
my own house—on the spot where I have been so happy, so unthinkingly
happy. Henry—do not laugh—it is real, very real, to me. The
specter which is said to haunt these walls has revealed itself to me. I
have seen the ghost.”</p>
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