“The postman has just left it, sir, and hopes it is right, as it has given him a lot of trouble.”
Mr. Henley examined the letter with curiosity. There were several erased addresses. The original was:
“Mr. P. Henley, New York City.”
Scarcely legible, in the lower left-hand corner, was:
“Dead. Try Paul, No. —, W. 20th.”
Being unfamiliar with the handwriting, Mr. Henley carried the letter to his room. It was nearly dark, and he lighted the gas, exchanged the coat he had been wearing for a gaudy smoking jacket, glancing momentarily at the mirror, at a young and gentlemanly face with good features; complexion rather florid; hair and moustache neither fair nor dark, with reddish lights.
Seating himself upon a table directly under the gas, he proceeded with the letter. Evidently the document was not intended for him, but it proved sufficiently interesting to hold his attention.
GUIR HOUSE, 16TH SEPT., 1893.
MY DEAR MR. HENLEY:
Although we have never met, I feel sure that you are the man for
whom I am looking, which conclusion has been reached after
carefully considering your letters. Why have I taken so long to
decide? Perhaps I can answer that better when we meet. Do not
forget that the name of our station is the same as that of the
house—Guir. Take the evening train from New York, and you will be
with us in old Virginia next day, not twenty-four hours. I shall
meet you at the station, where I shall go every day for a month, or
until you come. You will know me because—well, because I shall
probably be the only girl there, and because I drive a piebald
horse in a cart with red wheels—but how shall I know you? Suppose
you carry a red handkerchief in your hand as you step upon the
platform. Yes, that will do famously. I shall look for the red silk
handkerchief, while you look for the cart with gory wheels and a
calico horse. What a clever idea! But how absurd to take
precautions in such a desolate country as this. I shall know you as
the only man stopping at Guir's, and you will know me as the only
woman in sight.
Of course you will be our guest until you have proved all things to
your satisfaction, and don't forget that I shall be looking for you
each day until I see you. Meanwhile believe me
Sincerely yours,
DOROTHY GUIR.
“Devilish strange letter!” said Henley, turning the sheet over in an effort to identify the writer. But it was useless. Dorothy Guir was as complete a myth as the individual for whom her letter was intended. Oddly enough, the man's last name, as well as the initial of his first, were the same as his own; but whether the P. stood for Peter, Paul, or Philip, Mr. Henley knew not, the only evident fact being that the letter was not intended for himself.
Reading the mysterious communication once more, the young man smiled. Who was Dorothy Guir? Of course she was Dorothy Guir, but what was she like? At one moment he pictured her as a charming girl, where curls, giggles, and blushes were strangely intermingled with moonlight walks, rope ladders, and elopements. At the next, as some monstrous female agitator; a leader of Anarchists and Nihilistic organizations, loaded with insurrectionary documents for the destruction of society. But the author was inclined to playfulness; incompatible with such a character. He preferred the former picture, and throwing back his head while watching the smoke from his cigarette curl upward toward the ceiling, Mr. Paul Henley suddenly became convulsed with laughter. He had conceived the idea of impersonating the original Henley, the man for whom the letter had been written. The more he considered the scheme, the more fascinating it became. The girl, if girl she were, confessed to never having met the man; she would therefore be the more easily deceived. But she was expecting him daily, and should not be disappointed. Love of adventure invested the project with an irresistible charm, and Mr. Henley determined to undertake the journey and play the part for all he was worth. It is true that visions of embarrassing complications occasionally presented themselves, but were dismissed as trifles unworthy of consideration.