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Aunt Jane's Nieces at Millville

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CHAPTER XVIII.

THE LOCKED CUPBOARD.

Louise and Beth returned to the farm in dismal silence. Every prop had

been knocked from beneath their carefully erected temple of mystery. Now

there was no mystery at all.

In a few words, Joe Wegg had explained everything, and explained all so

simply and naturally that Louise felt like sobbing with the bitterness

of a child deprived of its pet plaything. The band of self-constituted

girl detectives had been "put out of business," as Patsy said, because

the plain fact had developed that there was nothing to detect, and never

had been. There had been no murder, no robbery, no flight or hiding on

the part of the Weggs to escape an injured enemy; nothing even

mysterious, in the light of the story they had just heard. It was

dreadfully humiliating and thoroughly disheartening, after all their

earnest endeavor to investigate a crime that had never been committed.

Uncle John rallied his nieces on their somber faces at the dinner table,

and was greatly amused when the Major, despite the appealing looks

directed at him, gave Mr. Merrick a brief resume of the afternoon's

developments.

"Well, I declare!" said the little man, merrily; "didn't I warn you,

Louise, not to try to saddle a murder onto my new farm? How you foolish

girls could ever have imagined such a carnival of crime in connection

with the Weggs is certainly remarkable."

"I don't know about that, sir," returned the Major, seriously. "I was

meself inoculated with the idea, and for a while I considered meself and

the girls the equals of all the Pinkertons in the country. And when ye

come to think of it, the history of poor Captain Wegg and his wife, and

of Nora and Thomas as well, is out of the ordinary entirely, and,

without the explanation, contained all the elements of a

first-class mystery."

"How did you say the Weggs lost their money?" inquired Uncle John,

turning the subject because he saw that it embarrassed his nieces.

"Why, forest fires at Almaquo, in Canada, burned down the timber they

had bought," replied the Major.

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