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Updated: May 7, 2025
She did not look back, but passed on rapidly up the gravel walk toward the house. And John Eddring, foolish, stunned, abashed, knew that he had seen the mysterious Louise Loisson! Ah, he had seen more he had seen another! He turned as he heard a footstep and a soft voice at his elbow. The passerby accosted him smiling, and he recognized Jules, the duck- footed.
The trail ended abruptly; nor could Eddring find any means of pursuing it further, certain as he was that, in the person of Miss Lady, he had found the third Louise Loisson and the rightful heiress of the Loisson properties in the mountains below St. Louis. Again he looked at his uncompleted papers, and again he sighed.
He assumed the management of her case, along with some other lawyers to whom he carried it." "But did he think she was the heiress of the Loisson estates?" "You, as a lawyer, can tell that better than I can. In some ways he had a good mind. He never told me much after that, except that he said if this case was ever decided he could not lose, no matter which way it went.
Tell me, is there any truth in this newspaper paragraph 'There is talk about the marriage of the mysterious Louise Loisson'? Don't tell me that he that Decherd " He gazed steadily into her eyes, but saw there that which made him forget all his purposes, forced him to remember nothing in the world but his sudden personal misery.
But soon this feeling of the young men it has shange'. It has go into devotion. Now it is religion!" "Well, that is a pretty state of affairs, isn't it?" "But I say to you that this Louise Loisson, she dance not like the othair femmes du ballet absolument non." Jules became excited, spreading out his hands and letting fall his napkin.
Louis; and it was with this woman, white or partly white, that the young daughter of the Comte de Loisson was left, at least for a time. Paul Loise himself on one journey went up the river to the place where the Omaha tribe then lived. Whether he took this white child with him, or whether he left her in charge of his white wife at St. Louis, is something now very difficult to prove.
Cal " and here Eddring rose, tapping with his finger on the table in front of him, "the Louise Loisson who went to France in 1825 was the owner of those lead mines! Now I have looked up the tax record. The taxes on these lands for several years back have been paid by Henry Decherd!" Blount himself rose and stood back, hands in pockets, looking at the speaker.
I don't fancy that you did. I don't think you told her anything which did not serve your own purposes." "We were going to be married," began Decherd. "We are going to be married " "You were, perhaps," said Eddring, "but not now. Oh, I don't doubt that you are willing enough to marry Louise Loisson, and to deceive her after your marriage as you did before. I don't doubt that in the least."
With them was a young girl, Louise Loisson don't you see the name? and she is carefully described as a descendant, not of Paul Loise, but of the Comte de Loisson, a nobleman who came to St. Louis shortly before 1825." Blount sat up still straighter in his chair. "This here is mighty strange," said he. "Names sound right near alike." "Yes," said Eddring.
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