Liddy came to my room on Sunday morning with a face as long as the

moral law. She laid out my things as usual, but I missed her customary

garrulousness. I was not regaled with the new cook's extravagance as

to eggs, and she even forbore to mention "that Jamieson," on whose

arrival she had looked with silent disfavor.

"What's the matter, Liddy?" I asked at last. "Didn't you sleep last

night?"

"No, ma'm," she said stiffly.

"Did you have two cups of coffee at your dinner?" I inquired.

"No, ma'm," indignantly.

I sat up and almost upset my hot water--I always take a cup of hot

water with a pinch of salt, before I get up. It tones the stomach.

"Liddy Allen," I said, "stop combing that switch and tell me what is

wrong with you."

Liddy heaved a sigh.

"Girl and woman," she said, "I've been with you twenty-five years, Miss

Rachel, through good temper and bad--" the idea! and what I have taken

from her in the way of sulks!--"but I guess I can't stand it any

longer. My trunk's packed."

"Who packed it?" I asked, expecting from her tone to be told she had

wakened to find it done by some ghostly hand.

"I did; Miss Rachel, you won't believe me when I tell you this house is

haunted. Who was it fell down the clothes chute? Who was it scared

Miss Louise almost into her grave?"

"I'm doing my best to find out," I said. "What in the world are you

driving at?" She drew a long breath.

"There is a hole in the trunk-room wall, dug out since last night.

It's big enough to put your head in, and the plaster's all over the

place."

"Nonsense!" I said. "Plaster is always falling."

But Liddy clenched that.

"Just ask Alex," she said. "When he put the new cook's trunk there

last night the wall was as smooth as this. This morning it's dug out,

and there's plaster on the cook's trunk. Miss Rachel, you can get a

dozen detectives and put one on every stair in the house, and you'll

never catch anything. There's some things you can't handcuff."

Liddy was right. As soon as I could, I went up to the trunk-room,

which was directly over my bedroom. The plan of the upper story of the

house was like that of the second floor, in the main. One end,

however, over the east wing, had been left only roughly finished, the

intention having been to convert it into a ball-room at some future

time. The maids' rooms, trunk-room, and various store-rooms, including

a large airy linen-room, opened from a long corridor, like that on the

second floor. And in the trunk-room, as Liddy had said, was a fresh

break in the plaster.




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