[The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Loudwater Mystery CHAPTER XIII 18/26
I'm feeling a different man, and I'll baulk them yet." "Of course you will, Jim," said Elizabeth, and she opened the door. "Lord, how I wish I was coming in with you--back in my old place! I should be seeing you most of the time," he said wistfully. Elizabeth stopped short, flushing, and looked at him with suddenly excited eyes. At his words a great thought had come into her mind. "Wait a minute, Jim.
Wait till I come back," she said somewhat breathlessly, and, leaving the door open, she hurried down the passage. She hurried up to her room, took off her hat, and hurried to Olivia.
She found her in her sitting-room looking through an evening paper to learn if any new fact about the murder had come to light. "If you please, your ladyship, James Hutchings has come to ask if your ladyship would like him to come back for the time being till you've got suited with another butler," said Elizabeth in a rather breathless voice. Olivia looked at Elizabeth's flushed, excited and hopeful face, and smiled. "Why, have you and James made it up, Elizabeth ?" she said. "Yes, m'lady," said Elizabeth, and the flush deepened in her cheeks. "Then go and tell him to come back, by all means," said Olivia. "Thank you, m'lady," said Elizabeth, in accents of profound gratitude, and she ran out of the room. Olivia smiled and then she sighed.
It was pleasant to have given Elizabeth such obviously keen pleasure.
She never dreamed that Elizabeth and James Hutchings were under the same strain of fear and anxiety as she herself, and that she had given them great help in their trouble, for Elizabeth saw that the return of James Hutchings to his situation would give the wagging tongues full pause. James Hutchings was dumbfounded on receiving the message.
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