The Secret Passage
Hale's," she said indistinctly, with her mouth full of pins, "and has come in for a lot of money. Mr. Hale's introducing him into good society, to make a gent of him." 

 "Silk purses can't be made out of sows' ears," growled the cook, "an' who told you all this Geraldine?" 

 "Miss Loach herself, at different times." 

 Susan thought it was strange that a lady should gossip to this extent with her housemaid, but she did not take much interest in the conversation, being occupied with her own sad thoughts. But the next remark of Geraldine made her start.  "Mr. Clancy's father was a carpenter," said the girl. 

 "My father was a carpenter," remarked Susan, sadly. 

 "Ah," cried Mrs. Pill with alacrity, "now you're speaking sense. Ain't he alive?" 

 "No. He was poisoned!" 

 The three servants, having the love of horrors peculiar to the lower classes, looked up with interest.  "Lor!" said Thomas, speaking for the first time and in a thick voice, "who poisoned him?" 

 "No one knows. He died five years ago, and left mother with me and four little brothers to bring up. They're all doing well now, though, and I help mother, as they do. They didn't want me to go out to service, you know," added Susan, warming on finding sympathetic listeners.  "I could have stopped at home with mother in Stepney, but I did not want to be idle, and took a situation with a widow lady at Hampstead. I stopped there a year. Then she died and I went as parlor-maid to a Senora Gredos. I was only there six months," and she sighed. 

 "Why did you leave?" asked Geraldine. 

 Susan grew red.  "I wished for a change," she said curtly. 

 But the housemaid did not believe her. She was a sharp girl and her feelings were not refined.  "It's just like these men—" 

 "I said nothing about men," interrupted Susan, sharply. 

 "Well, then, a man. You've been in love, Susan, and—" 

 "No. I am not in love," and Susan colored more than ever. 


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