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The Mystery of Mary by Grace Livingston Hill
page 103 of 130 (79%)
telling me how much he cared for me, and how hard it was for him to be
separated from me. I began to feel desperate about him, and made up my
mind that when I received the inheritance I should ask the lawyers to make
some arrangement with him by which I should no longer be annoyed.

"It was necessary for me to return to America when I came of age, in order
to sign certain papers and take full charge of the property. Richard knew
this. He seems to have had some way of finding out everything my uncle
did.

"He wrote telling me of a dear friend of his mother, who was soon to pass
through Vienna, and who by some misfortune had been deprived of a position
as companion and chaperon to a young girl who was travelling. He said it
had occurred to him that perhaps he could serve us both by suggesting to
me that she be my travelling companion on the voyage. He knew I would not
want to travel alone, and he sent her address and all sorts of
credentials, with a message from his mother that she would feel perfectly
safe about me if I went in this woman's guardianship.

"I really did need a travelling companion, of course, having failed to get
my dear old lady to undertake the voyage, so I thought it could do no
harm. I went to see her, and found her pretty and frail and sad. She made
a piteous appeal to me, and though I was not greatly taken with her, I
decided she would do as well as any one for a companion.

"She did not bother me during the voyage, but fluttered about and was
quite popular on board, especially with a tall, disagreeable man with a
cruel jaw and small eyes, who always made me feel as if he would gloat
over any one in his power. I found out that he was a physician, a
specialist in mental diseases, so Mrs. Chambray told me, and she talked a
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