least, act for her." And I tore the disputed thing into a dozen pieces.
"In the name of decency," cried Searle, "what does this horrid business mean?"
Mr. Searle was about to break out upon him; but at this moment his sister appeared on the staircase, summoned evidently by our high-pitched and angry voices. She had exchanged her dinner-dress for a dark dressing-gown, removed her ornaments, and begun to disarrange her hair, a heavy tress of which escaped from the comb. She hurried downward, with a pale, questioning face. Feeling distinctly that, for ourselves, immediate departure was in the air, and divining Mr. Tottenham to be a butler of remarkable intuitions and extreme celerity, I seized the opportunity to request him, sotto voce, to send a carriage to the door without delay. "And put up our things," I added.
Our host rushed at his, sister and seized the white wrist which escaped from the loose sleeve of her dress. "What was in that note? " he demanded.
Miss Searle looked first at its scattered fragments and then at her cousin. "Did you read it?" she asked.
"No, but I thank you for it!" said Searle.
Her eyes for an instant communed brightly with his own; then she transferred them to her brother's face, where the light went out of them and left a