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a couple of particularly unseamanlike men, dressed in shiny tarpaulin hats and pea-jackets, with earrings and very smooth pomatumy hair, came into sight. Each man carried a pack and a big stick, and as they drew near their eyes wandered over window and door in a particularly searching way.

      They did not come to the front, but in a slouching, furtive way went past the front of the house, and round to the back, where the next minute there was a new tapping made by the knob of a stick on a door, and a moment later a buzzing murmur of voices arose.

      Aunt Marguerite had nothing whatever to do, and the murmur interested her to the extent of making her rise, go across her room, and through a door at the back into her bed-chamber, where an open lattice window had a chair beneath, and the said window being just over the back entrance from whence the murmur came. Aunt Marguerite had nothing to do but go and sit down there unseen, and hear every word that was said.

      “Yes,” said the familiar voice of brown-faced, black-haired Liza; “they’re beautiful, but I haven’t got the money.”

      “That there red ribbon’d just soot you, my lass,” said a deep voice, so fuzzy that it must have come from under a woollen jacket.

      “Just look at that there hankychy, too,” said another deep voice. “Did you ever see a better match?”

      “Never,” said the other deep voice emphatically.

      “Yes, they’re very lovely, but I ain’t got the money. I let mother have all I had this week.”

      “Never mind the gashly money, my lass,” said the first deep-voiced man huskily, “ain’tcher got nothing you can sell?”

      Then arose a good deal of murmuring whisper, and Aunt Marguerite’s lips became like a pale pink line drawn across the lower part of her face, and both her eyes were closely shut.

      “Well, you wait,” was the concluding sentence of the whispered trio, and then the door was heard to shut.

      The click of a latch rose to where Aunt Marguerite sat, and then there was a trio once again – a whispered trio – ending with a little rustling, and the sound of heavy steps.

      Then the door closed, and Liza, daughter of Poll Perrow, the fish-woman, who carried a heavy maund by the help of a strap across her forehead, hurried up to her bedroom, and threw herself upon her knees as she spread two or three yards of brilliant red ribbon on the bed, and tastefully placed beside the ribbon an orange silk kerchief, whose united colours made her dark eyes sparkle with delight.

      The quick ringing of a bell put an end to the colour-worship, and Liza, with a hasty ejaculation, opened her box, thrust in her new treasures, dropped the lid, and locked it again before hurrying down to the dining-room, where she found her young mistress, her master, and Madelaine Van Heldre.

      “There was some change on the chimney-piece, Liza,” said Louise. “Did you see it?”

      “No, miss.”

      “It is very strange. You are quite sure you did not take it, papa?”

      “Quite, my dear.”

      “That will do, Liza.”

      The girl went out, looking scared.

      “It is very strange,” said Vine.

      “Yes, dear; and it is a great trouble to me. This is the third time money has been missing lately. I don’t like to suspect people, but one seems to be forced.”

      “But surely, Louie, dear, that poor girl would not take it.”

      “I have always tried to hope not, Maddy,” said Louise sadly.

      “You had better make a change.”

      “Send her away, father? How can I do that? How can I recommend her for another situation?”

      “Ah! it’s a puzzle – it’s a puzzle,” said Vine irritably. “One of the great difficulties of domestic service. I shall soon begin to think that your uncle Luke is right after all. He has no troubles, eh, Louise?”

      She looked up in his face with a peculiar smile, but made no reply. Her father, however, seemed to read her look, and continued:

      “Ah, well, I daresay you are right, my dear; we can’t get away from trouble; and if we don’t have one kind we have another. Get more than our share, though, in this house.”

      Louise smiled in his face, and the comical aspect of chagrin displayed resulted in a general laugh.

      “Is one of the sea-anemones dead?”

      “Yes, confound it! and it has poisoned the water, so that I’m afraid the rest will go.”

      “I think we can get over that trouble,” said Louise, laughing. “It will be an excuse for a pleasant ramble with you.”

      “Yes,” said Vine dryly, “but we shall not get over the trouble of the thief quite so well. I’m afraid these Perrows are a dishonest family. I’ll speak to the girl.”

      “No, father, leave it to me.”

      “Very well, my child; but I think you ought to speak.” The old man left the room, the bell was rung, and Liza summoned, when a scene of tears and protestations arose, resulting in a passionate declaration that Liza would tell her mother, that she would not stop in a house were she was going to be suspected, and that she had never taken anybody’s money but her own.

      “This is the third time that I have missed money, Liza, or I would not have spoken. If you took it, confess like a good girl, and we’ll forgive you if you promise never to take anything of the kind again.”

      “I can’t confess, miss, and won’t confess,” sobbed the girl. “Mother shall come and speak to you. I wouldn’t do such a thing.”

      “Where did you get the money with which you bought the red ribbon and orange kerchief this morning, Liza?” said a voice at the door.

      All started to see that Aunt Marguerite was there looking on, and apparently the recipient of all that had been said.

      Liza stood with eyes dilated, and jaw dropped.

      “Then you’ve been at my box,” she suddenly exclaimed. “Ah, what a shame!”

      “At your box, you wretched creature!” said Aunt Marguerite contemptuously. “Do you suppose I should go into your room?”

      “You’ve been opening my box,” said the girl again, more angrily; “and it’s a shame.”

      “I saw her take them up to her room, Louise. My dear, she was buying them under my window, of some pedlar. You had better send her away.”

      Liza did not wait to be sent away from the room, but ran out sobbing, to hurry up-stairs to her bed-chamber, open her box, and see if the brilliant specimens of silken fabric were safe, and then cry over them till they were blotched with her tears.

      “A bad family,” said Aunt Marguerite. “I’m quite sure that girl stole my piece of fine lace, and gave it to that wretched woman your uncle Luke encourages.”

      “No, no, aunt, you lost that piece of lace one day when you were out.”

      “Nonsense, child! your memory is not good. Who is that with you? Oh, I see; Miss Van Heldre.”

      Aunt Marguerite, after suddenly becoming aware of the presence of Madelaine, made a most ceremonious curtsey, and then sailed out of the room.

      “Louise must be forced to give up the companionship of that wretched Dutch girl,” she said as she reached her own door, at which she paused to listen to Liza sobbing.

      “I wonder what Miss Vine would have been like,” thought Madelaine, “if she had married some good sensible man, and had a large family to well employ her mind?” Then she asked herself what kind of man she would have selected as possessing the necessary qualifications, and concluded that he should have been such a man as Duncan Leslie, and wondered whether he would marry her friend.

      “Why, Madelaine,” said Louise, breaking her chain of

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