"That must be the Italian who is stopping here for the night," she

said. "We do not generally take such people; but he spoke so civilly,

and said it was so hard to get lodging for his bear--"

"His bear!" I exclaimed.

"Oh yes," she answered, with a little laugh, "he has a bear with him.

I suppose it dances, and so makes a living for its master. Anyway, I

said he might stay and lodge with our stable-man. He would sing very

well if he had a better voice--don't you think so?"

"We do not generally accommodate," "I said he might stay"--these were

phrases which I turned over in my mind. If she were the lady clerk she

might say "we"--even the boy said "we"--but "I said he might stay" was

different. A daughter of a landlord or a landlady might say that.

I made a remark about the difficulty of finding lodging for man and

beast, if the beast happened to be a bear, and I had scarcely finished

it when from the house there came a shrill voice, flavored with lemon

without any sugar, and it said, "Mrs. Chester!"

"Excuse me," said the young lady, and immediately she went in-doors.

Here was a revelation! Mrs. Chester! Strange to say, I had not thought

of her as a married woman; and yet, now that I recalled her manner of

perfect self-possession, she did suggest the idea of a satisfied young

wife. And Mr. Chester--what of him? Could it be possible? Hardly.

There was nothing about her to suggest a widow.




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