 CHAPTER XIV. In one of the middle-west states there is a delightful little city called Doorfield. It hasn't so many thousand inhabitants, but in all respects and in its municipal equipment it is indeed a modern city. It has factories and a big farming community to support its streets of neat and progressive shops, and at the west side of the business district is a residence section, where broad wooded streets furnish the setting for many cozy homes. Some of the houses are old and picturesque, and some are new and imposing, but each has its flower-lit garden, its fruit and shade-trees, and its little garage or barn tucked away in the backyard. When you come to Oak Street there is a rambling frame house on the corner, set well back, where Peter Canot, the lawyer, lives, with his good wife and his niece Irene McFarlane, who is seventeen. This is one of the ancient dwellings of Doorfield, for the Canots are old inhabitants. Right next to them stands a more modern and expensive, if less attractive mansion, with grounds twice as large, and a velvet lawn that puts the Canot's carelessly cropped grass to shame. But the two families are neighbors and friends nevertheless, for in the new house lives Colonel James Hathaway and his granddaughter Mary Louise Burroughs. At least they live there when at home, and although they seem persistent ramblers, they are glad to have this refuge to return to when wearied with traveling and sightseeing. One morning in June Mr. Canot was just seating himself at the breakfast table when a messenger boy delivered a telegram, a night-letter from New York. The lawyer, a short, thick-set man of middle age, with a stern countenance but mild blue eyes, laid aside his morning paper and read the telegram with his usual deliberation. Mrs. Canot silently poured the coffee, knowing any interference would annoy him. Irene, the niece, was a cripple, and sat in her wheeled chair at the table between her uncle and aunt. She was a pleasant-faced, happy little maid, consistently ignoring her withered limbs and thankful that from her knees up she was normal and that her wheeled chair rendered her fairly independent of assistance in all ordinary activities. Everyone loved Irene McFarlane because of her brave and cheery acceptance of her misfortune, and her merry speech and spontaneous laughter rendered her, as Aunt Hannah often declared, the light of the house. Irene was, moreover, an intimate and highly valued friend of her next-door neighbor, Mary Louise Burroughs. Mr. Peter Canot, sipping his coffee reflectively, read the lengthy telegram a second time. Then he said, somewhat irritably in chopping his words into distinct syllables, as was his habit at all times. I wonder why people imagine a lawyer's duties cover every phase of life. My clients used me as a real estate agent, a horse trader, a purchasing agent, a father confessor, an automobile expert, a medical adviser, and sometimes, in their simplicity, as a banker. What's wrong now, Peter, inquired Mrs. Canot with wifely sympathy. Colonel Hathaway wants to know. Oh, is Mary Louise coming back? cried Irene, eagerly. He frowned at her. What does the Colonel wish to know, Peter? I object to this unwarrantable cross-examination, said he. It is customary to first allow one to state his case. Forgive me, Uncle Peter. Take your time, said Aunt Hannah, composedly buttering the toast. You will, anyhow, and I'm sure Irene and I have both learned to curb our feminine curiosity. He glanced at the telegram again. Do you know if the Pelton Place has been rented, my dear? The Pelton Place? Why, it wasn't rented yesterday, for I passed by there and saw the rent sign still in the window. Mr. Harlan is the agent. I know. And where can we find a female house servant, Hannah? Now see here, Peter, it's all very well for you to keep your own counsel when there's a professional secret to be guarded, but if you want any help from me you've got to open your mouth and talk out plainly, so I can answer you in a sensible way. You're always sensible, Hannah. He observed, quite unruffled by her demand, and then he ate a whole slice of toast and drank his coffee and handed his cup for more before he spoke another word. Irene devoted herself to her breakfast. She knew Uncle Peter's ways, and that it was useless to attempt to hurry him or force him to explain until he was quite ready to do so. Aunt Hannah bided her time. Peter was a thoughtful man, and he was doubtless thinking. His wife was not only a clever helpmate but was noted for her consideration of her erratic spouse. The Colonel, said Mr. Connott at last, has run across a man who wants to make his home in Dorfield. A very sensible idea. The Colonel met the man in Europe. The man— What's the man's name? —enquired Mrs. Connott. He referred to the telegram. Jones. Jason Jones. I never heard of him. He looked at her reproachfully. Why should you, my dear? The Colonel found the man in Europe. We live in Dorfield. The man, it seems, has a daughter. Oh, goody! cried Irene. Who has become a friend of Mary Louise? Therefore the Colonel wires to ask if there is a furnished house to rent at a modest price, and if a competent female servant can be secured for the man and his daughter. He requests me to wire an answer promptly. That is the gist of the telegram, although the Colonel, in his usual extravagant way, has paid for more words than were required to express his meaning. And what are you going to do about it? demanded Mrs. Connott. I am endeavouring to gain information from my wife. Very well. What does he mean by a modest price? The Pelton place is expensive. The rent is sixty dollars a month, while a comfortable house like that of the widow Harrington rents for fifteen dollars, with good solid furniture. Is Mrs. Harrington's house for rent? he asked. Yes. She'll go to live with her married daughter as soon as she can find a tenant. The poor creature needs the money, and her house is just around the corner from here, and her backyard blocks up to the Colonel's backyard. Now the Pelton place is two blocks from here, and the Pelton's don't need the money, because they're already too rich and aristocratic to live in Dorfield any longer. Hmm! murmured Mr. Connott. It occurs to me that a friend of Colonel Hathaway might desire a more luxurious place than that of the widow Harrington. Doesn't the telegram say a modest price? It does. I'll quote both places and let the man Jones take his choice. And how about a female servant, Hannah? Leave that to me. I can hire plenty. But if Mr. Jason Jones takes the Pelton place, he will want one kind of a servant. And if he takes Mrs. Harrington's house, he'll want a different sort. He gazed at her admiringly and passed his cup again, saying, You've a logical mind, my dear. Had you been a man, you might have been a fairly good lawyer. No, Peter. Not another drop. You've had two cups already. Are you sure, Hannah? Absolutely positive. Then, said he, rising with a sigh, I'll go to the office. To Mr. Connott's disappointment, to Mrs. Connott's delight, to Irene's satisfaction, and the astonishment of all, Mr. Jason Jones selected Mrs. Harrington's modest house and ordered it rented and prepared for his arrival on the following Thursday. This was conveyed in a second telegram from Colonel Hathaway, who requested the lawyer to inform old Uncle Ibn and Aunt Sally, the Colonel's own faithful colored servants and caretakers, that he and Mary Louise would return home on the same day. You see, said Aunt Hannah triumphantly, I sized the Joneses up pretty well. It isn't necessary for a man to be rich to be a friend of the dear old Colonel, for he considers a man rather than a man's pocketbook. Yet a man who can afford to travel abroad with his daughter, began Mr. Connott argumentatively, should certainly be able and willing, what do you know about him, Peter? Perhaps he has spent his ready money in Europe and is now obliged to economize. Unless that is the case, why does he come to a sleepy little town like Dorfield, which is almost forgotten by the big world to settle down? Why he's the Colonel's friend, retorted the lawyer, stiffly. And Mary Louise is his daughter's friend, said Irene. That accounts for it, of course, and they couldn't have picked a prettier place. Dorfield may be sleepy and quiet and half forgotten by the rest of the big world, but it's simply delightful as a residence. Didn't Colonel Hathaway choose it for a home, and the Colonel could afford to live at the Waldorf Astoria if he wanted to? I know why you are pleased, Irene, remarked Aunt Hannah, smiling upon her niece. You're going to have another girlfriend. She won't be as nice as Mary Louise, though, was the reply. There's no girl in the world as sweet and lovely as Mary Louise. Or one that innocently gets into more trouble, declared Mr. Cannot. That, said Aunt Hannah, is because she can't let other people's troubles alone. CHAPTER XV Mr. Cannot, who was Colonel Hathaway's lawyer and confidential agent, was at the train to meet his important client on his return to Dorfield. The first to alight from the coach was the Colonel, who greeted his lawyer with a cordial handclasp. Mary Louise kissed Peter Cannot upon his impassive cheek, and presented him to a pretty young girl who clung to her arm smiling, yet half bewildered by her arrival in a strange town. There seemed no one else with the party, and Mr. Cannot glanced over the crowd of passengers and said, Mr. Jones did not accompany you then? Why, yes, I suppose he's here, answered the Colonel carelessly. I believe he travelled in another car. I don't see him anywhere, added Mary Louise. I wonder if anyone reminded him that this is the place to get off. Never mind, said Elora, if Father can't keep track of himself, let him go on to another station. I can't lose him for long, that's certain. There he is up ahead, announced Mary Louise. He's quarreling with his porter about something. To save the tip, suggested Elora scornfully. Mary Louise rushed to greet an old, colourful man with snow-white hair, who was picking up their hand-baggage. Oh, Uncle Eben, I'm so glad to see you again, she exclaimed, and how's Aunt Sally, and is my pony well, and are the goldfish still alive, and— Bless your soul, Mary Louise, said the delighted old servant. Everybody's well and joyful to see you all back again. The Colonel shook Uncle Eben's hands, both of them, in a kindly but dignified manner. I suppose the automobile is still running, Uncle? Not just this here a minute, Colonel, with a glad chuckle, but that car's going to run just as soon as we all get aboard. What do you think I's been doing, I'll win a, Colonel, and that lonesome's house, except keeping that car greased up? Did you grease it in the house, then, Uncle? asked Mary Louise gravely, but with twinkling eyes. Old Eben chuckled again, for this was a happy hour for him, but while he chuckled he led them to where the automobile stood waiting. Behind the others slowly followed Jason Jones, carrying his own luggage and eyeing every detail of his surroundings in the manner of a countryman paying his first visit to a town. He was inwardly sizing up Dorfield as a place of residence. When Jones got into the car the Colonel briefly introduced him to the lawyer. This is Mr. Jones, Mr. Connaught. He looked at the lawyer and gave a slight nod, and Mr. Connaught's bow was very stiff and formal. Already he had, with fair accuracy, grasped the relationship of the man to the others. Alora Jones seemed a fine girl, the right sort, and Mary Louise was evidently fond of her. The Colonel barely tolerated the man Jones, whom he did not like for the daughter's sake. The girl herself lacked in respect for her father, and this unfilial attitude seemed condoned by both Mary Louise and the Colonel, which was evidence that there was something wrong about Jason Jones. With such a cue for guidance Mr. Connaught decided he had no use for Jason Jones, either. Colonel Ebbon first drove the car to the Widow Harrington's cottage, where Mrs. Connaught awaited the new tenants to introduce them to their servant, and to assure them that everything was prepared for their convenience. Then they drove to Colonel Hathaway's home, where Irene was at the gate in her wheeled chair, a bunch of her choicest roses in her hand, ready to welcome her friend Mary Louise and to be kissed and hugged with girlish enthusiasm. It was a happy homecoming, indeed, for Mary Louise, and Colonel Hathaway breathed a deep sigh of relief as he entered his own portals. From now on, he said to his granddaughter that evening, I am under no obligation to assist that impossible person Jones, or to even associate with him. For your sake, my darling, I have suffered the inflection of his presence with fortitude, even going to the extent of locating him in our beloved town of Dorfield, that you and Ellora might enjoy one another's society. But from this time forward, Jason Jones is to be a distant acquaintance, rather than a companion. Congratulate me, Mary Louise. I do, Grandpa Jim, she replied soberly, and I thank you, too. It has been a trial for both of us, but we've been really helpful to poor Ellora. I want to try to bring a little happiness into her life, and encourage her to become as sweet and lovable as she has the nature to be, and this could never have been accomplished had we allowed her to drift in the sole companionship of her disagreeable father. END OF CHAPTER XIV of Mary Louise solves a mystery by L. Frank Baum. Read for LibriVox.org into the public domain. The puzzle becomes intricate. Ellora formed an immediate friendship for crippled Jane McFarlane, first based on sympathy and afterward on genuine admiration. That one condemned to pass her entire life in a wicker wheel chair should be so bright and cheerful, with no word of protest or even a reference to her own misfortune, was deemed wonderful by Ellora, and she soon found that Irene had an excuse or explanation for every seeming annoyance her friends suffered, and delighted to console them. At the same time she allowed no one to console her, because she declared she needed no consolation. Such a disposition invited confidence, and soon Irene knew more of Ellora's past history, including her trials and tribulations than even Mary Louise had yet learned, and was shocked and grieved at the girl's vengeful defiance of her father due to his neglect and coldness as well as to his contemptible selfishness. But Irene had an excuse ready, even for the artist. Poor Mr. Jones, she said one day, when the three girls were together and had been discussing Ellora's troubles, think what a trial it must have been to him to be saddled with the care of a child he had not seen since babyhood, and had no special interest in. As for affection between them, it could not sprout nor grow because there was no mutual understanding to germinate it. Your father's life, my dear, had been wrecked by his separation from your mother, and the money meant little to him at that period of his life when you were left to his care. But did he refuse the obligation so inconsiderately thrust upon him? No. No man of reserved nature, almost a recluse, self-absorbed in shrinking from association with others, he accepted the care of an eleven-year-old child, and without being able to change his disposition to suit her requirements, has guarded her health and safety ever since. So that he can use my money, added Ellora with a shrug. But you admit that he doesn't squander money on himself. I don't know what he does with it. If he wants books, he buys them. He bought a rickety automobile in Italy and never took me to ride in it. But his extravagance seems to end there. I've read some letters that he left around, showing that he is investing thousands in his own name. What for, I can't guess, as he is too miserly ever to have a use for it. Well, he may be intending to endow some deserving charity, suggested Irene. And as for his not loving you, Ellora, I fancy you have never tried to win your father's love. No one could love that, man. You've never been able to get beneath his reserve. You came to him from a luxurious life, a petted and pampered child, and his simple tastes and unemotional nature repelled you from the first. Is it not so? I'm not sure, Irene. I needed sympathy and affection. Had my father been different, had he shown love for me or even fatherly consideration, I would have responded eagerly. But he ignored me. There has never been any companionship between us. He has guarded my personal safety because I was of financial value to him. Once when I contracted a fever he was really worried and hired a skillful doctor and a trained nurse, but he never entered my sick room. When I was well he reproached me for costing him so much money. I told him it was my money, and he was costing me even more than I could ever cost him. I reminded him that he would have been a beggar but for my income, and that shut him up at once. There's the whole trouble, declared Irene, constant friction and a lack of consideration for one another. Such remarks could not have made him more gracious toward you, Elora, and you did not appreciate his care in furnishing you with the means of recovery. Had I died, said the girl, my fortune would have gone to a bunch of third cousins whom I had never seen. That would have stopped father's right to the income, you see. Irene sighed, and Mary Louise smiled. It was almost impossible to defend Mr. Jones consistently, with Elora present to accuse him. The artist at first took little interest in his new home. The cottage was small and not very cheerful, but it was cheap, and all that Jason Jones seemed to care for was a place to say that was not expensive. He continued his reading and had a book in his hand from morning till night. He seldom left the cottage except for a trip to the public library or to a bookstore, and never spoke to anyone unless it was necessary. Their maid was Jane Gladys O'Donnell, stout and good-natured, and in different cook and rather untidy. She was twenty years old and the eldest of a large and impoverished family. Her mother was a laundress, took in washing, and her earnings, with the wages of Jane Gladys, must suffice to feed many hungry mouths. That was why Mrs. Gannott had hired Jane Gladys. Aunt Hannah knew the girl was not very competent, but she was cheap, so Mr. Jones accepted her without protest. Laura had lived so long abroad that she did not know what a competent American housemaid is. One foreknown, they had now been a month at Dorfield, Mr. Jones was seated on the little front porch, reading, as usual, when a queer buzzing in the air overhead aroused his attention. What's that? he called sharply, and Jane Gladys, who was dusting in the little room behind him, replied, That soar is only Steve Cain's flying machine. A what? A flying machine soar. Jane has a factory for making the crazy things in the town yonder over by the south side. Indeed, he got up and went into the yard to fetch the faraway speck in the sky that was humming so persistently. Why, there's another. There are two of them, he exclaimed, as if to himself. There might be a dozen soar, because there's a school for airy flying over by Cain's factory where they teach the folks to fly that buy the machines. He stood a long time watching the sky. When the last airplane had disappeared he resumed his reading, but the next day he watched for the machines again, abandoning his book to follow the course of the flyers. Where did you say that factory is located? he asked Jane Gladys. Over by the gas works soar by the south side. It takes the Ellum Street car at the four corners. On a Sunday there'd be crowds of watch in the air devils. He started to read again, but gave it up and glanced nervously up and down the little porch. Jane Gladys noted this was a surprise, for he was usually quiet and unobservant. Like the toad in the garden, what squats under a bush all day and forgets he's alive till a fly lights on his nose, as she expressed it to the family at home. After lunch Mr. Jones went to town and after making inquiries took the car to the aviation works and the field. He watched the construction of flying machines in the factory, and saw one or two pupils take short flights in the air. And Jason Jones was so interested that he was late to dinner that evening. Next day he was at the aviation field again, and from that time he haunted the place, silent and composed but watching every detail of manufacture and listening to the experts as they instructed the pupils. These were not many, three altogether, although Stephen Cain's airplane was now admitted one of the safest and most reliable ever invented. In one day one of the instructors, noticing the silent man who had watched so long, invited him to take a flight, thinking perhaps to frighten him, but Jason Jones promptly accepted the invitation and with perfect composure endured the strange experience and returned to ground with heightened color but no other evidence of excitement. Could Elora have seen him that day she would have acquitted him of cowardice. But Elora knew nothing of her father's odd fancy for some time after he became interested in airplanes. She was not often at home during the day, frequently taking lunch with Mary-Louise or Irene and passing much of her time in their company. She had no interest whatever in her father's movements, and Jane Gladys didn't think to mention the matter to her, for flying machines had ceased to be a novelty in Dorfield, and the sound of their buzzing through the air was heard many times a day. But in turning over a pile of her father's books one day in its absence, Elora found several treatises on aviation and was almost startled to find that Jason Jones cared for any reading aside from light novels. She had been hunting at the time for a novel to read herself, so turning from the aviation literature to a shelf of fiction she began searching for an interesting title. Presently she drew out one of her father's books, opened it by accident at a place where a letter had been tucked in, a letter written on soiled and coarse paper of a foreign make. It was addressed Senora Jason Jones at the Steamer Hercules to sail for New York, USA. Opening it she found it signed Silvio Alguero. That was their manservant in Italy, so with a smile of anticipated amusement she read the letter. It was brief indeed, but the girl's expression soon changed to a puzzled look, for the scrawl said, Honored Senor, at your command I have this morning three hours after your departure for Naples, allowed the prisoner to escape. How funny, she exclaimed, knitting her brows. I can't remember any prisoner at the villa. Perhaps it was the cat. It would even be just like Silvio to consider the release of a cat an important event. She replaced the letter in the book and after selecting another novel forgot Silvio's epistle entirely. Another time, when Alora happened to be at home for their noonday luncheon and her father did not appear, Jane Gladys quietly remarked in answer to her query that the old man was probably over to the flying machine works. Does he go there often? She asked in surprise. Why, he mostly lives there, asserted the maid. Alora laughed and afterward told Mary Louise, as a bit of humorous gossip, that the man who had heretofore failed to find any interest in life had at last succumbed to the fascination of the airplane. Well, I'm glad of it, said Mary Louise. I've often wondered, Lori, how your father could be so infatuated with novel reading, absorbing stories of human interest, if they have any interest at all, with such avidity, while real people all around him fail to interest him at all. I've thought perhaps he read to keep his mind from other things that would make him unhappy to dwell upon. I have thought so too, replied Alora musingly, and this queer fancy of his, for a new and unusual invention, may serve the same purpose. But I, too, am glad he has found a diversion that will keep him away from home. That barn of a cottage will become more home-like without his eternal presence. Peter cannot, the lawyer, had paid little heed to Jason Jones since the latter's arise in Dorfield. He had heard his wife and Irene gossip about the girl and her father, and state that Alora was an heiress and Mr. Jones merely the guardian of her fortune, until she came of age. But his legal mind decided that the girl's fortune must be a modest one, since they lived so economically and dressed so plainly. Colonel Hathaway, who might have undeceived him in this regard, seldom spoke to the lawyer of anything but his own affairs, and had foreborn to mention Mr. Jones and his personal affairs in any way. Therefore, Mr. Connaught was somewhat surprised when one morning Jason Jones called at his office and asked for an interview. The lawyer was busy that day, and, attaching little importance to his collar, he demanded brusquely, Well, sir, what can I do for you? The man seated himself and glanced around the room before replying. The big desk, littered with papers, the cabinet files and stiff chairs seemed to meet his approval. In the outer office a girl was busily clicking a typewriter. You are Colonel Hathaway's lawyer, I believe, said Jones. I have that honour, sir. That's why I came to you. The Colonel is a prosperous man and has judgment. I want your advice about investing some money. Peter Connaught regarded him with his speculative gaze. The thought flashed through his mind that if Jones had any money to invest he might better buy himself a new necktie and have his shoes repaired, or even invest in a new dress for his daughter who needed it. But he merely said in his peculiar way of chopping each word off short as he uttered it, How much have you to invest? Not a great deal at this moment, but I am constantly receiving dividends and interest on my daughter's securities, and so, if I am going to live in Dorfield, I shall need a lawyer to advise me how to reinvest the money, as well as how to make out the papers properly. I don't want to make any mistakes and get robbed, even by my lawyer. But I'll pay you a fair price. Perhaps I should explain that while the income is derived from my daughter's property, the investments are to be made in my name. Why so? The income belongs to me by my dead wife's will, as long as Laura is alive and in my keeping. When the girl is eighteen she will manage her own affairs and I'll be quit of her, and out of any further income as well. So I am investing now to secure my future. I see. How old is your daughter at this time? Fifteen. So you've three years more to grab the income. Exactly. How much money do you wish to invest today? Twelve thousand dollars. Peter cannot sat straight up in his chair. And you say this is but part of the income. The estate is valued at nearly two million dollars. The lawyer gave a low whistle of amazement. Beside this enormous sum, even Colonel Hathaway's holding shrank into insignificance. You surprised me, he said. I imagine, then, that you can afford to live some what better than you do. That is none of your business. True. Good day, Mr. Jones. Eh? I won't accept you as a client. Why not, sir? Thank you for asking. In the first place, I don't like you, said Peter cannot. Nor do I approve of your treating your daughter a great heiress as you do and hoarding all her enormous income for your personal use. You're not toting fair. It is an unjust arrangement and I'll have nothing to do with it. Jason Jones sat still and stared at him. Good day, sir, repeated the lawyer curtly. The man did not move. Peter turned to his papers. See here, the artist presently remarked. Let's come to an understanding. I don't like you either. You're insulting. But you're honest and I think I could trust you. I'm not especially honest, retorted the lawyer, but I'm particular. I don't need clients and I don't want a client I'm ashamed of. Still the man did not offer to go. Instead he reflected for a while in his stolid, unemotional way, while Peter cannot frown and examined the papers on his desk. I believe you will see the thing in a different light if you read my wife's will, said Jones. I've brought a copy of it with me, thinking it might help you to understand my affairs. Is it an attested copy? asked the lawyer, turning around again. Yes. Let me see it. Mr. Canot decided to read the will, with the idea that he might find in it some way to assist Dolora. When he had finished the document he was disappointed. Mrs. Antoinette Seaver Jones, a woman clever enough to make a fortune, had been foolish enough to give her former husband autocratic power over her money during her daughter's minority. Had the man been a gentleman the folly would have been mitigated, but Jason Jones and Mr. Canot's opinion was a selfish, miserly, consciousness rascal. Enjoying a yearly income that was a small fortune in itself he had neglected to educate his daughter properly, to clothe her as befitted her station in life, or to show her ordinary fatherly consideration. Affection and kindness seemed foreign to the man's nature. He handed the will back and said, You have taken an unfair advantage of the confidence reposed in you by your dead wife, who doubtless loved her child. Legally your actions cannot be assailed, but morally they should ostracize you from decent society. As I said before I do not want your business, I'll have nothing to do with you. Jones remained unruffled. I'm a stranger in the city, he remarked, Perhaps you will recommend me to some good lawyer. No, there are a score of lawyers in town, make your own choice. The man rose and put on his hat. I said you were honest and I was right, he calmly remarked. I'll say now that you are a fool and I'm right in that also. And with these words he walked away. That was his only protest to the humiliating rebuff. He showed no anger, he did not seem annoyed. He simply rode down in the elevator, examined the directory, and selected another lawyer in the same building. CHAPTER XVII of Mary Louise solves a mystery by L. Frank Baum. Read for LibriVox.org into the public domain. Alora wins her way. Mary Louise decided that Alora Jones improved on acquaintance. There were many admirable traits in her character that had lain dormant, until developed by association with two girls of her own age, who were themselves gentle and considerate. It is true that Alora at times was still headstrong and willful and unable to bridle her tongue when irritated, but neither Mary Louise nor Irene ever reproved her by word or look, so that she grew ashamed of her outbursts, and at home, when her father aroused her to anger, she fled to her girlfriends and sought in their companionship the antidote to her vexation. The two friends had decided it was unwise to comment on Alora's unhappy family relations, and soon she discovered this and refrained from burdening them with her home quarrels. No one could witness Irene's patient resignation to misfortune without admiring her character and being touched by her bravery and gentleness, and association with this crippled girl was softening Alora's hard and defiant nature wonderfully. Had the association continued, it might have redeemed the prospective heiress from many of the faults she had acquired through years of neglect and rebellion against fate, but the close triumvirate of girlfriends was suddenly dissolved, early in July, by no less a person than Will Morrison, a wealthy and kindly natured gentleman who was a friend of both the Canots and Colonel Hathaway. Will Morrison had purchased a yacht. It was anchored in the breakwater near the Chicago Yacht Club, and its owner intended making a summer trip through the Great Lakes, and cordially invited the Canots and Irene and Mary Louise and Colonel Hathaway to accompany his party. Unfortunately Mrs. Canot at that time was ill. She had contracted a lingering but mild form of spring fever that would keep her in bed for weeks, and Irene, who was devoted to her aunt, would not leave her to the mercies of a nurse. Mary Louise wanted to go, though, for the Morrison's were delightful people, and any yacht they purchased would be sure to be safe and comfortable. Since the Canots could not go, Mary Louise suggested to her grandfather that they ask Will Morrison to invite Elora Jones, and the Colonel approved the idea because he thought it would do Elora much good to mingle with refined people, such as were sure to form the yacht party. So when he answered Mr. Morrison's letter, he told him something of Elora and asked permission to fetch her along. "'I'm not at all sure,' he said to Mary Louise, that Mr. Jones will permit Elora to go with us.' "'Nor am I,' the girl replied. But perhaps Elora can coax him to consent. There might be a good idea for you to ask him, too, Grandpa Jim.' "'My dear,' he remonstrated, do you think I ought to hazard that man's sneers and insults, even to favour your friend Elora?' "'No, I do not, Grandpa Jim,' she laughingly rejoined. That was a foolish suggestion, and I withdraw it. If Elora fails, I'll speak to him myself. I'm not afraid of Jason Jones, and he doesn't growl at me as he does at poor Lori.' They did not mention the proposal to Elora until the Colonel had received a telegram from Will Morrison, saying, "'By all means, invite Miss Jones to join us, knew her mother once, and will be glad to have her with us.' Elora was delighted at the prospect of a yachting trip, and decided at once that she would go, especially as Colonel Hathaway said she would be Mary Louise's guest on the trip to Chicago, and no money would be needed for expenses. So she attacked her father in a somewhat original manner. Mr. Jones had conceived a passion for flying and had just purchased an airplane. He was to begin his lessons at once, and was so thoroughly immersed in his strange fancy that he paid little heed to anything else. His books were neglected. His former, quiet life, amounting almost to physical inertia, had given place to a nervous and all-consuming desire to master the rather strenuous art of aviation. Elora was quite unaware of this transformation, for as usual Jason Jones kept his own counsel, and followed his inclinations without conference with any one. The girl knew that her father haunted the aviation field, but anything that kept him amused away from home was gratefully approved by her. Usually the two breakfasted together in silence. Lately Mr. Jones had hurried through with the meal so as to get away, and he did not return for lunch. So on this important morning, Elora said casually, I'm going away for three or four weeks. Where to? He asked sharply, suddenly rousing from his abstraction. I'm going on a yachting trip with Mary Louise and Colonel Hathaway, where to be the guests of a Mr. Morrison and his wife, who own the yacht. Morrison? Morrison, he repeated suspiciously, then as if relieved, I don't know any Morrison's. Nor do I. They are old friends of the Hathaways and the Canots, however. Well, you can't go. It's nonsense. Why? Yachts are dangerous. I don't want you drowned. I'd be as safe on a yacht as I would be in this house," she declared. Do you think I intend to take any chances with my life? Please remember that when I'm eighteen I shall have a fortune and be able to lead an independent life, a pleasant one, a life in sharp contrast to this one. Therefore I'm going to live to enjoy my money. He gave her a shrewd look of approval. The argument seemed to appeal to him. It quieted to an extent his fears for her safety. Anyhow, said Allure Bluntly, I'm going, and I dare you to stop me. He was silent a while, considering the proposition. Just now he would be busy at the aviation field, and in Colonel Hathaway's charge the girl was likely to be quite safe. He was inclined to relax his vigilance over his precious daughter on this occasion. How long do the Hathaways expect to be away? he inquired. Mary Louise says we will surely be home three weeks from the day we leave. Surely. Without fail. Hmm. It's a risk. Something might delay you. Do you know what would happen if you left me for sixty days or more? Of course I do. That will of my mother states that if at any time my devoted father develops any neglect of me or lack of interest in his darling daughter, such as allowing me to become separated from him for longer than sixty days at one time, the court has the privilege, at its option, of deposing him as administrator of my estate and appointing another guardian. The other guardian, however, is to be paid a salary and the income in that case is to accrue to the benefit of my estate. How did you learn all that? he demanded. You left a copy of the will lying around, and I read it and made a copy of it for myself. I now know my mother's will by heart. She suggests that if we must live together in loving companionship you will probably have me educated by tutors at home and her objection to girls' schools. I wonder why. Was the principal reason she inserted the clause that we must never be separated? It would prevent you from sending me away to school. But as for the tutors, I haven't yet made their acquaintance. Tutors cost money, he said in a surly tone. I realize that, and while there is an abundance of money, the will states that it is to be entirely in your control. But we've quarreled on that subject too many times already without your loosening your grip on the dollars. To get back to our subject I assure you that I shall not be gone longer than twenty-one days, and the trip won't cost you a single penny. When did you propose going? We take the noon train on Monday for Chicago. He got his hat and left the house without another word, leaving Elora exultant. She hurried over to tell Mary Louise the good news. Did he really consent? asked Mary Louise. Well, he didn't forbid it, said the girl, and that's the same thing. CHAPTER XVIII. THE DISAPPEARANCE. The train was late getting into Chicago that Monday night. Colonel Hathaway took Mary Louise and Elora to the Blackington, but the hotel was so crowded that the girls could not get a joining-rooms. However, they secured rooms just across the hall from one another, and the Colonel's room was but two doors were moved from that of his granddaughter, so the three were not greatly separated. Never mind, dear, said Mary Louise as she kissed her friend good night. Tomorrow we go board the yacht, and that will be our home for a long time. What time will you breakfast? asked Elora. Well, we're up late, and Grandpa Jim likes to sleep mornings. Can you fast until half-past eight, Elora? Yes, indeed, with a laugh. I'm used to somewhat early hours, so I shall probably be dressed by seven, but I'll find plenty to amuse me until you are up, and I'll knock on your door at eight-thirty. But in the morning Elora failed to knock on Mary Louise's door, as she had promised. The Colonel was ready for breakfast, having enjoyed a good night's rest, and Mary Louise said to him, Elora probably slept later than she expected to. Shall I risk wakening her, Grandpa Jim? I think so, he replied. She has slept long enough for a young girl. Mary Louise ran across the hall and knocked at the door of two-sixteen. She knocked again, for there was no answer. She did not dare call out, for fear of disturbing other guests of the hotel. The Colonel now came and rapped upon the panels, but without any better result. I think she must have left her room and is perhaps in the parlor or in the hotel lobby, he said. A chambermaid was passing through the hall and overheard the remark. The party in two-sixteen has been up a long time, sir, she asserted. I found the door ajar at six o'clock, and so I went in and made up the room. Poor Elora exclaimed Mary Louise laughingly. She was too excited to sleep, and as you say, we shall probably find her somewhere about the hotel, enjoying the sights. But they could not find the girl anywhere in the hotel. After a long and careful search for her, Colonel Hathaway left word at the desk that if his room or Mary Louise's room was called, to report that they would be found in the breakfast room. The old gentleman was distinctly annoyed as they sat down to breakfast. The foolish girl is wandering about the street somewhere, he complained, and it was unmanorly to leave the hotel without consulting me, since she is a guest and in my care. Mary Louise's sweet face wore troubled expression. It is not like Elora, Grandpa Jim, she asserted in defense of her friend. Usually I have found her quite considerate. Even after a pause, I—I hope nothing has happened to her. Don't worry, he replied, she's a wide awake girl and has a tongue in her head, so she can't get lost. Why Mary Louise, Elora knows the city well, for she used to live in Chicago with her mother. Until she was eleven, that was four years ago, but I did not think of her getting lost. The automobiles, you know, are so thick. Yes, dear, and there's the lake and the railroad crossings and the street-cars, but the chances are against our little friends being drowned or run over, especially so early in the day, when there isn't much traffic. Again, I ask you not to worry. But Mary Louise couldn't help worrying. They lingered over the breakfast, but Elora did not join them. Then they waited around the hotel until nearly noon, without receiving a word from her. Finally Colonel Hathaway, too, became nervous. He telephoned the Central Police Station to inquire if a young girl of Elora's description had met with an accident. There was no record of such an accident, but in a half an hour a detective came to the hotel and asked for the Colonel. Tell me all the particulars of the young lady's disappearance, please," he requested. When he had received this information he said, Let us go to her room. The key to No. 216 had not been turned in at the desk, but was missing. With a pass key they unlocked the door of Elora's room and found her suitcase open, her toilet articles lying upon the dresser, and her night-robe neatly folded ready for packing. Her hat was missing, however, and the little jacket she wore with her tailored suit. The detective touched nothing but examined the room and its contents with professional care. Let us call the chambermaid who made of the room, he suggested. The woman was easily found, and when she appeared the detective asked, Did you fold this night-robe or did you find it already folded? Why, it was lying careless like over the foot of the bed, said she, so I folded it up. Why didn't you hang it in the closet? The clerk had notified me the room would be vacated to-day, so I knew that when the young lady came back she'd want to pack it in her grip. And at what time did you find the door ajar? At six-ten, sir, I came on duty at six. You did not see Miss Jones? No, sir, if that were the lady's name? You found no one prowling about the halls? Didn't see a soul, sir? Thank you, that's all. When she had gone the detective said to the Colonel in a reassuring tone, I wouldn't worry, sir, although I'll admit this prolonged absence of Miss Jones is puzzling. But perhaps she's gone to call on an old friend and will presently return and apologize. I remember her mother, a remarkable woman, sir, who used to live at the Voltaire. She had a lot of friends in Chicago, did Mrs. Antoinette Sievert-Jones, so it's likely her daughter is looking some of them up. I wish she would do all you can to locate her, pleaded Colonel Hathaway. The young girl was placed in my care by her father, and I feel personally responsible for her safety. She's safe enough, sir. No sign of a struggle in her room, no report of an accident in the city. Went out of her own volition, and will probably come back the same way when she's ready. I'm going back to the office now, but I'll instruct our men to keep a good look out for Miss Jones. If we hear anything, I'll let you know at once. In the meantime, if the girl happens to turn up, you must telephone me of the fact. He handed the Colonel his card and went away. Mrs. Dreadful, Grandpa Jim, exclaimed Mary Louise. That man can't help us a bit. What do you think we ought to do? Why, we've done all in our power already, it seems to me, he answered. The police will keep a good look out for Elora. I've no confidence in that detective. Why not, my dear? He seemed quite courteous and gentlemanly. But he isn't especially interested. He didn't probe far enough into the case. He never asked why the key to Elora's door was missing, yet the maid found the door ajar, half open, said Mary Louise. Would she take the key and leave the door open? Why, no, that is strange, Mary Louise. The detective didn't inquire at the office whether the night clerk had seen Elora pass through and go out. But I inquired, Grandpa, and the night clerk goes off duty at six o'clock, when the relief clerk comes on, but neither saw any girl at all leave the office. No one was in the hotel lobby at that hour. That is strange, too. How could Elora get out otherwise? I can't guess, Grandpa. I'm going to telegraph Josie O'Gorman and ask for advice, said Mary Louise. Do. It's a good idea. Josie Wright put us on the right track, approved the Colonel. So Mary Louise went to the telegraph office in the hotel lobby and sent the following message. Josie O'Gorman, 1225 F Street, Washington, D.C. A girlfriend has mysteriously disappeared from the Blackington where we are stopping. What shall I do? Mary Louise Burroughs. Two hours later she received this answer. Miss Mary Louise Burroughs, Hotel Blackington, Chicago. Notify police at once. Keep cool. I'm coming. Josie O'Gorman. Mary Louise felt tremendously relieved when she read this. Josie was a girl of her own age, but she was the daughter of one of the most celebrated secret servicemen in the employee of the United States government. And John O'Gorman had trained Josie from babyhood in all the cult details of his artful profession. It was his ambition that some day this daughter would become a famous female detective, but he refused to allow her to assume professional duties until she had become thoroughly qualified to excel. He did not wish her to be ordinary but extraordinary, and Josie's talent so far had seemed to justify his expectations. Mary Louise knew Josie very well and admired and loved her, for in her amateur way Josie had once helped to solve a stubborn mystery that threatened the happiness of both the old Colonel and his granddaughter, and through this experience the two girls had become fast friends. Josie O'Gorman was devoted to Mary Louise, who knew she could rely on Josie's judgment in this emergency, but had scarcely expected her to come all the way from Washington to Chicago to render her personal assistance. In appearance the young girl, who was destined some day to become a great detective, was not especially prepossessing. She was short of form and inclined to be stout, chubby, she called herself. She had red hair, a freckled face, and a turned-up nose. But her eyes, round and blue and innocent in expression as those of a baby, dominated her features, and to an extent redeemed their plainness. Mary Louise hurried to the Colonel. Grandpa Jim, she cried excitedly, Josie is coming. That is very good of her, replied the Colonel, highly pleased. Josie is very resourceful, and while she may not be able to trace Elora, she will at least do all in her power. And perhaps her clever little brain will be able to fathom the mystery of the girl's disappearance. She tells us to notify the police, but we did that at once. I don't know of anything else we can do, Grandpa Jim, until Josie comes. Colonel Hathaway communicated with the police office several times that day, and found the officials courteous but calm, prolific of assurances, but not especially concerned. This was but one of a number of peculiar cases that daily claimed their attention. I should hire a private detective. We're not Josie coming, he told Mary Louise, but of course it is possible we shall hear of Elora directly or indirectly before morning. But they did not hear, and both passed a miserable, waitful, anxious night. There is no use in our consulting Elora's father for the present, remarked the old gentleman, next morning. The news would only worry him. You remember how very particular he was in charging me to guard his daughter's safety. Yes, and I know why, replied Mary Louise, Elora has told me that if she has lost, strayed, or stolen for sixty days, her father might be relieved of his guardianship and lose the income he enjoys. Now I wonder, Grandpa Jim, if Elora has purposely lost herself, with mischievous intent, so as to get rid of her father whom she adores. The Colonel considered this thoughtfully. I think not, he decided. The girl is impulsive and at times reckless, and doubtless she would like to be free from her father's guardianship. But I am sure she is too fond of you, and has too much respect for me to run away from us without a word. Besides, she has no money. Really, said Mary Louise despondently, it is the strangest thing I ever knew. Josiah Gorman arrived at the hotel at six o'clock in the afternoon, having caught the fast train from Washington the evening before. She came in as unconcernedly as if she had lived at the hotel, and merely been out to attend a matinee, and greeted the Colonel with a bright smile and Mary Louise with a kiss. My, but I am hungry, were her first words. I hope you haven't dined yet. Oh, Josie, began Mary Louise on the verge of tears, this dreadful— I know, dear, but we must eat. And let's not talk or think of the trouble till our stomachs are in a comfortable condition. Which way is the dining-room? Neither the Colonel nor Mary Louise had eaten much since Elora's disappearance, but they took Josie into dinner, forcing it would be impossible to get her to talk seriously or to listen to them until she was quite ready to do so. And during the meal Josie chattered away like a magpie on all sorts of subjects, except that which weighed most heavily on their minds, and the little thing was so bright and entertaining that they were encouraged to dine more heartily than they otherwise would have done. CHAPTER XVII. But afterward, when they had adjourned to a suite that had now been given them, and which included a cozy little sitting-room, and after the Colonel had been ordered to light his cigar, which always composed his nerves, the old Gorman girl suddenly turned serious, and from the depths of an easy chair, with her hands clasped behind her red head, she said, Now, to business. Begin at the beginning and tell me all there is to tell. Haven't I written you something about Elora, Josie? asked Mary Louise. Never mind whether you have or haven't. Imagine I've forgotten it. I want every detail of the girl's history. So Mary Louise told it, with a few comments from her grandfather. She began with her first meeting with Elora and her eccentric father in Italy, and related not only all the details of their acquaintance, but such facts as Elora had confided to her of her mother's death and her subsequent unhappy relations with her father and guardian. Elora had often talked freely to Mary Louise, venting in her presence much bitterness and resentment over her cruel fate, as she deemed it. So knowing Josie's desire to obtain the most seemingly trifling detail of a case, Mary Louise told the story as connectedly and comprehensively as possible, avoiding all personal comment so as to leave Josie's mind free from prejudice. During the recital, Josie sat very still, with closed eyes, reclining lazily in her chair and refraining from any interruption. Now, Colonel, she said, tell me all that Mary Louise has forgotten to mention. She has told you more than I knew myself, he declared. Of course we informed the police of our friend's disappearance, and they sent a detective here who went into the affair very carefully. Yet, so far. I know, said Josie, nodding. I called at the police station before I came here on leaving the train. The detective is Al Howard, and he's a nice fellow but rather stupid. You must not expect any results from that source. To be sure the department might stumble on a clue, but the chances are they wouldn't recognize it even then. I'm certainly surprised to hear that, said the Colonel. She's your ignorant of police methods. They mean well, but have so much to handle in a big city like this, that they exist in a state of perpetual bewilderment. But what are we to do, pleaded Mary Louise, tell us, Josie. How do I know, asked the girl with a smile. I'm just Josie O'Gorman, a student detective, who makes as many blunders alas, as a full-fledged tech. But I thought I'd be able to help, or I wouldn't have come. I have a personal interest in this case, Mary Louise, because it's your case and I love you. So let's get to work. Have you a photograph of the Lord Jones? No, was the reply. Then give me a word-picture of her. Both Mary Louise and the Colonel tried to do this, and Josie seemed satisfied. Now, then, she said, rising, let's go to her room. I hope it hasn't been disturbed since she left it. The police have taken the key and forbidden anyone to enter the room. Quite proper, but we'll go there just the same. The room was but a few steps away, in the same corridor, and when they arrived there Josie drew a bunch of slender keys from her purse and unlocked the door with no difficulty. Having entered, she turned on the electric lights and cast a curious glance around. Let's read Alora's room, said she, while her companion stood listening. To begin with we see her night-dress nicely folded and her toilet articles arranged in neat order on the dresser. Chambermaid did that, for Alora is not neat. Proving that her stuff was just strewn around and the orderly maid put things straight. Which leads to the suspicion that Alora was led away rather suddenly. Oh, do you think so? She left the door ajar but took the key, intended, of course, to lock her room, but was so agitated by what she saw or heard that she just forgot and walked away. But no one saw her leave the hotel, observed Mary Louise. Then she didn't pass through the office, but through the less used lady's entrance at the side. That was not unlocked, they told me, until after seven. Then she left by the servant's entrance. The servant's? Quite likely. You'll say she didn't know anything about it or where it was, but the fact remains that Alora left the hotel. I'd like to see that chambermaid. I believe you told me that she comes on duty at six o'clock in the morning. All right, I'll catch her at six a.m. tomorrow. The detective interviewer, stated the Colonel, I know, and she answered all his questions. My questions will be different. If Alora used the servant's entrance she went out with a servant or with someone who knew the ways of the hotel intimately. I don't see that, objected Mary Louise. Nor do I, but there lies our trail. Alora didn't pass out through the office, nor did she make her exit through the less public lady's entrance. There are only two other ways to get out of here, through the baggage door and by the servant's entrance at the rear, which sluts out into an alley. The head porter will know whether Alora went out the baggage door, but it's usually very high. On a level with the platform of a baggage wagon, I don't believe she jumped it. That leaves the servant's entrance as the probable exit for our missing one, and as she was a perfect stranger to the arrangements of this hotel, she couldn't have gone out that way unless someone guided her. So our course is clear, Mary Louise. Find out who enticed Alora from the hotel, and it won't be difficult to trace her and discover what has become of her. Enticed, Josie? Had force been used she would have screamed in attracted attention. Let us say she was decoyed. You think, then, that Alora was kidnapped? Let us reason. The girl couldn't have had an enemy in Chicago, according to her history, for she was only eleven when she left here, and no one hates an eleven-year-old child. Having no enemy, she has doubtless escaped personal harm. But Alora is an heiress, and a lot of people in Chicago know that. You suggest kidnapping? Well, perhaps that's the solution, held for ransom. That would be the first idea of Jason Jones, exclaimed Mary Louise. She's always seemed afraid of such a thing. In that case, however, I do not believe her father would pay a ransom, declared Colonel Hathaway. Oh, indeed he would, asserted Mary Louise emphatically. We mustn't forget that if Alora isn't bound and restored to him within a given time he will lose all her income for the next three years. Josie looked at her friend admiringly. Then she laughed. You're a better detective than any of us, she remarked. What I've been groping for is the object of the abduction, you've hit the nail squarely on the head. Now we're getting down to brass tacks, so to speak. The whole thing is explained by the one word, blackmail. Girl disappears, papa is threatened with the loss of thousands. Very well, papa, pay up. Relinquish a part of the income and you may keep the rest. Refuse and you lose it all. Ergo, papa pays. That certainly seems a logical conclusion, admitted the Colonel. Then, said Josie thoughtfully, we must decide whether to put it up to Mr. Jones and let him pay or to go on with the search. We'll go on, exclaimed Mary Louise. We may be wrong and poor Alora may be in danger or suffering. We must rescue her as soon as possible. The girl was in my care, said the Colonel, and I feel responsible for her safety. Moreover, blackmail is a crime against society and the plot should be foiled, even were we not interested in the victim of it. I am anxious to find Alora before her father is approached. Then, Josie decided, we will leave no stone unturned in our efforts to locate and recover her. If we have diagnosed the case correctly, we have to deal with a shrewd and unprincipled, if not clever person. Cleverness too we may encounter, and then our task will be doubly hard. Poor dear Alora, sighed Mary Louise, it's a shame she should suffer because some cruel person wants her father's money. The fortune her mother left her has been a misfortune to her daughter, instead of a blessing. Money, said Josie, sententiously, is a dangerous thing. Its possession or the lack of it leads to four-fifths of the world's crimes. The other one-fifth is charged to hatred and jealousy. But dear me, here am I philosophizing when I ought to be thinking. Then think, Josie, and think to some purpose, pleaded Mary Louise. If our hastily constructed theory is correct, remarked John O'Gorman's daughter, Papa Jones will soon hear from Alora's abductor with a financial proposition. I hope we shall find her before then, returned the Colonel earnestly. We ought not to delay an instant with that idea in view. Indeed our theory may be quite wrong and Alora be in desperate need of immediate assistance. Correct, sir, agreed Josie, but we won't abandon our theory until we evolve a better one, and in following this lead we must first discover who in Chicago is aware of the terms of the will of Antoinette Sever Jones. Also, who is familiar enough with Papa Jones's love of money to believe he can be successfully blackmailed? What information can either of you give me along those lines? Alora has talked to Irene a good deal about that dreadful will, replied Mary Louise. Irene has repeated many of her statements to me. Also, Alora has frankly spoken to me at times, and her queer history has interested us all. But I cannot remember that any such person as you describe is in any way mixed up with the story. Judge Bernstead drew up the will for Alora's mother. He was her lawyer, and she trusted him fully. She was justified, declared Josie. I know of Judge Bernstead by reputation. He died a year ago. Then continued Mary Louise reflectively, there was Mrs. Jones's doctor, who was very kind to Alora, and who also enjoyed her mother's confidence. His name was Anstrother, Dr. Anstrother. He is a prominent physician in Chicago, declared Josie, who seemed to know every important person of every locality, for this had been part of her education. It is impossible that Dr. Anstrother could have any knowledge of this plot. Moreover, it doesn't seem to me like a man's plot. I don't believe Alora would have accompanied a strange man under any circumstances, for she's knocked around the world enough to have learned prudence. The crime is feminine. What woman knew of this will, and was an intimate friend of Mrs. Jones or of Mr. Jones? Really, said Mary Louise, I don't know. Nor you, Colonel. I do not recollect hearing of any woman connected with the Jones history, except Alora's former governess, a Miss Gorham, who was discharged by Mr. Jones at the time he took his daughter from Chicago to New York. That isn't such a bad clue, Josie returned quickly, sitting up straight and staring reflectively at the old gentleman. Miss Gorham, eh? Now how long had she been Alora's governess? For some years, I believe. It was Mary Louise who answered this question. Then she doubtless knew the family's secrets. Was Alora fond of her? I think not. She has told me that at the time they separated she was glad to be rid of the woman. Then the woman may be the kind that would resort to blackmail. Discharged from a good place, where she had drawn pay for years, she would be angry. Brooded during the last four years on her imagined wrongs and figured out a neat revenge, had sized up Papa Jones and knew he clung to money with a desperate grip, and would pay some rather than lose all. Couldn't get another job, was poor, had no money to chase up Jones, but figured he would sometime return to Chicago and give her an opportunity to play her game. Alora had arrived at this hotel and, see here, what would prevent the former governess, now in reduced circumstances, from being employed as a servant in this very hotel, perhaps as a night chambermaid? May have seen Alora enter her room and recognize her former pupil. During the long night she figured and planned how to take advantage of the fortunate circumstances. Early in the morning, before she left here, went to Alora and in some way induced the girl to go out with her. Alora would accompany her old governess without suspicion, so there's the whole story in a nutshell, rather cleverly figured out. Oh, Josie, it must be true, cried Mary Louise, who had eagerly followed this plausible reasoning. And it may not, laughed Josie. It's just a theory and good detective's distrust theories, which often befog clever brains. Still, the deduction sounds mighty logical. I'm going to my room now to give the suggestion some serious thought. I'll try to tear it to pieces or at least to pick holes in it. When I came away Daddy said to me, Josie, beware that imagination of yours, if it asserts itself, sit on it. Daddy was glad to have me tackle the case and to try to help you, for these little affairs give me practice, but he hates to have me make a flat failure. So for dear old Daddy's sake I'm not going to let any good looking theory lead me astray. Good night. You'd both better go to bed, for I can see you had little sleep last night. But your strain must now relax, for you've pushed the responsibility onto my poor little shoulders, and now it's up to me to worry. CHAPTER XIX of Mary Louise solves a mystery by L. Frank Baum. Read for LibriVox.org into the public domain. On the trail. Josie O'Gorman loved mysteries for their own sake. She loved them because they required solutions, and to solve a mystery is not only interesting, but requires a definite amount of talent. Since she was a we-thing perched on her father's knee, officer O'Gorman had flooded her ears with the problems he daily encountered, had turned the problems inside out, and canvassed them from every possible viewpoint, questioning the child if this or that was most probable. By this odd method he not only enjoyed the society of his beloved daughter, but argued himself, through shrewd reasoning, into a lucid explanation of many puzzling cases. To his pleased surprise, as little Josie grew older, she began to answer his questions, taking apart in his professional arguments with himself, and from that time her training as a detective began. John O'Gorman had never been quite sure whether his fatherly adoration unduly influenced him, or whether Josie was indeed an exceptionally talented girl, so having firmly determined to train her to become a girl detective, he had so far held her in leash, permitting her to investigate various private cases, but refusing to place her in professional work, such as the secret service, until she had gained experience and acquired confidence in herself. Confidence was the one thing Josie lacked most. She took her mistakes too much to heart. The girl was full of enthusiasm, however, and now meant to untangle the mystery of Elora Jones if it were possible to do so, both to please Mary Louise and to enjoy the satisfaction of success. After saying good night to her friends and before going to her own room, the girl wandered about the big hotel making casual inquiries and obtaining more or less useful information. Afterward, she sat in her room and arranged in her mind the complete history of Elora, so far as she was informed of it, and made notes of all facts which seemed to bear on the present problem. Next morning she inquired for the housekeeper and found that lady seated in her little office on the third floor of the hotel. I'm trying to trace one of the servants who left you Monday night or early Tuesday morning, she said, after informing the woman that she was engaged in tracing the missing girl Elora Jones. I am not sure what name you knew her by, but her real name was Gorman. No one has left us this week, returned the housekeeper who seemed disposed to converse freely with her visitor. Are you sure of that? Why, I'm positive. We treat our help well and they seldom leave us. I'm sure no woman employed in the hotel, down to the lowest kitchen scullion, has resigned or been discharged during the last few days. And there is no one still in your service named Gorham? No one. It's an unusual name and I should have remembered it. Do any of the guests ever use the servants' entrance? Certainly not. It is reserved exclusively for the employees. Some of our guests have private maids who occasionally use the rear entrances, and Mrs. Tolliver's trained nurses are allowed to pass out that way, too, but—she stopped abruptly as if some new thought had occurred to her. What is it? asked Josie, who was watching her face. Why, I have just recollected that Mrs. Tolliver's night nurse did not show up Tuesday evening for some reason and they were obliged to telephone for another. Who is Mrs. Tolliver? One of our permanent guests, who is suffering just now from a severe attack of rheumatism, she employs two trained nurses, a day nurse and a night nurse. And the night nurse left her post Tuesday morning and did not return in the evening as she was expected to do. That's it, Miss. Mrs. Tolliver was greatly annoyed, but fortunately she was able to secure another nurse at once. What was the nurse's name, the one who abandoned her job without notice? Let me see. It wasn't Gorham. I'll call Alice my assistant. I feel quite sure that she will know. Alice promptly answered the bell and on being questioned said, The nurse was Mrs. Orm. She'd been with Mrs. Tolliver ever since she took sick and was the best nurse she's had. Why did she leave? asked Josie. I don't know, Miss. I'm sure. She were a quiet body, never saying much to no one, but quite ladylike she were and most of us liked her. Can you describe her? Well she isn't tall, not so very tall, you know, and she's got a good form and good manners. I take it she's about thirty-five and handsome for her age. Good eyes, but mostly looks down and don't show them. Very neat and tidy, brown hair. You wear gray clothes, you know, the regular nurse's uniform. Do you know where Mrs. Orm lives? No, Miss, haven't the faintest idea. Who is Mrs. Tolliver's doctor? The house physician, Dr. Pease. His office is number 633 in this hotel. Thank you, Alice. Josie hunted up Mary Louise. Have you ever heard that a trained nurse named Mrs. Orm is in any way connected with Allura's history? No, I'm pretty sure Allura has never mentioned such a person. What about her, Josie? I think Allura went away with her. Have you any description of Miss Corum, the governess? Not especially, said Mary Louise, trying to remember. Allura has sometimes referred to her as old-skinny, but that doesn't mean anything. It means she isn't Mrs. Orm, anyhow, answered Josie in a disappointed tone. Mary Louise considered this in her usual, careful way. She would like to help Josie if she could. Who do you suppose this Mrs. Orm could be? she presently asked. One whom Allura knew years ago, when her mother was alive. Of course her name may not have been Orm then, and she may not have been a trained nurse. That's why I was inclined to connect her with Corum. Wait a minute, Josie, a nurse, do you say? Why I remember something about a nurse—no, Allura's mother's nurse. When we were in Italy, when I first knew Allura, she told me that her father, at one time, when they lived in New York, had been forced to give money to a woman, and Allura believed he had left America to escape this person's further demands. When I asked who the woman was, she said it was her mother's nurse, but I'm pretty sure she didn't mention her name. Josie's freckled face now bore broad smile. How simple any enigma proves when you have the key, she remarked, with an air of relief. The mystery is solved, my dear. It's all as easy as A, B, C. In that case, said Mary Louise, more mystified than ever, kindly obliged me with the key. Not a pleasure! You haven't given me much time to forge a chain, so I'll add each link as it occurs to me. Mrs. Jones, during her last illness, had a nurse, a good nurse, too, in whom she had confidence. When Mrs. Jones sent for her husband, from whom she had been estranged, the nurse was aware of the action. When the husband came, Allura's father, without doubt the nurse remained in the sick room during the interview. Husband and wife quarreled, instead of making up. This guest is justified by the man's disagreeable disposition, and Mrs. Jones hastily wrote a codicil to her will, and gave it into the nurse's keeping, with instructions to deliver it to her lawyer. Then the poor lady, overexcited, lay back and died, and the man, Jason Jones, realized that his lack of diplomacy had eukered him out of a big income for seven years. But he put up a job with the nurse who held his fate in her hands in the shape of a scrap of paper. If she'd give him that codicil—no, that isn't right. If she'd keep it to herself and not let anyone know of its reasons, Mr. Jones proposed to give her a share of the money. She considered this easier than working, and the bargain was struck. Isn't that a logical chain of events so far, Mary Louise? But what a terrible thing to do, Josie! Yes, human nature in its worst aspect, selfishness, greed, unscrupulousness, and still human nature. Well, the woman followed him to New York and got some of the money, as Allura said, but the nurse wanted more, and was likely to bleed the man more liberally than he liked. Though being afraid of her he ran away to Europe. Nurse spent her money, couldn't find Jason Jones to get more, and so returned to Chicago and practiced her profession again. Any dummy could figure that out. I cannot see, responded Mary Louise, how that accounts for Allura's disappearance. Why, of course, the woman knew all about the terms of the will. She was nursing a Mrs. Toliver in this hotel when she discovered Allura's arrival. How she discovered it doesn't matter. In the morning, when the day nurse arrived to take her place, she left Mrs. Toliver and went directly to Allura's room. The girl instantly recognized her and would probably have a warm place in her heart for her mother's old nurse. Decided to walk part of the way home with her so they could talk over old times, you and the colonel being still asleep, but was enticed to the nurse's house and promptly locked up and held as a weapon to force old Jones to pay up. This completes the chain. A woman who would enter into such an ugly deal with Jason Jones as I have described would not hesitate to capture Allura, especially as it proved an easy thing to do. Mary Louise drew a long breath. If I could believe that theory, Josie, she said, it would relieve me of much worry, for I'd know Allura is safe. But what was it your father said about your imagination? Josie laughed. This isn't holy imagination, you goose, for it's based on a knowledge of human nature, as I've hinted. Also it's a scientific matching of the pieces in the puzzle. Why, Mary Louise, in this deduction we have all the necessary elements of the usual crime. A woman. Always look for a woman in a mystery, my dear. Money. The cause of four-fifths of all crimes. And a guilty man who is afraid of being forced to discourage his ill-gotten gains. Then we will add an innocent girl who suffers through the machinations of others. Some of my conclusions may not be exactly correct, but in the main the story is absolutely logical. That's what you said last night, Josie, when you thought the governess, Gorham, had abducted Allura. True, but I have later information which doesn't entirely upset the theory, but changes the actors in the drama. I don't say that further investigations may not alter this present plot in some of its details, but the main facts are too lucid and undeniable to get far away from. I'm now going to interview the house physician and get Mrs. Orm's address. When she had gone, Mary Louise went to Grandpa Jim with the tale of Josie's latest discoveries, and Colonel Hathaway was so impressed by the theory that he decided to telegraph Peter Connott to catch the noon train and come straight to Chicago. The complication suggested by Josie will require a lawyer's advice, he said, and Mr. Connott knows law and can advise us how to handle the case when we have discovered where Allura is confined. Meanwhile, Josie went to the doctor's office and after waiting some time was finally admitted to his private room. I came to ask for the address of a trained nurse, a Mrs. Orm, whom you recommended to Mrs. Tolliver, she began, her innocent eyes regarding the physician gravely. Dr. Pease frowned. I cannot recommend her again, said he, although she's a good nurse, she is unreliable, and left my patient without notice when she was badly needed. I merely want to find her, declared Josie. I'm a stranger in town, and I have a letter of introduction to Mrs. Orm. I don't know her address. I got the woman through Dr. Anstrother. Oh! May I telephone Dr. Anstrother, then? I've no objection. There's a telephone in the outer office, but you're not likely to catch him much before noon. Dr. Anstrother is a very busy man. Josie went to her own room to telephone. She telephoned Dr. Anstrother's office at intervals all the morning, but did not succeed in getting him until nearly two o'clock. Then he answered that he did not know Mrs. Orm's address, having always secured her services through the sister's hospital. Josie tried the sister's hospital and learned that Mrs. Orm lived in an apartment at 524 Morgan Avenue. She took a taxi cab and drove there, determining to obtain an interview with the woman by posing as a nurse who desired assistance in securing employment. But disappointment confronted her. Mrs. Orm had moved from the apartment ten days ago, and her present address was unknown. She has taken considerable pains to cover her traces, said Josie to Mary Louise when she returned from her futile trip. I hope you're not discouraged, dear," returned Mary Louise anxiously. The local detectives have done nothing at all, so you are our only hope, Josie. The embryo detective smiled sweetly. I'm not here on a pleasure trip, she said, although I enjoy travel and good hotel fodder as well as any one. This is business, but so far I'm just feeling my way and getting a start. You can't open a mystery as you do a book, Mary Louise. It has to be pride open. The very fact that this Mrs. Orm has so carefully concealed her hiding-place is assurance that she's the guilty party who abducted Elora. Being positive of that, it only remains to find her, not an impossibility by any means, and then we shall have no difficulty in liberating her prisoner. But to find her, can you do that, Josie? Certainly, with a little help from the police, which they will gladly furnish. They know I'm Daddy's daughter, for I have already introduced myself to them, and while they may be slow to take the initiative they are always quite willing to aid in an affair of this sort. Now it stands to reason, Mary Louise, that the nurse didn't use the streets to promenade with Elora. That would have been dangerous to her plans. There are so few people abroad in Chicago at six o'clock in the morning that those who met the two would have noted and remembered them. For the same reason Mrs. Orm did not take a streetcar or the elevated. Therefore she took a cab, and the cab men who drove them will know Mrs. Orm's address. But who was the cab man? asked Mary Louise. That, said Josie, is to be my next discovery. CHAPTER XXXI of Mary Louise solves a mystery by L. Frank Baum. Read for LibriVox.org into the public domain. DECOID. The excitement of being once more in a big city rendered Elora Jones wakeful on that eventful Tuesday morning following her arrival in Chicago. At daybreak she rose and peered through the window into a gray and unimpressive side street. Then, disinclined to return to bed, she slowly began dressing. Presently a sharp knock sounded upon her door. Somewhat surprised she opened it far enough to see a middle-aged woman attired in a nurse's uniform standing in the dim hallway. Miss Jones? Miss Elora Jones? questioned the woman in a soft voice. Yes, what is it? I have a message for you. May I come in? Elora, fearful that Mary Louise or the Colonel might have been taken suddenly ill, threw wide the door and allowed the woman to enter. As the nurse closed the door behind her, Elora switched on the electric light, and then facing her visitor for the first time recognized her and gave a little cry of surprise. Janet! Yes, I am Janet Orm, your mother's nurse. But I thought you abandoned nursing after you made my father give you all that money. An accent of scorn in her tone. I did for a time, was the quiet answer. All that money was not a great sum. It was not as much as your father owed me, so I soon took up my old profession again. The woman's voice and attitude were meek and deprecating, yet Elora's face expressed distrust. She remembered Janet's jaunty insolence at her father's studio, and how she had dressed extravagantly and attended theatre parties and fashionable restaurants, scattering recklessly the money she had extracted from Jason Jones. Janet, with an upward sweep of her half-failed eyes, read the girl's face clearly, but she continued in the same subdued tones. However, it is not of myself I came here to speak, but on behalf of your mother's old friend, Dr. Anstrother. Oh, did he send you here? Yes, I am his nurse just now. He has always used me on his important cases, and now I am attending the most important case of all, his own. Is Dr. Anstrother ill, then? asked Elora. He is dying. His health broke weeks ago, as you may have heard, and gradually he has grown worse. This morning he is sinking rapidly. They have no hope that he will last through the day. Oh, I'm sorry for that, explained Elora, who remembered the kindly old doctor with real affection. He had been not only her mother's physician, but her valued friend. He learned quite by accident of your arrival here last evening, Janet went on, and so he begged me to see you and implore you to come to his bedside. I advised him not to disturb you until the morning, but the poor man is very restless, and so I came here at this unusual hour. It seems he is anxious to tell you some secret, which your dead mother confided to his keeping, and realizing his hours are numbered, he urges you to lose no time in going to him. That is the message entrusted to me. There was no emotion in her utterance. The story was told calmly, as by one fulfilling a mission, but indifferent as to its success. Elora did not hesitate. How far is it? she quickly asked. A fifteen-minute ride. The girl glanced at her watch. It was not quite six o'clock. Mary Louise and the Colonel would not appear for breakfast for a good two hours yet, and after breakfast they were all to go to the yacht. The hour was opportune, affording her time to visit poor Dr. Anstrother and return before her friends were up. Had Elora paused to give Janet's story more consideration, she might have seen the inconsistencies in the nurse's statements, but her only thoughts were to learn her mother's secret and to show her sincere consideration for her kindly old friend. Early completing her attire, she added her hat and jacket, and then said, I am ready, Janet. I hope we shall find him still alive, remarked the nurse, a cleverly assumed anxiety in her tone, as she took the key from inside the door and fitted it to the outer side of the lock. Elora passed out, scarcely aware that Janet had pretended to lock the door. Halfway down the hall the woman handed her the key. Come this way, please, she said, it is nearer to the carriage which is waiting for us. At the rear of the building they descended the stairs and passed through an anti-room, filled with lockers for the use of the employees of the hotel. No one happened to be in the anti-room at that moment, and they gained the alley without encountering a single person. Janet quickly led the girl through the alley, and soon they came to a closed automobile, which evidently awaited them. Janet opened the door for Elora and followed the girl inside the car, which started at once and sped along the quiet streets. You will find Dr. Anstrother very feeble, said the nurse, for he has suffered greatly. But I am sure it will give him pleasure to see you again. I hope he will recognize you. I scarcely recognize you myself. You have changed so much since last we saw you at the Voltaire. Your resemblance to your mother is quite marked, however. And so during the ride she kept up a flow of dulcetory conversation, intended to distract Elora's attention from the section of the city through which they were passing. She spoke of Dr. Anstrother mostly, and answered such questions as Elora put to her in a calm, unemotional manner well calculated to allay suspicion. The woman kept her eyes veiled by her lashes, as of your, but her face seemed to have aged and grown harder in its lines. There was no hint now of her former gay life in New York. She had resumed the humble tones and manners peculiar to her profession, such as Elora remembered where characteristic of her at the time she nursed her mother. This is the place, said Janet, as the cab came to a stop. Let us move softly, as noise disturbs my patient. Elora had paid no attention to the direction they had driven, but on leaving the car she found herself facing a three-story brick-flat building of not very prepossessing appearance. There were several vacant lots on either side of this building, giving it a lonely appearance, and in the lower windows were pasted placards to let. Oh! does Dr. Anstrother live here? asked Elora, somewhat astonished. Without seeming to have heard the question, Janet mounted the steps and opened the front door with a latch-key. Elora followed her inside and up two dingy flights to the third floor. Once she started to protest, for the deadly silence of the place impressed her with a vague foreboding that something was amiss, but Janet silenced her with a warning finger on her lips, and on reaching the upper landing herself avoided making noise as she cautiously unlocked the door. She stood listening a moment and then entered and nodded to the girl to follow. They were in a short, dark passage which separated the landing from the rooms of the flat. Janet closed the outer door, startling her companion with a sharp click it made, and quickly opened another door which led into a shabby living-room at the front of the building. Standing just within this room, Elora glanced around with the first real sensation of suspicion she had yet experienced. Janet raised her lids for a sweeping view of the girl's face, and then with a light laugh began to remove her cloaking cap, which she hung in a closet. "'Come, child, make yourself at home,' she said in a mocking, triumphant voice, as she seated herself in a chair facing the bewildered girl. "'I may as well inform you that this is to be your home for some time to come, until Jason Jones decides to rescue you. You won't object, I hope. Don't get nervous, and you'll find your quarters very comfortable, if retired.' Elora, understanding now, first shuttered, then grew tense and cast a hurried glance at the hall-door behind her. "'Have you lied to me, Janet?' she demanded. "'Yes.' "'And this is a trap. Dr. Anstrother is not sick. He did not send for me. He is not here.' "'You have guessed correctly, Elora.' The girl wheeled, and in a quick run reached the door to the landing. It was fast-locked. "'Help!' she cried, and then stopped to listen. "'Help, help!' "'Come in and take off your things,' called Janet, undisturbed by the outcry. "'This building hasn't a soul in it but ourselves, and you may yell for help until you are a horse without being heard. But don't be afraid. I'm not going to hurt you. In fact, I'd like to make your confimeness cheerful as possible. Can't you understand the truth, that I am simply holding your person in order to force Jason Jones to pay the money he owes me?' CHAPTER XXI. OF MARRY LOUISE SOLVES A MYSTERY by L. FRANK BAUM. Red for LibriVox.org into the public domain. JANET'S TRIUMPH. Elora stood by the door, irresolute, wondering what to do. It occurred to her that she was not much afraid of Janet Orm. She had been trapped in order to bleed her father of money. It was all her father's fault—his fault and Janet's. "'Suppose you help me get our breakfast,' suggested the nurse Cooley. "'It will take your mind off your trouble and keep you from brooding. I admit I'm hungry, and I'm sure you'll feel better for a cup of coffee.' She passed into another room as she spoke, and Elora, realizing the hall door could not be forced by her puny length, advanced into the living room. There were three other doorways opening from this apartment. She could hear Janet rattling dishes and pans, so the way she had gone led into the kitchen. The other two doors she found gave entrances to small bedrooms, neither having egress other than through the living room. The furniture in all the rooms was cheap and tawdry but fairly comfortable. Elora sat down and tried to collect her thoughts. Janet got the breakfast unaided and then came to summon her. Elora quietly walked into the kitchen and sat down at a little table spread for two. There was a dish of crisp bacon, some toast and coffee. Elora silently ate and drank, determined to maintain her strength. Having finished her meal, she sat back and asked, "'Do you mind explaining what all this means?' "'No, indeed, I'm glad to explain,' replied the woman, raising her eyelids and instant to flash a glance of approval at her prisoner. "'I have already said that I was obliged to annoy you in order to reach your father. But the dear father is an elusive person, you know, and is determined to avoid paying the money he owes me. I haven't been able to locate him lately, but I have located you, and you are mighty precious to him, because if he loses you he loses the income from your fortune. Therefore it is my intention to hold you here until Jason Jones either pays my demands, or allows the probate court to deprive him of his guardianship. The proposition is really very simple, as you see." "'Still,' said Elora, "'I do not quite understand. How did you know of my value to my father?' "'I witnessed your mother's will,' was the reply. Elora remembered that this was true. "'But why does my father still owe you money? You were paid for nursing my mother, and if your demands are merely blackmail, why does not my father defy you?' "'I'll tell you,' answered Janet. "'It is a bit of ancient history, but it may interest you. Your mother renounced your father when you were scarcely a year old. I met Jason Jones soon afterward, and, believing, as your own deluded mother did, that he would become a great artist, I gambled with him on his career. In other words, I supported Jason Jones with all my earnings as a nurse for a period of six years, and in return he signed an agreement which states that one half of all the money he received in the future, from whatever source, must be paid to me in return for my investment. Doubtless we both thought at the time that any money he got would come from the sale of his pictures. Neither of us could have dreamed that your mother would call him to her on her deathbed and present him with your income until you came of age, seven years' control of a fortune, with no other obligation than to look after a child and keep her with him. But the agreement between us covered even that astonishing event. Imagine if you can, Jason Jones's amazement when he entered your mother's sick chamber to find me, his partner, acting as her nurse. He was also annoyed, for he realized I knew the terms of the will and would demand my share of his income. Can you blame me? He hadn't made good as an artist, and this was my only chance to get back some of the hard-earned savings I had advanced him. But Jason Jones isn't square, Elora. He's mean and shifty, as perhaps you have discovered. He gave me some money at first, when I followed him to New York, as you know, but after that the coward ran away. That provoked me and made me determined to run him down. I traced him to Europe and followed him there, but he evaded me for a full year, until my money was gone and I was forced to return to America. For nearly three years longer I worked as a nurse and hoarded my earnings. Then through your father's banker in New York I managed to learn his address. The banker didn't tell me, but I did a little spy work, and in the bank's mail I found a letter in Jason Jones's handwriting postmarked Positano, Italy. That was all the clue I needed, and I went to Italy and soon located my man. I faced him in his own villa, I believe you are away at the time, and when he found he was caught he cringed and begged for mercy and promised to give me all that belonged to me. He said he had a lot of gold in his possession and he would pay me partly in gold and partly in drafts on his New York banker. Then he left the room to get the gold and returned with a husky Italian servant, who seized and bound me and threw me into a stone house used to store grapes, where I was kept a prisoner for nearly ten days and treated like a dog. Finally the Italian released me, asserting that Jason Jones was on his way to America. I followed as soon as I could get passage in a ship, but your clever father had left New York before I arrived there, and I could not discover where he had hidden himself. Once more he had beaten me. Her voice was hard and angry. Allora was tempted to believe the story, for many of its details she knew were true. She remembered, for one thing, that queer letter from Silvio, which she had discovered tucked inside one of her father's books. It stated that, according to orders, the Italian had released the prisoner. So the prisoner had been Janet, and Allora could well understand her determination to secure revenge. It seems to me, she said, that you should have taken your contract with my father to a lawyer and brought suit to recover the money, do you? Surely that would have been the easiest way to collect it. Janet's face grew red. Her lashes dropped still further over the eyes, but she answered after an instant's pause. I do not wish the world to know what a fool I was to support an imitation artist for six long years. A lawsuit means publicity, and I have a little pride left I can assure you. Besides, collecting her thoughts as she spoke, I cannot see the wisdom of dividing my share with a lawyer when I can bring your father to terms myself. I know I have executed a bold stroke in seizing you and making you my prisoner, but it's a stroke that's bound to win. It was conceived last night on the spur of the moment. Lately I've been nursing in Chicago, where I am better known than in New York and can get better wages. Since my return from Italy I've been saving to renew the search for Jason Jones, while nursing a Mrs. Tolliver at the Hotel Blackington, Fortune suddenly smiled on me. I chanced to examine the hotel register last night and found you were registered with Colonel Hathaway's party. Your room number was marked opposite your name, so I had you properly located. During the night, while on duty in Mrs. Tolliver's room, I had ample time to figure out a plan of action. I knew you were fond of old Dr. Anstrother and so used his name for allure. I had already rented this flat, not with the idea of using it for a prison, but because it was cheap and so isolated that I could sleep during the daytime without being disturbed. I believe that's all I need to explain to you. Our little adventure of this morning you will now be able to understand perfectly. Also you will understand the fact that you must remain a prisoner until my purpose is accomplished. I'm sorry for you, but it can't be helped. Won't you have another cup of coffee, Elora? Elora had no answer ready. Janet's story did not satisfy her. She felt that somewhere there was a flaw in it, but she decided to bide her time. CHAPTER XXII. A LORA, being in the Main a sensible girl, strove to make the best of her unpleasant predicament. She longed to notify Mary Louise that she was safe and well, and in answer to her pleadings Janet agreed she might write a letter to that effect, with no hint that she was imprisoned or where she could be found, and the nurse would mail it for her. So Elora wrote the letter and showed it to Janet, who could find no fault with its wording and promised to mail it when she went out to market, which she did every morning, carefully locking her prisoner in. It is perhaps needless to state that the letter never reached Mary Louise because the nurse destroyed it instead of keeping her agreement to mail it. The nurse can be traced, and Janet did not wish to be traced just then. The days dragged by with little excitement. Elora sought many means of escape but found none practical. Once while Janet was unlocking the hall door to go to market, the girl made a sudden dash to get by her and so secure her freedom, but the woman caught her arm and swung her back so powerfully that Elora fell against the opposite wall, bruised and half stunned. She was no match for Janet in strength. I'm sorry, so Janet complacently, but you brought it on yourself. I'm not brutal, but I won't be balked. Remember, my girl, that to me this is a very important enterprise, and I have no intention of allowing you to defeat my plans. Usually the woman was not unpleasant in her treatment of Elora, but conversed with her frankly and cheerfully as if striving to relieve her loneliness. Have you written to my father about me? the girl asked one day. Not yet, was the reply. I don't even know where Jason Jones may be found, for he haven't given me his address. But there's no hurry. You've been missing only a week so far. Jason Jones has doubtless been notified of your disappearance and is beginning to worry. Of course he will imagine I am responsible for this misfortune and his alarm will grow with the days that pass. Finally, when his state of mind becomes desperate, you will give me his address and he will hear from me. I shall have no trouble at that crisis in bringing my dishonest partner to terms. I can't see the object of waiting so long, protested Elora. How long do you intend to keep me here? I think you should remain missing about fifty days, during which time they will search for you in vain. Your father's search for you will include a search for me, and I've figured on that and defy him to find me. The sister's hospital, the only address known to the physicians who employ me, believe I've gone to some small Indiana town on a case, but I neglected to give them the name of the town. So there's a blind lead that will keep my pursuers busy without their getting anywhere, and it's easy to hide in a big city. Here you are very safe, Elora, and discovery is impossible. Janet had abandoned her nurse's costume from the first day of the girl's imprisonment. When she went out, which was only to a nearby market and grocery, she wore an unobtrusive dress. Every day seemed more dreary to Elora than the last. She soon became very restless under her enforced confinement and her nerves, as well as her general health, began to give way. She had been accustomed to out-of-door exercise and the rooms were close and stuffy, because Janet would not allow the windows open. For twelve days and nights poor Elora constantly planned an escape, only to abandon every idea she conceived as foolish and impractical. She looked forward to fifty days of this life with horror, and believed she would go mad if forced to endure her confinement so long. CHAPTER XXIII. A Compromise. If I had any money of my own, Elora said to Janet Orm on the morning of the twelfth day of imprisonment, I would gladly pay it to be free. Janet flashed a quick glance at her. Do you mean that? She asked with ill-suppressed eagerness. I do indeed, declared the girl, moaning dismally, but I never have a scent to call my own. Janet sat still for some time, thinking. I too wish you were free, she admitted, resuming the conversation. For my position as jailer obliges me to share your confinement, and it's wearing on me as it is on you. But you have unconsciously given me a thought, an idea that seems likely to lead to a compromise between us. I'm going to consider it seriously, and if it still looks good to me, I'll make you a proposition. Saying this, she retired to her bedroom and closed the door after her, leaving Elora in a fit of nervous trembling through half-formed hopes that she might gain her release. It was nearly an hour before Janet returned. When she came from her room she stood before the girl for a time and seemed to study her face. Elora was anxious and did not endeavor to conceal the fact. In her hand the woman held a paper, which she presently laid upon the centre-table. I've decided to make you a proposition, she said, turning to seat herself near the table. If it interests you, all right. If it doesn't, you may of course reject it. My offer is this. If you will tell me where to find your father and will promise not to mention me to him, or warn me of my intentions, and if you will sign this paper which I have prepared, I will allow you to return to your friends to-day. You are not especially fond of Jason Jones, I believe. Not especially, although he is my father, returned Elora, eyeing the woman expectantly. Then you can have no objection to my forcing him to discourage my share of his income, which you would not get in any event. I don't know how much of an allowance he makes you, but— I don't get any allowance, said Elora. In fact, he gives me nothing. Then my demands on your father will not affect your interests. Are you willing to give me his address and promise not to warn him? Under the circumstances, yes. Very well. I accept your plighted word, your word of honour. Now sign this paper, and you may go. She took the paper from the table and handed it to Elora, who read as follows. For value received, in services faithfully rendered in which I hereby freely and without courage and acknowledge, I hereby promise and agree to pay to Janet Orm-Jones on the day that I attain my majority the sum of fifty thousand dollars, which sum is to be paid from my estate without recourse, equivocation, or attempt to repudiate the said obligation, and as much as I willingly admit the said sum to be justly due, the said Janet Orm-Jones. Signed. Elora read the paper twice, with growing indignation. Then she glanced up at her jailer and muttered questioningly, Jones, Janet Orm-Jones—a family name, my dear. The Joneses are so thick and so unimportant that I generally do not use the name, but this is a legal document. I hope you won't try to claim relationship, she added, with a light laugh. I'm not going to promise you so enormous a sum as fifty thousand dollars, even to secure my liberty, said Elora. It's out of all reason. It's—it's outrageous. Very well, returned Janet Cooley, that's your own affair. This is merely a compromise proposition, suggested by yourself, as I told you. Let us say no more about it. Elora was greatly disheartened. After allowing her hopes to run so high, the disappointment was now doubly keen. Her defiance melted away with the thought of all the weary days of imprisonment she must endure, until Janet was ready to act. I—I might agree to give you five thousand dollars, she ventured. Nonsense! I'm not gunning for small game, Elora. Did you but realize I'm quite considerate in exacting only fifty thousand? Your estate is worth two millions. Your income is something like eighty thousand a year, and this payment would leave you thirty thousand to use the first year after you come into your fortune. I don't believe you could spend thirty thousand in a year when you are eighteen years of age. Elora turned away, and going to the front window looked through its stain and unwashed pains to the gloomy street below. The sight emphasized her isolation from the world. Her imprisonment was becoming unbearable. After all she reflected in a reckless mood, what did so small a share of her perspective fortune weigh against her present comfort and health and happiness? Janet was stealthily watching her. Should you decide to sign the paper, said the nurse, you must make up your mind not to raise a row when payday comes. The money will come out of your income, and instead of investing it in more bonds, you will have invested it in your liberty. You won't be inconvenienced in the slightest degree. On the other hand, this money will mean everything to me—a modest competence for my old age and relief from the drudgery of working. I've had a hard life, my girl, for nursing is mere slavery to the whims of sick people. It are also that for six years Jason Jones squandered all my savings in trying to paint pictures that were not worth the canvass he ruined. If I had that money now I wouldn't need to descend to this disgraceful mode of recouping my bank account. But under the circumstances don't you think I am justly entitled to some of the Jones' money? You're going to get a lot from my father. True, but that is for his indebtedness, while this amount is for your freedom. A scrape of the pen and you secure liberty, fresh air and the privilege of rejoining your friends, who are probably getting anxious about you. If you are the sensible girl I take you to be, you won't hesitate. Alora knew the woman was pleading her own case, but the arguments appealed to her. She was weak and nervous, and her longing for liberty outweighed her natural judgment. I suppose I'm a fool, but— Slowly she approached the table where the written promissory notes still lay. Janet had placed a pen and ink-stand beside it. End of Chapter 23 Red by Cibella Denton For more free audio books or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org Chapter 24 of Mary Louise Solves a Mystery by L. Frank Baum Read for LibriVox.org into the public domain Mary Louise has an intuition I wish, Josie, said Mary Louise dolefully, you'd let me help in this search for Alora. I'd be glad to, dear, if I could think of a single thing you could do, replied her friend. Since now I'm on the most tedious task imaginable—visiting the army of cab drivers, horse and taxi, here in Chicago, and trying to find the one who carried a woman and a girl away from the Blackington at six o'clock that eventful Tuesday morning. Have you met with any success at all? asked Mary Louise. That question proves you're not fitted for detective work. Josie laughingly asserted, a moment's reflection would assure you that when I found my man my search would be ended. Ergo! No success has yet attended my efforts. I've interviewed a couple of hundreds, however, and that leaves only a few hundreds left to question. But the whole thing drags terribly, complained Mary Louise. Days are passing and who knows what may be happening to poor Alora while you are hanging around the cab stands? Josie's face grew gray. In sobretones she said, I'm just as anxious as you are, Mary Louise, but this case is really puzzling because Chicago is such a big city that criminals may securely hide themselves here for months, even for years, without being discovered. Mrs. Orm was clever enough to leave a few traces behind her. As far as clues are concerned, she might have evaporated into thin air, taking Alora with her, except for this matter of the cabman. That's why I'm pinning my faith to this search, knowing all the time nevertheless, that Mrs. Orm may have provided for even that contingency and rendered the discovery of the cabman impossible. To do that, however, she would have to use a private equipage involving a confederate and I believe she preferred to take chances with a hired cab. What are the police doing? inquired Mary Louise nervously. Nothing. They were soon discouraged and lost interest in the matter when I took hold of the case. But I don't intend to get discouraged. I hate to be stumped, as you know, and it seems to me, after careful consideration, that success may follow the discovery of the cab driver. I've not been neglecting other trails, I assure you. I've obtained a pretty fair record of the history of nurse Orm. She has the habit of dredging in sick rooms until she accumulates enough capital to lead a gay life for a month or so, after which she resumes nursing in order to replenish her purse. She's a good nurse and a wild spendthrift, but aside from the peculiarity mentioned there is nothing in her career of a special interest. The woman is pretty well known, both in New York and Chicago, for she squanders in the first city and saves in the other. But of her early history there is no information available. In her wildest mood she has never done anything to warrant her arrest, yet the police have kept a suspicious eye on her for years. Poor Elora! wailed Mary Louise miserably. I wish I could do something for her. You did a lot for her when you put me on her trail, declared Josie with conviction. I have a hunch I shall win. I've wired Daddy O'Gorman all about the case, but he says he can't advise me. In other words, he's watching to see whether I make good or cave in, and I just dare not fail. So keep your courage, Mary Louise, and muster all the confidence you are able to repose in me. I may not know all the tricks of the sleuths, but I know some of them. And now I'm off to interview more cabmen. Mary Louise's side is her friend left her. She was indeed very unhappy and restless during those days of tedious waiting. Peter Cannot had come to Chicago on the Colonel's demand, but Mary Louise couldn't see how he was able to help them one bit. Of course, the lawyer had said in his terse choppy manner, whoever abducted the girl is criminally liable. We can put the party in jail. When we get her, suggested Mary Louise impatiently, the party is Mrs. Orm. We have established that fact without a doubt, and if we could get her we'd also get Elora. Just so, Peter replied, and between the O'Gorman girl and the police we ought to capture the woman soon. I have a degree of confidence in Josie O'Gorman and somewhat more confidence in the police. Do you think we should notify Jason Jones, inquired Colonel Hathaway? I have considered that, sir, in all its phases, and knowing the man's peculiar characteristics, I believe such a course is not yet desirable. Jones is so enthralled by his latest craze over aviation that he would be no fit adviser and could render no practical assistance in the search for his daughter. On the other hand, his association would be annoying, for he would merely accuse you of neglect in permitting Elora to be stolen while in your care. I have seen a copy of his wife's will and know the girl's loss may cost him his guardianship and the perquisites that pertain to it. In that case he will probably sue you for the loss of the money, claiming Elora's abduction was due to your carelessness. He could not win such an absurd suit, however, declared the Colonel. Still, he might be awarded damages, asserted the lawyer. Juries are uncertain. The law is somewhat elastic. Judges are peculiar. Don't worry, Grandpa Jim, said Mary Louise soothingly, as she sat on the arm of his chair and rubbed the wrinkles from his forehead, there must be such a thing as justice, even in law. Law is justice, stated Mr. Canot, resenting the insinuation, but justice is sometimes recognized by humans in one form and sometimes in another. I do not say that Jason Jones should collect damages on such a complaint, but he assuredly would have a case. Mr. Canot had desired to return home after the first conference with his client, but he admitted that his wife was recovering from her indisposition, and a kindly neighbor was assisting Irene in the care of her, so he yielded to his client's urgent request to remain. Colonel Hathaway was more alarmed by Elora's disappearance than he allowed Mary Louise to guess, and he wanted Mr. Canot to spur the police to renewed effort. In addition to this, the Colonel and his lawyer usually spent the best part of each day pursuing investigations on their own account, with the result that Mary Louise was left to mope alone in the hotel rooms. The young girl was fond of Elora and secretly terrified over her mysterious disappearance. She tried to embroider, as she sat alone and waited for something to happen, but her nerveless fingers would not hold the needle. She bought some novels, but could not keep her mind on the stories. Hour by hour she gazed from the window into the crowded street below, searching each form and face for some resemblance to Elora. She had all the newspaper sent to her room that she might scan the advertisements and personals for a clue, and this led her to following the news of the Great War, in which she found a partial distraction from her worries. And one morning, after her grandfather and the lawyer had left her, she was glancing over the columns of the Tribune when an item caught her eye that drew from her a cry of astonishment. The item read as follows. The grand prize at the exhibition of American paintings being held in the Art Institute was yesterday awarded by the jury to the remarkable landscape entitled Poppies and Pepper Trees by the California artist Jason Jones. The picture has not only won praise from eminent critics, but has delighted the thousands of visitors who have flocked to the exhibition, so the award is a popular one. The associated artists are tendering a banquet tonight to Jason Jones at the Congress Hotel, where he is staying. The future of this clever artist promises well and will be followed with interest by all admirers of his skillful technique and marvelous coloring. Mary Louise read this twice, trying to understand what it meant. Then she read it a third time. "'How strangely we have all been deceived in Elora's father,' she murmured. I remember that Grandpa Jim once claimed that any man so eccentric might well possess talent, but even Mr. Jones's own daughter did not believe he was a true artist. And Elora never guessed he was still continuing to paint, alone and in secret, or that he had regained his former powers and was creating a masterpiece. We have all been sadly wrong in our judgment of Jason Jones. Only his dead wife knew he was capable of great things.' She dropped the paper, still somewhat bewildered by the remarkable discovery. "'And he is here in Chicago, too,' she mused, continuing her train of thought. And we all thought he was stupidly learning to fly in Dorfield. Oh! Now I understand why he allowed Elora to go with us. He wanted to exhibit his picture, the picture whose very existence he had so carefully guarded, and knew that with all of us out of the way, afloat upon the great lakes, he could come here without our knowledge and enter the picture in the exhibition. It may be he doubted its success. He is diffident in some ways, and thought if it failed none of us at home would be the wiser. But I am sure that now he is one he will brag and bluster and be very conceited and disagreeable over his triumph. That is the man's nature, to be cowed by failure and bombastic over success. It's singular, come to think it over, how one who has the soul to create a wonderful painting can be so crude and uncultured, so morose and—and cruel. Suddenly she decided to go and look at the picture. The trip would help to relieve her loneliness, and she was eager to see what Jason Jones had really accomplished. The institute was not so far from her hotel. She could walk the distance in a few minutes, so she put on her hat and set out for the exhibition. On her way disbelief assailed her. I don't see how the man did it, she mentally declared. I wonder if that item is just a huge joke, because the picture was so bad that the reporter tried to be ironical. But when she entered the exhibition and found a small crowd gathered around one picture, it was still early in the day, she dismissed at once that doubtful supposition. That is the Jason Jones picture, said an attendant answering her question and nodding toward the admiring group. That's the prize-winner. Over there. Mary Louise edged her way through the crowd until the great picture was in full view, and then she drew a long breath, awestruck, delighted, filled with a sense of all-pervading wonder. It's a tremendous thing, whispered a man beside her to his companion. There's nothing in the exhibit to compare with it, and how it breathes the very spirit of California. California, thought Mary Louise. Of course, those yellow poppies and lacy pepper-trees with their deep red berries were typical of no other place. Even the newspaper had called Jason Jones a California artist. When had he been in California, she wondered. Allora had never mentioned visiting the Pacific Coast. Yet sometimes surely her father must have lived there. Was it while Allora was a small child, and after her mother had cast him off, he could have made sketches then and preserved them for future use. As she stood there marvelling at the superb genius required to produce such a masterpiece of art, a strange notion crept stealthily into her mind. Promptly she drove it out, but it presently returned. It would not be denied. Finally it mastered her. Anyhow, she reflected, setting her teeth together, I'll beard the wolf in his den. If my intuition has played me false, at worst the man can only sneer at me, and I've always weathered his scornful moods. But if I am right— The suggestion was too immense to consider calmly. With quick nervous steps she hastened to the Congress Hotel, and sent up her car to Jason Jones. On it she had written in pencil, I shall wait for you in the parlour. Please come to me.