PAGE 7
The Goddess of Excelsior
by
His first thought was to go to the committee room and examine the locked closet. But the key was in his desk at home, he had no light, and the room was on the other side of the house. Besides, he reflected that even the detection of the figure would involve the exposure of the very secret they had kept intact so long. He sought his bedroom, and went quietly to bed. But not to sleep; a curiosity more potent than any sense of the trespass done him kept him tossing half the night. Who was this woman whom the clothes fitted so well? He reviewed in his mind the guests in the house, but he knew none who could have carried off this masquerade so bravely.
In the morning early he made his way to the committee room, but as he approached was startled to observe two pairs of boots, a man’s and a woman’s, conjugally placed before its door. Now thoroughly indignant, he hurried to the office, and was confronted by the face of the fair secretary. She colored quickly on seeing him–but the reason was obvious.
“You are coming to scold me, sir! But it is not my fault. We were full yesterday afternoon when your friend from San Francisco came here with his wife. We told him those were YOUR rooms, but he said he would make it right with you–and my father thought you would not be displeased for once. Everything of yours was put into another room, and the closet remains locked as you left it.”
Amazed and bewildered, the president could only mutter a vague apology and turn away. Had his friend’s wife opened the door with another key in some fit of curiosity and disported herself in those clothes? If so, she DARE not speak of her discovery.
An introduction to the lady at breakfast dispelled this faint hope. She was a plump woman, whose generous proportions could hardly have been confined in that pale blue bodice; she was frank and communicative, with no suggestion of mischievous concealment.
Nevertheless, he made a firm resolution. As soon as his friends left he called a meeting of the committee. He briefly informed them of the accidental occupation of the room, but for certain reasons of his own said nothing of his ghostly experience. But he put it to them plainly that no more risks must be run, and that he should remove the dresses and dummy to his own house. To his considerable surprise this suggestion was received with grave approval and a certain strange relief.
“We kinder thought of suggesting it to you before,” said Mr. Trigg slowly, “and that mebbe we’ve played this little game long enough– for suthin’s happened that’s makin’ it anything but funny. We’d have told you before, but we dassent! Speak out, Clint, and tell the president what we saw the other night, and don’t mince matters.”
The president glanced quickly and warningly around him. “I thought,” he said sternly, “that we’d dropped all fooling. It’s no time for practical joking now!”
“Honest Injun–it’s gospel truth! Speak up, Clint!”
The president looked on the serious faces around him, and was himself slightly awed.
“It’s a matter of two or three nights ago,” said Grey slowly, “that Trigg and I were passing through Sycamore Woods, just below the hotel. It was after twelve–bright moonlight, so that we could see everything as plain as day, and we were dead sober. Just as we passed under the sycamores Trigg grabs my arm, and says, ‘Hi!’ I looked up, and there, not ten yards away, standing dead in the moonlight, was that dummy! She was all in white–that dress with the fairy frills, you know–and had, what’s more, A HEAD! At least, something white all wrapped around it, and over her shoulders. At first we thought you or some of the boys had dressed her up and lifted her out there for a joke, and left her to frighten us! So we started forward, and then–it’s the gospel truth!–she MOVED AWAY, gliding like the moonbeams, and vanished among the trees!”