The Black Eagle Mystery - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Black Eagle Mystery Part 36 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
And then came the awful and unexpected. I didn't think he'd dare to do it but he did. Turning to me with his gla.s.s in his hand, and his face so kind it made me melt like the ice cream, Jack said:
"And there's going to be another health drunk-Molly's. Molly Babbitts, the best friend that any man and woman ever had, the person who did the biggest thing in the whole Harland case."
He wasn't going to tell-he knew enough for that, he knew that Babbitts wasn't on, but he wanted _me_ to understand. I looked at their faces, Jack's with its grateful message, and Carol's saying the same, and Babbitts' red with pride and joy. _Then_ I couldn't bear it. Feeling queer and weak, I sat dumb, not touching my gla.s.s, looking at the plate.
"Why, Mollie," said Babbitts surprised, "aren't you going to answer?"
"No," I said suddenly, "not till I've told something first."
I guess I looked about as cheerful as the skeletons they used to have at feasts in foreign countries. Anyway I saw them all amazed, their eyes fixed staring on me. I stiffened up and set both hands hard on the edge of the table, and looked at Carol. My lips were so shaky I could hardly get out the words:
"You're all wrong-you've made a mistake. I didn't do it for you the way you think-I-I-" I turned to Jack and the tears began to spill out of my eyes, "I did it for _him_."
"_Me?_" he exclaimed.
"Yes, you. We swore to be friends once and that's what I am. I saw you were going to tell her. I thought it would ruin you and I knew I couldn't stop you-so-so-as _I_ didn't matter-I did it myself before you could."
He pushed back his chair all stirred and pale. Carol, with a catch of her breath, said my name-just "Molly," nothing more. But Babbitts, who didn't know where he was at, cried out:
"Did _what_? For Heaven's sake what's it all about?"
Then I told him-the whole thing-out it came with tears and sobs-all to him, every word of it, with not a voice to interrupt, and when it was done, down went my head on the table with my hair in the ice cream.
Well, what do you think happened? Was he mad-did he say, "You're a false, deceitful woman. Begone?" Oh, he didn't-he _didn't_! He got up and came around the table and Carol and Jack slipped away somewhere and left us alone.
Afterward in the parlor, me a sight with my nose red and the ice cream only half out of my hair, we talked it all out and they-Oh well, they said a lot of things-I can't tell you what-too many and sort of affecting. It made me feel awful uncomfortable, not knowing what to say, but Babbitts _adored_ it, couldn't get enough of it, just sat there nodding like the Chinese image on the mantelpiece, while those two fine people sat and threw bouquets at his wife.
On the way up the street, we didn't say much, walking close together hand tucked in arm. But suddenly, up under one of those big arc lights in Gramercy Park, he stopped short, and looking strange and solemn, gave me a kiss, a good loud smack, and said, sort of husky:
"I love you more this evening, Morningdew, than I ever did since the first day I met you."
Well-that's the end. Jack and Carol are going to be married this spring and go to Firehill. Babbitts and I have a standing invitation down there for every Sunday and all summer if we want. There's a great lawsuit started to prove the claims of Mrs. Whitehall and Carol as Johnston Barker's wife and child. He died without a will, so in the end they'll get most all he left-piles and piles of money. It's in the Whitney office and last time I saw Mr. Whitney he told me Carol would some day be one of the richest women in New York.
It won't spoil her-she's not that kind-a grand, fine woman, true blue every inch of her. I've come to know her well and I'm satisfied she's just the girl I would have chosen for Jack Reddy. Queer, isn't it, the way things come about? Here was I, searching for a wife for him, turning them all down, and he goes and stumbles on the only one in the country I'd think good enough. That's the way it is with life-when it looks most like a muddle it's going straightest. It sure is sort of confusing-but it's a good old world after all.