summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/34552.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '34552.txt')
-rw-r--r--34552.txt6776
1 files changed, 6776 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/34552.txt b/34552.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6f97165
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34552.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6776 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Danger at the Drawbridge, by Mildred A. Wirt
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Danger at the Drawbridge
+
+Author: Mildred A. Wirt
+
+Release Date: December 3, 2010 [EBook #34552]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANGER AT THE DRAWBRIDGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Brenda Lewis and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Danger
+ at the
+ Drawbridge
+
+
+ _By_
+ MILDRED A. WIRT
+
+ _Author of_
+ MILDRED A. WIRT MYSTERY STORIES
+ TRAILER STORIES FOR GIRLS
+
+ _Illustrated_
+
+ CUPPLES AND LEON COMPANY
+ _Publishers_
+ NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+ _PENNY PARKER_
+ MYSTERY STORIES
+
+ _Large 12 mo. Cloth Illustrated_
+
+
+ TALE OF THE WITCH DOLL
+ THE VANISHING HOUSEBOAT
+ DANGER AT THE DRAWBRIDGE
+ BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR
+ CLUE OF THE SILKEN LADDER
+ THE SECRET PACT
+ THE CLOCK STRIKES THIRTEEN
+ THE WISHING WELL
+ SABOTEURS ON THE RIVER
+ GHOST BEYOND THE GATE
+ HOOFBEATS ON THE TURNPIKE
+ VOICE FROM THE CAVE
+ GUILT OF THE BRASS THIEVES
+ SIGNAL IN THE DARK
+ WHISPERING WALLS
+ SWAMP ISLAND
+ THE CRY AT MIDNIGHT
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1940, BY CUPPLES AND LEON CO.
+
+ Danger at the Drawbridge
+
+ PRINTED IN U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ 1 AN ASSIGNMENT FOR PENNY _1_
+ 2 REPORTERS NOT WANTED _9_
+ 3 GIFT TO THE BRIDE _19_
+ 4 BEHIND THE BUSHES _28_
+ 5 THE MISSING BRIDEGROOM _35_
+ 6 A RING OF WHITE GOLD _45_
+ 7 THE FORBIDDEN POOL _54_
+ 8 PARENTAL PROTEST _63_
+ 9 A SOCIETY BAZAAR _72_
+ 10 A THROWN STONE _79_
+ 11 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS _88_
+ 12 FISHERMAN'S LUCK _96_
+ 13 TWO MEN AND A BOAT _105_
+ 14 THE STONE TOWER _113_
+ 15 A CAMEO PIN _122_
+ 16 GATHERING CLUES _129_
+ 17 A SEARCH FOR JERRY _140_
+ 18 OVER THE DRAWBRIDGE _149_
+ 19 A DARING RESCUE _158_
+ 20 AN IMPORTANT INTERVIEW _164_
+ 21 THE WHITE CRUISER _171_
+ 22 TRAPPED IN THE CABIN _177_
+ 23 AT THE HIDE-OUT _184_
+ 24 SECRET OF THE LILY POOL _192_
+ 25 VICTORY FOR PENNY _203_
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 1
+ _AN ASSIGNMENT FOR PENNY_
+
+
+Penny Parker, leaning indolently against the edge of the kitchen table,
+watched Mrs. Weems stem strawberries into a bright green bowl.
+
+"Tempting bait for Dad's jaded appetite," she remarked, helping herself
+to the largest berry in the dish. "If he can't eat them, I can."
+
+"I do wish you'd leave those berries alone," the housekeeper protested in
+an exasperated tone. "They haven't been washed yet."
+
+"Oh, I don't mind a few germs," laughed Penny. "I just toss them off like
+a duck shedding water. Shall I take the breakfast tray up to Dad?"
+
+"Yes, I wish you would, Penny," sighed Mrs. Weems. "I'm right tired on my
+feet this morning. Hot weather always did wear me down."
+
+She washed the berries and then offered the tray of food to Penny who
+started with it toward the kitchen vestibule.
+
+"Now where are you going, Penelope Parker?" Mrs. Weems demanded
+suspiciously.
+
+"Oh, just to the automatic lift." Penny's blue eyes were round with
+innocence.
+
+"Don't you dare try to ride in that contraption again!" scolded the
+housekeeper. "It was never built to carry human freight."
+
+"I'm not exactly freight," Penny said with an injured sniff. "It's strong
+enough to carry me. I know because I tried it last week."
+
+"You walk up the stairs like a lady or I'll take the tray myself," Mrs.
+Weems threatened. "I declare, I don't know when you'll grow up."
+
+"Oh, all right," grumbled Penny good-naturedly. "But I do maintain it's a
+shameful waste of energy."
+
+Balancing the tray precariously on the palm of her hand she tripped
+lightly up the stairway and tapped on the door of her father's bedroom.
+
+"Come in," he called in a muffled voice.
+
+Anthony Parker, editor and owner of the _Riverview Star_ sat propped up
+with pillows, reading a day-old edition of the newspaper.
+
+"'Morning, Dad," said Penny cheerfully. "How is our invalid today?"
+
+"I'm no more an invalid than you are," returned Mr. Parker testily. "If
+that old quack, Doctor Horn, doesn't let me out of bed today--"
+
+"You'll simply explode, won't you, Dad?" Penny finished mischievously.
+"Here, drink your coffee and you'll feel less like a stick of dynamite."
+
+Mr. Parker tossed the newspaper aside and made a place on his knees for
+the breakfast tray.
+
+"Did I hear an argument between you and Mrs. Weems?" he asked curiously.
+
+"No argument, Dad. I just wanted to ride up in style on the lift. Mrs.
+Weems thought it wasn't a civilized way to travel."
+
+"I should think not." The corners of Mr. Parker's mouth twitched slightly
+as he poured coffee from the silver pot. "That lift was built to carry
+breakfast trays, but not in combination with athletic young ladies."
+
+"What a bore, this business of growing up," sighed Penny. "You can't be
+natural at all."
+
+"You seem to manage rather well with all the restrictions," her father
+remarked dryly.
+
+Penny twisted her neck to gaze at her reflection in the dresser mirror
+beyond the footboard of the big mahogany bed.
+
+"I won't mind growing up if only I'm able to develop plenty of glamour,"
+she said speculatively. "Am I getting any better looking, Dad?"
+
+"Not that I've noticed," replied Mr. Parker gruffly, but his gaze
+lingered affectionately upon his daughter's golden hair. She really was
+growing prettier each day and looked more like her mother who had died
+when Penny was a little girl. He had spoiled her, of course, for she was
+an only child, but he was proud because he had taught her to think
+straight. She was deeply loyal and affectionate and those who loved her
+overlooked her casual ways and flippant speech.
+
+"What happened to the paper boy this morning?" Mr. Parker asked between
+bites of buttered toast.
+
+"It isn't time for him yet, Dad," said Penny demurely. "You always expect
+him at least an hour early."
+
+"First edition's been off the press a good half hour," grumbled the
+newspaper owner. "When I get back to the _Star_ office, I'll see that
+deliveries are speeded up. Just wait until I talk with Roberts!"
+
+"Haven't you been doing a pretty strenuous job of running the paper right
+from your bed?" inquired Penny as she refilled her father's cup.
+"Sometimes when you talk with that poor circulation manager I think the
+telephone wires will burn off."
+
+"So I'm a tyrant, am I?"
+
+"Oh, everyone knows your bark is worse than your bite, Dad. But you've
+certainly not been at your best the last few days."
+
+Mr. Parker's eyes roved about the luxuriously furnished bedroom. Tinted
+walls, chintz draperies, the rich, deep rug, were completely lost upon
+him. "This place is a prison," he grumbled.
+
+For nearly a week the household had been thrown completely out of its
+usual routine by the editor's illness. Overwork combined with an attack
+of influenza had sent him to bed, there to remain until he should be
+released by a doctor's order. With a telephone at his elbow, Mr. Parker
+had kept in close touch with the staff of the _Riverview Star_ but he
+fretted at confinement.
+
+"I can't half look after things," he complained. "And now Miss Hilderman,
+the society editor, is sick. I don't know how we'll get a good story on
+the Kippenberg wedding."
+
+Penny looked up quickly. "Miss Hilderman is ill?"
+
+"Yes, DeWitt, the city editor, telephoned me a few minutes ago. She
+wasn't able to show up for work this morning."
+
+"I really don't see why he should bother you about that, Dad. Can't Miss
+Hilderman's assistant take over the duties?"
+
+"The routine work, yes, but I don't care to trust her with the Kippenberg
+story."
+
+"Is it something extra special, Dad?"
+
+"Surely, you've heard of Mrs. Clayton Kippenberg?"
+
+"The name is familiar but I can't seem to recall--"
+
+"Clayton Kippenberg made a mint of money in the chain drug business. No
+one ever knew exactly the extent of his fortune. He built an elaborate
+estate about a hundred and twenty-five miles from here, familiarly called
+_The Castle_ because of its resemblance to an ancient feudal castle. The
+estate is cut off from the mainland on three sides and may be reached
+either by boat or by means of a picturesque drawbridge."
+
+"Sounds interesting," commented Penny.
+
+"I never saw the place myself. In fact, Kippenberg never allowed
+outsiders to visit the estate. Less than a year ago a rumor floated
+around that he had separated from his wife. There also was considerable
+talk that he had disappeared because of difficulties with the government
+over income tax evasion and wished to escape arrest. At any rate, he
+faded out of the picture while his wife remained in possession of _The
+Castle_."
+
+"And now she is marrying again?"
+
+"No, it is Mrs. Kippenberg's daughter, Sylvia, who is to be married. The
+bridegroom, Grant Atherwald, comes from a very old and distinguished
+family."
+
+"I don't see why the story should be so difficult to cover."
+
+"Mrs. Kippenberg has ruled that no reporters or photographers will be
+allowed on the estate," explained Mr. Parker.
+
+"That does complicate the situation."
+
+"Yes, it may not be easy to persuade Mrs. Kippenberg to change her mind.
+I rather doubt that our assistant society editor has the ingenuity to
+handle the story."
+
+"Then why don't you send one of the regular reporters? Jerry Livingston,
+for instance?"
+
+"Jerry couldn't tell a tulle wedding veil from one of crinoline. Nor
+could any other man on the staff."
+
+"I could get that story for you," Penny said suddenly. "Why don't you try
+me?"
+
+Mr. Parker gazed at his daughter speculatively.
+
+"Do you really think you could?"
+
+"Of course." Penny spoke with assurance. "Didn't I bring in two perfectly
+good scoops for your old sheet?"
+
+"You certainly did. Your Vanishing Houseboat yarn was one of the best
+stories we've published in a year of Sundays. And the town is still
+talking about Tale of the Witch Doll."
+
+"After what I went through to get those stories, a mere wedding would be
+child's play."
+
+"Don't be too confident," warned Mr. Parker. "If Mrs. Kippenberg doesn't
+alter her decision about reporters, the story may be impossible to get."
+
+"May I try?" Penny asked eagerly.
+
+Mr. Parker frowned. "Well, I don't know. I hate to send you so far, and
+then I have a feeling--"
+
+"Yes, Dad?"
+
+"I can't put my thoughts into words. It's just that my newspaper instinct
+tells me this story may develop into something big. Kippenberg's
+disappearance never was fully explained and his wife refused to discuss
+the affair with reporters."
+
+"Kippenberg might be at the wedding," said Penny, thinking aloud. "If he
+were a normal father he would wish to see his daughter married."
+
+"You follow my line of thought, Penny. When you're at the estate--if you
+get in--keep your eyes and ears open."
+
+"Then you'll let me cover the story?" Penny cried in delight.
+
+"Yes, I'll telephone the office now and arrange for a photographer to go
+with you."
+
+"Tell them to send Salt Sommers," Penny suggested quickly. "He doesn't
+act as know-it-all as some of the other lads."
+
+"I had Sommers in mind," her father nodded as he reached for the
+telephone.
+
+"And I have a lot more than Salt Sommers in _my_ mind," laughed Penny.
+
+"Meaning?"
+
+"Another big story, Dad! A scoop for the _Star_ and this for you."
+
+Penny implanted a kiss on her father's cheek and skipped joyously from
+the room.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 2
+ _REPORTERS NOT WANTED_
+
+
+In the editorial room of the _Riverview Star_ heads turned and eyebrows
+lifted as Penny, decked in her best silk dress and white picture hat,
+clicked her high-heeled slippers across the bare floor. Jerry Livingston,
+reporter, stopped pecking at his typewriter and stared in undisguised
+admiration.
+
+"Well, if it isn't our Bright Penny," he bantered. "Didn't recognize you
+for a minute in all those glad rags."
+
+"These are my work clothes," replied Penny. "I'm covering the Kippenberg
+wedding."
+
+Jerry pushed his hat farther back on his head and grinned.
+
+"Tough assignment. From what I hear of the Kippenberg family, you'll be
+lucky if they don't throw the wedding cake at you."
+
+Penny laughed and went on, winding her way through a barricade of desks
+to the office of the society editor. Miss Arnold, the assistant, was
+talking over the telephone, but in a moment she finished and turned to
+face the girl.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Parker," she said stiffly. An edge to her voice told
+Penny more clearly than words that the young woman was nettled because
+she had not been trusted with the story.
+
+"Good morning," replied Penny politely. "Dad said you would be able to
+give me helpful suggestions about covering the Kippenberg wedding."
+
+"There's not much I can tell you, really. The ceremony is to take place
+at two o'clock in the garden, so you'll have ample time to reach the
+estate. If you get in--" Miss Arnold placed an unpleasant emphasis upon
+the words--"take notes on Miss Kippenberg's gown, the flowers, the
+decorations, the names of her attendants. Try to keep your facts
+straight. Nothing infuriates a bride more than to read in the paper that
+she carried a bouquet of lilies-of-the-valley and roses while actually it
+was a bouquet of some other flower."
+
+"I'll try not to infuriate Miss Kippenberg," promised Penny.
+
+Miss Arnold glanced quickly at her but the girl's face was perfectly
+serene.
+
+"That's all I can tell you, Miss Parker," she said shortly. "Bring in at
+least a column. For some reason the city editor rates the wedding an
+important story."
+
+"I'll do my best," responded Penny, and arose.
+
+Salt Sommers was waiting for her when she came out of the office. He was
+a tall, spare young man, with a deep scar down his left cheek. He talked
+nearly as fast as he walked.
+
+"If you're all set, let's go," he said.
+
+Penny found herself three paces behind but she caught up with the
+photographer as he waited for the elevator.
+
+"I'm taking Minny along," Salt volunteered, holding his finger steadily
+on the signal bell. "May come in handy."
+
+"Minny?" asked Penny, puzzled.
+
+"Miniature camera. You can't always use the Model X."
+
+"Oh," murmured Penny. Deeply embarrassed, she remained silent as the
+elevator shot them down to the ground floor.
+
+Salt loaded his photographic equipment into a battered press car which
+was parked near the loading dock at the rear of the building. He slid in
+behind the wheel and then as an afterthought swung open the car door for
+Penny.
+
+Salt seemed to know the way to the Kippenberg estate. They shot through
+Riverview traffic, shaving red lights and tooting derisively at slow
+drivers. In open country he pressed the accelerator down to the floor and
+the car roared down the road, only slackening speed as it raced through a
+town.
+
+"How do you travel when you're in a hurry?" Penny gasped, clinging to her
+flopping hat.
+
+Salt grinned and lifted his foot from the gasoline pedal.
+
+"Sorry," he said. "I get in the habit of driving fast. We have plenty of
+time."
+
+As they rode, Penny gathered scraps of information. The Kippenberg estate
+was located six miles from the town of Corbin and was cut off from the
+mainland on three sides by the joining of two wide rivers, one with a
+direct outlet to the ocean. Salt did not know when the house had been
+built but it was considered one of the show places of the locality.
+
+"Do you think we'll have much trouble getting our story?" Penny asked
+anxiously.
+
+"All depends," Salt answered briefly. He slammed on the brake so suddenly
+that Penny was flung forward in the seat.
+
+Another car coming from the opposite direction had pulled up at the side
+of the road. Penny did not recognize the three men who were crowded into
+the front seat, but the printed placard, _Ledger_ which was pasted on the
+windshield told her they represented a rival newspaper in Riverview.
+
+"What luck, Les?" Salt called, craning his neck out the car window.
+
+"You may as well turn around and go back," came the disgusted reply. "The
+old lady won't let a reporter or a photographer on the estate. She has a
+guard stationed on the drawbridge to see that you don't get past."
+
+The car drove on toward Riverview. Salt sat staring down the road,
+drumming his fingers thoughtfully on the steering wheel.
+
+"Looks like we're up against a tough assignment," he said. "If Les can't
+get in--"
+
+"I'm not going back without at least an attempt," announced Penny firmly.
+
+"That's the spirit!" Salt cried with sudden approval. "We'll get on the
+estate somehow if we have to swim over."
+
+He jerked the press card from the windshield, and reaching into the back
+seat of the car, covered the Model X camera with an old gunny sack. The
+miniature camera he placed in his coat pocket.
+
+"No use advertising our profession too early in the game," he remarked.
+
+Twelve-thirty found Penny and Salt in the sleepy little town of Corbin.
+Fortifying themselves with a lunch of hot dog sandwiches and pop, they
+followed a winding, dusty highway toward the Kippenberg estate.
+
+Presently, through the trees, marking the end of the road, an iron
+drawbridge loomed up. It stood in open position so that boats might pass
+on the river below. A wooden barrier had been erected across the front of
+the structure which bore a large painted sign. Penny read the words
+aloud.
+
+ "'DANGEROUS DRAWBRIDGE--KEEP OFF.'"
+
+Salt drew up at the side of the road. "Looks as if this is as far as
+we're going," he said in disgust. "There's no other road to the estate.
+I'll bet that 'dangerous drawbridge' business is just a dodge to keep
+undesirables away from the place until after the wedding."
+
+Penny nodded gloomily. Then she brightened as she noticed an old man who
+obviously was an estate guard standing at the entrance to the bridge. He
+stared toward the old car as if trying to ascertain whether or not the
+occupants were expected guests.
+
+"I'm going over to talk with him," Penny said.
+
+"Pretend that you're a guest," suggested Salt. "You look the part in that
+fancy outfit of yours."
+
+Penny walked leisurely toward the drawbridge. Appraisingly, she studied
+the old man who leaned comfortably against the gearhouse. A dilapidated
+hat pulled low over his shaggy brows seemed in keeping with the rest of
+his wardrobe--a blue work shirt and a pair of grease-smudged overalls. A
+charred corn-cob pipe, thrust at an angle between his lips, provided sure
+protection against the mosquitoes swarming up from the river below.
+
+"Good afternoon," began Penny pleasantly. "My friend and I are looking
+for the Kippenberg estate. We were told at Corbin to take this road but
+we seem to have made a mistake."
+
+"You ain't made no mistake, Miss," the old man replied.
+
+"Then is the estate across the river?"
+
+"That's right, Miss."
+
+"But how are guests to reach the place? I see the sign says the bridge is
+out of commission. Are we supposed to swim over?"
+
+"Not if you don't want to," the old man answered evenly. "Mrs. Kippenberg
+has a launch that takes the folks back and forth. It's on the other side
+now but will be back in no time at all."
+
+"I'll wait in the car out of the hot sun," Penny said. She started away,
+then paused to inquire casually: "Is this drawbridge really out of
+order?"
+
+The old man was deliberate in his reply. He blew a ring of smoke into the
+air, watched it hover like a floating skein of wool and finally
+disintegrate as if plucked to pieces by an unseen hand.
+
+"Well, yes, and no," he said. "It ain't exactly sick but she sure is
+ailin'. I wouldn't trust no heavy contraption on this bridge."
+
+"Condemned by the state, I suppose?"
+
+"No, Miss, and I'll tell you why. This here bridge doesn't belong to the
+state. It's a private bridge on a private road."
+
+"Odd that Mrs. Kippenberg never had it repaired," Penny remarked. "It
+must be annoying."
+
+"It is to all them that don't like launches. As for Mrs. Kippenberg, she
+don't mind. Fact is, she ain't much afraid of the bridge. She drives her
+car across whenever she takes the notion."
+
+"Then the bridge does operate!" Penny exclaimed.
+
+"Sure it does. That's my job, to raise and lower it whenever the owner
+says the word. But the bridge ain't fit for delivery trucks and
+such-like. One of them big babies would crack through like goin' over
+sponge ice."
+
+"Well, I rather envy your employer," said Penny lightly. "It isn't every
+lady who has her own private drawbridge."
+
+"She is kind of exclusive-like that way, Miss. Mrs. Kippenberg she keeps
+the drawbridge up so she'll have more privacy. And I ain't blamin' her.
+These here newspaper reporters always is a-pesterin' the life out of
+her."
+
+Penny nodded sympathetically and walked back to make her report to Salt.
+
+"No luck?" he demanded.
+
+"Guess twice," she laughed. "The old bridgeman just took it for granted I
+was one of the wedding guests. It will be all right for us to go over in
+the guest launch as soon as it arrives."
+
+Salt gazed ruefully at his clothes.
+
+"I don't look much like a guest. Think I'll pass inspection?"
+
+"Maybe you could get by as one of the poor relations," grinned Penny.
+"Pull your hat down and straighten your tie."
+
+Salt shook his head. "A business suit with a grease spot on the vest
+isn't the correct dress for a formal wedding. You might get by but I
+won't."
+
+"Then should I try it alone?"
+
+"I'll have to get those pictures somehow," stated Salt grimly.
+
+"Maybe we could hire a boat of our own," Penny suggested. "Of course it
+wouldn't look as well as if we arrived on the guest launch."
+
+"Let's see what we can line up," Salt said, swinging open the car door.
+
+They walked to the river's edge and looked in both directions. There were
+no small boats to be seen. The only available craft was a large motor
+boat which came slowly downstream toward the open drawbridge. Penny
+caught a glimpse of the pilot, a burly man with a red, puffy face.
+
+Salt slid down the bank toward the water's edge, and hailed the boat.
+
+"Hey, you, Cap'n!" he called. "Two bucks to take me across the river."
+
+The man inclined his head, looked steadily at Salt for an instant, then
+deliberately turned his back.
+
+"Five!" shouted Salt.
+
+The pilot gave no sign that he had heard. Instead, he speeded up the boat
+which passed beneath the drawbridge and went on down the river.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 3
+ _GIFT TO THE BRIDE_
+
+
+"Perhaps he didn't hear you," said Penny, peering after the retreating
+boat.
+
+"He heard me all right," growled Salt as he scrambled back up the high
+bank.
+
+Noticing a small boy in dirty overalls who sat at the water's edge
+fishing, he called to him: "Say, sonny, who was that fellow, do you
+know?"
+
+"Nope," answered the boy, barely turning his head, "but his boat has been
+going up and down the river all morning. That's why I can't catch
+anything."
+
+The boat rounded a bend of the river and was lost to view. Only one other
+craft appeared on the water, a freshly painted white motor launch which
+could be seen coming from the far shore.
+
+"That must be the guest boat now," remarked Penny, shading her eyes
+against the glare of the sun. "It seems to be our only hope."
+
+"Let's try to get aboard and see what happens," proposed the
+photographer.
+
+They walked leisurely back toward the guard at the drawbridge, timing
+their arrival just as the launch swung up to the landing. With a cool
+assurance which Penny tried to duplicate, Salt stepped aboard, nodded
+indifferently to the wheelsman, and slumped down in one of the leather
+seats.
+
+Penny waited uneasily for embarrassing questions which did not come.
+Gradually she relaxed as the boatman took no interest in them and the
+guard's attention was fully occupied with other cars which had driven up
+to the drawbridge.
+
+A few minutes later, two elderly women, both elegantly gowned, were
+helped aboard the boat by their chauffeur. One of the women stared
+disapprovingly at Salt through her lorgnette and then ignored him.
+
+"We'll get by all right," Salt whispered confidently.
+
+"Wait until Mrs. Kippenberg sees us," warned Penny.
+
+"Oh, we'll keep out of her way until we have our story and plenty of
+pictures. Once we're across the river it will be easy."
+
+"I hope you're right," muttered Penny.
+
+While Salt's task of taking pictures might prove relatively simple, she
+realized that her own work would be anything but easy. She could not hope
+to gather many facts without talking to a member of the family, and the
+instant she admitted her identity she likely would be ejected from the
+grounds.
+
+"I boasted I'd bring in a front page story," she thought ruefully. "I'll
+be lucky if I get a column of routine stuff."
+
+The boat was moving slowly away from the landing when the guard at the
+drawbridge called in a loud voice: "Hold it, Joe!"
+
+Penny and Salt stiffened in their chairs, fearing they were to be
+exposed. But they were both greatly relieved to see that a long, black
+limousine had drawn up at the end of the road. The launch had been
+stopped so that additional passengers might be accommodated.
+
+Salt nudged Penny's elbow.
+
+"Grant Atherwald," he contributed, jerking his head toward a tall,
+well-built young man who had stepped from the car. "I've seen his picture
+plenty of times."
+
+"The bridegroom?" Penny turned to stare.
+
+"Sure. He's one of the blue-bloods, but they say he's a little short on
+ready cash."
+
+The young man, dressed immaculately in formal day attire, and accompanied
+by two other men, came aboard the launch. He bowed politely to the
+elderly women and his gaze fell questioningly upon Penny and Salt. But if
+he wondered why they were there, he did not voice his thought.
+
+As the boat put out across the river Penny watched Grant Atherwald
+curiously. It seemed to her that he appeared nervous and preoccupied. He
+stared straight before him, clenching and unclenching his hands. His face
+was colorless and drawn.
+
+"He's nervous and worried," thought Penny. "I guess all bridegrooms are
+like that."
+
+A sharp "click" sounded in her ear. Penny did not turn toward Salt, but
+she caught her breath, knowing what he had done. He had dared to take a
+picture of Grant Atherwald!
+
+She waited, feeling certain that the sound must have been heard by
+everyone in the boat. A full minute elapsed and no one spoke. When Penny
+finally glanced at Salt he was gazing serenely out across the muddy
+water, his miniature camera shielded behind a felt hat which he held on
+his knees.
+
+The boat docked. Salt and Penny allowed the others to go ashore first,
+and then followed a narrow walk which wound through a deep lane of
+evergreen trees.
+
+"Salt," Penny asked abruptly, "how did you get that picture of
+Atherwald?"
+
+"Snapped it through a hole in the crown of my hat. It's an old trick. I
+always wear this special hat when I'm sent out on a hard assignment."
+
+"I thought a cannon had gone off when the shutter clicked," Penny
+laughed. "We were lucky you weren't caught."
+
+Emerging from behind the trees, they obtained their first view of the
+Kippenberg house. Sturdily built of brick and stone, it stood upon a
+slight hill, its many turrets and towers commanding a view of the two
+rivers.
+
+"Nice layout," Salt commented, pausing to snap a second picture. "Wish
+someone would give me a castle for a playhouse."
+
+They crossed the moat and found themselves directly behind Grant
+Atherwald again. Before the bridegroom could enter the house a servant
+stepped forward and handed him a sealed envelope.
+
+"I was told to give this to you as soon as you arrived, sir," he said.
+
+Grant Atherwald nodded, and taking the letter, quickly opened it. A
+troubled expression came over his face as he scanned the message. Without
+a word he thrust the paper into his pocket. Turning, he walked swiftly
+toward the garden.
+
+"Salt, did you notice how queerly Atherwald looked--" Penny began, but
+the photographer interrupted her.
+
+"Listen," he said, "we haven't a Chinaman's chance of getting in the
+front door. That boy in the fancy knickers is giving everyone the once
+over. Let's try a side entrance."
+
+Without attracting attention they walked quickly around the house and
+located a door where no servant had been posted. Entering, they passed
+through a marble-floored vestibule into a breakfast room crowded with
+serving tables. Salt nonchalantly helped himself to an olive from one of
+the large glass dishes and led Penny on toward the main hall where many
+of the guests had gathered to admire the wedding gifts.
+
+"Now don't swipe any of the silver," Salt said jokingly. "I think that
+fellow over by the stairway is a private detective."
+
+"He seems to be looking at us with a suspicious gleam in his eyes," Penny
+replied. "I hope we don't get tossed out of here."
+
+"We'll be all right if Mrs. Kippenberg doesn't see us before the
+ceremony."
+
+"Do you suppose Mr. Kippenberg could be here, Salt?"
+
+"Not likely. It's my guess that fellow will never be seen again."
+
+"Dad doesn't share your opinion."
+
+"I know," Salt admitted. "We'll keep watch for him, but it would just be
+a lucky break if it turns out he's here."
+
+Mingling with the guests, they walked slowly about a long table where the
+wedding gifts were displayed. Penny gazed curiously at dishes of solid
+silver, crystal bowls, candlesticks, jade ornaments, tea sets and service
+plates encrusted with gold.
+
+"Nothing trashy here," muttered Salt.
+
+"I've never seen such an elegant display," Penny whispered in awe. "Do
+you suppose that picture is one of the gifts?"
+
+She indicated an oil painting which stood on an easel not far from the
+table. So many guests had gathered about the picture that she could not
+see it distinctly. But at her elbow, a woman in rustling silk, said to a
+companion:
+
+"My dear, a genuine Van Gogh! It must have cost a small fortune!"
+
+When the couple had moved aside, Penny and Salt drew closer to the easel.
+One glance assured them that the painting had been executed by a master.
+However, it was the subject of the picture which gave Penny a distinct
+start.
+
+"Will you look at that!" she whispered to Salt.
+
+"What about it?" he asked carelessly.
+
+"Don't you notice anything significant?"
+
+"Can't say I do. It's just a nice picture of a drawbridge."
+
+"That's just the point, Salt!" Penny's eyes danced with excitement. "A
+drawbridge!"
+
+The photographer glanced again at the painting, this time with deeper
+interest.
+
+"Say, it looks a lot like the bridge which was built over the river," he
+observed. "You think this picture is a copy of it?"
+
+Penny shook her head impatiently. "Salt, your knowledge of art is
+dreadful. This Van Gogh was painted ages ago and is priceless. Don't you
+see, the drawbridge has to be a copy of the picture?"
+
+"Your theory sounds reasonable," Salt admitted. "I wonder who gave the
+painting to the bride? There's no name attached."
+
+"Can't you guess why?"
+
+"I never was good at kid games."
+
+"Why, it's clear as crystal," Penny declared, keeping her voice low.
+"This estate with the drawbridge was built by Clayton Kippenberg. He must
+have been familiar with the Van Gogh painting, and had the real bridge
+modeled after the picture. For that matter, the painting may have been in
+his possession--"
+
+"Then you think the picture was presented to Sylvia Kippenberg by her
+father?" Salt broke in quickly.
+
+"Yes, I do. Only a person very close to the bride would have given such a
+gift."
+
+"H-m," said Salt, squinting at the picture thoughtfully. "If you're right
+it means that Clayton Kippenberg's whereabouts must be known to his
+family. His disappearance may not be such a deep mystery to Mamma
+Kippenberg and daughter Sylvia."
+
+"Oh, Salt, wouldn't it make a grand story if only we could learn what
+became of him?"
+
+"Sure. Front page stuff."
+
+"We simply must get the story somehow! If Mrs. Kippenberg would just
+answer our questions about this drawbridge painting--"
+
+"I'm afraid Mamma Kippenberg isn't going to break down and tell all,"
+Salt said dryly. "But buckle on your steel armor, little girl, because
+here she comes now!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 4
+ _BEHIND THE BUSHES_
+
+
+A large, middle-aged woman in rose-colored silk, crossed the room
+directly toward Salt and Penny. Her pale blue eyes glinted with anger and
+there were hard lines about her mouth. She walked haughtily, but with
+grim purpose.
+
+"Unless we do some fast talking, out we go!" muttered Salt. "It's Mrs.
+Kippenberg, all right."
+
+They stood their ground, knowing they had been recognized as intruders.
+But before the woman could reach them she was stopped by a servant who
+spoke a few words in a low tone. For a moment Mrs. Kippenberg forgot
+about Penny and Salt as a new problem presented itself.
+
+"I can't talk with anyone now," she said in an agitated voice. "Tell them
+to come back later."
+
+"They insist upon talking with you now, Madam," replied the servant.
+"Unless you see them they say they will look around for themselves."
+
+"Oh!" Mrs. Kippenberg drew herself up sharply as if from a physical blow.
+"Where are they now?"
+
+"In the library, Madam."
+
+Penny did not hear the woman's reply, but she turned and followed the
+servant.
+
+"Saved by the bell," mumbled Salt. "Now let's get away from here before
+she comes back."
+
+They pushed through the throng and reached a long hallway. Mrs.
+Kippenberg had disappeared, but as they drew near an open door they
+caught sight of her again. She stood just inside the library, her back
+toward them, talking with two men who wore plain gray business suits.
+
+Penny half drew back, fearing discovery, but Salt pulled her along. As
+they went quietly past the door they heard Mrs. Kippenberg say in an
+excited voice:
+
+"No, no, I tell you he isn't here! Why should I try to deceive you? We
+have nothing to hide. You are most inconsiderate to annoy me at such a
+time!"
+
+Penny and Salt did not hear the reply. They reached an outside door and
+stepped down on a flagstone terrace which overlooked the garden at the
+rear of the grounds.
+
+"Who were those men, do you suppose?" Penny whispered, fearful that her
+voice might betray them.
+
+"Officers of the law, I should guess," Salt replied in an undertone.
+
+"Government men?"
+
+"Likely as not. I don't believe the locals would bother her. Anyway she's
+got the wind up and you can tell she's scared silly in spite of all her
+back talk."
+
+"You know what I think they're after?" Penny said thoughtfully.
+
+"Well, if I had just one guess," Salt replied, "I'd say they are after
+Mr. Kippenberg."
+
+"I agree with you there."
+
+"Sure, why else would they come sleuthing around at a time like this? The
+answer is simple. Daughter gets married. Papa wants to see his darling do
+it. Therefore, boys, we'll spread a net for Daddy and he might plump
+right into it."
+
+"So that's the way a G man's mind works?" laughed Penny.
+
+"But I would take it that Kippenberg is no fool," Salt went on. "If they
+really have a 'man wanted' sign hung on him he would be too cagey to come
+around here today."
+
+They were standing beside the stone balustrade which bounded the terrace.
+Below them the green foliage of the gardens formed a dark background for
+the playing fountains. A cool breeze drifted in from the river and
+rattled a window awning just over their heads.
+
+"We're in an exposed place here," observed Salt uneasily. "Maybe we ought
+to find a hole somewhere."
+
+"We'll never learn anything in a hole," Penny objected. "In fact, we're
+not making much progress in running down any sort of story. I do wish we
+could have heard more of that conversation."
+
+"And get thrown out on our collective ear before we even have a chance to
+snap a picture of the blushing bride!"
+
+"Pictures! Pictures!" exclaimed Penny. "That's all you photographers
+think about. How about poor little me and my story? After all, you can't
+bring out a paper full of nothing but pictures and cigarette ads. You
+need a little news to go with it."
+
+"You like to work too fast," complained Salt. "Right now the thing to do
+is to keep out of sight. I'm telling you the minute Mrs. Kippy finishes
+with those men she'll be gunning for us."
+
+"Then I suppose we'll have to go into hiding."
+
+"First, let's mosey out into the rose garden," Salt proposed. "I'll take
+a few shots and then we'll duck under somewhere and wait until the
+ceremony starts."
+
+"That's all very well for you," grumbled Penny, "but I can't write much
+of a story without talking to some member of the family."
+
+Salt started off across the velvety green lawn toward the rose arbor
+where the service was to be held. Penny followed reluctantly. She watched
+the photographer take several pictures before a servant approached him.
+
+"I beg your pardon," the man said coldly, "but Mrs. Kippenberg gave
+orders no pictures were to be taken. If you are from one of the papers--"
+
+"Oh, I saw her in the house just a minute ago," Salt replied carelessly.
+
+"Sorry, sir," the servant apologized, retreating.
+
+Salt finished taking the pictures and slipped the miniature camera back
+into his pocket.
+
+"Now let's amble down toward the river and wait," he said to Penny.
+"We'll blossom forth just as the ceremony starts. Mrs. Kippy won't dare
+interrupt it to have us thrown off the grounds."
+
+They walked down a sloping path, past a glass-enclosed hothouse and on
+toward a grove of giant oak and maple trees.
+
+"It's pleasant here when you're away from the crowd," Penny remarked,
+gazing up at the leafy canopy. "I wonder where this path leads?"
+
+"Oh, down to the river probably. With water on three sides of us that's a
+fairly safe guess."
+
+"Which rivers flow past the estate, Salt?"
+
+"The Big Bear and the Kobalt."
+
+"The same old muddy Kobalt which is near our town," said Penny in
+surprise. "I'll always think of it as a river of adventure."
+
+"Because of Mud-Cat Joe and his Vanishing Houseboat?"
+
+Penny nodded and a dreamy look came into her eyes. "So much happened on
+the Kobalt, Salt. Remember that big party Dad threw at the Comstock Inn?"
+
+"Do I? Jerry Livingston decided to sleep in Room Seven where so many
+persons had disappeared."
+
+"And then he was spirited away almost before our very eyes," added Penny.
+"Days later Mud-Cat Joe helped me fish him out of this same old Kobalt.
+For awhile we didn't think he'd ever pull through or be able to tell what
+had happened to him."
+
+"But as the grand finale you and your friend, Louise Sidell, solved the
+mystery and secured a dandy story for the _Star_. Those were the days!"
+
+"You talk as if they were gone forever," laughed Penny. "Other good
+stories will come along."
+
+"Maybe," said Salt, "but covering a wedding is pretty tame in
+comparison."
+
+"Yet this one does have interesting angles," Penny insisted. "Can't you
+almost feel mystery lurking about the place?"
+
+"No, but I do feel a mosquito sinking his stinger into me." Salt slapped
+vigorously at his ankle.
+
+They followed the path on toward the river, coming soon to a trail which
+branched off to the right. Across it had been stretched a wire barrier
+and a neatly lettered sign read:
+
+ NO ADMITTANCE BEYOND THIS POINT.
+
+"Why do you suppose the path is blocked off?" Penny speculated.
+
+"Let's find out," Salt suggested with a sudden flare of interest. "Maybe
+we'll run into something worth a picture."
+
+Penny hesitated, not wishing to disregard the sign, yet eager to learn
+what lay beyond the barrier.
+
+"Listen," said Salt, "just put your little conscience on ice. We're here
+to get the 'who, when, why and where.' You'll never be a first class
+newspaper reporter if you stifle your curiosity."
+
+"Lead on," laughed Penny. "I will follow. Only isn't it getting late?"
+
+Salt looked at his watch. "We still have a safe fifteen minutes."
+
+He started to step over the wire, only to have Penny reach out and grasp
+his hand.
+
+"Wait!" she whispered.
+
+"What's the idea?" Salt turned toward her in astonishment.
+
+"I think someone is watching us! I'm sure I saw the bushes move."
+
+"Your nerves are jumpy," Salt jeered. "It's only the wind."
+
+Even as he spoke the foliage to the left moved ever so slightly and a
+dark form could be seen creeping stealthily away along the ground.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 5
+ _THE MISSING BRIDEGROOM_
+
+
+Salt acted instinctively. Leaping over the wire barrier he dived into the
+bushes. Hurling himself upon the man who crouched there, he pinned him to
+the ground. The fellow gave a choked cry and tried to pull free.
+
+"Oh, no, you don't," Salt muttered, coolly sitting down on his stomach.
+"Snooping, eh?"
+
+"You let me up!" the man cried savagely. "Let me up, I say!"
+
+"I'll let you up when you explain what you were doing here."
+
+"Why, you impudent young pup!" the man spluttered. "You're the one who
+will explain. I am Mrs. Kippenberg's head gardener."
+
+Salt's hand fell from the old man's collar and he apologetically helped
+him to his feet. Penny, who had reached the scene, stooped down and
+recovered a trowel which had slipped from the gardener's grasp.
+
+"It was just a little mistake on my part," Salt mumbled. "I hope I didn't
+hurt you."
+
+"No fault of yours you didn't," the old man snapped. "A fine howdydo when
+a person can't even loosen earth around a shrub without being assaulted
+by a ruffian!"
+
+The gardener was a short, stout man with graying hair. He wore coarse
+garments, a loose fitting pair of trousers, a dark shirt and battered
+felt hat. But Penny noticed that his hands and fingernails were clean and
+there were no trowel marks around any of the shrubs.
+
+"Salt isn't exactly a ruffian," she said as the photographer offered no
+defense. "After all, from where we stood it looked exactly as if you were
+hiding in the bushes."
+
+"Then you both need glasses," the man retorted rudely. "A person can't
+work without getting down on his hands and knees."
+
+"Where were you digging?" Penny asked innocently.
+
+"I was just starting in when this young upstart leaped on my back!"
+
+"Sorry," said Salt, "but I thought you were trying to get away."
+
+"Who are you anyway?" the gardener demanded bluntly. "You're not guests.
+I can tell that."
+
+"You have a very discerning eye," replied Salt smoothly. "We're from the
+_Riverview Star_."
+
+"Reporters, eh?" The old man scowled unpleasantly. "Then you've no
+business being here at all. You're not wanted, so get out!"
+
+"We're only after a few facts about the wedding," Penny said. "Perhaps
+you would be willing to tell me--"
+
+"I'll tell you nothing, Miss! If anything is given out to the papers it
+will have to come from Mrs. Kippenberg."
+
+"Fair enough," Salt acknowledged. He glanced curiously down the path
+which had been blocked off. "What's down there?"
+
+"Nothing." The gardener spoke irritably. "This part of the estate hasn't
+been fixed up. That's why it's closed."
+
+Penny had bent down, pretending to examine a shrub at the edge of the
+path.
+
+"What is the name of this bush?" she inquired casually.
+
+"An azalea," the gardener replied after a slight hesitation. "Now get out
+of here, will you? I have my work to do."
+
+"Oh, all right," Salt rejoined as he and Penny moved away. "No need to
+get so tough."
+
+They stepped over the barrier wire and retraced their way toward the
+house. Several times Penny glanced back but she could not see the old
+man. He had slipped away somewhere among the trees.
+
+"I don't believe that fellow was a gardener," she said suddenly.
+
+"What makes you think not?"
+
+"Didn't you notice his nice clean hands and fingernails? And then when I
+asked him the name of that bush he hesitated and called it an azalea. I
+saw another long botanical name attached to it."
+
+"Maybe he just made a mistake, or said the first thing that came into his
+head. He wanted to get rid of us."
+
+"I know he did," nodded Penny. "Yet, when he found out we were from the
+_Star_ he didn't threaten to report us to Mrs. Kippenberg."
+
+"That's so."
+
+"He was afraid to report us," Penny went on with conviction. "I'll bet a
+cent he has no more right here than we have."
+
+Salt had lost all interest in the gardener. He glanced at his watch and
+quickened his step.
+
+"Is it two o'clock yet?" Penny asked anxiously.
+
+"Just. After all the trouble we've had getting here we can't afford to
+miss the big show."
+
+Emerging from the grove, Salt and Penny were relieved to see that the
+ceremony had not yet started. The guests were gathered in the garden, the
+minister stood waiting, musicians were in their places, but the bridal
+party had not appeared.
+
+"We're just in time," Salt remarked.
+
+Penny observed Mrs. Kippenberg talking with one of the ushers. Even from
+a distance it was apparent that the woman had lost her poise. Her hands
+fluttered nervously as she conferred with the young man and a worried
+frown puckered her eyebrows.
+
+"Something seems to be wrong," said Penny. "I wonder what is causing the
+delay?"
+
+Before Salt could reply, the usher crossed the lawn, and came directly
+toward them. Penny and Salt instantly were on guard, thinking that he had
+been sent by Mrs. Kippenberg to eject them from the grounds. But although
+the young man paused, he did not look squarely at them.
+
+"Have you seen Mr. Atherwald anywhere?" he questioned.
+
+"The bridegroom?" Salt asked in astonishment. "What's the matter? Is he
+missing?"
+
+"Oh, no, sir," the young man returned stiffly. "Certainly not. He merely
+went away for a moment."
+
+"Mr. Atherwald came over on the same boat with us," Penny volunteered.
+
+"And did you see him enter the house?"
+
+"No, he spoke to one of the servants and then went toward the garden."
+
+"Did you notice which path he took?"
+
+"I believe it was this one."
+
+"We've just come from down by the river," added Salt. "We didn't see him
+there. The only person we met was an old gardener."
+
+The usher thanked them for the information and hurried on. When the man
+was beyond hearing, Salt turned to Penny, saying jubilantly:
+
+"Say, maybe we'll get a big story after all! Sylvia Kippenberg jilted at
+the altar! Hot stuff!"
+
+"Aren't you jumping to swift conclusions, Salt? He must be around here
+somewhere."
+
+"It's always serious business when a man is late for his wedding. Even if
+he does show up, daughter Sylvia may take offense and call the whole
+thing off."
+
+"Oh, you're too hopeful," Penny laughed. "He'll probably be here in
+another minute. I don't believe he would have come at all if he had
+intended to slip away."
+
+"He may have lost his nerve at the last minute," Salt insisted.
+
+"Atherwald did act strangely on the boat," Penny said reflectively. "And
+then that message he received--"
+
+"He may have sent it to himself."
+
+"As an excuse for getting away?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"I can't see any reason for going to so much unnecessary trouble," Penny
+argued. "If he intended to jilt Miss Kippenberg how much easier it would
+have been not to come here at all."
+
+"Well, let's see what we can learn," Salt suggested.
+
+Their interest steadily mounting, they went on toward the house and
+stationed themselves where they could see advantageously. It was evident
+by this time that the guests suspected something had gone amiss.
+Significant glances were exchanged, a few persons looked at their
+watches, and all eyes focused upon Mrs. Kippenberg who tried desperately
+to carry off an embarrassing situation.
+
+Minutes passed. The crowd became increasingly restless. Finally, the
+usher returned and spoke quietly to Mrs. Kippenberg. They both retired to
+the house.
+
+"It looks as if there will be no wedding today," Salt declared.
+"Atherwald hasn't been located."
+
+"I won't dare use the story unless I'm absolutely certain of my facts,"
+Penny said anxiously.
+
+"We'll get them, never fear."
+
+Mrs. Kippenberg and the usher had stepped into the breakfast room.
+Posting Penny at the outside door, Salt followed the couple. From the
+hallway he could hear their conversation distinctly.
+
+"But he must be somewhere on the grounds," the matron argued.
+
+"I can't understand it myself," the young man replied. "Grant's
+disappearance is very mysterious to say the least. Several persons saw
+him arrive here and everything seemed to be all right."
+
+"What time is it now?"
+
+"Two thirty-five, Mrs. Kippenberg."
+
+"So late? Oh, this is dreadful! How can I face them?"
+
+"I know just how you feel," the young man said with sympathy. "If you
+wish I will explain to the guests."
+
+"No, no, this will disgrace us," Mrs. Kippenberg murmured. "Wait until I
+have talked with Sylvia."
+
+She turned suddenly and reached the hall door before Salt could escape.
+Her eyes blazed with wrath as she faced him.
+
+"So here you are!" she cried furiously. "How dare you disregard my
+orders? I will have no reporters on the grounds!"
+
+"I'm only a photographer," Salt said meekly enough. "Sorry to intrude but
+I've been assigned to get a picture of the bride. It won't take a
+minute--"
+
+"Indeed it won't," Mrs. Kippenberg broke in, her voice rising higher.
+"You'll take no pictures here. Not one! Now get out."
+
+"A picture might be better than a story that the bridegroom had skipped
+out," Salt said persuasively.
+
+"Why, you--you!" Mrs. Kippenberg's face became fiery red. She choked as
+she tried to speak. "Get out, I say!"
+
+Salt did not retreat. Instead he took his camera from his pocket.
+
+"Just one picture, Mrs. Kippenberg. At least of you."
+
+Realizing that the photographer meant to take it whether or not she gave
+permission, the woman suddenly lost all control over her temper.
+
+"Don't you dare!" she cried furiously. "Don't you dare!"
+
+Whirling about, she seized an empty plate from the tall stack on the
+serving table.
+
+"Hold that pose!" chortled Salt, goading her on.
+
+The woman hurled the plate straight at him. Salt gleefully snapped a
+picture and dodged. The plate crashed into the wall behind him,
+splintering into a half dozen pieces.
+
+"Swell action picture!" he grinned.
+
+"Don't you dare try to use it!" screamed Mrs. Kippenberg. "I'll telephone
+your editor! I'll have you discharged!"
+
+"See here," offered the usher, taking out his wallet. "I'll give you ten
+dollars for that picture."
+
+Salt shook his head, still smiling broadly.
+
+The sound of the crash had brought servants running to the scene.
+
+"Have this person ejected from the grounds," Mrs. Kippenberg ordered
+harshly. "And see that he doesn't get back."
+
+Just outside the house, Penny huddled against the wall, trying to make
+herself as inconspicuous as possible. She had heard everything. As Salt
+backed out the door he did not glance at her but he muttered for her ears
+alone:
+
+"You're on your own now, kid. I'll be waiting at the drawbridge."
+
+An instant later two servants seized him roughly by the arms and escorted
+him down the walk to the boat landing.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 6
+ _A RING OF WHITE GOLD_
+
+
+Penny waited anxiously, but Mrs. Kippenberg did not come to the outside
+door. Nor had it occurred to the two servants that the girl was connected
+in any way with the photographer.
+
+"On my own," she repeated to herself. "On my own with a vengeance."
+
+Salt had his picture and it was up to her to get a good story. Until now
+she had depended upon his guidance. With all support withdrawn she
+suddenly felt uncertain and incompetent.
+
+Penny waited a few minutes before gathering sufficient courage to enter
+the long hallway. One glance assured her that the breakfast room was
+deserted.
+
+"Mrs. Kippenberg probably went upstairs to talk with her daughter," she
+reasoned. "I'd like to hear what they say to each other."
+
+With the guests assembled in the garden, only a few persons lingered in
+the house. No one paid heed to Penny as she moved noiselessly up the
+spiral stairway.
+
+A bedroom door stood slightly ajar. Hearing a low murmur of voices, Penny
+paused. Framed against the leaded windows she saw Sylvia Kippenberg
+talking with her mother. Despite a tear-streaked face the girl was very
+lovely. She wore a long flowing gown of white satin and the flowers at
+the neckline were outlined with real pearls. Her net veil had been
+discarded. A bouquet of flowers lay on the floor.
+
+"How could Grant do such a cruel thing?" Penny heard her sob. "I just
+can't believe it of him, Mother. Surely he will come."
+
+Mrs. Kippenberg held the girl in her arms, trying to comfort her.
+
+"It is nearly three now, Sylvia. The servants have searched everywhere. A
+man of his type isn't worthy of you."
+
+"But I love him, Mother. And I am sure he loves me. It doesn't seem
+possible he would do such a thing without a word of explanation."
+
+"He will explain, never fear," Mrs. Kippenberg said grimly. "But now, we
+must think what has to be done. The guests must be told."
+
+"Oh, Mother!" Sylvia went into another paroxysm of crying.
+
+"There is no other way, my dear. Leave everything to me."
+
+Before Penny realized that the interview had ended, Mrs. Kippenberg
+stepped out into the hall. Her eyes focused hard upon the girl.
+
+"You are a reporter!" she accused harshly. "I remember, you were with
+that photographer!"
+
+"Please--" began Penny.
+
+"I'll tell you nothing," the woman cried. "How dare you intrude in my
+home and go about listening at bedroom doors!"
+
+"Mrs. Kippenberg, if only you will calm yourself, I may be able to help
+you."
+
+"Help me?" the woman demanded. "What do you mean?"
+
+"I may be able to give you a clue as to what became of Grant Atherwald."
+
+The anger faded from Mrs. Kippenberg's face. She came close to Penny,
+grasping her arm with a pressure which hurt.
+
+"You have seen him? Tell me!"
+
+"He came over in the same boat."
+
+"How long ago was that?"
+
+"Shortly after one o'clock. He was stopped at the front door by a servant
+who handed him a note. Mr. Atherwald read it and walked down toward the
+garden."
+
+"I wonder which one of the servants spoke to him? It was at the front
+door, you say?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it must have been Gregg. I'll talk with him."
+
+Forgetting Penny, Mrs. Kippenberg hastened down the stairway. She jangled
+a bell and asked that the manservant be sent to her. Unnoticed, Penny
+lingered to hear the interview.
+
+The man came into the room. "You sent for me, Mrs. Kippenberg?" he
+inquired.
+
+"Yes, Gregg. You were at the door when Mr. Atherwald arrived?"
+
+"I was, Madam."
+
+"I understand you handed him a note which he read."
+
+"Yes, Madam."
+
+"Who gave you the note?"
+
+"Mrs. Latch, the cook. She told me it was brought to the kitchen door
+early this morning by a most disreputable looking boy."
+
+"He had been hired to deliver it for another person, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes, Madam. The boy told Mrs. Latch that the message came from a friend
+of Mr. Atherwald's and should be given to him as soon as he arrived."
+
+"You have no idea what the note contained?"
+
+"No, Mrs. Kippenberg, the envelope was sealed."
+
+Sensing that when the interview ended Mrs. Kippenberg's wrath might again
+descend upon her, Penny decided not to tempt fate. While the woman was
+still talking with the servant, she slipped out of the house.
+
+"Atherwald might have had that note sent to himself, but I doubt it," she
+told herself. "Either he is still on the estate, or the boatman would
+have had to take him back across the river."
+
+She walked quickly down to the dock and was elated to find the guest
+launch tied up there. The boatman answered her questions readily. He had
+not seen Grant Atherwald since early in the afternoon. Salt was the only
+person he had taken back across the river.
+
+"Have you noticed any other boat leaving the estate?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Boats have been going up and down the river all day," the man answered
+with a shrug. "I didn't notice any particular one."
+
+Penny glanced across the water. She could see Salt perched on the
+drawbridge waiting for her. But she was not yet ready to leave the
+estate.
+
+Ignoring his shout to "come on," she turned and walked back toward the
+house. Deliberately, she chose the same path which she and Salt had
+followed earlier in the afternoon.
+
+A swift walk brought her to the forbidden trail with the barrier sign.
+Penny glanced around to be certain she was not under observation. Then
+she stepped boldly over the wire.
+
+Passing the place where she and Salt had talked with the gardener, she
+noticed his trowel lying on the ground. There was no evidence that he had
+done any work.
+
+However, all along the path flowering shrubs were well trimmed and
+tended.
+
+"So this part of the estate isn't fixed up," Penny mused. "It's much
+nicer than the other section in my opinion. I wonder why that gardener
+told so many lies?"
+
+The path led deeper into the woods. Rustic benches invited one to linger,
+but Penny walked rapidly onward.
+
+Unexpectedly, she came to a little clearing, and saw before her a large,
+circular pool. From a gap in the trees, warm sunshine poured down upon
+the bed of flowers which flanked the cement sides, making a circle of
+brilliant color.
+
+"So this is where the path leads," thought Penny. "No mystery here after
+all."
+
+She was at a loss to understand why this portion of the estate had been
+closed to visitors for certainly it was the most beautiful part. Yet
+there was a quality to the beauty which the girl did not like.
+
+As she stood staring at the pool, she was fully aware of an uneasy
+feeling which had taken possession of her. It was almost as if she stood
+in the presence of something sinister and unknown. The gentle rustling of
+the tree leaves, the cool river air blowing against her cheek, only
+served to heighten the feeling.
+
+She drew closer and peered down into the blue depths of the pool. She
+could not see the bottom plainly for the water was choked with a tangle
+of feathery plants. A few yellow lilies floated on the surface.
+
+Penny absently reached out to pluck one. But as the stem snapped off, she
+gave a little scream and dropped the flower. She had seen a large,
+shadowy form slithering through the water beneath her.
+
+Penny backed a step away from the pool. From among the lily pads an ugly
+head emerged and a broad snout was raised above the surface for an
+instant. Powerful jaws opened and closed, revealing jagged teeth set in
+deep pits.
+
+"An alligator!" Penny exclaimed aloud. "Such a horrid, ugly creature! And
+to think, I nearly put my hand in that water."
+
+She shivered and watched the movements of the alligator. Its head scooted
+smoothly over the water for a short distance. Then with a swish of its
+tail, the reptile submerged and the pool was as placid as before.
+
+"Eight feet long if it's an inch," estimated Penny. "Why would any person
+in his right mind keep such a creature here? Why, it's dangerous."
+
+She felt enraged, thinking how close she had come to touching the
+alligator. Yet justice compelled her to admit that she had only herself
+to blame. Deliberately, she had disregarded the warning not to explore
+the forbidden trail.
+
+"The Kippenbergs keep nice pets," she thought ironically. "If anyone fell
+into that pool it would be just too bad."
+
+Now that her curiosity was satisfied, Penny had not the slightest desire
+to linger near the lily pool. With another glance down into the murky
+depths she turned away, but she had taken less than a dozen steps when
+she paused. Her attention was held by a bright and shiny object which lay
+in the dust at her feet.
+
+With a low cry of surprise she reached down and picked up a plain band of
+white gold. Obviously, it was a wedding ring.
+
+"Now where did this come from?" Penny turned it over on the palm of her
+hand.
+
+Startled thoughts leaped into her mind. She felt certain Grant Atherwald
+had taken this same path earlier in the afternoon. It was logical to
+believe that the ring had been his, intended for Sylvia Kippenberg. Had
+he lost the band accidentally or deliberately thrown it away?
+
+Slowly, Penny's gaze roved to the lily pond. She noted that the coping
+was so low that one who walked carelessly might easily stumble and fall
+into the water. It made her shudder to think of such a gruesome
+possibility, yet she could not avoid giving it consideration. For that
+matter, Grant Atherwald might have been lured to this isolated spot. The
+mysterious message--
+
+Penny delved no deeper into the problem for suddenly she felt someone
+grasp her arms. With a terrified cry she whirled about to face her
+assailant.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 7
+ _THE FORBIDDEN POOL_
+
+
+A wave of relief surged over Penny as she saw that it was the old
+gardener who held her fast.
+
+"Oh, it's only you," she laughed shakily, trying to pull away. "For a
+second I thought the Bogey Man had me for sure."
+
+The gardener did not smile.
+
+"Didn't I tell you to keep away from here?" he demanded, giving her a
+hard shake.
+
+"I'm not doing any h-harm," Penny stammered. She kept her hand closed
+over the white gold ring so that the old man would not see what she had
+found. "I just wanted to learn what was back in here."
+
+"And you found out?"
+
+The gardener's tone warned Penny to be cautious in her reply.
+
+"Oh, the pool is rather pretty," she answered carelessly. "But I've seen
+much nicer ones."
+
+"How long have you been here?"
+
+"Only a minute or two. I really came to search for Grant Atherwald."
+
+"Atherwald? What would he be doing here?"
+
+"He disappeared an hour or so ago," revealed Penny. "The servants have
+been searching everywhere for him."
+
+"He disappeared?" the gardener repeated incredulously.
+
+"Yes, it's very peculiar. Mr. Atherwald arrived at the estate in ample
+time for the wedding. But after he read a note which was delivered to him
+he walked off in this direction and was seen no more."
+
+"Down this path, you mean?"
+
+"I couldn't say as to that, but he started this way. I know because I saw
+him myself."
+
+"Atherwald didn't come here," the gardener said with finality. "I've been
+working around the lily pond all afternoon and would have seen him."
+
+Penny's fingers closed tightly about the white gold ring which she kept
+shielded from the man's gaze. In her opinion the trinket offered almost
+conclusive proof that the bridegroom had visited the locality. Because
+she could not trust the gardener she kept her thoughts strictly to
+herself.
+
+The man stared down at his feet, obviously disturbed by the information
+Penny had given him.
+
+"Do you suppose harm could have befallen Mr. Atherwald?" she asked after
+a moment.
+
+"Harm?" he demanded irritably. "That's sheer nonsense. The fellow
+probably skipped out. He ought to be tarred and feathered!"
+
+"And you would enjoy doing it?" Penny interposed slyly.
+
+The gardener glared at her, making no attempt to hide his dislike.
+
+"Such treatment would be too good for anyone who hurt Miss Sylvia. Now
+will you get out of here? I have my orders and I mean to enforce them."
+
+"Oh, all right," replied Penny. "I was going anyway."
+
+This was not strictly true, for had the gardener not been there she would
+have made a more thorough investigation of the locality near the lily
+pool. But now she had no hope of learning more, and so turned away.
+
+Emerging from among the trees, she glanced toward the rose garden. Nearly
+all of the wedding guests had departed. Penny considered whether or not
+she should speak to Mrs. Kippenberg about finding the ring. Deciding
+against it, she joined a group of people at the boat dock and was ferried
+across the river.
+
+Salt awaited her at the drawbridge.
+
+"I just about gave you up," he complained. "It's time for us to get back
+to the office or our news won't be news. The wedding is definitely off?"
+
+"Yes, Atherwald can't be found."
+
+"We'll stop at a drug store and telephone," Salt said, pulling her toward
+the car. "Learn anything more after I left?"
+
+"Well, I found a wedding ring and was nearly chewed up by an alligator,"
+laughed Penny. "It seemed rather interesting at the time."
+
+The photographer gave her a queer look as he started the automobile.
+
+"Imagination and journalism never mix," he said.
+
+"Does this look like imagination?" Penny countered, showing him the plain
+band ring.
+
+"Where did you find it?"
+
+"Beside a lily pond in the forbidden part of the estate. I feel certain
+it must have been dropped by Grant Atherwald."
+
+"Thrown away?"
+
+"I don't know exactly what to think," Penny replied soberly.
+
+Salt steered the car into the main road which led back to Corbin. Then he
+inquired: "Did you notice any signs of a struggle? Grass trampled?
+Footprints?"
+
+"I didn't have a chance to do any investigating. That bossy old gardener
+came and drove me away."
+
+"What were you saying about alligators?"
+
+"Salt, I saw one swimming around in the lily pool," Penny told him
+earnestly. "It was an ugly brute, at least twelve feet long."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Well, eight anyway."
+
+"You're joking."
+
+"I am not," Penny said indignantly.
+
+"Maybe it was only a big log lying in the water."
+
+Penny gave an injured sniff. "Have it your own way. But it wasn't a log.
+I guess I can tell an alligator when I see one."
+
+"If you're actually right," Salt said unmoved, "I'd like to have snapped
+a picture of it. You know, this story might develop into something big."
+
+"I have a feeling it will, Salt."
+
+"If Atherwald really has disappeared it should create a sensation!"
+
+"And if the poor fellow had the misfortune to fall or be pushed into the
+lily pool Dad wouldn't have headlines large enough to carry it!"
+
+"Say, get a grip on yourself," Salt advised. "The _Riverview Star_ prints
+fact, not fancy."
+
+"That's because so many of Dad's reporters are stodgy old fellows,"
+laughed Penny. "But I'll admit it isn't very likely Grant Atherwald was
+devoured by the alligator."
+
+The car had reached Corbin. Salt drew up in front of a drug store.
+
+"Run in and telephone DeWitt," he said, opening the door for her. "And
+remember, stick to facts."
+
+Penny was a little frightened as she entered the telephone booth and
+placed a long distance call to the _Riverview Star_. She never failed to
+feel nervous when she talked with DeWitt, the city editor, for he was not
+a very pleasant individual.
+
+She jumped as the receiver was taken down and a voice barked: "City
+desk."
+
+"This is Penny Parker over at Corbin," she began weakly.
+
+"Can't hear you," snapped DeWitt. "Talk up."
+
+Penny repeated her name and DeWitt's voice lost some of its edge.
+Gathering courage, she started to tell him what she had learned at the
+Kippenberg estate.
+
+"Hold it," interrupted DeWitt. "I'll switch you over to a rewrite man."
+
+The connection was made and Penny began a second time. Now and then the
+rewrite man broke into the narrative to ask a question.
+
+"All right, I think I have it all," he said finally and hung up.
+
+Penny went back to the car looking as crestfallen as she felt.
+
+"I don't know what they thought of the story," she told Salt. "DeWitt
+certainly didn't waste any words of praise."
+
+"He never does," chuckled the photographer. "You're lucky if you don't
+get fired."
+
+"That's one consolation," returned Penny, settling herself for the long
+ride home. "He can't fire me. Being the editor's daughter has its
+advantages."
+
+The regular night edition of the _Riverview Star_ was on the street by
+the time they reached the city. Salt signaled a newsboy and bought a
+paper while the car waited for a traffic light. He tossed it over to
+Penny.
+
+"Here it is! My story!" she cried, and then her face fell.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Salt. "Did they garble it all up?"
+
+"They've cut it down to three inches! And not a word about the alligator
+or the lost wedding ring! I could cry! Why, I told that rewrite man
+enough to fill at least a column!"
+
+"Well, anyway you made the front page," the photographer consoled. "They
+may build the story up in the next edition after they get my pictures."
+
+Penny said nothing, remaining in deep gloom during the remainder of the
+ride to the _Star_ office. Salt let her out at the front door. She
+debated for a moment whether or not to go on home, but finally entered
+the building.
+
+DeWitt was busy at his desk as she walked stiffly past. She hoped that he
+would notice how she ignored him, but he did not glance up from the copy
+before him.
+
+Penny opened the door of her father's private office and stopped short.
+
+"Why, Dad?" she cried. "What are you doing here? You're supposed to be
+home in bed."
+
+"I finally persuaded the doctor to let me out," Anthony Parker replied,
+swinging around in his swivel chair. "How did you get along with your
+assignment?"
+
+"I thought I did very well," Penny said aloofly. "But from now on I'll
+not telephone anything in. I'll write the story myself."
+
+"Now don't blame DeWitt or the rewrite man," said Mr. Parker, smiling. "A
+paper has to be careful in what it publishes, especially about a wedding.
+Alligators are a bit too--shall we say sensational?"
+
+"You made a similar remark about witch dolls," Penny reminded him.
+
+"I did eat my words that time," Mr. Parker admitted, "but this is
+different. If we build up a big story about Grant Atherwald's
+disappearance, and then tomorrow he shows up at his own home, we'll
+appear pretty ridiculous."
+
+"I guess you're right," Penny said, turning away. "Well, I'm happy to see
+you back in the office again."
+
+Mr. Parker watched her speculatively. When she reached the door he
+inquired: "Aren't you forgetting something?"
+
+"What, Dad?"
+
+"Today is Thursday." The editor took a sealed envelope from the desk
+drawer. "This is the first time you have failed to collect your allowance
+in over a year."
+
+"I must be slipping." Penny grinned as she pocketed the envelope.
+
+"Why don't you open it?"
+
+"What's the use?" Penny asked gloomily. "It's always the same. Anyway, I
+borrowed two dollars last week so this doesn't really belong to me."
+
+"You might be pleasantly surprised."
+
+Penny stared at her father with disbelief. "Dad! You don't mean you've
+given me a raise!"
+
+Eagerly, she ripped open the envelope. Three crisp dollar bills fluttered
+into her hand. With a shriek of delight, Penny flung her arms about her
+father's neck.
+
+"I always try to reward a good reporter," he chuckled. "Now take yourself
+off because my work is stacked a mile high."
+
+Penny tripped gaily toward the door but it opened before she could cross
+the room. An office boy came in with a message for Mr. Parker.
+
+"Man to see you named Atherwald," he announced.
+
+The name produced an electrifying effect upon both Penny and her father.
+
+"Atherwald!" Mr. Parker exclaimed. "Then he hasn't disappeared after all!
+Show him in."
+
+"And I'm staying right here," Penny declared, easing herself into the
+nearest chair. "I have a hunch that this interview may concern me."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 8
+ _PARENTAL PROTEST_
+
+
+In a few minutes the office boy returned, followed by a distinguished,
+middle-aged man who carried a cane. Penny gave him an astonished glance
+for she had expected to see Grant Atherwald. It had not occurred to her
+that there might be two persons with the same surname.
+
+"Mr. Atherwald?" inquired her father, waving the visitor into a chair.
+
+"James Atherwald."
+
+The man spoke shortly and did not sit down. Instead he spread out a copy
+of the night edition of the _Star_ and pointed to the story which Penny
+had covered. She quaked inwardly, wondering what error of hers was to be
+exposed.
+
+"Do you see this?" Mr. Atherwald demanded.
+
+"What about it?" inquired the editor pleasantly.
+
+"You are holding my family up to ridicule by printing such a story! Grant
+Atherwald is my son!"
+
+"Is the story incorrect?"
+
+"Yes, you imply that my son deliberately jilted Sylvia Kippenberg!"
+
+"And actually he didn't?" Mr. Parker inquired evenly.
+
+"Certainly not. My son is a man of honor and had a very deep regard for
+Sylvia. Under no circumstance would he have jilted her."
+
+"Still, the wedding did not take place."
+
+"That is true," Mr. Atherwald admitted.
+
+"Perhaps you can explain why it was postponed?"
+
+"I don't know what happened to Grant," Mr. Atherwald said reluctantly.
+"He left our home in ample time for the ceremony, and I might add, was in
+excellent spirits. I believe he must have been the victim of a stupid,
+practical joke."
+
+"Well, that suggests a new angle," Mr. Parker remarked thoughtfully. "Did
+your son have friends who might be apt to play such a joke on him?"
+
+"No one of my acquaintance," Mr. Atherwald answered unwillingly. "Of
+course, he had many young friends who were not in my circle."
+
+Penny had listened quietly to the conversation. She now arose and came
+over to the desk. From her pocket she took the white gold wedding ring.
+
+"Mr. Atherwald," she said, "I wonder if you could identify this."
+
+The man studied the trinket for a moment.
+
+"It looks very much like a ring which Grant purchased for Sylvia," he
+declared. "Where did you get it?"
+
+"I found it lying on the ground at the Kippenberg estate," Penny replied
+vaguely. She had no intention of divulging the exact locality where she
+had picked up the ring.
+
+"You see," said Mr. Parker, "we have supporting facts in our possession
+which were not published. All in all, I think the story was handled
+discreetly, with due regard for the feelings of those involved."
+
+"Then you refuse to retract the story?"
+
+"I should like to oblige you, Mr. Atherwald, but you realize such a story
+as this is of great interest to our readers."
+
+"You care only for sensationalism!"
+
+"On the contrary, we try to avoid it," Mr. Parker corrected. "In this
+particular case, we deliberately played the story down. If it develops
+that your son actually has disappeared--"
+
+"I tell you it was only a practical joke," Mr. Atherwald interrupted. "No
+doubt my son is at home by this time. The wedding has merely been
+postponed."
+
+"You are entitled to your opinion," said Mr. Parker. "And I sincerely
+hope that you are right."
+
+"At least do not use that picture which your photographer took of Mrs.
+Kippenberg. I'll pay you for it."
+
+Mr. Parker smiled and shook his head.
+
+"I might have expected such an attitude!" Mr. Atherwald exclaimed
+angrily. "Good afternoon."
+
+He left the office, slamming the door behind him.
+
+"Well, you've lost another subscriber, Dad," said Penny flippantly.
+
+"He's not the first," returned her father.
+
+"I intended to give Mr. Atherwald the wedding ring, but he went off in
+too big a hurry. Should I go after him?"
+
+"No, don't bother, Penny. You might take it around to the picture room
+and have it photographed. We may use it as Exhibit A if the story
+develops into anything."
+
+"How about the alligator?" Penny asked. "Would you like to have me bring
+that to the office, too?"
+
+"Move out of here and let me work," her father retorted.
+
+Penny went to the photographic department and made her requirements
+known.
+
+"I'll wait for the ring," she announced. "You don't catch me trusting you
+boys with any jewelry."
+
+While the picture was being taken Salt came by with several damp prints
+in his hand.
+
+"Take a look at this one, Penny," he said proudly. "Mrs. Kippenberg
+wielding a wicked plate. Will she burn up when she sees it on the picture
+page?"
+
+"She will, indeed," agreed Penny. "Nice going."
+
+When the ring had been returned to her she slipped it into her pocket and
+left the newspaper office. Her next stop was at a corner hamburger shop
+where she fortified herself with two large sandwiches.
+
+"That ought to hold me until the dinner bell rings," she thought. "And
+now to pay my honest debts."
+
+A trolley ride and a short walk brought Penny to the home of her chum,
+Louise Sidell. As she came within sight of the front porch she saw her
+friend sitting on the steps, reading a movie magazine. Louise threw it
+aside and sprang to her feet.
+
+"Oh, Penny, I'm glad you came over. I telephoned your house and Mrs.
+Weems said you had gone away somewhere."
+
+"Official business for Dad," Penny laughed. She dropped two dollars into
+Louise's hand. "Here's what I owe you. But don't go spend it because I
+may need to borrow it back in a couple of days."
+
+"Is Leaping Lena running up huge garage bills again?" Louise inquired
+sympathetically.
+
+Penny's second-hand car was a joke to everyone save herself. She was a
+familiar figure at nearly every garage in Riverview, for the vehicle had
+a disconcerting way of breaking down.
+
+"I had to buy new spark plugs this time," sighed Penny. "But then, I
+should get along better from now on. Dad raised my allowance."
+
+"Doesn't that call for a celebration? Rini's have a special on today. A
+double chocolate sundae with pineapple and nuts, cherry and--"
+
+"Oh, no, you don't! I'm saving my dollar for the essentials of life. I
+may need it for gasoline if I decide to drive over to Corbin again."
+
+"Again?" Louise asked alertly.
+
+"I was over there today, covering the Kippenberg wedding," Penny
+explained. "Only it turned out there was no ceremony. Grant Atherwald
+jilted his bride, or was spirited away by persons unknown. He was last
+seen near a lily pool in an isolated part of the estate. I picked up a
+wedding ring lying on the ground close by. And then as a climax Mrs.
+Kippenberg hurled a plate at Salt."
+
+"Penny Parker, what are you saying?" Louise demanded. "It sounds like one
+of those two-reel thrillers they show over at the Rialto."
+
+"Here is the evidence," Penny said, showing her the white gold ring.
+
+"It's amazing how you get into so much adventure," Louise replied
+enviously as she studied the trinket. "Start at the beginning and tell me
+everything."
+
+The invitation was very much to Penny's liking. Perching herself on the
+highest porch step she recounted her visit to the Kippenberg estate,
+painting an especially romantic picture of the castle dwelling, the moat,
+and the drawbridge.
+
+"Oh, I'd love to visit the place," Louise declared. "You have all the
+luck."
+
+"I'll take you with me if I ever get to go again," promised Penny. "Well,
+I'll see you tomorrow."
+
+And with this careless farewell, she sprang to her feet, and hastened on
+home.
+
+The next morning while Mrs. Weems was preparing breakfast, Penny ran down
+to the corner to buy the first edition of the _Star_. As she spread it
+open a small headline accosted her eye.
+
+ "NO TRACE OF MISSING BRIDEGROOM."
+
+Penny read swiftly, learning that Grant Atherwald had not been seen since
+his strange disappearance from the Kippenberg estate. Members of the
+family refused to discuss the affair and had made no report to the
+police.
+
+"This story is developing into something big after all," she thought with
+quickening pulse. "Now if Dad will only let me work on it!"
+
+At home she gave the newspaper to her father, remarking rather pointedly:
+"You see, your expert reporters haven't learned very much more than I
+brought in yesterday. Why wouldn't it be a good idea to send me out there
+again today?"
+
+"Oh, I doubt if you could get into the estate, Penny."
+
+"Salt and I managed yesterday."
+
+"You did very well, but you weren't known then. It will be a different
+matter today since we antagonized the family by using the story. I'll
+suggest that Jerry Livingston be assigned to it."
+
+"With Penny as first assistant?"
+
+Mr. Parker smiled and shook his head. "This isn't your type of story. Now
+if you would like to cover a lecture at the Women's Club--"
+
+"Or a nice peppy meeting of the Ladies Sewing Circle," Penny finished
+ironically. "Thank you, no."
+
+"I am sure you wouldn't have a chance of getting into the estate," her
+father said lamely. "We must have good coverage."
+
+"What does Jerry have that I haven't got?" Penny demanded in an aggrieved
+voice.
+
+"Eight years of experience for one thing."
+
+"But I really should go out there," Penny insisted. "I ought to show Miss
+Kippenberg the ring I found."
+
+"The ring might provide an entry," Mr. Parker admitted thoughtfully.
+"I'll tell you, why don't you telephone long distance?"
+
+"And if I'm able to make an appointment, may I help Jerry cover the
+story?"
+
+"All right," agreed Mr. Parker. "If Sylvia Kippenberg talks with you
+we'll be able to use anything she says."
+
+"I'm the same as on my way to the estate now, Dad."
+
+With a triumphant laugh, Penny left the breakfast table and hastened to
+the telephone.
+
+"Long distance," she said into the transmitter. "The Kippenberg estate at
+Corbin, please."
+
+She hovered anxiously near the telephone while she waited for the
+connection to be made. Ten minutes elapsed before the bell jingled
+several times. Eagerly, she jerked down the receiver. She could hear a
+faint, far-away voice saying, "hello."
+
+"May I speak with Sylvia Kippenberg?" Penny requested.
+
+"Who is this, please?"
+
+"Miss Parker at Riverview."
+
+"Miss Kippenberg is not at home," came the stiff response.
+
+"Then let me speak with Mrs. Kippenberg," Penny said quickly. "I have
+something very important to tell her. Yesterday when I was at the estate
+I found a ring--"
+
+The receiver had clicked at the other end of the line. The connection was
+broken.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 9
+ _A SOCIETY BAZAAR_
+
+
+"You see, Penny," said Mr. Parker sympathetically, "wealthy people have a
+way of being inaccessible to the press. They surround themselves with
+servants who have been trained to allow no invasion of their privacy.
+They erect barriers which aren't easily broken down."
+
+"If only I could have reached Miss Kippenberg I feel sure she would have
+wished to learn about the ring," returned Penny. "Oh, well, let Jerry
+cover the story. I've lost interest."
+
+All that morning the girl went about the house in a mood of deep
+depression. She felt completely out of sorts and would scowl at her own
+reflection whenever she passed a mirror. Nothing seemed to go right.
+
+"I declare, I wish you would forget that silly wedding," Mrs. Weems said
+wearily. "Why don't you try working out your resentment on a tennis
+ball?"
+
+"Not a bad idea," admitted Penny. "Only I have no partner. Louise is
+going away somewhere today to a charity bazaar."
+
+"Here in Riverview?" inquired Mrs. Weems with interest.
+
+"No, it's to be held at Andover, twenty miles from Corbin. Louise is
+going with an aunt of hers. She invited me several days ago, but I didn't
+think it would be any fun."
+
+"You might enjoy it. Why don't you go?"
+
+"I wonder if it isn't too late?" Penny glanced at the clock.
+
+A telephone call to the Sidell home assured her that she would have ample
+time to get ready for the trip. She quickly dressed and was waiting when
+Louise and her aunt, Miss Lucinda Frome, drove up to the door.
+
+"What sort of an affair is it?" Penny inquired as they traveled toward
+the distant town.
+
+Miss Frome explained that the bazaar was being sponsored by members of
+the D.A.R. organization and would be held at one of the fashionable clubs
+of the city. As Miss Frome belonged to the Riverview chapter she and her
+guests would have an entry.
+
+"I look forward to meeting a number of prominent persons today," the
+woman declared. "The Andover chapter has a very exclusive membership."
+
+Louise winked at Penny, for it was a source of amusement to her that her
+aunt stood in awe of society personages. Neither she nor her chum
+suffered from social ambition or a feeling of inferiority.
+
+At Andover, Miss Frome drove the car to the City Club and parked it
+beside a long row of other automobiles, many of which were under the
+charge of uniformed chauffeurs.
+
+"Oh, dear," remarked Miss Frome nervously, "I didn't realize how shabby
+my old coupe looks. I do hope no one notices."
+
+"Now don't start that, Aunty," Louise said, taking her by the arm. "Your
+car is perfectly all right. And so are you."
+
+They went up the steps of the stone building and mingled with the other
+women. So many persons were present that the three newcomers attracted no
+attention. Miss Frome was reassured to see that she was as well dressed
+as anyone in the room.
+
+Several long tables were covered with various articles offered for sale.
+Penny and Louise wandered about examining objects which struck their
+fancy. Miss Frome bought a vase and an imitation ivory elephant, but the
+girls considered the prices too high for their purses.
+
+Presently, Penny's gaze was drawn to a young woman who stood behind one
+of the tables at the far end of the room. She stopped short and stared.
+
+"See someone you know?" inquired Louise.
+
+"Why, that young woman with the dark hair and the lace dress, Louise! She
+is Sylvia Kippenberg!"
+
+"Really? I must say she has courage to come here today after all that
+happened!"
+
+The young woman did not realize that she was being subjected to scrutiny.
+However, she seemed fully aware that she was a general object of
+curiosity, for her lips were frozen in a set smile and her face was pale
+despite the rouge on the smooth cheeks.
+
+"I suppose she must be on the bazaar committee," Louise went on. "But my,
+if anyone had jilted me, I would not have come here today."
+
+"Jerry must have missed his interview after all," Penny murmured, half to
+herself.
+
+"Jerry?"
+
+"Yes, Dad assigned him to the Kippenberg story. I suppose he drove to
+Corbin today in the hope of seeing Miss Sylvia."
+
+"And she may have come here just to escape reporters."
+
+"For two cents I'd try to interview her myself," Penny said.
+
+"Do you think she would talk with you?"
+
+"Not if she realizes I am a reporter. But at least I can try."
+
+"Don't create a scene whatever you do," Louise warned uneasily. "Not that
+I would mind. But Aunt Lucinda would die of mortification."
+
+"I'll try to be careful," Penny promised.
+
+She sauntered forward, gradually working toward the table where the young
+woman served. Selecting an article at random from the display, she
+inquired its price.
+
+"Ten dollars," Miss Kippenberg answered mechanically.
+
+Penny loitered at the table until two elderly women had moved on. She was
+now alone with Sylvia Kippenberg. She would have no better opportunity to
+speak with her.
+
+"Miss Kippenberg," she began.
+
+"Yes?" The young woman really gazed at the girl for the first time. Penny
+saw that her eyelids were red and swollen from recent tears.
+
+"I should like to talk with you alone, please."
+
+"Do I know your name?" Miss Kippenberg asked coldly.
+
+"Penny Parker."
+
+"Parker--Parker," the young woman repeated and her eyes hardened. "Oh,
+yes, you are the girl who came to our place yesterday with that
+photographer! And you telephoned again this morning."
+
+"Yes," Penny admitted reluctantly, "but--"
+
+The young woman did not allow her to finish.
+
+"I'll not talk with you or any other reporter. You have no right to come
+here and annoy me."
+
+"Please, I'm not really a reporter, Miss Kippenberg. I have something to
+show you."
+
+Miss Kippenberg had closed her ears to Penny's words. She turned abruptly
+and fled in the direction of the powder room.
+
+Penny hesitated, remembering her promise to create no scene. Still, she
+could not allow Miss Kippenberg to elude her so easily. Determinedly, she
+followed.
+
+"Please, Miss Kippenberg, you must listen to me," she pleaded.
+
+Observing that her words had not the slightest effect upon the girl, she
+suddenly opened her purse and took out the white gold ring. She thrust it
+in front of Miss Kippenberg.
+
+"I only wish to show you this."
+
+The young woman stopped short, gazing down at the ring.
+
+"Where did you get it?" she asked in a low tone.
+
+"Then you do recognize it?"
+
+"Of course. Grant showed it to me the night before we were to have been
+married. Tell me, how did it come into your hands?"
+
+"We can't talk here."
+
+Miss Kippenberg glanced quickly about and observing that many eyes were
+focused upon them, led the girl into the deserted powder room. They sat
+down on a sofa in a secluded corner.
+
+"I didn't mean to be so rude before," Miss Kippenberg apologized. "It was
+only because I must protect myself from reporters and photographers. You
+have no idea how I have been annoyed."
+
+"I do understand," said Penny, "and I wish to help you. That was why I
+was so insistent upon talking with you. I think this ring may be a clue
+to Mr. Atherwald's disappearance."
+
+"Then you believe as I do that he did not go away purposely?"
+
+"My theory is that Mr. Atherwald was a victim of a plot. Did he have any
+known enemies?"
+
+"Oh, no, everyone liked Grant. Tell me about the ring. Who gave it to
+you?"
+
+"No one. I found it while I was exploring a path on the estate, the trail
+which is blocked off."
+
+"You shouldn't have gone there, but no matter. Just where did you pick up
+the ring?"
+
+"I found it near the lily pool."
+
+Miss Kippenberg stared at Penny with expressionless, half-glazed eyes.
+
+"Oh!" she murmured. Her head dropped low, her body sagged and she slumped
+down on the sofa in a faint.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 10
+ _A THROWN STONE_
+
+
+Penny's first thought was to call for assistance, but sober reflection
+made her realize that to do so would likely result in awkward questions.
+She felt certain Miss Kippenberg had only fainted and would soon revive.
+
+Stretching the young woman full length upon the sofa, the girl ran to the
+washroom for a glass of water. She dampened a towel and folded it across
+Miss Kippenberg's forehead, at the same time rubbing the limp hands and
+trying to restore circulation. Noticing the white gold ring which had
+fallen to the floor, she reached down and picked it up.
+
+"Miss Kippenberg must have fainted because of what I told her about the
+lily pond," thought Penny. "I should have used more tact."
+
+She watched the young woman anxiously, fearing that what she had assumed
+to be an ordinary faint might really be a heart attack. A wave of relief
+surged over her as Miss Kippenberg stirred slightly. Her long dark
+eyelashes fluttered open and she stared blankly about her.
+
+"Where am I?" she asked, moistening her dry lips.
+
+"Here, drink this," Penny urged, offering the glass of water. "You'll
+feel much better in a few minutes."
+
+"Now I remember," Miss Kippenberg murmured. "You were saying--"
+
+"Don't think about that now. Just lie still and relax."
+
+Miss Kippenberg did not try to speak again for some little time. Then,
+despite Penny's protests, she raised herself to a sitting position.
+
+"I feel quite all right now," she insisted. "How stupid of me to faint."
+
+"I am afraid I was very tactless."
+
+"On the contrary, our conversation had nothing to do with it."
+
+"I thought--"
+
+"It was the heat," Miss Kippenberg insisted. "I had a sunstroke once and
+since then I can't bear even an overheated room."
+
+"But it really isn't very warm in here," protested Penny. "I don't notice
+it at all."
+
+"You might not but I am very sensitive to it."
+
+"Well, I'm glad your faint wasn't caused by anything I said," Penny
+declared, although she continued to regard the young woman dubiously. "I
+thought you seemed shocked by what I told you about the ring."
+
+"You were saying that you picked it up near the lily pond?" Miss
+Kippenberg questioned in a low tone.
+
+"Yes," replied Penny, watching her closely.
+
+"I wish I knew the exact place."
+
+"If we could go to your estate together I could show you," Penny said
+eagerly.
+
+Miss Kippenberg hesitated in her reply, obviously still prejudiced
+against the girl because of her connection with the _Riverview Star_.
+
+"Very well," she agreed. "Will you please ask that my car be sent to the
+door?"
+
+"Gladly," said Penny, trying not to show her jubilance.
+
+Leaving Miss Kippenberg in the powder room she returned to the main hall.
+Louise separated from the crowd and hurried to meet her.
+
+"Oh, Penny, I saw you go off with Miss Kippenberg," she began. "Would she
+talk with you?"
+
+"She did," answered Penny, "and now I'm going with her to the estate."
+
+"But Aunt Lucinda expects to start home in a few minutes," protested
+Louise. "How long will you be gone?"
+
+"I haven't the slightest idea. If I'm not back here by the time you are
+ready to leave don't wait for me."
+
+"But how will you get home?"
+
+"Oh, I'll find a way. The important thing now is to learn everything I
+can from Miss Kippenberg. She's in a mood to talk."
+
+"I'd love to visit the estate," Louise said wistfully.
+
+"I wish I could take you," Penny told her sincerely, "but I don't see how
+I can this time."
+
+"Of course not, Penny. It would be very foolish of you to try. You might
+lose your own chance to gain an exclusive news story."
+
+"Will you explain to your aunt about my sudden disappearance?"
+
+"Yes, she'll understand," Louise replied. "We'll wait here for you at
+least an hour."
+
+Penny left a call for Miss Kippenberg's car and then went back to the
+powder room. The young woman walked a bit unsteadily even with aid.
+However, no one paid attention to them as they crossed the main hall and
+made their way to the waiting automobile.
+
+With Penny and Miss Kippenberg as passengers the big limousine rolled
+away from the clubhouse and sped toward Corbin. During the ride the young
+woman scarcely spoke. She sat with her head against the cushion, eyes
+half closed. As they came within view of the drawbridge she made an
+effort to arouse herself.
+
+"I see you have visitors at the estate," Penny commented, noticing a
+number of cars parked near the river's edge.
+
+"Reporters, always reporters," returned Miss Kippenberg impatiently.
+"They may try to board as we pass."
+
+Penny wondered how the limousine would be taken across the river. The old
+watchman had noted their approach. Before the car reached the end of the
+road he had lowered the creaking drawbridge into position.
+
+"Is the bridge really safe?" Penny inquired of her companion.
+
+"For light traffic only," Miss Kippenberg answered briefly.
+
+The arrival of the car had created a stir of interest among the group of
+men gathered near the bridge. Penny caught sight of Jerry Livingston and
+could not resist rolling down the side window so he would be sure to
+obtain a clear view of her. It gave her a very pleasant feeling to see
+him stare as if he could not believe his own eyes.
+
+Several of the reporters attempted to stop the limousine but without
+success. The car clattered over the drawbridge which was pulled up again
+before anyone could follow.
+
+Penny and Miss Kippenberg alighted at the front door of the great house.
+
+"Now show me where you found the ring," requested the young woman.
+
+Penny led her down the winding path into the grove.
+
+"I hope we don't meet your head gardener," she said significantly. "He
+seems to be such an unpleasant individual."
+
+Miss Kippenberg glanced at her queerly.
+
+"Why, how do you mean?"
+
+"Oh, yesterday he ordered me away from here in no uncertain terms."
+
+"He only meant to do his duty."
+
+"Then the man has been ordered to keep persons away from this part of the
+estate?"
+
+"I really couldn't tell you," Miss Kippenberg answered aloofly. "Mother
+has charge of the servants."
+
+"Has the man been in your employ long?"
+
+"I can't tell you that either." Miss Kippenberg's voice warned Penny that
+she did not care to be questioned.
+
+There was no sign of the old gardener as they came presently to the lily
+pool. Penny searched about in the grass for a few minutes.
+
+"Here is where I found the ring," she revealed. "And see this!"
+
+"What?" Miss Kippenberg drew in her breath sharply.
+
+"Footprints."
+
+"That doesn't seem so remarkable." The young woman bent to examine them.
+"They probably were made by Grant's own shoe."
+
+"But it looks as if there might have been a struggle here," Penny
+insisted. "From those marks wouldn't you say a body had been dragged
+across the ground toward the pool?"
+
+"No!" cried Miss Kippenberg. "The grass is trampled, but I can't believe
+Grant has met with violence. I refuse to think of such a thing! The
+pool--" she broke off and a shudder wracked her body.
+
+"It is best to know the truth. Have you notified the police about Mr.
+Atherwald's disappearance?"
+
+Miss Kippenberg shook her head. "Until today I thought he would return.
+Or at least I hoped so."
+
+"It seems to me an expert should be called into the case," Penny urged.
+"Why don't you telephone the police station now?"
+
+"I couldn't," returned Sylvia looking very miserable. "Not without
+consulting Mother."
+
+"Then let's talk with her now."
+
+"She isn't at home this afternoon."
+
+"But something should be done, and at once," Penny protested. "The first
+rain will destroy all these footprints and perhaps other important
+evidence. Do you really love Grant Atherwald?"
+
+"With all my heart," answered the young woman soberly.
+
+"Then I should think you would have some interest in what became of him.
+I can't understand your attitude at all."
+
+"I--I have others to think of besides myself."
+
+"Your mother, you mean?"
+
+"Yes." Sylvia avoided Penny's penetrating gaze.
+
+"Surely your mother wouldn't wish an act of violence to go unpunished. So
+much time has been lost already."
+
+"We aren't certain anything has happened to Grant," Sylvia responded, her
+eyes downcast. "If we should bring the police into the case, and then it
+turns out that he has merely gone away to some other city, I'd be held up
+to ridicule once more."
+
+"It seems to me you are taking a most foolish attitude."
+
+"There is another reason why we must be very careful," Sylvia said
+unwillingly.
+
+"And what is that?"
+
+For just an instant Penny dared hope that the young woman meant to answer
+the question. But Sylvia seemed to reconsider for she said quickly:
+
+"I can't tell you. Please don't ask me any more questions."
+
+"Are you afraid you may be blamed for Mr. Atherwald's disappearance?"
+Penny persisted.
+
+"No, no, I assure you I am not thinking of myself. Please, let's return
+to the house."
+
+Penny deliberately blocked the path.
+
+"Unless you wish me to notify the police there is a little matter which I
+must ask you to explain."
+
+Reaching down she picked up a small stone and hurled it into the lily
+pond. As the ripples died away they both observed a convulsive movement
+of the water, a churning which had no relation to the missile thrown.
+
+"I think," said Penny evenly, "that you understand my meaning."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 11
+ _QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS_
+
+
+Miss Kippenberg watched the concentric circles race each other to the far
+edge of the lily pool.
+
+"Then you know the reason why this part of the estate is kept closed
+off?" she murmured, very low.
+
+"I learned about the alligator yesterday," said Penny. "Why is such an
+ugly brute kept here?"
+
+"It was none of my doing, I assure you. I hate the horrid thing. Surely
+you don't mean to suggest--"
+
+"I am not suggesting anything yet," said Penny quietly. "But you must
+realize that it is rather unusual to keep an alligator on one's estate."
+
+"My father brought it here from Florida," Miss Kippenberg revealed
+reluctantly. "For some reason the creature seemed to fascinate him. He
+insisted upon keeping it in the pond."
+
+"Your father is not living here now I am told."
+
+"That is true." Miss Kippenberg quickly switched the subject back to the
+alligator. "Mother and I would like to get rid of the beast but we've
+never been able to do it."
+
+"Any zoo should be willing to take it off your hands."
+
+"Mother often spoke of getting in touch with one but for some reason she
+never did. I suppose she hesitated to give the alligator away upon
+Father's account."
+
+Penny remained silent, wondering how deeply she dared probe into the
+private life of the Kippenberg family. After all there were certain
+inquiries which a person of sensibility could not make. She couldn't very
+well ask: "Have your parents separated? Why did your father leave home?
+Is it true he is wanted by the authorities for evading income tax?"
+although these questions were upon the tip of her tongue.
+
+She did say carelessly, "Your father is away, isn't he?"
+
+"Yes," Miss Kippenberg answered briefly. After a moment she went on:
+"Father was rather peculiar in many ways. He had a decided flare for the
+unusual. Take this estate for instance. He had it built at great expense
+to resemble a castle he once saw in Germany."
+
+"I've never visited such an elegant place."
+
+"It is entirely too flamboyant for my taste. But Father loved every tower
+and turret. If only things had turned out different--"
+
+Her voice trailed away and she stared at the ground, lost in deep
+thought. Arousing herself, she went on once more.
+
+"If you had known Father you would understand it was not strange for him
+to have an alligator on the estate. At one time he kept imported
+peacocks. The place was fairly overrun with them."
+
+Penny offered no comment. She moved closer to the edge of the lily pool,
+gazing down into the now tranquil waters.
+
+"I know what you are trying to imply," Miss Kippenberg said jerkily. "It
+couldn't be possible. I refuse even to consider such a ridiculous
+theory."
+
+"It does seem rather far-fetched," Penny admitted. "Of course, tragedies
+do occur and those foot-prints--"
+
+"Please, not another word or you'll drive me into hysterics!" Sylvia
+cried. "You are trying to play upon my feelings so that I will tell you
+things! You are only trying to get a story! I'll not talk with you any
+longer."
+
+She turned and ran up the path toward the house.
+
+"Overplayed my hand that time," thought Penny ruefully. "As Dad says, I
+really have too much imagination to make a good reporter. Also too lively
+a tongue."
+
+Miss Kippenberg had vanished into the house by the time the girl retraced
+her way to the garden. The black limousine no longer stood at the front
+door so she knew she was expected to get back to Andover by her own
+efforts.
+
+"If Jerry is still waiting at the drawbridge, I'll ride home with him,"
+she told herself. "Otherwise, I'm out of luck completely."
+
+The path which Penny followed brought her toward the rear of the house.
+As she drew near, the kitchen door suddenly opened and a stout woman in a
+blue uniform came outside. In her arms she carried two large paper sacks
+which appeared to be filled with garbage for the bottoms were moist.
+
+Just as the woman reached Penny one of the bags gave away, allowing a
+collection of corn husks, watermelon rinds and egg shells to fall on the
+sidewalk.
+
+"Now I've done it!" she exclaimed crossly. "Splattered my stockings too."
+
+"Oh, that's too bad," said Penny, pausing.
+
+"This is the only place I ever worked where the cook was expected to
+carry out the garbage!" the woman complained. "It makes me good and mad
+every time I do it."
+
+"I should think a house of this size would have an incinerator so that
+the garbage could be burned," Penny remarked.
+
+"Say, this place doesn't have any conveniences for the servants," the
+cook went on. "You're expected to work, work, work from morning to
+night."
+
+She broke off quickly, regarding Penny with a suspicious gaze. "You're
+not one of Miss Sylvia's guests?" she demanded.
+
+"Oh, no, I only came here on an errand. I wouldn't repeat anything to the
+family."
+
+"That's all right then," the woman said in relief. "I liked my job here
+well enough until lately. All month it's been one dinner party after
+another. Then we spent days getting ready for the wedding feast and not
+one scrap of food was touched!"
+
+"But I suppose Mrs. Kippenberg pays you well."
+
+"Listen, she didn't give me one extra cent for all the work I did. Mrs.
+Kippenberg always has been real close, and she's a heap worse since her
+husband went away. Another week like this last one and I quit!"
+
+"Well, I can't say I blame you," Penny said, leading the woman on. "I
+suppose Miss Sylvia is as overbearing as her mother?"
+
+"Oh, Miss Sylvia is all right, as sweet a girl as you'll find anywhere. I
+felt mighty sorry for her when that no-account man threw her over."
+
+Penny knew by this time that she must be talking with Mrs. Latch, for the
+footman had mentioned the cook's name. As the woman walked on with her
+bundles of garbage she fell into step with her.
+
+"It was strange about Mr. Atherwald's disappearance," she remarked. "I
+hear he came to the house and then went away just before the wedding."
+
+"I can tell you about that," replied Mrs. Latch with an important air.
+"Yesterday morning a boy came to the back door with a letter for Mr.
+Atherwald. It's my opinion he sent it to himself."
+
+"Didn't the boy tell you where he had obtained the letter?"
+
+"He said it was given to him by one of Mr. Atherwald's friends. A man in
+a boat."
+
+"Oh, I see," said Penny, making a mental note of the information.
+Realizing that the cook had told everything she knew about the matter,
+she quickly switched the subject. "By the way, who is the head gardener
+here?"
+
+"Do you mean Peter Henderson?"
+
+"A fairly old man," described Penny. "Gray hair, stooped shoulders, and I
+might add, an unpleasant manner."
+
+"I guess that's Peter. He's not much of a gardener in my opinion. And he
+feels too high and mighty to associate with the other servants. He
+doesn't even stay here nights."
+
+"Is he a new man?"
+
+"Mrs. Kippenberg hired him only three days before the wedding. I don't
+think he's done a lick of honest work since he came here."
+
+"And Mrs. Kippenberg doesn't mind?"
+
+"She's been too busy and bothered to pay any attention to him," the cook
+declared. "But she always has time to boss me. I tell you, if dishes
+aren't prepared perfectly she raves!"
+
+"No wonder Mr. Kippenberg was forced to leave home," Penny interposed
+slyly. "You can't blame him for running away from a violent temper."
+
+"Oh, the Kippenbergs never had any trouble," Mrs. Latch corrected. "Mr.
+Kippenberg would just laugh and not say a word when she jumped on him.
+They were never heard to quarrel."
+
+"Then it seems odd that he went away."
+
+"Yes, it does," agreed the cook, frowning. "I never did understand it.
+And then the way Mrs. Kippenberg changed all the servants!"
+
+"You mean after Mr. Kippenberg went away?"
+
+"She fired everyone except me. I guess she knew she couldn't get another
+cook half as good if she let me go. Right away I struck for more money
+and she gave it to me without a whimper. But since then she works me like
+a dog."
+
+Mrs. Latch clattered the lid of the garbage can into place and turned
+toward the house. But as Penny once more fell into step with her, she
+paused and regarded the girl with sudden suspicion.
+
+"Say, why am I telling you all this anyway? Who are you? You're not one
+of those sneaking reporters?"
+
+"Do I look like a reporter?" countered Penny.
+
+"Well, no, you don't," admitted Mrs. Latch. "But you're as inquisitive as
+one. You must be the girl who brought Miss Sylvia's new dress from the
+LaRue Shoppe."
+
+Penny hesitated too long over her reply, and the woman gazed at her
+sharply.
+
+"You _are_ a reporter!" she exclaimed with conviction. "And you've been
+deliberately pumping me! Of all the tricks! I'll tell Miss Kippenberg!"
+
+"Wait, I can explain."
+
+Mrs. Latch paid no heed. With an angry toss of her head she hastened into
+the house.
+
+"Overstepped myself again," Penny thought in dismay. "I'll be getting
+away from here while the getting is good."
+
+Turning, she ran down the walk toward the river, only to stop short as
+she reached the boat dock. The drawbridge was in open position and the
+old watchman did not appear to be at his usual post. She had no way of
+reaching the mainland.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 12
+ _FISHERMAN'S LUCK_
+
+
+Penny looked anxiously about for a means of crossing the river. There
+were no small boats available and the only person who stood on the
+opposite shore was Jerry Livingston. The other reporters and
+photographers, evidently tiring of their long vigil, had gone away.
+
+She cupped her hands and shouted to Jerry: "How am I going to get over
+there? Can you lower the bridge?"
+
+"The mechanism is locked," called back the reporter. "And the watchman
+won't be back for an hour."
+
+Penny walked a short distance up the shore searching for a boat. The only
+available craft was the large launch which she could not hope to operate.
+She might return to the house and appeal to Miss Kippenberg but such a
+course was not to her liking.
+
+As she considered whether or not to ruin her clothing by swimming across,
+Jerry called her attention to a small boat some distance up the river.
+The boy who was fishing from it obligingly rowed ashore after Penny had
+signaled him.
+
+"I'll give you fifty cents to ferry me across," she offered.
+
+"I'll be glad to do it," he agreed.
+
+Penny stepped into the boat and then asked: "Aren't you the same lad I
+saw here yesterday?"
+
+The boy nodded as he reached for the oars. "I remember you," he answered.
+
+"You seem to fish here nearly every day."
+
+"Just about. I caught some nice ones today." Proudly he held up two large
+fish for her to see.
+
+"Beauties," praised Penny. "I take it the motor boats haven't been
+bothering you as much as they were."
+
+"It's been pretty quiet on the river today," the boy agreed. "Want to see
+something else I fished up?"
+
+"Why, yes. What did you hook, a mud turtle?"
+
+The boy opened a large wooden box which contained an assortment of rope,
+fishing tackle and miscellaneous articles. He lifted out a man's high
+silk hat, bedraggled and shapeless.
+
+"You fished that out of the water?" Penny demanded, leaning forward to
+take the article from him. "Where did you find it?"
+
+"Up there a ways." The boy motioned vaguely toward a point on the
+Kippenberg estate.
+
+Penny turned the hat over in her hand, examining it closely. She found no
+identifying marks, yet she believed that it had belonged to Grant
+Atherwald for he had worn similar headdress. The point indicated by the
+boy was not far distant from the Kippenberg lily pool.
+
+"How would you like to sell this hat?" she asked.
+
+"Why, it's not worth anything."
+
+"I'd like to have it," said Penny. "I'll give you another fifty cents."
+
+"It's a deal."
+
+Penny offered the boy a dollar bill, and a moment later he beached the
+boat. Jerry was waiting to help her ashore. His alert gaze fastened upon
+the hat which she hugged close, but he withheld comment. To the boy he
+said:
+
+"Son, how would you like to earn five dollars?"
+
+The boy's eyes brightened. "Say, this is my lucky day!" he exclaimed.
+"What doin'?"
+
+"It's easy," Jerry told him. "All you need to do is to be here for a
+couple of days with your boat. You're not to allow anyone to use it
+except me."
+
+"And me," added Penny. "I'll need taxi service myself if I come back
+here."
+
+"That's all right," agreed the boy.
+
+"Here's a dollar on deposit," Jerry said. "Now remember, be here tomorrow
+from eight o'clock on, and don't hire out to any other person."
+
+"I won't," the boy promised.
+
+Jerry took Penny's elbow and escorted her to the press car.
+
+"So you found Atherwald's hat?" he asked without preliminaries.
+
+"It resembles the one he wore. The boy fished it out of the river."
+
+"Then that looks as if the fellow really was the victim of a plot!"
+
+"I've thought so all along," Penny declared soberly.
+
+"What else did you learn? You seemed to be very chummy with Miss
+Kippenberg."
+
+"I'll not be from now on," Penny returned ruefully.
+
+As Jerry backed the car around in the dusty road, she told of her meeting
+with Sylvia Kippenberg and the ensuing conversation.
+
+"So Miss Kippenberg doesn't like questions?" Jerry asked. "And she
+refuses to notify the police? Well, after we publish our story in the
+_Star_ it won't be necessary. The police will come to do their own
+investigating."
+
+"I can't really believe she is trying to deceive the authorities," Penny
+said thoughtfully. "She seems to have a sincere regard for Grant
+Atherwald."
+
+"It may be pretense."
+
+"She wasn't pretending the day of the wedding. Atherwald's disappearance
+was a great shock to her."
+
+"Well, even so, she may know a lot more than she's putting out."
+
+"I think that myself. She closed up like a clam when I talked about her
+father."
+
+The car came to the main road and a short time later entered the town of
+Corbin. As they stopped for a red light, Penny touched Jerry's arm.
+
+"Look over there," she directed. "See those two men standing in front of
+the drugstore?"
+
+"What about them?"
+
+"They're G men who attended the Kippenberg wedding. Salt pointed them out
+to me."
+
+"You don't say! Maybe we can learn a fact or two from them."
+
+Jerry parked the car at the curb and sprang out. Penny saw him walk over
+to the men, introduce himself and show his press credentials. She was too
+far away to hear the conversation.
+
+In a few minutes Jerry returned to the car looking none too elated.
+
+"You didn't learn anything, did you?" Penny inquired as they drove on
+again.
+
+"Not very much. Government men never will talk. But they did admit they
+were here trying to locate James Kippenberg."
+
+"Then they think he is in the locality."
+
+"They had an idea he would show up at his daughter's wedding. But it
+didn't turn out that way."
+
+"Did you say anything to them about Grant Atherwald's disappearance?"
+
+"Yes, but they wouldn't discuss it. They said they had nothing to do with
+the case."
+
+Penny lapsed into reflective silence as the car went on toward Andover.
+Mentally she sorted over the evidence which she had gathered that day,
+trying to fit it into a definite pattern.
+
+"Jerry," she said at last.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"You'll probably laugh at this, but I have a theory about Grant
+Atherwald's disappearance."
+
+"Go ahead, spill it."
+
+"Yesterday when Salt and I were waiting at the drawbridge we saw a
+motorboat cruise down the river. It was driven by a burly looking fellow
+who paid no heed when we tried to hail him."
+
+"You're not suggesting that the man may have had something to do with
+Atherwald's disappearance?" Jerry questioned, mildly amused.
+
+"I knew you would laugh."
+
+"Your theory sounds pretty far-fetched to me, I'll admit. It happens
+there are any number of burly, tough looking boatmen on the Kobalt. You
+can't arrest a man for a crime just because of his appearance."
+
+"All the same, there is supporting evidence. Mrs. Latch told me that
+Atherwald's note had been handed to her by a boy who in turn received it
+from someone in a boat."
+
+"Boats are rather common too. Your theory is interesting, but that's all
+I can say for it."
+
+"All right," said Penny. "I was about to tell you another idea of mine.
+Now I won't do it."
+
+No amount of coaxing could induce her to reveal her thought, and the
+remainder of the drive to Andover was made in silence. It was well after
+five-thirty when the car finally drew up in front of the City Club.
+
+Penny was not surprised to find the doors locked and no sign of Louise or
+Miss Frome.
+
+"I thought they would go home without me," she said to Jerry. "I only
+wanted to make certain."
+
+For many miles the road led through pleasant countryside and then swung
+back toward the Kobalt river. The sun had dropped below the horizon by
+the time the automobile sped through the town of Claxton.
+
+"Thirty miles still to go," Jerry sighed. "I'm getting hungry."
+
+"Two souls with but a single thought," remarked Penny.
+
+Directly ahead they noticed an electric sign which drew attention to a
+roadside gasoline station with an adjoining restaurant. Jerry eased on
+the brake.
+
+"How about it, Penny? Shall we invest a few nickels?"
+
+"I could do with a sandwich," Penny agreed. "Several, in fact."
+
+Not until Jerry had parked the car did they notice the dilapidated
+condition of the building. It stood perhaps fifty yards back from the
+main road, its rear porch fronting on the Kobalt.
+
+"Strange how one is always running into the river," Penny remarked
+absently. "It seems to twist itself over half the state."
+
+Jerry had not heard her words. He was gazing at the restaurant with
+disapproval.
+
+"This place doesn't look so good, Penny. If you say the word we'll drive
+on."
+
+"Oh, I'd brave anything for a beef barbecue," she laughed.
+
+Through the screen door they caught a discouraging glimpse of the cafe's
+interior--dingy walls, cigarette smoke, a group of rough looking men
+seated on stools at the counter. Upon the threshold Penny hesitated,
+losing courage.
+
+"Let's not go in," Jerry grunted in an undertone. "They'll probably serve
+cockroaches in the sandwiches."
+
+Penny half turned away from the door only to stop short. Her attention
+focused upon two men who were sitting at the far end of the cafe drinking
+coffee from heavy mugs. In the indistinct light she could not be
+absolutely sure, yet she was instantly convinced that the heavy-set
+fellow in shirt sleeves was the same boatman who had been seen near the
+Kippenberg estate.
+
+To Jerry's surprise, Penny resisted the tug of his arm as he sought to
+lead her toward the car.
+
+"This place isn't half bad," she said. "Let's try it and see what
+happens."
+
+Boldly she reached for the knob of the screen door and entered the cafe.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 13
+ _TWO MEN AND A BOAT_
+
+
+Penny ignored several empty tables at the front of the dreary restaurant
+and selected one not far from where the two men sat. As they glanced at
+her with insolent, appraising eyes, her pulse quickened. She was almost
+certain that the heavy-set man was the same fellow she had noticed near
+the Kippenberg estate.
+
+A waiter in a soiled white apron shuffled up to take their order.
+
+"Hot roast beef sandwich and coffee," said Jerry. "With plenty of cream."
+
+"Make mine the same," added Penny without looking at the menu.
+
+All her attention centered upon the two men who were now talking together
+in low tones. After the first glance they had taken no interest in her
+and were unaware of her scrutiny. The heavy-set man bent nearer his
+companion and with the point of his knife drew a pattern on the
+tablecloth.
+
+"What do you think of this route, Joe?" he asked.
+
+"Too risky," the other muttered. "Once we start we got to make a quick
+shoot to the sea."
+
+"Any way we take we might run into trouble. Y'know, I wish we had never
+agreed to do the job."
+
+"You and me both!"
+
+"Dietz ain't to be trusted," the heavy-set man said and his shaggy
+eyebrows drew together in a scowl. "He's thinking first and last of his
+own skin. We've got to watch him."
+
+"And the girl, too. She's a dumb one and plenty apt to talk if the going
+gets rough."
+
+Penny lost the remainder of the conversation as Jerry spoke to her.
+
+"We couldn't have picked a worse place," he complained. "Look at all the
+breakfast egg on the tablecloth. I'm in favor of walking out even now."
+
+"I'm not," replied Penny.
+
+"Say, what's got into you anyway?" Jerry demanded. "You're acting mighty
+funny."
+
+"Notice those two men at the last table," she indicated.
+
+"What about them?"
+
+"See that heavy-set fellow with the tattooed anchor on his arm? Well, I'm
+satisfied he is the same boatman who cruised near the Kippenberg estate
+yesterday afternoon."
+
+"It might be," Jerry agreed, unimpressed. "The Kobalt is only a stone's
+throw away. And this place seems to be frequented by rivermen."
+
+"You didn't hear what they were saying?" whispered Penny. "Listen!"
+
+Jerry immediately fell silent, centering his attention upon the two men.
+But by this time they had lowered their voices so that only an occasional
+word could be distinguished.
+
+"What were they saying anyway?" Jerry asked curiously.
+
+Before Penny could answer, the proprietor came from the kitchen bearing
+two plates of food which he set down before them. The sandwiches were
+covered with a dark brown, watery gravy, potatoes bore a heavy coating of
+grease and the coffee looked weak.
+
+"Anything more?" the man inquired indifferently.
+
+"That's all," Jerry replied, with emphasis. "In fact, it's too much."
+
+At the adjoining table the two men abruptly hauled to their feet. Paying
+their bill they quitted the restaurant.
+
+"Let's leave, too," suggested Penny. "I should like to see where they
+go."
+
+Jerry pushed his plate aside. "Suits me," he agreed. "Even my cast-iron
+stomach can't wrestle with such food as this."
+
+He paid at the cash register and they went out into the night. Penny
+looked about for the two men and saw them walking toward the river.
+
+"Hold on," said Jerry as she started to follow. "Tell me what all the
+excitement is about."
+
+Tersely, Penny repeated the conversation she had overheard.
+
+"They're tough looking hombres all right," Jerry admitted. "Likely as not
+mixed up in some dirty business. But to say they're involved in the
+Kippenberg affair--"
+
+"Oh, Jerry," Penny broke in impatiently, "we'll never learn anything if
+we take that attitude. We must run down every possible clue. Please,
+let's see if they go down to the river."
+
+"We ought to be getting our story back to the office," Jerry reminded
+her. "If we miss the last edition there will be fireworks."
+
+"It will only take a minute," Penny insisted stubbornly. "If you won't
+come with me, then I'm going alone!"
+
+She started away and the reporter had no choice but to follow. A narrow,
+well-trod path led down a steep slope toward the river. Long before they
+came within sight of it they could hear the croak of bullfrogs and feel
+the damp, night mists enveloping them like a cloak.
+
+Drawing closer to the two men, Penny and Jerry slackened pace and moved
+with greater care. But if they hoped to learn anything from the
+conversation of the pair ahead they were disappointed. The talk concerned
+only the weather.
+
+Reaching the banks of the river, the two men boarded a sturdy cabin
+cruiser which had been moored to a sagging dock.
+
+"It's the very same boat," Penny whispered jubilantly. "I knew I wasn't
+mistaken."
+
+"Even so, what does that prove?" demanded Jerry. "It's no crime to run a
+motorboat near the Kippenberg estate. The river is free."
+
+"But you must admit there _is_ other evidence. Oh, why can't we follow
+them? We might learn something really important."
+
+"We're not going off on any wild chase tonight," stated Jerry sternly.
+"Come on, it's home for us before your father sends a police squad to
+search for his missing daughter."
+
+"You're losing a golden opportunity, Jerry Livingston."
+
+"Listen, by the time we located a boat those men would be ten miles from
+here. They're leaving now. Use your head."
+
+"Oh, all right," Penny gave in. "We'll go home, but I'll bet a cent
+you'll be sorry later on."
+
+She waited until the cruiser was lost to view in the darkness and then
+allowed the reporter to guide her back up the steep path.
+
+"At least let's try to find out who the men are," Penny urged as they
+came near the cafe. "The restaurant owner might know."
+
+More to please her than for any other reason, Jerry said that he would
+inquire. He re-entered the cafe, returning in a few minutes to report
+that the proprietor had never seen either of the men before.
+
+"And now let's be traveling," he urged. "We've killed enough time here."
+
+During the remainder of the ride back to Riverview, Penny had little to
+say. But long after she knew Jerry had forgotten the two boatmen she kept
+turning their conversation over in her mind. She only wished she might
+prove that her theories were not ridiculous.
+
+Presently, the automobile drew up in front of the Parker residence.
+
+"Won't you come in, Jerry?" Penny invited. "Dad may wish to talk with you
+about the case."
+
+"I might stop a minute. I have a question or two to ask him."
+
+The door of the house swung open as Penny and the reporter crossed the
+front porch. Anthony Parker stood framed in the bright electric light, a
+tall, imposing figure.
+
+"That you, Penny?"
+
+"Yes, Dad."
+
+"I'm glad you're home safe," he said, not trying to hide his relief.
+"Mrs. Weems and I have both been worried. It's going on nine o'clock."
+
+"So late? Didn't Louise telephone you?"
+
+"Yes, she said you had gone on to the Kippenberg estate. Knowing you, I
+worried all the more. What mischief did you get into this time, Penny?"
+
+"None. Jerry took care of that!"
+
+Mr. Parker held the door open for his daughter and Jerry to pass through.
+"Have you had your dinners?" he asked.
+
+"We stopped at a roadside cafe, Dad. But the food was horrible. We didn't
+even try to eat it."
+
+"Mrs. Weems can find something for you, I'm sure. She's upstairs."
+
+"Don't call her just yet," said Penny. "First, we want to tell you what
+we've learned."
+
+Mr. Parker listened attentively as Penny gave a detailed account of her
+visit to the estate, the finding of the silk hat, and finally of her
+encounter with the two boatmen at the river cafe.
+
+"I might have learned a lot more if only Jerry hadn't played
+grandmother," she said crossly. "He refused to follow the boat down the
+river--said it would only be a wild chase."
+
+"Jerry, I'm glad you had will power enough to overrule her," declared Mr.
+Parker. "The possibility of those men being connected with the Atherwald
+case seems very vague to me."
+
+"Dad, you should have heard what they were saying! The one man drew a
+design on the tablecloth and asked his companion what he thought of the
+route. They talked about a quick get-away to the sea."
+
+"The men may have been fugitives," Mr. Parker commented. "But even that
+isn't very likely."
+
+"They spoke of being uneasy about a certain job they had agreed to do,"
+Penny went on earnestly. "They mentioned a girl and said that a fellow
+named Dietz would bear watching."
+
+Mr. Parker leaned forward in his chair. "Dietz?" he questioned. "Are you
+certain that was the name?"
+
+"Yes, I heard it clearly."
+
+"I don't see how there could be any connection," Mr. Parker mused. "And
+yet--"
+
+"Where did you hear the name before, Dad?" Penny asked, all eagerness.
+
+"Well, DeWitt has been digging up all the facts he can about James
+Kippenberg. As it happens, the man once had a business associate named
+Aaron Dietz who was dismissed because of alleged dishonesty."
+
+"Then there must be a relationship!" Penny cried. She whirled
+triumphantly to face the crestfallen reporter. "You see, Mr. Jerry
+Livingston, my theory wasn't so crazy after all! Now aren't you sorry?"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 14
+ _THE STONE TOWER_
+
+
+Louise Sidell was washing the breakfast dishes when Penny walked boldly
+in at the back door.
+
+"Don't you ever answer doorbells, Lou?" she demanded. "I stood around
+front for half an hour, ringing and ringing."
+
+"Why, hello, Penny. I didn't hear you at all," apologized Louise. "The
+radio is on too loud. I see you reached home last night."
+
+Penny picked up a towel and began to dry dishes. "Oh, yes, and did I have
+a day!"
+
+"What happened after you left Andover?"
+
+"It's a long story, so I'll begin at the end. Last night, coming home
+with Jerry we stopped at a cafe along the river. Guess whom we saw!"
+
+"Knowing your luck, I'd say Charlie Chaplin, or maybe the Queen of
+England."
+
+"This particular cafe wasn't quite their speed, Lou. Jerry and I saw that
+same boatman I told you about!"
+
+"The fellow you saw cruising about the Kippenberg estate? What's so
+remarkable about that?"
+
+"It just happens I've dug up other evidence to show he may know something
+about Grant Atherwald's disappearance," Penny revealed proudly. "Jerry
+and I overheard a conversation. It seems this man and a companion of his
+are mixed up with another fellow named Aaron Dietz."
+
+"Which doesn't make sense to me," complained Louise, scrubbing hard at a
+sticky plate.
+
+"Aaron Dietz was a former associate of James Kippenberg. Dad said he
+probably knew more about the Kippenberg financial affairs than any other
+person. Oh, I tell you, Jerry feels pretty sick because we didn't follow
+the men last night! Dad assigned him to try to pick up the trail today.
+He's chartered a motor boat and will patrol the river."
+
+"If you don't mind," said Louise patiently, "I'd like to hear the first
+part of the story now. Then I might know what this is all about."
+
+Talking as fast as she could, Penny related everything which had happened
+since she had taken leave of her chum at Andover.
+
+"Which brings me to the point of my visit," she ended her tale. "How
+about going out there with me this morning?"
+
+"To the Kippenberg estate?" Louise asked eagerly.
+
+"Yes, we may not be able to get across the river, but I mean to try."
+
+"You know I'm wild to visit the place, Penny!"
+
+"How soon can you start?"
+
+"Just as soon as these stupid dishes are done. And I ought to change my
+dress."
+
+"Wear something dark which won't attract attention in the bushes,"
+advised Penny. "Now get to working on yourself while I finish the
+dishes."
+
+Louise dropped the dishcloth and hurried upstairs. When she returned ten
+minutes later, her chum was swishing the last of the soapsuds down the
+sink drain. Another five minutes and they were in Penny's battered car,
+speeding toward Corbin.
+
+The sun rode high in the sky by the time they came within view of the
+drawbridge. Noticing that a press car from a rival newspaper was parked
+at the end of the road, Penny drew up some distance away. She could see
+two reporters talking with the old watchman.
+
+"Evidently, they're having no luck in getting over to the estate," she
+remarked.
+
+"Then what about us?"
+
+"Oh, we have our own private taxi service," Penny chuckled. "At least I
+hope so."
+
+Taking a circuitous route so they would not be noticed by the bridgeman,
+the girls went down to the river's edge. Far up the stream Penny saw the
+familiar rowboat drifting with the current. At her signal the small boy
+seized his oars and rowed toward shore.
+
+"I was here at eight o'clock just as you said," he declared. "That fellow
+up there by the bridge offered me a dollar to take him across the river.
+I turned him down."
+
+"Good," approved Penny.
+
+"Do you want to go across the river now?" the boy asked.
+
+"Yes, please." Penny stepped into the boat and made room for Louise.
+"Keep close to the bank until we are around the bend. Then I'll show you
+where to land."
+
+"I guess you're afraid someone will see you," the boy commented.
+
+"Not exactly afraid," corrected Penny. "But this way will be best."
+
+The boat moved quietly along the high bank, well out of sight of those
+who stood by the drawbridge.
+
+"The cops were here this morning," volunteered the boy as he pulled at
+the oars.
+
+"You saw them visit the estate?" Penny questioned.
+
+"Sure, there were four of 'em. They drove up in a police car and they
+made old Thorndyke let the bridge down so they could go across."
+
+"Are the policemen at the estate now?"
+
+"No, they left again in about an hour. What do you suppose they wanted
+over there?"
+
+"Well, now, I couldn't guess," replied Penny. "Like as not they only
+wished to ask a few questions. Are the Kippenbergs at home?"
+
+"I saw Mrs. Kippenberg drive away right after the police left."
+
+"And her daughter?"
+
+"I guess she must be still there. Anyway, she wasn't in the car."
+
+The boat rounded the bend, and Penny pointed out a place on the opposite
+shore where she wished to land.
+
+"Shall I wait for you?" the boy asked as the girls stepped from the
+craft.
+
+"Yes, but not here," directed Penny. "You might row back to the opposite
+shore and keep watch from there. We ought to be ready to leave within at
+least an hour."
+
+The roof top of the Kippenberg house could be seen towering above the
+tall trees. But as the two girls plunged into the bushes which grew
+thickly along the shore they lost sight of it entirely.
+
+"I hope," said Louise uneasily, "that you know where you are going. It
+would be easy to lose one's self in this jungle."
+
+"Oh, I have my directions straight. We should come out near the lily pool
+at any minute."
+
+"What do you hope to gain by coming here, Penny?" Louise inquired
+abruptly.
+
+"I thought I would try to talk with Miss Kippenberg again. There's an
+important question I forgot to ask her yesterday. Then I wanted to show
+you the estate, especially the lily pond."
+
+"Is there anything unusual about it?"
+
+"I'll let you be the judge," Penny answered. "We're almost there now."
+
+They came in a moment to a path which made walking much easier. Penny
+went in advance of her chum. Suddenly she halted.
+
+"See what is ahead, Lou! I never saw that thing before."
+
+She stepped to one side so that Louise might see the tall stone tower
+which loomed up against a background of scarlet maples.
+
+"How curious!" murmured Louise.
+
+"This isn't the only queer thing I've found on the estate."
+
+"What purpose could the tower have?" speculated Louise.
+
+"Decoration, perhaps," replied Penny, moving forward again. "Or it might
+have been built for a prison."
+
+"Listen, you have too many different theories about Grant Atherwald,"
+laughed Louise. "Why don't you get one and stick to it?"
+
+"My mind is always open to new possibilities and impressions."
+
+"I'll say it is," agreed Louise. "I suppose you think Mrs. Kippenberg is
+keeping young Atherwald a prisoner in yonder tower?"
+
+"Well, no, but you must admit it would make a lovely one. So romantic."
+
+"Are you trying to kid me?" Louise demanded.
+
+Penny smiled broadly as she stared up at the tower which rose perhaps
+twelve feet. Like every other building on the estate it had been built to
+resist the ages. High above her head a circular window had been cut in
+the wall and there was a heavy oaken door.
+
+Reaching for the knob, Penny turned it. Then she pressed her shoulder
+against the door and pushed with her entire strength.
+
+"Locked!" she announced.
+
+"Then we won't learn what is inside after all."
+
+"Yes, we will," declared Penny. "You lift me up and I'll peep in the
+window."
+
+"You only weigh a ton," complained Louise.
+
+She obligingly raised Penny up as high as she could.
+
+"Look fast," she panted. "What do you see?"
+
+"Not much of anything."
+
+"I can't hold you forever," Louise said, and released her hold. "Didn't
+you see anything at all?"
+
+"Just a lot of machinery."
+
+"Tools, you mean?"
+
+"No, an electric motor and something which looked like it might be a
+pump. Oh, I get it now!"
+
+"Get what?" demanded Louise.
+
+"Why, the idea of this tower. It must be used as a pump house. I wondered
+how the lily pool was ever drained and this must be the answer."
+
+"You didn't see any prisoners chained inside?" Louise teased.
+
+"Not one. Well, let's be getting on to the lily pond. It must be
+somewhere close."
+
+Louise could not understand why her chum was so determined that she
+should see the pool. But since Penny seldom did anything without a
+purpose, she speculated upon what might be in store. She knew from the
+girl's manner that certain facts had been withheld deliberately to make
+this visit the more impressive.
+
+"Here we are," said Penny as they came to the clearing. "What do you
+think of it?"
+
+Louise was aware of a deep sense of disappointment as she gazed at the
+lily pool.
+
+"I really don't see anything so remarkable about it, Penny."
+
+"This was the place where I found the wedding ring. And there were
+footprints indicating that a struggle probably took place."
+
+"I read all that in the paper," Louise said. "From the hints you've been
+passing out, I thought you brought me here to show me something
+mysterious."
+
+"Go close to the pool."
+
+"What for, Penny? You want to push me in?"
+
+"Oh, you're too suspicious! Go on and look."
+
+Louise went to the edge of the pool and peered down into the water.
+
+"I don't see anything."
+
+"You will in just a minute. Keep looking."
+
+Louise was more than half convinced that Penny meant to play some prank,
+but she dropped down on her knees so her eyes would be closer to the
+water.
+
+"Why, I do see some large object on the floor of the tank!" she exclaimed
+after a moment. "What is it, Penny?"
+
+"An alligator."
+
+Louise gave a smothered scream and drew back from the pool's edge.
+
+"I--I might have fallen in. You ought to be ashamed of yourself!"
+
+"I only wanted you to get a nice thrill," Penny grinned. "Pretty fellow,
+isn't he?"
+
+"I didn't really see him," Louise admitted.
+
+Overcoming her fear, she again leaned over the edge of the pool but with
+great caution. This time she could make out the alligator's form
+distinctly.
+
+"Horrible!" she shuddered. "I wish you hadn't brought me--"
+
+Her words ended in a little wail as a tiny object splashed into the water
+directly beneath her.
+
+"My cameo pin!" she cried. "Oh, Penny, it slipped from my dress and now
+it's gone!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 15
+ _A CAMEO PIN_
+
+
+In dismay, the two girls watched the trinket settle slowly to the bottom
+of the pool.
+
+"Oh, my beautiful pin," moaned Louise. "Aunt Lucinda gave it to me for my
+birthday. I wouldn't have lost it for anything in the world."
+
+"I guess it was my fault," Penny said self-accusingly.
+
+"No, it wasn't. I must have been careless about fastening the clasp. When
+I leaned over it slipped off. Well, it's gone, and that's that."
+
+The cameo pin had fallen into the deepest part of the pool not far from
+where the alligator lay. The girls were unable to see it plainly because
+of the lily pads and plants which cluttered the water.
+
+"If that old alligator would just behave himself we could wade in and get
+it easy," Penny said.
+
+"Fancy trying it!"
+
+"I'm afraid he would take special delight in snapping off an arm or a
+leg. And we don't dare ask anyone to help us get the pin or we'll be
+ejected from the grounds as trespassers."
+
+"We may as well forget about it, Penny. Come along, I'm sick of this
+place."
+
+"No, wait, Louise. We might be able to fish it out with a stick."
+
+"I don't think we'd have a chance."
+
+"Anyway, it will do no harm to try."
+
+Penny searched the woods until she found a long stick with a curve at the
+end. Lying flat on the flagstones at the edge of the pool she prodded for
+the pin.
+
+"I can touch it all right!" she cried. "I'll pull it over to the side."
+
+"Be careful you don't tumble in," Louise warned, anxiously holding her
+chum by the waist. "If you should lose your balance--"
+
+Penny hooked the cameo pin in the curve of the stick and began raising it
+inch by inch up the side of the pool.
+
+"If I can get it up high enough reach down and snatch it," Penny advised
+her chum. "Oh, shoot, there it goes!"
+
+The pin had slipped away from the stick and settled once more on the
+bottom of the pool.
+
+"You can't get it, Penny," Louise insisted. "You're making the alligator
+all excited by prodding around."
+
+"I don't care about _him_. I'll try once more if I can locate the pin. It
+seems to be hiding from me now."
+
+The water was so disturbed that Penny could not see the pin or the bottom
+of the pool. She waited several minutes for the dirt to settle and then
+gazed down once more.
+
+"There it is!" she exclaimed. "It moved over quite a ways to the right."
+
+Louise flattened herself beside Penny. "Oh, let the pin go," she said.
+
+"No, I think I can get it. Say, there seems to be something else on the
+bottom of the pool."
+
+"Where?"
+
+Penny pointed, and then, as her chum still could not distinguish
+anything, parted the lily pads with her stick.
+
+"Yes, I do see something now," Louise declared. "What can it be?"
+
+"Doesn't it look like a metal ring?" Penny asked. She had lost all
+interest in the cameo pin.
+
+"Yes, it does. Someone probably threw it into the pool."
+
+"But it looks to me as if it's attached to the bottom of the tank,
+embedded in the cement," Penny said. She bent closer to the water, trying
+to see.
+
+"Be careful," Louise warned nervously. "That alligator might come up and
+snap off your nose."
+
+Penny paid no heed.
+
+"It is attached!" she announced in an excited voice. "Louise, do you know
+what I think?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"It's the ring of a trapdoor!"
+
+"A trapdoor!" Louise echoed incredulously.
+
+"You can see for yourself that it's an iron ring."
+
+"It does look a little like one from here," Louise admitted. "But whoever
+heard of a trapdoor in a lily pool? No one but you would even think of
+such a thing. It doesn't make sense."
+
+"Does anything on this estate make sense?"
+
+"The ring might have something to do with draining the pool," Louise said
+without replying to her chum's question. "I suppose a section of the pool
+could be lifted up and removed. But I'd never call it a trapdoor."
+
+"I wish we could tell for sure what it is." Penny tried to prod the ring
+with her stick but it was well beyond her reach. "Maybe the alligator has
+a room down under the pool where he spends his winters!"
+
+"You're simply filled with ideas today," Louise declared. "What about my
+pin? Shall we let it go?"
+
+Reminded of her original task, Penny set to work once more, trying to
+draw the cameo to the edge of the tank. She was so deeply engrossed, that
+she jumped as her chum touched her on the arm.
+
+"Listen, Penny, I think someone is coming!"
+
+From the path at the right they could hear approaching footsteps and the
+low murmur of voices.
+
+Penny struggled to her feet, dropping the stick.
+
+"We mustn't be caught here," she whispered.
+
+Taking Louise's hand, she drew the girl into the dense bushes directly
+behind the pool. Scarcely had they secreted themselves when Sylvia
+Kippenberg and the head gardener came into view. They seated themselves
+on a rustic bench not far from where the two girls stood.
+
+"I had to talk with you," Sylvia said to the old man. "The police came
+this morning and asked so many questions. Mother put them off but they'll
+be back again."
+
+"They didn't learn about the alligator?" the gardener asked gruffly.
+
+"No, they came here but only stayed a few minutes. I don't think they
+noticed anything wrong."
+
+"Then that's all right."
+
+"Their investigation is only beginning," Sylvia said nervously. "Mother
+and I both believe it would be wise to get rid of the alligator."
+
+"Wise but not easy," the gardener replied.
+
+"You'll see what you can do about it?"
+
+"Yes. I'll try to get rid of him."
+
+"Then I guess that's all," Sylvia said, but she made no move to leave.
+She sat staring moodily at the pool.
+
+"Anything else on your mind?" asked the gardener.
+
+"I--I wanted to ask you something, but I scarcely know how."
+
+The gardener waited, watching the girl's face intently.
+
+"You never liked Grant Atherwald," she began nervously.
+
+"Say, what are you driving at?" the man asked quickly. "You're not trying
+to hint that I had anything to do with Grant Atherwald's disappearance?"
+
+The two faced each other and Sylvia's gaze was the first to fall.
+
+"No, no, of course not," she said.
+
+"I don't know any more about his disappearance than you do," the man told
+her angrily. "I didn't even see him on the day of the wedding."
+
+"But he came here. The wedding ring was found near the pool. Surely you
+must have heard some sound for I know you were in this part of the
+garden."
+
+"Well, I didn't," the man said sullenly. "The only persons I saw were a
+newspaper photographer and a girl."
+
+"Please don't take offense," Miss Kippenberg murmured, getting up from
+the bench. "I've been terribly upset these past few days."
+
+She walked slowly to the edge of the pool. There she stopped short,
+staring down at an object which lay on the flagstones at her feet. It was
+the stick which Penny had dropped only a moment before.
+
+"What have you found?" the gardener cried.
+
+He went quickly to her side and took the damp stick from her hand.
+
+"Someone has been here prying around," he said in a harsh voice. "This
+was used to investigate the water in the pool."
+
+"And whoever it was must be close by even now. Otherwise the stick would
+have dried out in the sun."
+
+"You go back to the house," the man commanded. "I'll look around."
+
+In their hideout amid the bushes, Penny and Louise gazed at each other
+with chagrin. No word was spoken for even a whisper might have been
+heard. With a common desire for escape, they glided with cat-like tread
+toward the river.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 16
+ _GATHERING CLUES_
+
+
+The girls could hear no movement behind them as they darted down the
+path. They dared to hope that they had eluded the old gardener.
+
+Then as they came within sight of the river, Louise stumbled over a vine.
+Although she stifled an outcry the dull thud of her body against the
+ground seemed actually to reverberate through the forest. A black crow on
+the lower limb of an oak tree cawed in protest before he flew away.
+
+Penny pulled Louise to her feet and they went on as fast as they could,
+but they knew the sound had betrayed them. Now they could hear the man in
+pursuit, his heavy shoes pounding on the hard, dry path.
+
+"Run!" Penny commanded.
+
+They reached the river bank and looked about for the boat which would
+take them across. As they had feared it was on the opposite shore.
+
+Penny gestured frantically, but the boy did not understand the need for
+haste. He picked up his oars and rowed toward them at a very deliberate
+pace.
+
+"Oh, he'll never get here in time," Louise murmured fearfully. "Shall we
+hide?"
+
+"That's all we can do."
+
+They realized then that they had waited too long. Before they could dodge
+into the deeper thicket the gardener reached the clearing.
+
+"So it's you again!" he cried wrathfully, glaring at Penny.
+
+"Please, we didn't mean any harm. We can explain--"
+
+"This stick is explanation enough for me!" the man shouted, waving it
+above his head. "You were trying to find out about the lily pool!"
+
+"We were only trying to get a pin which I dropped into the water," Louise
+said, backing a step away.
+
+"I don't believe you!" the man snapped. "You can't fool me! I know why
+you came here, and you'll pay for your folly! You'll never take the
+secret away with you!"
+
+With a swift, animal-like spring which belied his age, the gardener
+hurled himself toward the girls. He seized Penny's arm giving it a cruel
+twist.
+
+"You're coming along with me," he announced harshly.
+
+"Let me go!" Penny cried, trying to free herself.
+
+"You're going with me to the house. You've been altogether too prying.
+Now you'll take your punishment, both of you."
+
+The gardener might have managed Penny alone, but he was no match for two
+athletic girls. As he tried to seize Louise, Penny twisted free.
+
+Quick as a flash, she grasped the man's felt hat, jamming it down on his
+head over his eyes. While he was trying to pull it off, Louise also
+wriggled from his grasp.
+
+The two girls ran to the water's edge. Their boat had drawn close to
+shore. Without waiting for it to beach they waded out over their shoetops
+and climbed aboard.
+
+"Don't either of you ever come here again!" the gardener hurled after
+them. "If you do--"
+
+The rest of the threat was carried away by the wind. However, Penny could
+not resist waving her hand and calling back: "Bye, bye, old timer! We'll
+be seeing you!"
+
+"What's the matter with that man anyhow?" asked the boy who rowed the
+boat. "Didn't he want you on the estate?"
+
+"On the contrary, he invited us to remain and we declined," grinned
+Penny. "Just temperament, that's all. He can't make up his mind which way
+he would like to have it."
+
+Allowing the boy to puzzle over the remark, she busied herself pouring
+water from her sodden shoes. The visit to the estate had not turned out
+at all as she had planned. She had failed to talk with Miss Kippenberg,
+and it was almost certain that from now on servants would keep a much
+closer watch for intruders.
+
+The only vital information she had gleaned resulted from overhearing the
+conversation between Sylvia Kippenberg and the gardener.
+
+"She talked with him as if they were well acquainted," mused Penny. "Miss
+Kippenberg must have thought he knew more about Grant Atherwald's
+disappearance than he would tell. And she seems to be afraid the Law will
+ask too many questions. Otherwise, she wouldn't have suggested getting
+rid of the alligator."
+
+One additional observation Penny had made, but she decided not to speak
+of it until she and Louise were alone.
+
+The boat reached shore and the two girls stepped out on the muddy bank.
+
+"Will you need me again?" inquired the boy.
+
+"I may," said Penny, "and I can't tell you exactly when. Where do you
+keep your boat?"
+
+"Up the river just beyond that crooked maple tree. I hide it in the
+bushes and I keep the oars inside a hollow log close by. You won't have
+any trouble finding it."
+
+Penny and Louise said goodbye to the lad and scrambled up the bank.
+
+"I'm sure I'll not be going back to _that_ place," the latter declared
+emphatically. "I just wonder what would have happened if we hadn't broken
+away."
+
+"We might have been locked up in the stone tower," Penny laughed. "Then
+another one of my theories would have proven itself."
+
+"Oh, you and your theories! You can't make me believe that gardener
+didn't mean to harm us. He was a very sinister character."
+
+"Sinister is a strong word, Lou. But I'll agree he's not any ordinary
+gardener. Either he's been hired by the Kippenberg family for a very
+special purpose or else he's gained their confidence and means to bend
+them to his own ends."
+
+"His own ends! Why, Penny, what do you mean? Have you learned something
+you haven't told me?"
+
+"Only this. I'm satisfied Old Peter is no gardener. He's wearing a
+disguise."
+
+"Well, what won't you think of next! You've been reading too many
+detective stories, Penny Parker."
+
+"Have I? Then there's no need to tell you--"
+
+"Yes, there is," Louise cut in. "Your ideas are pretty imaginative, but I
+like to hear them anyway."
+
+"Considerate of you, old thing," Penny drawled in her best imitation of
+an English accent. "You don't deserve to be told after that crack, but
+I'll do it anyhow. When I pulled the gardener's hat down over his eyes, I
+felt something slip!"
+
+"Maybe it was his skin peeling off."
+
+"He wore a wig," Penny said soberly. "That's why he looked so startled
+when I jerked the hat."
+
+"Did you actually see a wig?"
+
+"No, but he must have had one on his head. I felt it give, I tell you."
+
+"I wouldn't put anything past that fellow. But if he isn't a gardener,
+then who or what is he?"
+
+"I don't know, but I intend to do some intensive investigation."
+
+"Just how, may I ask?"
+
+Penny gazed speculatively toward the drawbridge, noting that the old
+watchman had been deserted by the group of reporters. He sat alone, legs
+crossed, his camp stool propped against the side of the gearhouse.
+
+"Let's talk with him, Lou. He might be able to tell us something about
+the different employees of the estate."
+
+They walked over to where the old man sat, greeting him with their most
+pleasant smiles.
+
+"Good morning," said Penny.
+
+The old man finished lighting his pipe before he deigned to notice them.
+
+"Good morning," repeated Penny.
+
+"Mornin'," said the watchman. He looked the two girls over appraisingly
+and added: "Ain't you children a long ways off from your Ma's?"
+
+The remark both startled and offended Penny, but instantly she divined
+that the old fellow's memory was short and his eyesight poor. He had
+failed to recognize her in everyday clothes.
+
+"Oh, we're just out for a hike," she answered. "You see, we get tired of
+all the ordinary places, so we thought we would walk by here."
+
+"We're interested in your bridge," added Louise. "We just love bridges."
+
+"This one ain't so good any more," the old man said disparagingly.
+
+"Doesn't it get lonely here?" ventured Louise. "Sitting here all day
+long?"
+
+"It did at first, Miss. But I got used to it. Anyway, it beats leanin' on
+a shovel for the gov'ment. I got a little garden over yonder a ways. You
+ought to see my tomatoes. Them Ponderosas is as big as a plate."
+
+"Do you ever operate the bridge?" Louise inquired, for Penny had not told
+her that the structure was still in use.
+
+"Oh, sure, Miss. That's what I'm here for. But it ain't safe for nothin'
+heavier than a passenger car."
+
+"I'd love to see the bridge lowered." Louise stared curiously up at the
+tall cantilevers which pointed skyward. "When will you do it next time,
+Mr.--?"
+
+"Davis, if you please, Miss. Thorny Davis they calls me. My real name's
+Thorndyke."
+
+The old man pulled a large, silver watch from his pocket and consulted
+it.
+
+"In about ten minutes now, Mrs. Kippenberg will be comin' back from town.
+Then we'll make the old hinge bend down agin'."
+
+"Let's wait," said Louise.
+
+Penny nodded and then as Thorny did not seem to object, she peeped into
+the gear house, the door of which stood half open. A maze of machinery
+met her eye--an electric motor and several long hand-levers.
+
+Presently Thorny Davis listened intently. Penny thought he looked like an
+old fox who had picked up the distant baying of the pack.
+
+"That's _her_ car a-comin' now," he said. "I can tell by the sound of the
+engine. Well, I reckon I might as well let 'er down."
+
+Thorny arose and knocked the ashes from his corn-cob pipe. He opened the
+door of the gear house and stepped inside.
+
+"May I see how you do it?" asked Penny. "I always was interested in
+machinery."
+
+"The women will be runnin' locomotives next," Thorny complained
+whimsically. "All right, come on in."
+
+The old watchman pulled a lever on the starting rheostat of the motor
+which responded with a sudden jar and then a low purr. It increased its
+speed as he pushed the lever all the way over.
+
+"Now the power's on. The next thing is to drop 'er."
+
+Thorny grasped one of the long hand-levers and gently eased it forward.
+There was a grind of gears engaging and the bridge slowly crept down out
+of the sky.
+
+Penny did not miss a single move. She noted just which levers the
+watchman pulled and in what order. When the platform of the bridge was on
+an even keel she saw him cut off the motor and throw all the gear back
+into its original position.
+
+"Think you could do 'er by yourself now?" Thorny asked.
+
+"Yes, I believe I could," Penny answered gravely.
+
+The old watchman smiled as he stepped to the deck of the bridge.
+
+"It ain't so easy as it looks," he told her. "Well, here comes the Missuz
+now and we're all ready for her. Last time she came along I was weedin'
+out my corn patch and was she mad?"
+
+As the black limousine rolled up to the drawbridge Penny turned her face
+away so that Mrs. Kippenberg would not recognize her. She need have had
+no uneasiness, for the lady gazed neither to the right nor the left. The
+car crept forward at a snail's pace causing the steel structure to shiver
+and shake as if from an attack of ague.
+
+"Dear me, I think this bridge is positively dangerous," Louise declared.
+"I shouldn't like to drive over it myself."
+
+As the old watchman again raised the cantilevers, Penny studied his every
+move.
+
+"For a girl you're sure mighty interested in machinery," he remarked.
+
+"Oh, I may grow up to be a bridgeman some day," Penny said lightly. "I
+notice you keep the gear house locked part of the time."
+
+"I have to do it or folks would tamper with the machinery."
+
+The old man snapped a padlock on the door.
+
+"Now I'm goin' to mosey down to my garden and do a little hoein'," he
+announced. "You girls better run along."
+
+Thus dismissed, Louise started away, but Penny made no move to leave. She
+intended to ask a few questions.
+
+"Thorny, are you any relation to the Kippenberg's head gardener?" she
+inquired with startling abruptness.
+
+"Am I any relation to that old walrus?" Thorny fairly shouted. "Am I any
+relation to _him_? Say, you tryin' to insult me?"
+
+"Not at all, but I saw the man this morning, and I fancied I noticed a
+resemblance. Perhaps you don't know the one I mean."
+
+"Sure, I know him all right." Thorny spat contemptuously. "New man. He
+acts as know-it-all and bossy as if he owned the whole place."
+
+"Then you don't like him?"
+
+"There ain't no one that has anything to do with him. He's so good he
+can't live like the rest of the servants. Where do you think I seen him
+the other night?"
+
+"I haven't the slightest idea. Where?"
+
+"He was at the Colonial Hotel, eatin' in the main dining room!"
+
+"The Colonial is quite an expensive hotel at Corbin, isn't it?"
+
+"Best there is. They soak you two bucks just to park your feet under one
+of their tables. Yep, if you ask me, Mrs. Kippenberg better ask that
+gardener of hers a few questions!"
+
+Having delivered himself of this tirade, Thorny became calm again. He
+shifted his weight and said pointedly: "Well, I got to tend my garden.
+You girls better run along. Mrs. Kippenberg don't want nobody hangin'
+around the bridge."
+
+The girls obligingly took leave of him and walked away. But when they
+were some distance away, Penny glanced back over her shoulder. She saw
+Thorny down on his hands and knees in front of the gear house. He was
+slipping some object under the wide crack of the door.
+
+"The key to the padlock!" she chuckled. "So that was why he wanted us to
+leave first. We'll remember the hiding place, Lou, just in case we ever
+decide to use the drawbridge."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 17
+ _A SEARCH FOR JERRY_
+
+
+After leaving the Kippenberg estate, Penny and Louise motored to Corbin.
+More from curiosity than for any other reason they dined at the Colonial
+Hotel, finding the establishment as luxurious as the old watchman had
+intimated. A full hour and a half was required to eat the fine dinner
+which was served.
+
+"Our friend, the gardener, does have excellent taste in food," remarked
+Louise. "What puzzles me is where does he get the money to pay for all
+this?"
+
+"The obvious answer is that he's not a gardener."
+
+"Maybe he has rooms here too, Penny."
+
+"I've been wondering about it. I mean to investigate."
+
+Louise glanced at her wristwatch. "Do you think we should take the time?"
+she asked. "It will be late afternoon now before we reach home."
+
+"Oh, it won't take a minute to inquire at the desk."
+
+Leaving the dining room, the girls made their way to the lobby. When the
+desk clerk had a free moment Penny asked him if anyone by the name of
+Peter Henderson had taken rooms at the hotel.
+
+"No one here by that name," the man told her. "Wait, I'll look to be
+sure."
+
+He consulted a card filing system which served as a register, and
+confirmed his first statement.
+
+"The man I mean would be around sixty years of age," explained Penny. "He
+works as a gardener at the Kippenberg estate."
+
+"Perhaps you have come to the wrong hotel," said the clerk aloofly. "We
+do not cater to gardeners."
+
+"Only to people who employ gardeners, I take it."
+
+"Our rates start at ten dollars a day," returned the clerk coldly.
+
+"And does that include free linen and a bath?" Penny asked with pretended
+awe.
+
+"Certainly. All of our rooms have private baths."
+
+"How wonderful," giggled Penny. "We thought this might be one of those
+places with a bath on every floor!"
+
+Suddenly comprehending that he was being made an object of sport, the
+clerk glared at the girls and turned his back.
+
+Penny and Louise went cheerfully to their car, very much pleased with
+themselves for having deflated such a conceited young man. They drove
+away, and late afternoon brought them to Riverview, tired and dusty from
+their long trip.
+
+After dropping her chum off at the Sidell home, Penny rode directly to
+the newspaper office. Finding no parking place available on the street,
+she ran her car into the loading area at the rear of the building, nosing
+into a narrow space which had just been vacated by a paper-laden truck.
+
+"Hey, you lady," shouted an employee. "You can't park that scrap iron
+here. Another paper truck will be along in a minute."
+
+Penny switched off the engine.
+
+"I guess you're new around here," she said, climbing out. "The next truck
+isn't due until five-twenty-three."
+
+"Say, who do you think you are, tellin' me--?"
+
+The employee trailed off into silence as another workman gave him a sharp
+nudge in the ribs.
+
+"Pipe down," he was warned. "If the boss' daughter wants to park her
+jitney in the paper chute it's okay, see?"
+
+"Sure, I get it," the other mumbled.
+
+Penny grinned broadly as she crossed the loading area.
+
+"After this, you might mention my automobile in a more respectful tone,"
+she tossed over her shoulder. "It's not scrap iron or a jitney either!"
+
+Riding up the freight elevator, Penny passed a few remarks with the
+smiling operator and stepped off at the editorial floor. She noticed as
+she went through the news room that Jerry Livingston's desk was vacant.
+And because the waste basket was empty, the floor beside it free from
+paper wads, she knew he had written no story that day.
+
+Penny tapped lightly on the closed door of her father's private office
+and went in.
+
+"Hello," he said, glancing up. "Just get back from Corbin?"
+
+"Yes, Louise and I had plenty of excitement, but I didn't dig up any
+facts you'll dare print in the paper."
+
+"Did you meet Jerry anywhere?"
+
+"Why, no, Dad."
+
+"The young cub is taking a vacation at my expense, running up a big
+motorboat bill! He should have been back here three hours ago."
+
+"Oh, be reasonable, Dad," said Penny teasingly. "You can't expect him to
+trace down those men just in a minute."
+
+"It was a wild chase anyway," the editor growled. "I let him do it more
+to please you than for any other reason. But that's beside the point. He
+was told to be back here by four o'clock at the latest, even if he had
+nothing to report."
+
+"Jerry is usually punctual, Dad. But I suppose being on the river he
+couldn't get here just when he expected."
+
+"He's probably gone fishing," Mr. Parker declared.
+
+He slammed down the roll top on his desk and picked up his hat.
+
+"Will you ride home with me?" Penny invited. "Leaping Lena would be
+highly honored."
+
+"It's a mighty sight more comfortable on the bus," her father replied.
+"But then, I can stand a jolting."
+
+As they went out through the main room he paused to speak with DeWitt,
+leaving an order that he was to be called at his home as soon as Jerry
+Livingston returned.
+
+Mr. Parker raised his eyebrows as he saw where Penny had left the car.
+
+"Haven't I told you that the trucks need this space to load and unload?"
+he asked patiently. "There is a ten cent parking lot across the street."
+
+"But Dad, I haven't ten cents to spare. The truth is, I spent almost
+every bit of my allowance today over at Corbin."
+
+"NO!" said Mr. Parker firmly. "NO!"
+
+"No what?"
+
+"Not a penny will you get ahead of time."
+
+"You misjudge me, Dad. I had no intention of even mentioning such a
+painful subject."
+
+They drove in silence for a few blocks and then Penny indicated the
+gasoline gauge on the dashboard.
+
+"Why, it's nearly empty!" she exclaimed. "We won't have enough to reach
+home!"
+
+"Well, get some," said Mr. Parker automatically. "We don't want to stall
+on the street."
+
+A flip of the steering wheel brought the car to a standstill in front of
+a gasoline pump.
+
+"Fill it up," ordered Penny.
+
+While Mr. Parker read his newspaper, the attendant polished the
+windshield and checked the oil, finding it low. At a nod from Penny he
+added two quarts.
+
+"That will be exactly two fifty-eight."
+
+Penny repeated the figure in a louder tone, giving her father a nudge.
+"Wake up, Dad. Two fifty-eight."
+
+Absently, Mr. Parker reached for his wallet. Not until the attendant
+brought the change did it dawn upon him that Penny had scored once more.
+
+"Tricked again," he groaned.
+
+"Why, it was your own suggestion that we stop for gasoline," Penny
+reminded him. "I shouldn't have minded taking a chance myself. You see,
+the gauge is usually at least a gallon off."
+
+"Anyway, I would rather pay for it than have you siphon it out of my
+car."
+
+"Thanks for the present," laughed Penny.
+
+Dinner was waiting by the time they reached home. Afterwards, Penny
+helped Mrs. Weems with the dishes while her father mowed the lawn.
+Hearing the telephone ring he came to the kitchen door.
+
+"Was that a call for me?" he asked.
+
+"No, Dad, it was for Mrs. Weems."
+
+"Strange DeWitt doesn't call," Mr. Parker said. "I believe I'll telephone
+him."
+
+After Mrs. Weems had finished with the phone he called the newspaper
+office only to be told that Jerry Livingston had not put in an
+appearance.
+
+"At least he might have communicated with the office," Mr. Parker said as
+he hung up the receiver.
+
+He went back to lawn mowing but paused now and then to stare moodily
+toward the Kobalt river which wound through the valley far below the
+terrace. Penny finished drying the dishes and went outside to join him.
+
+"You're worried about Jerry, aren't you?" she asked after a moment.
+
+"Not exactly," he replied. "But he should have been back long ago."
+
+"He never would have stayed away without good reason. We both know Jerry
+isn't like that."
+
+"No, he's either run into a big story, or he's in trouble. When I sent
+him away this morning, I didn't look upon the assignment as a
+particularly dangerous one."
+
+"And yet if he met those two seamen anything could have happened. They
+were tough customers, Dad."
+
+"I could notify the police if Jerry isn't back within an hour or two,"
+Mr. Parker said slowly. "Still, I hate to do it."
+
+"Where did Jerry rent his boat, Dad?"
+
+"I told him to get one at Griffith's dock at twenty-third street."
+
+"Then why don't we go there?" suggested Penny. "If he hasn't come in we
+might rent a boat of our own and start a search."
+
+Mr. Parker debated and then nodded. "Bring a heavy coat," he told her.
+"It may be cold on the river."
+
+Penny ran into the house after the garments and also took a flashlight
+from her father's bureau drawer. When she hurried outdoors again her
+father had backed his own car from the garage and was waiting.
+
+At the twenty-third street dock, Harry Griffith, owner of the boat house,
+answered their questions frankly. Yes, he told them, Jerry Livingston had
+rented a motor boat early that morning but had not returned it.
+
+"I been worryin' about that young feller," he admitted, and then with a
+quick change of tone: "Say, you're not Mr. Parker, are you?"
+
+"Yes, that's my name."
+
+"Then I got a letter here for you. I reckon maybe it explains what became
+of the young feller."
+
+The boatman took a greasy envelope from his trousers pocket and gave it
+to the editor.
+
+"Where did you get this, Mr. Griffith?"
+
+"A boy in a rowboat brought it up the river about two hours ago. He said
+the young feller gave him a dollar to deliver it to a Mr. Parker. But the
+kid was mixed up on the address, so I just held it here."
+
+"Dad, it must be from Jerry," said Penny eagerly.
+
+As her father opened the envelope, she held the flashlight close. In an
+almost illegible scrawl Jerry had written:
+
+"Following up a hot tip. Think I've struck trail of key men. Taking off
+in boat. Expect to get back by nightfall unless Old Man Trouble catches
+up with me."
+
+Mr. Parker looked up from the message, his gaze meeting the frightened
+eyes of his daughter.
+
+"Oh, Dad," she said in a tone barely above a whisper, "it's long after
+dark now. What do you think has become of Jerry?"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 18
+ _OVER THE DRAWBRIDGE_
+
+
+Wasting no moments in useless conversation, Mr. Parker rented a fast
+motor boat and prevailed upon Harry Griffith to operate it for him.
+Guided by the stars and a half moon which was slowly rising over the
+treetops, the party swung down the river.
+
+Riding with the current, they came before long to the locality where
+Penny and Jerry had first sighted the two seamen's cruiser. But now there
+was no sign of a boat, either large or small.
+
+At a speed which enabled the occupants to scrutinize the shoreline, the
+searching craft swept on. The river had never seemed more deserted.
+
+"Jerry might have stopped anywhere along here," Mr. Parker observed. "If
+he drew the boat into the bushes we haven't a chance of finding him."
+
+They went on, coming presently to the Kippenberg estate. As they passed
+beneath the open drawbridge Penny noted how low it had been swung over
+the water. A boat with a high cabin could not possibly go through when
+the cantilevers were down.
+
+Gazing upward, she saw a swinging red light at the entrance to the
+bridge. A lantern, no doubt, hung there to give warning to any motorist
+who might venture upon the private road.
+
+"Thorny probably isn't on duty at this hour," Penny reflected. "But I
+should think an open drawbridge might prove more dangerous at night than
+in the daytime."
+
+As the bridge was lost to view beyond a bend in the river, she gave all
+her attention to watching the coves and inlets. Her father sat hunched
+over in the seat beside her, slapping at mosquitoes. Now and then he
+would switch on the flashlight to look at his watch.
+
+Gradually the river had widened, so that it was possible to cover only
+one shore.
+
+"We'll search the other side on our return trip," Mr. Parker said. "But
+it looks to me as if we're not going to have any luck."
+
+As if to add to the discouragement of the party, dark clouds began to
+edge across the sky. One by one the stars were inked out. Penny's light
+coat offered scant protection from the cold wind.
+
+And then, Harry Griffith throttled down the motor and spun the wheel
+sharply to starboard. He leaned forward, trying to pierce the black void
+ahead of the boat's bright beam.
+
+"Looks like something over there," he said pointing. "Might be a log. No,
+it's a boat."
+
+"I can't see anyone in it!" Penny cried. "It's drifting with the
+current."
+
+"That looks like one of my boats, sure as you're born," Griffith
+declared, idling the engine. "The same I rented the young feller this
+morning."
+
+"But where is Jerry?" cried Penny.
+
+Griffith maneuvered his own boat close to the one which drifted with the
+current. Mr. Parker was able to reach out and grasp the long rope
+dangling in the water.
+
+"The flashlight, Penny!" he commanded.
+
+She turned the beam on, and as it focused upon the floor of the boat,
+drew in her breath sharply. On the bottom, face downward, lay a man.
+
+"It's Jerry!" Penny cried. "Oh, Dad, he's--"
+
+"Steady," said her father. "Steady."
+
+While Griffith held the two boats together, he stepped aboard the smaller
+one. He bent over the crumpled figure, feeling Jerry's pulse, gently
+turning him upon his back.
+
+"Is he alive, Dad?"
+
+"His pulse is weak, but I can feel it. Yes, he's breathing! Hold that
+light steady, Penny."
+
+"Dad, there's blood on his head! I--I can see it trickling down."
+
+"He's been struck with a club or some blunt object," Mr. Parker said
+grimly. "He may have a fractured skull."
+
+"Oh, Dad!"
+
+"Keep a grip on yourself," her father ordered sternly, "It may not be as
+bad as I think, but we'll have to rush him to the nearest doctor."
+
+"If it was me, I wouldn't try to move him out of there," advised Harry
+Griffith. "Leave him where he is. I'll get aboard and we'll take this
+boat in tow."
+
+Penny helped the man make their craft fast to the other boat, and then
+they both climbed aboard. Griffith started the engine and turned around
+in the river.
+
+"I'll head for Covert," he said. "That's about the closest place. There
+ought to be a good doctor in a town that size."
+
+While Griffith handled the boat, Penny and her father did what they could
+to make Jerry comfortable. They stripped off their coats, using one for a
+pillow, and the other to cover his body.
+
+"Those two men he was sent to follow must be responsible for this!" Penny
+murmured. "How could they do such a brutal thing?"
+
+"I'll notify the police as soon as we touch shore," her father said
+grimly. "We'll search every cove and inlet until we find the ones
+responsible!"
+
+As he spoke Mr. Parker bent lower to examine the wound on Jerry's head.
+Blood had nearly stopped flowing and he was hopeful that it came from a
+flesh wound. He pressed a clean handkerchief against it and the young man
+stirred.
+
+"How long do you suppose he's been like this, Dad?"
+
+"Hard to tell. An hour, maybe two hours."
+
+Presently, as the boat made full speed up the river, Jerry stirred once
+more. His lips moved but the words were indistinguishable.
+
+"How far to Covert?" Mr. Parker asked anxiously.
+
+"About four miles from this point," Griffith flung over his shoulder.
+"It's the next town above the Kippenberg estate. I'm making the best time
+I can."
+
+Jerry moved restlessly, his hands plucking at the coat which covered him.
+
+"Flaming eyes," he muttered. "Looking at me--looking at me--"
+
+Penny and her father gazed at each other in startled dismay.
+
+"He's completely out of his head," whispered Penny.
+
+"He's gone back to that other accident which happened last year," nodded
+Mr. Parker. "The Vanishing Houseboat affair."
+
+"Jerry's had more than his share of bad luck, Dad. Twice now on this same
+river, he's met with disaster. And this time he may not come through."
+
+"I think he will if his skull hasn't been fractured," Mr. Parker told her
+encouragingly. "Listen!"
+
+Jerry's lips were moving again, and this time his words were more
+rational.
+
+"Got to get word to the Chief," they heard him mutter. "Got to get
+word--"
+
+A long while after that Jerry remained perfectly quiet. Suddenly
+arousing, his eyes opened wide and he struggled to sit up. Mr. Parker
+gently pressed him back.
+
+"Where am I?" Jerry muttered. "Let me out of here! Let me out!"
+
+"Quiet, Jerry," soothed Mr. Parker. "You're with friends."
+
+The reporter's tense grip on the editor's hand relaxed. "That you,
+Chief?"
+
+"Yes, Jerry. Just lie quiet. We'll have you to a doctor in a few more
+minutes."
+
+"Doctor! I don't need any doctor," he protested, trying once more to sit
+up. "What happened anyway?"
+
+"That's what we would like to know."
+
+"Can't you remember anything, Jerry?" Penny asked. "You went out on the
+river to try to trace those two men in the cruiser."
+
+"Oh, it's coming back to me now. I ran into their boat down by Cranberry
+Cove. They tied up there."
+
+"And then what happened?" Penny demanded, as Jerry paused.
+
+"I saw 'em walk ashore. Thought I would follow so I tied up my boat, too.
+They started off through the trees. Pretty soon they met a third man, a
+well dressed fellow, educated too."
+
+"Did you hear any of their conversation?" Mr. Parker questioned.
+
+"I heard Kippenberg's name mentioned. That caught my interest so I crept
+closer. Must have given myself away because that's about the last I
+remember. A ton of dynamite seemed to explode in my head. And here I am."
+
+"Obviously, you were struck from behind with some heavy object," Mr.
+Parker said. "They probably dumped you back in your own boat and set it
+adrift. You never saw your attacker?"
+
+"No."
+
+Jerry rested for a moment, and then as it dawned upon him that he was
+being speeded to a doctor, he began to protest.
+
+"Say, Chief, I'll be all right. I don't need any doc. Head's clear as a
+bell now."
+
+"That's fine, Jerry. But you'll see a doctor anyway and have X-rays.
+We're taking no chances."
+
+"Then at least let me go back to Riverview," Jerry grumbled. "I don't
+want to be stuck in any hick town hospital."
+
+"If you feel equal to the trip, I guess we can grant you that much. You
+seem to be all right, but I want to make sure. Can't take chances on the
+paper being sued later on, you know."
+
+"Oh, I get the idea," said Jerry with a grimace. "Thinking of the old
+cash register, as usual."
+
+Penny drew a deep sigh of relief. If Jerry were able to make jokes he
+couldn't be seriously injured. She still felt weak from the fright she
+had received.
+
+"The police will find those men who attacked you," she told him. "I hope
+they're put in prison for life, too!"
+
+"The police?" Jerry repeated. He stared up into Mr. Parker's face. "Say,
+Chief, you're not aiming to spill the story, are you?"
+
+"I was."
+
+"But see here, if you notify the police, we'll show our hand to the rival
+paper. If we keep this dark we could do our own investigating, and maybe
+land a big scoop."
+
+"Justice is more important than a scoop, Jerry," returned Mr. Parker. "If
+those men had anything to do with Atherwald's disappearance, and it looks
+as if they did, then we are duty bound to hand our clues over to the
+police. By trying to handle it alone, we might let them escape."
+
+"Guess maybe you're right at that," Jerry acknowledged.
+
+As she saw that the reporter was rapidly recovering strength, Penny left
+him to the care of her father and went forward to speak with Harry
+Griffith.
+
+"Where are we now?" she inquired.
+
+"Just comin' to the Kippenberg estate," he told her.
+
+"Only that far? We don't seem to be making very fast time."
+
+"We're buckin' the current, Miss. And there's a right stiff wind
+blowing."
+
+She had not noticed the wind before or how overcast the sky had become.
+One could not see many yards in advance of the boat.
+
+Ahead loomed the drawbridge in open position as usual. But Penny could
+not see the red lantern which she had noticed upon the trip down. Had the
+light been blown out by the wind?
+
+In any case, it would not greatly matter, she reflected. Few cars
+traveled the private road. And any person who came that way would likely
+know about the bridge.
+
+And then, above the steady hum of the motor boat engine, Penny heard
+another roar which steadily increased in intensity. A car was coming down
+the road at great speed!
+
+"The lantern must be there," Penny thought. "It's probably hidden by a
+tree or the high bank. Of course it's there."
+
+She listened with a growing tension. The car was not slowing down. Even
+Harry Griffith turned his head to gaze toward the entrance ramp of the
+drawbridge.
+
+It was all over in an instant. A scream of brakes, a loud splintering of
+the wooden barrier. The speeding automobile struck the side of the steel
+bridge, spun sideways and careened down the bank to bury itself in the
+water.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 19
+ _A DARING RESCUE_
+
+
+Those in the motor boat who had witnessed the disaster were too horrified
+to speak. They could see the top of the car rising above the water into
+which it had fallen, but there was no sign of the unfortunate driver or
+other possible occupants.
+
+Penny began to kick off her shoes.
+
+"No!" shouted her father, divining her purpose. "No! It's too dangerous!"
+
+Penny did not heed for she knew that if the persons in the car were to be
+saved it must be by her efforts. Her father could not swim well and Harry
+Griffith was needed at the wheel of the motor boat.
+
+Scrambling to the gunwale, the girl dived into the water. She could see
+nothing. Groping her way to the overturned coupe, she grasped a door
+handle and turned it. All her strength was required to pull the door
+open. Her breath was growing short now. She worked faster, with frantic
+haste.
+
+A hand clutched her own. Before she could protect herself she felt the
+man upon her, clawing, fighting, trying to climb her shoulders, upward to
+the blessed air.
+
+His grasp was loose. Penny ducked out of it but held fast to his hand.
+She braced her feet against the body of the car and pushed. They both
+shot upward to the surface.
+
+Griffith and her father lifted the man out of the water into the motor
+boat.
+
+"Have to go down again," Penny gasped. "There may be others."
+
+She dived once more, doubling herself into a tight ball, and giving a
+quick, upthrust of her feet which sent her straight to the bottom. She
+swam into the car and groped about on the seat and floor. Finding no
+bodies, she quickly shot to the surface again. Her father pulled her over
+the side, saying curtly: "Good work, Penny."
+
+The victim she had saved seemed little the worse for his ducking. With
+Griffith's help he had divested himself of his heavy coat and was
+wringing it out.
+
+Penny had obtained no clear view of the man, nor did she ever, for just
+at that moment, Jerry raised himself to a sitting position. He stared at
+the bedraggled one and pointed an accusing finger.
+
+"That's the fellow!" he cried in an excited voice. "The one I was telling
+you about--"
+
+The man took one look at Jerry and gazed quickly about. By this time the
+motor boat had drifted close to shore. Before anyone could make a move to
+stop him, the man hurled himself overboard. He landed on his feet in
+shallow water. Splashing through to the shore, he scuttled up the steep
+bank and disappeared in the darkness.
+
+"Don't let him get away!" shouted Jerry. "He's the same fellow I saw in
+the woods!"
+
+"You're certain?" asked Mr. Parker doubtfully.
+
+"Of course! If you think I'm out of my head now, you're the one who's
+crazy! It's the same fellow! Oh, if I could get out of this boat!"
+
+Griffith brought the craft to shore. "I'll see if I can overtake him," he
+said, "but he's probably deep in the woods by this time."
+
+The boatman was a heavy-set man, slow on his feet. Penny and her father
+were not surprised when he came back twenty minutes later to report he
+had been unable to pick up the trail.
+
+"The overturned car may offer a clue to his identity," Mr. Parker said,
+as they started up the river once more. "The police will be able to check
+the license plates."
+
+"I wonder what the man was doing at the estate?" Penny mused.
+
+She groped her way toward the cabin, thinking that she would divest
+herself of some of her wet garments. Suddenly she stopped short.
+
+"Dad, that fellow took off his coat!" she exclaimed. "He must have left
+it behind!"
+
+"It's somewhere on the floor," Harry Griffith called to her.
+
+Penny found the sodden garment lying almost at her feet. She straightened
+it out and searched the pockets. Her father moved over to her side.
+
+"Any clues?" he asked.
+
+Penny took out a water-soaked handkerchief, a key ring and a plain white
+envelope.
+
+"That may be something!" exclaimed Mr. Parker. "Handle it carefully so it
+doesn't tear."
+
+They carried the articles into the cabin. Mr. Parker turned on the light
+and took the envelope from his daughter's hand. They were both elated to
+see that another paper was contained inside.
+
+Mr. Parker tore off the envelope and flattened the letter on the table
+beneath the light. The ink had blurred but nearly all of the words could
+still be made out. There was no heading, merely the initials: "J. J. K."
+
+"Could that mean James Kippenberg?" Penny asked.
+
+The message was brief. Mr. Parker read it aloud.
+
+"Better come through or your fate will be the same as Atherwald's. We
+give you twenty-four hours to think it over."
+
+"How strange!" Penny exclaimed. "That man I pulled out of the water
+couldn't have been James Kippenberg!"
+
+"Not likely, Penny. My guess would be that he had been sent here to
+deliver this warning note. Being unfamiliar with the road, and not
+knowing about the dangerous drawbridge, he crashed through."
+
+"But James Kippenberg isn't supposed to be at the estate," Penny argued.
+"It doesn't make sense at all."
+
+"This much is clear, Penny. Jerry saw the man talking with the two
+seamen, and they all appear to be mixed up in Grant Atherwald's
+disappearance. We'll print what we've learned, and let the police figure
+out the rest."
+
+"Dad, this story is developing into something big, isn't it?"
+
+He nodded as he moved a swinging light bulb slowly over the paper,
+hastening the drying process.
+
+"After the next issue of the _Star_ is printed, every paper in the state
+will send their men here. But we're out ahead, and when the big break
+comes, we may get that first, too."
+
+"Oh, Dad, if only we can!"
+
+"Count yourself out of the case from now on, young lady," he said
+severely. "You scared the wits out of me tonight, risking your life to
+save that no-good. Now shed those wet clothes before you come down with
+pneumonia."
+
+He tossed her an overcoat, a sweater and a crumpled pair of slacks which
+Griffith had found under one of the boat seats. Leaving the cabin, he
+closed the door behind him.
+
+Penny did not change her clothes at once. Instead, she sat down at the
+table, studying the warning message.
+
+"'Better come through,'" she read aloud. "Does that mean Kippenberg is
+supposed to pay money? And what fate did Atherwald meet?"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 20
+ _AN IMPORTANT INTERVIEW_
+
+
+Those same questions were pounding through Penny's mind the next morning
+when she read the first edition of her father's paper. Propped up in bed
+with pillows, she perused the story as she nibbled at the buttered
+muffins on her breakfast tray.
+
+"Is there anything else you would like?" Mrs. Weems inquired, hovering
+near.
+
+"No, I'm quite all right," smiled Penny. "Not even a head cold after my
+ducking. Have you heard about Jerry?"
+
+"Your father said he was doing fine."
+
+"Did he leave any message for me before going to the office?"
+
+"He said he thought you should stay in bed all day."
+
+"Dad would," Penny pouted. "Well, I feel just fine. I'm getting up right
+away." She heaved aside the bed clothes.
+
+Then, because she couldn't get the Kippenberg case out of her head, she
+dressed quickly and went downstairs. She was going out the front door
+when Mrs. Weems stopped her.
+
+"Now where are you going, Penny?"
+
+Penny's bright eyes twinkled and she flashed the housekeeper an arch,
+provocative smile.
+
+"Not sure just where I'm going," she replied, her smooth forehead
+creasing with thought. "But if Dad should get curious, you can tell him
+he shouldn't be surprised if he finds me visiting with the Kippenbergs."
+
+"Penny! You're not going there again?"
+
+"Why not? I'm after a story for the _Riverview Star_ and I mean to get
+it. See you later."
+
+With a wave of her hand Penny walked jauntily off. A few moments later
+Mrs. Weems heard the clatter of Penny's Leaping Lena careening down the
+street in the direction of Corbin. First, however, she called for her
+chum, Louise, who was eager to accompany her on the long ride.
+
+"I won't be able to stay long, Penny," said Louise. "Mother wants me to
+go shopping with her later this afternoon."
+
+"That's all right," responded Penny as the old car bolted along the road.
+"If I get delayed, you can take Leaping Lena back home, and I'll follow
+later on."
+
+With both girls keeping up a steady run of conversation they soon reached
+their destination.
+
+Penny wondered if she would be able to enter the Kippenberg estate
+without being challenged by the bridgeman or a servant. Her anxiety
+increased upon approaching the river, for she saw that a large group of
+persons had gathered by the drawbridge.
+
+No one paid the slightest attention to the two girls as they abandoned
+the car and proceeded to the water's edge. Penny was pleased to find the
+youthful boatman at his usual haunt on the river. He rowed the girls
+across to the estate, promising to await their return.
+
+Penny escorted Louise through the trees to the Kippenberg house. Boldly
+she rang the doorbell which was answered by a butler.
+
+"I should like to speak with Mrs. Kippenberg," she requested.
+
+"Madam will see no one," began the man.
+
+Footsteps sounded behind him in the hallway and Mrs. Kippenberg stood in
+the door.
+
+"So it is you?" she asked in an icy voice. "Julius, see that this person
+is ejected from the grounds."
+
+"One moment please," interposed Penny. "If I leave now, I warn you that
+certain facts will be published in the _Star_, facts which will add to
+your embarrassment."
+
+"You can print nothing which will humiliate us further."
+
+"No? You might like to have me mention the alligator in your lily pool.
+And the reason why you and your daughter are so anxious to be rid of it
+before the police ask questions."
+
+Mrs. Kippenberg's plump face flushed a deep red. But for once she managed
+to keep her temper.
+
+"What do you wish of me?" she asked frigidly.
+
+"First, tell me about that painting, 'The Drawbridge' which was presented
+to your daughter as a wedding gift. Was it not given to her by your
+husband?"
+
+"I shall not answer your question."
+
+"Then you prefer that I print my own conclusions?"
+
+"You are an impudent, prying young woman!" Mrs. Kippenberg stormed. "What
+if the picture was given to Sylvia by her father! Is that any crime?"
+
+"Certainly not," said Penny soothingly. "It merely proves that you both
+know the whereabouts of Mr. Kippenberg."
+
+"Perhaps I do. But I'll tell you nothing, absolutely nothing!"
+
+"I have a few questions to ask about your new gardener," Penny went on,
+unmoved. "For instance, why does he wear a wig?"
+
+The door slammed in her face.
+
+"That certainly was a very cold reception," remarked Louise as the girls
+walked away, the sound of the slamming door still ringing in their ears.
+
+Penny shrugged her shoulders and smiled. "That's nothing. When you're a
+reporter you have to expect those things." She looked about the deserted
+estate. "Well, I think I'll do some more sleuthing in the vicinity of the
+pool."
+
+Louise looked at her wristwatch. "Goodness, it's getting late," she
+stated. "I'd like to stay, Penny, but I think I'd better be getting home
+to meet Mother."
+
+"Go ahead," said Penny. "You take Leaping Lena. The boy in the boat will
+row you across."
+
+"But how will you get home, then?"
+
+"Don't worry about me. I'll find a way. You just go on. I only hope the
+old bus holds up all the way home."
+
+Louise laughed and then the two girls walked to the boat dock. In a few
+moments the boy in the rowboat appeared and took Louise across.
+Afterward, Penny turned back through the trees and went on to the
+forbidden part of the estate.
+
+She spent a long time about the pool, examining the earth all about it,
+but she failed to learn anything new. Finally, she retraced her steps to
+the river. She expected to find the boy waiting for her, but he had
+disappeared. She walked through the trees to the boat dock and stood
+there until the old watchman on the other side observed her predicament.
+
+He obligingly lowered the drawbridge and she crossed the river, pausing
+at the gear house to chat with him.
+
+Penny listened without comment to his story of the automobile accident.
+Thorny had his own version of how it had occurred and she did not correct
+any of the details.
+
+"I wish I had a way to get into Corbin," she remarked when he had
+finished his lengthy account.
+
+"If you walk down to the main road you kin catch the county bus," he told
+her. "It runs every hour."
+
+A long hike along a dusty highway, an equally tedious wait at a
+crossroad, and finally Penny arrived in Corbin. She went directly to the
+Colonial Hotel, placing a telephone call to her father's office.
+
+"What are you doing in Corbin, Penny?" her father demanded as he
+recognized her voice.
+
+Penny answered him eagerly. "I've made an important discovery which may
+blow your case higher than a kite. No, I can't tell you anything over the
+telephone. The reason I am calling is that I may need help. Is Jerry
+still in the hospital?"
+
+"He never was there," responded her father. "I couldn't make him go. He
+and Salt are out on the river looking for the men who cracked him over
+the head. I expect they'll call in any time now."
+
+"If you do get in touch with Jerry, ask him to meet me at the Colonial
+Hotel," urged Penny. "I have a hunch the big story is about to break. In
+any event I'll need a ride home."
+
+There was a great deal more to the conversation, with Mr. Parker
+delivering a long lecture upon the proper deportment for a daughter.
+Penny closed her ears, murmuring at regular intervals, "Yes, Dad," and
+finally went back to her post in the lobby.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 21
+ _THE WHITE CRUISER_
+
+
+For at least an hour she waited. She watched the clock until the hands
+pointed to six o'clock. Tantalizing odors came to her from the dining
+room, but she resolutely downed her hunger. She did not wish to give up
+her vigil even for a few minutes.
+
+Finally Penny's patience was rewarded. She saw a man moving across the
+lobby toward the desk. He wore well-cut tailored clothes and a
+low-brimmed felt hat, yet the girl recognized him at a glance. He was the
+Kippenberg gardener.
+
+The man paused at the desk and asked for a key.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Hammil," said the clerk, handing it over.
+
+Penny had noted that the key was taken from a mailbox which bore the
+number, 381.
+
+"So my friend, the gardener, has an alias," she mused. "Several of them,
+perhaps."
+
+Another half hour elapsed while the girl waited patiently in her chair.
+Each time the elevator descended she watched the people alight. At
+exactly six forty-five Mr. Hammil stepped out of the lift, and without
+glancing toward the girl, dropped his key on the desk and went into the
+dining room.
+
+The clerk, busy with several newcomers at the hotel, did not notice.
+Thinking that she saw her chance, Penny slipped from her chair, sidled
+toward the desk and picked up the key. Her heart pounded as she walked
+toward the elevator, but no one called to her. Her action had passed
+unobserved.
+
+"Third floor," said Penny, and the elevator shot upward.
+
+She located room 381 at the far end of the hall, and with a quick glance
+in both directions, unlocked the door and entered.
+
+An open suitcase lay upon the luggage rack by the dresser. In systematic
+fashion Penny went through it, finding an assortment of interesting
+articles--a revolver, and two wigs, one of gray hair, the other black.
+There were no letters or papers, nothing to positively identify the owner
+of the luggage. But in the very bottom of the case Penny came upon a
+photograph. It was a picture of Sylvia Kippenberg.
+
+Penny slipped the picture into the front of her dress, hastily replaced
+everything as she had found it, relocked the door, and returned to the
+lobby. As she went toward the desk intending to rid herself of the key,
+she stopped short.
+
+Jerry Livingston stood there talking earnestly with the clerk.
+
+"But I was told to come here," she heard him protest.
+
+"There was a girl in the lobby a few minutes ago," the clerk replied.
+"She went off somewhere."
+
+"No, here I am, Jerry!" Penny cried.
+
+The reporter turned around and his face lighted up.
+
+"Come outside, Jerry," Penny said before he could speak. "I have a great
+deal to tell you."
+
+"And I have some news of my own," returned the reporter.
+
+They left the hotel together. Once beyond hearing, Penny made a complete
+report of her afternoon adventure, and showed Jerry the picture of Sylvia
+Kippenberg which she had taken from room 381.
+
+"Now for my story," said Jerry. "I've located a place not far from here
+where those two seamen buy supplies. The owner of the store told me they
+tie their boat up there nearly every night."
+
+"Where is Salt now, Jerry?"
+
+"He's keeping watch at the place. I came into town to telephone the
+_Star_ office. Your father said I was to stop here and take you in tow."
+
+"You're not starting back to Riverview?" Penny asked in dismay.
+
+"I don't want to, Penny. I have a feeling our big story is just about
+ready to break!"
+
+"So have I, Jerry. Let's stay with it. I'll explain to Dad when we get
+home."
+
+"Then let's be on our way," the reporter said crisply. "No telling what
+has developed while I've been in town."
+
+In the press car, the couple took the river road which led east from the
+Kippenberg estate. As they bounced along, making all possible speed,
+Jerry told Penny how he and Salt had traced the two seamen. They had made
+inquiry all along the river, and quite by chance had encountered a
+fisherman who had given them a valuable tip.
+
+"But so many rumors are false, Jerry," Penny said.
+
+"This tip was straight. Salt and I found the white cruiser tied up at the
+dock not far from this store I was telling you about. We've been watching
+it for the past two hours, and Salt is still there."
+
+"Why didn't you call the police?"
+
+"Wouldn't have done any good. The men we're after haven't been there all
+day. The only person on board is a girl."
+
+"A girl?"
+
+"Well, maybe you would say a young woman. About twenty-two, I'd guess."
+
+"Jerry, you must be watching the wrong boat."
+
+Jerry shook his head as he drove the car into the bushes at the side of
+the road. "It's the right one, I'm sure of it. Well, we're here."
+
+Penny was hard pressed to keep up as the reporter led her through the
+trees down to the winding Kobalt river. They found Salt in his hiding
+place, behind a large boulder.
+
+"Anything happen since I left?" Jerry demanded.
+
+Salt scarcely noticed Penny's presence save to give her a quick nod of
+welcome.
+
+"You got back just in time," he replied to the question. "The girl went
+away a minute ago. Took a basket and started for the store."
+
+"Then why are we waiting?" asked Jerry. "Come on, we'll take a look
+inside that boat."
+
+"Someone ought to stay here and keep watch," Salt returned. "She may come
+back any minute."
+
+"You're elected guard then. Penny and I will look the boat over and see
+what we can find. If the girl starts back, whistle."
+
+Darting across the muddy shore, Penny and Jerry reached the dilapidated
+boat which had been tied up at the end of a sagging dock. They jumped
+aboard and after a hasty glance over the deck, dived down into the cabin.
+
+The room was dirty and in great disorder. Boots lay on the floor,
+discarded garments were scattered about, and a musty odor prevailed.
+
+"Nothing here," said Jerry.
+
+"Let's look around carefully," insisted Penny. "We may find something."
+
+Crossing the cabin she opened a closet door. Save for a pair of oilskins
+which hung from a nail, it was quite empty.
+
+"Listen!" commanded Penny suddenly.
+
+Jerry stood absolutely still, straining to hear. A long, low whistle
+reached his ears.
+
+"The warning signal!" he exclaimed. "Come on, Penny, we're getting out of
+here."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 22
+ _TRAPPED IN THE CABIN_
+
+
+Penny opened the door of the cabin only to close it quickly. She and
+Jerry both had heard men's voices very close to the boat.
+
+"It's too late," she whispered. "Those men have come back."
+
+"Not the girl?"
+
+"No, they're alone. But we're in a trap. What shall we do?"
+
+"We could make a dash for it. If we have to fight our way out, Salt will
+be there to help."
+
+"Let's stick and see what happens, Jerry. We're after information. We
+must expect to take a chance in order to get it."
+
+Jerry had been thinking more of Penny's safety than his own. But thus
+urged, he turned the key in the lock, bolting the door from the inside.
+
+A low rumble of voices reached the couple as they stood with ears pressed
+against the panel. But they were unable to distinguish words. Then
+presently, one of the seamen moved close to the companionway.
+
+"I'll get it, Jake," he called. "It's down in the cabin."
+
+Jerry and Penny kept quiet as the man turned the door knob. He heaved
+angrily against the panel with his shoulder.
+
+"Hey, Jake," he shouted, "what's the idea of locking the door?"
+
+"I didn't lock it."
+
+"Then Flora did." Muttering under his breath, the seaman tramped back up
+on deck.
+
+Perhaps ten minutes elapsed before Penny and Jerry heard a feminine voice
+speaking.
+
+"That must be Flora," whispered Penny. "What will happen when she tells
+them that she didn't lock the door?"
+
+The voices above rose louder and louder until the two prisoners were able
+to distinguish some of the words. Jake berated the girl as stupid while
+his companion showered abuse upon her until she broke down and wept.
+
+"I never had the key," they heard her wail. "I don't know what became of
+it. You always blame me for everything that goes wrong, and I'm good and
+sick of it. If I don't get better treatment I may tell a few things to
+the police. How would you like that?"
+
+Jerry and Penny did not hear the response, but they recoiled as a loud
+crashing sound told them the girl had been given a cruel push into a
+solid object. Her cry of pain was drowned out by another noise, the
+sudden clatter of the motor boat engine.
+
+Penny and Jerry gazed at each other with startled eyes.
+
+"We're moving," she whispered.
+
+Jerry started to fit the key into the door lock, only to have Penny
+arrest his hand.
+
+"Let's stay and see it through," she urged. "This is our chance to learn
+the hide-out and perhaps solve the mystery of Atherwald's disappearance."
+
+"All right," the reporter agreed. "But I wish you weren't in on this."
+
+From the tiny window of the cabin, he and Penny observed various
+landmarks as the boat proceeded downstream. Perhaps half an hour elapsed
+before the cruiser came to the mouth of a narrow river which emptied into
+the Kobalt. From that point on progress became slow and often the boat
+was so close to shore that Penny could have reached out and touched
+overhanging bushes.
+
+"I didn't know this stream was deep enough for a motor boat," Jerry
+whispered. "We must be heading for a hide-out deep in the swamp."
+
+"I hope Salt has sense enough to call Dad and the police," Penny said
+with the first show of nervousness. "We're going to be a long way from
+help."
+
+The boat crept on for perhaps a mile. Then it stopped, and Penny assumed
+they had reached their destination. Gazing out of the window again, she
+saw why they were halted. A great tree with finger-like branches had
+fallen across the river, blocking the way.
+
+"Look, Jerry," she whispered. "We'll not be able to go any farther."
+
+"Guess again," the reporter muttered.
+
+Penny saw then that one of the men had left the boat and was walking
+along shore. He seemed not in the least disturbed by the great tree and
+for the first time it dawned upon her that it served a definite purpose.
+
+"Lift 'er up, Gus," called the man at the wheel of the boat.
+
+His companion disappeared into the bushes. Several minutes elapsed and
+then Penny heard a creaking sound as if ropes were moving on a pulley.
+
+"The tree!" whispered Jerry, his eyes flashing. "It's lifting!"
+
+Very slowly, an inch at a time, the great tree raised from the water, its
+huge roots serving as a hinge. When it was high enough, the motor boat
+passed beneath the dripping branches and waited on the other side.
+
+Slowly, the tree was lowered into place once more.
+
+"Clever, mighty clever," Jerry muttered. "Anyone searching for the
+hide-out would never think of looking beyond this fallen tree. To all
+purposes nature put it here."
+
+"Nature probably did," Penny added. "But our dishonorable friends adapted
+it to their own use."
+
+Through the window Penny saw the man called Gus reboard the boat.
+
+Once more the cruiser went on up the narrow stream, making slow but
+steady progress. Long shadows had settled over the water. Soon it became
+dark.
+
+Then a short distance ahead, Jerry and Penny observed a light. As the
+boat drifted up to a wharf, a man could be seen standing there with a
+glowing lantern. They were unable to see his face, and quickly dodged
+back from the cabin window to avoid being noticed.
+
+"Everything all right, Aaron?" the man at the wheel asked, jumping
+ashore. He looped a coil of rope about one of the dock posts.
+
+"Aaron!" whispered Penny, gripping Jerry's hand.
+
+"It must be Aaron Dietz, Kippenberg's former business associate. So he's
+the ringleader in this business!"
+
+They listened, trying to hear the man's reply to the question which had
+been asked.
+
+"Yeah, everything's all right," he responded gruffly.
+
+"You don't sound any too cheerful about it."
+
+"Atherwald still won't talk. Keeps insisting he doesn't know where the
+gold is hidden. What bothers me, I am beginning to think we made a
+mistake. He may be telling the truth."
+
+"Say, this is a fine time to be finding it out!"
+
+"Oh, keep your shirt on, Gus. You and Jake will get your pay anyhow. And
+even if Atherwald doesn't know the hiding place we'll make Kippenberg
+come through."
+
+"You'll have to find him first," the other retorted. "If you ask my
+opinion, you've made a mess of the whole affair."
+
+"No one asked your opinion! We'll make Atherwald tell tonight or else--"
+
+The man with the lantern started away from the dock but paused before he
+had taken many steps.
+
+"Get those supplies up to the shack," he ordered. "Then I want to talk
+with you both."
+
+"All right," was the reply, "but we have to get the cabin door open
+first. Flora locked it and lost the key."
+
+"I didn't," the girl protested shrilly. "Don't you try to blame me."
+
+Jerry and Penny knew that their situation now was a precarious one. If
+they were found in the cabin they would be taken prisoners and the
+exclusive story which they hoped to write never would be theirs.
+
+"We've trapped ourselves in this cubby-hole," the reporter muttered. "All
+my doing, too."
+
+"We can hide in the closet, Jerry. The men may not think to search
+there."
+
+Noiselessly, they opened the door and slipped into the tiny room. The air
+was hot and stuffy, the space too narrow for comfort.
+
+Jerry and Penny did not have long to wait before there came a loud crash
+against the cabin door. The two seamen were trying to break through the
+flimsy panel.
+
+"Bring a light, Flora," called one of the men.
+
+Penny and Jerry flattened themselves against the closet wall, waiting.
+
+A panel splintered on the outside cabin door, and a heavy tramping of
+feet told them that the men had entered the room.
+
+"No one in here, Gus."
+
+"It's just as we thought. Flora locked the door and lied out of it."
+
+"I didn't! I didn't!" cried the girl. "Someone else must have done it
+while I was at the store. The door was unlocked when I went away."
+
+"There's no one here now."
+
+"I--I thought I heard voices while we were coming down the river."
+
+"In this cabin?"
+
+"Yes, just a low murmur."
+
+"You imagined it," the man told her. "But I'll take a look in the closet
+to be sure."
+
+He walked across the cabin toward the hiding place. Penny and Jerry
+braced themselves for the moment when the door would be flung open. They
+had trapped themselves and now faced almost certain capture.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 23
+ _AT THE HIDE-OUT_
+
+
+Before the man could pull open the closet door, a booming voice called
+impatiently from shore:
+
+"Say, are you coming? We have plenty of work ahead of us tonight."
+
+Distracted from his purpose, the searcher turned aside without glancing
+into the closet. With his companion and the girl, he left the cabin.
+
+Penny and Jerry waited at least five minutes. When all was silent above,
+they stole from their hiding place. From the window they assured
+themselves that the wharf was deserted.
+
+"What do we do now, start after the police?" Penny questioned.
+
+"Let's make certain Atherwald is here first. We can't afford to be
+wrong."
+
+A path led through the timber. As they followed it, Jerry and Penny saw a
+moving lantern some distance ahead. They kept it in sight until the three
+men and Flora disappeared into a cabin.
+
+Stealing on through the darkness, Penny and Jerry crept to the screen
+door. Peering in, they saw a barren room containing a table, a cook stove
+and double-deck bunks.
+
+"Get supper on, Flora," one of the men ordered curtly.
+
+"Am I to cook anything for the prisoner?" she asked in a whining voice.
+
+"Not unless he decides to talk. I'll find out if he's changed his mind."
+
+The man who had been called Aaron crossed the cabin to an adjoining room.
+He unlocked the door which had been fastened with a padlock, and went
+inside.
+
+"Atherwald must be in there," whispered Penny.
+
+With one accord, she and Jerry tiptoed across the sagging porch and
+posted themselves under a high window. Glancing up they saw it contained
+no glass, but had narrow iron bars in keeping with a prison chamber.
+
+Jerry lifted Penny up so that she could peep into the room. By the light
+of the oil lantern she saw a haggard young man sitting on the bed.
+Despite a stubble of beard and unkempt hair, she instantly recognized him
+as the missing bridegroom. She made another observation, one which
+shocked her. The man's wrists were handcuffed.
+
+"It's Grant Atherwald," she told Jerry as he lowered her to the ground.
+"They've treated him shamefully."
+
+Jerry held up his hand as a signal for silence. In the room above the men
+were speaking and he wished to hear every word.
+
+"Well, Atherwald, have you changed your mind? How about a little supper
+tonight?"
+
+"How can I tell you something I don't know?" the bridegroom retorted
+wearily. "Kippenberg never confided any of his secrets to me."
+
+"You know where his gold is hidden!"
+
+"I don't think he ever had any!"
+
+"Oh, yes, he did. When the government passed a law that it was illegal to
+keep gold, Kippenberg decided to defy it. He had over half his fortune
+converted into gold which he expected to re-convert into currency at a
+great profit to himself. His plans went amiss when government men listed
+him for investigation."
+
+"You seem to know all about his private affairs," Grant Atherwald said
+sarcastically. "Strange that you haven't learned the hiding place of the
+gold--if there ever was any!"
+
+"It will do you no good to pretend, Atherwald! Either you tell the hiding
+place, or we'll bring your bride here to keep you company!"
+
+"You wouldn't dare touch her, you fiend!"
+
+"No? Well, unless you decide to talk, she'll share your fate, and I
+promise you it won't be a pretty one. Now I'll leave you to think it
+over."
+
+The door closed with a bang.
+
+"We'll have to get the police here right away," Jerry advised Penny in a
+whisper. "No telling what those scoundrels may try to do to Atherwald. We
+haven't a moment to waste."
+
+"It would take us hours to bring help here," reasoned Penny. "And if we
+try to use the motorboat the gang will be warned and flee while we're on
+our way down the river."
+
+"That's so, but we have to do something. Any ideas?"
+
+"Yes, I have one," Penny answered soberly. "It may sound pretty crazy.
+Still, I really believe it would work!"
+
+Hurriedly, she outlined what she had in mind. Jerry listened
+incredulously, but as the girl explained and elaborated certain details
+of her plan, his doubts began to clear away.
+
+"It's dangerous," he protested. "And if your hunch about the pool is
+wrong, we will be in a fix."
+
+"Of course, but we'll have to take a chance in order to save Atherwald."
+
+"If everything went exactly according to plan it might work!"
+
+"Let's try it, Jerry. Lift me up so I can attract Atherwald's attention."
+
+The reporter did as she requested. Penny tapped lightly on the iron bars
+with her signet ring. She saw Grant Atherwald start and turn his head.
+Penny repeated the signal.
+
+The man arose from the bed and stumbled toward the window.
+
+"Who is it?" he whispered hoarsely.
+
+"A friend."
+
+"Can you get me out of here?"
+
+"We're going to try. You are handcuffed?"
+
+"Yes, and my captor keeps the key in his pocket. The room outside is
+always guarded. Did you bring an implement to saw through the bars?"
+
+"No, we have another scheme in mind. But you must do exactly as we tell
+you."
+
+"Yes, yes!" the bridegroom whispered eagerly, his pale cheeks flooding
+with color.
+
+"Listen closely," Penny instructed. "When your captor comes back tell him
+you have decided to talk."
+
+"I know nothing about the cache of gold," the man protested.
+
+"Tell your captor that the hiding place is on the Kippenberg estate."
+
+"That would only involve Sylvia and Mrs. Kippenberg. I'll do nothing to
+get them into trouble."
+
+"You'll have to obey instructions or no one can help you," Penny said
+severely. "Would you prefer that those cruel men carry out their threat?
+They'll spirit Sylvia away and try to force the truth from her."
+
+"I'll do as you say."
+
+"Then tell your captor that the gold is hidden in a specially constructed
+vault lying beneath the lily pool." Penny had resolved to act upon her
+hunch that there was a trapdoor on the bottom of the pool. Now as she
+issued instructions she wished that she might have found some way of
+examining the pool to see if she were right. However, she had to take a
+chance on there being a vault beneath the pool.
+
+Atherwald protested mildly. "He would never believe such a fantastic
+story."
+
+"It is not as fantastic as it sounds," replied Penny. "You must convince
+him that it is true."
+
+"I will try."
+
+"Make the men understand that to get the gold they must drain the pool
+and raise a trapdoor in the cement bottom. Ask to be taken with the men
+when they go there tonight and demand that you be given your freedom as
+soon as the gold is found."
+
+"They will never let me go alive. An identification from me would send
+them all to prison for life."
+
+"Do you know the men?"
+
+"The ringleader is Aaron Dietz. At one time he was employed by Mr.
+Kippenberg."
+
+"Just as I thought."
+
+"The other two call themselves Gus and Jake. I don't know their last
+names. Then there is a girl who seems to be a sister to Gus."
+
+"How did they get you here?"
+
+"On the day of the wedding I was handed a note just as I reached the
+estate. It requested me to come at once to the garden. While I waited
+there, two ruffians sprang upon me from behind. Before I could cry out
+they dragged me to their boat at the river's edge. I was handcuffed,
+blindfolded and brought to this cabin."
+
+The slamming of an outside door warned Penny that she was wasting
+precious time in talk.
+
+"You understand your instructions?" she whispered hurriedly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then goodbye. With luck we'll have you free in a few hours."
+
+"With luck is right," Jerry muttered as Penny slid to the ground.
+
+Aaron Dietz stood on the front porch staring out into the night. Seeing
+him there, Penny and Jerry circled widely before attempting to return to
+the river. Satisfied that they had not been observed, they boarded the
+boat and descended to the cabin.
+
+For possibly an hour they sat in the dark, waiting anxiously.
+
+"Looks as if my little plan didn't work," Penny remarked. "I might have
+known it would be too simple."
+
+Jerry had risen to his feet. He went to the window and listened.
+
+"Hear anything?" Penny whispered hopefully.
+
+"Sounds like someone coming down the path. We ought to get into our
+cubby-hole."
+
+They tiptoed to the closet and closed the door.
+
+Within a few minutes they heard a confusion of voices and the shuffle of
+feet as men boarded the cruiser. Penny wondered if the group included
+Grant Atherwald and was greatly relieved when she heard him speak.
+
+"I don't see why you think I would double-cross you," he said distinctly.
+"I am considering my own welfare. You promised that if the gold is found
+you'll give me my freedom."
+
+"Sure, you'll get it. But if you're lying about the hiding place--"
+
+The words were drowned out by the roar of the motor boat engine. Penny
+and Jerry felt the floor beneath them quiver and then gently roll. The
+cruiser was under way.
+
+"We're heading for the Kippenberg estate!" Penny whispered. "Oh,
+everything is starting out beautifully!"
+
+"I only hope it ends the same way," said Jerry morosely. "I only hope it
+does."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 24
+ _SECRET OF THE LILY POOL_
+
+
+The moon rode high in the heavens as the cabin cruiser let go its anchor
+in a cove off the Kippenberg estate. Penny who had been dozing for the
+past hour in her self-imposed prison started up in alarm as Jerry nudged
+her in the ribs.
+
+"Wake up," he whispered. "We're here."
+
+"At the estate?"
+
+"I think so."
+
+On the deck above their heads they could hear the men talking together.
+
+"You'll come along with us, Atherwald," Aaron Dietz said. "Flora, you
+stay here and guard the boat. If you see anyone watching or acting
+suspiciously, blow the whistle two short blasts."
+
+"I don't want to stay here alone," the girl whimpered. "I'm afraid."
+
+"You'll do as I say," the man ordered harshly. "Get started, Gus. It's
+two o'clock now. We won't have many hours before daylight."
+
+In making her plans Penny had not once considered that the men might
+leave a guard on the cruiser. With the girl posted as a lookout they were
+still prisoners in the cabin.
+
+"We have to get out of here now or never," she whispered. "What shall we
+do about Flora?"
+
+"We'll rush her and take a chance on the whistle."
+
+They slipped out of their hiding place and crawled noiselessly up the
+steep stairway. Pausing there, they watched the shadowy figure of the
+girl in the bow of the boat. She was quite alone, for her companions had
+disappeared into the woods.
+
+"Now!" commanded Jerry in a whisper.
+
+With a quick rush he and Penny were across the deck. They approached
+Flora from behind and were upon her before she could turn her head. Jerry
+grasped her arms while Penny clapped a hand over her mouth to prevent a
+scream. Although the girl fought fiercely, she was no match for two
+persons.
+
+Stripping off her sash, Penny gave it to Jerry to use as a gag. They
+bound the girl's wrists and ankles, then carried her down into the cabin.
+
+"I hate to leave her like that," said Penny as they went back on deck.
+
+"Don't waste your sympathy," replied Jerry. "She doesn't deserve it.
+Anyway, we'll soon set her free. We must bring the police now."
+
+"The nearest house with a telephone is about a half mile away."
+
+"It won't take us long to cover the distance," Jerry said, helping her
+down from the boat.
+
+"You go alone," urged Penny. "I'll stay here and keep watch."
+
+"I don't like to leave you."
+
+"Go on." Penny gave him a little push. "And hurry!"
+
+After Jerry had reluctantly left, she plunged into the trees, carefully
+picking her way along the path which led to the lily pool. A short
+distance brought her to the clearing. Halting, she saw the three men and
+Grant Atherwald silhouetted in the bright moonlight. The latter was still
+handcuffed, guarded by Aaron Dietz who allowed his companions to do the
+hard labor.
+
+Gus and Jake had broken open the door of the stone tower. The soft purr
+of a motor told Penny that they had started draining the pool. She
+wondered what the men would do when they discovered that the tank
+contained a very live alligator.
+
+"It ought to put a crimp in their work," she chuckled. "Mr. Kippenberg
+couldn't have chosen a more effective guard for his gold."
+
+But gradually as the pool drained lower and lower, it struck Penny as odd
+that the men did not notice the alligator. Belatedly, it occurred to her
+that the Kippenberg gardener had probably succeeded in getting rid of the
+monster since her visit to the garden earlier in the day.
+
+"Something like that _would_ happen," she thought. "Oh, well, even so
+Jerry ought to get here with the police in ample time."
+
+Only the waning of the moon gave indication of how swiftly the night was
+passing. Penny became alarmed as she observed how fast the pool emptied.
+Jerry would not have as long as she had anticipated. But surely, he would
+bring help before it was too late.
+
+Presently, one of the men shut off the motor in the stone tower, saying
+with quiet jubilance:
+
+"There, she's empty!"
+
+He jumped down into the tank, and almost at once uttered a cry of
+discovery.
+
+"Here it is, just as he said! The ring to the trap! Give us some help,
+Gus."
+
+With Aaron Dietz and the bewildered bridegroom watching from above, the
+two men raised the heavy block of cement. Penny drew closer for she did
+not wish to miss anything. She stood in the shadow of a tree scarcely
+fifteen yards from where the men worked.
+
+"A stairway leads down into an underground vault!" Jake cried exultantly.
+"We've found the hiding place of the gold."
+
+"Toss me your flashlight, Aaron," called Gus. "We'll soon have all of the
+treasure out of here."
+
+The next ten minutes brought a confused whirl of impressions. Penny's
+thoughts were in turmoil. Why didn't Jerry come with the police? As soon
+as the men carried the burden of gold to the boat they would discover
+Flora, bound and gagged. Then they would suspect that a trap had been
+laid. Oh, why didn't Jerry hurry?
+
+Gus and Jake had descended into the underground vault. As the light
+reappeared, Penny was dumbfounded to see that the men were empty handed.
+
+"Nothing down there," Gus reported in disgust. "Nothing!"
+
+"Then we've been tricked!" Aaron Dietz turned furiously upon his
+prisoner. "You'll pay for this!"
+
+"I thought the gold was here," answered Grant Atherwald.
+
+"Lock him up in the vault and start the water running," advised Jake
+harshly. "It's a good way to be rid of him."
+
+The suggestion appealed to Aaron Dietz. At a nod from him, Atherwald was
+seized and dragged down into the pool. He was shoved into the vault, but
+before the two men could lower the heavy cement block into place, a
+signal from Dietz arrested their action.
+
+"Wait!"
+
+In her anxiety over Grant Atherwald, Penny had moved closer to the pool.
+Without realizing that she was exposing herself, she stood so that her
+shadow fell clearly across the open space. Before she comprehended her
+danger, Dietz hurled himself upon her, seizing her roughly by the arms.
+
+Penny struggled to free herself but could not. The man's grip was like
+steel.
+
+"So you were spying!" he exclaimed harshly.
+
+"I--I was just watching," Penny stammered. "Don't you remember me? I am
+the girl who pulled you out of the river when your car went over the
+drawbridge."
+
+The man looked closely at her, and for an instant she dared hope that he
+would recall her with gratitude. But his face hardened again and he said
+unfeelingly:
+
+"You know entirely too much, my little girl. This is one story you will
+never write for your father's paper. Your curiosity has proven your
+undoing. You share the fate of your very good friend."
+
+With a sinking heart Penny realized by the man's words that he knew her
+to be the daughter of a newspaper publisher, and that he had guessed her
+part in the trick played upon him.
+
+"Down you go!" Dietz said harshly.
+
+As he dragged her toward the pool, Penny screamed at the top of her
+lungs. A hand was clapped over her mouth. She bit it savagely, but her
+efforts to free herself were of no avail.
+
+The men shoved her headlong down the stone stairway into the pit.
+
+"Now scream as much as you like," Aaron Dietz hurled after her. "No one
+will hear you."
+
+The heavy stone slab dropped into place.
+
+Penny picked herself up from the steps. Terror gripped her, and with a
+sob she called frantically:
+
+"Mr. Atherwald! Mr. Atherwald!"
+
+"Here at the bottom of the steps," he answered with a groan.
+
+"Are you hurt?"
+
+"Only bruised. But my hands are still in cuffs."
+
+Penny limped down the stairway and helped the man to his feet.
+
+"We're done for now," he said. "No one will ever look for us down in this
+vault. And our cries will never be heard."
+
+"Don't give up," Penny murmured encouragingly. "We may be able to lift
+the stone. Come let's try."
+
+Mounting the stairs, they applied their shoulders to the massive door,
+but their best efforts did not raise it an inch.
+
+"Listen!" cried Atherwald suddenly.
+
+They both could hear the sound of water running into the empty pool.
+
+"In an hour's time no one will ever guess that a hidden vault lies
+beneath the tank!" Atherwald groaned. "We're doomed!"
+
+"If we can hear the water splashing above us, our voices might carry!"
+Penny reasoned. "Let's cry out for help. Now, together!"
+
+They shouted over and over until their voices failed them. Then,
+completely discouraged, they sagged down on the stairway to rest.
+
+"Nothing went as I planned," Penny said dismally. "I really thought the
+gold was hidden in this vault. If the men had found it, they would have
+spent hours removing the loot to their boat. Jerry would have come with
+the police and everything would have been all right."
+
+Grant Atherwald was not listening to the girl's words. He struggled to
+his feet, pressing his ear against the trapdoor.
+
+"The water has stopped running!"
+
+"Are you sure?" Penny sprang up and stood beside him, listening.
+
+"Yes, and I hear voices!"
+
+With one accord, they shouted for help. Could it be imagination or did
+they hear an answering cry? As they repeated their frantic call, there
+was a scraping on the stone above their heads.
+
+"Stand away," ordered a muffled voice.
+
+Before Penny and the bridegroom could obey, the great door lifted. A
+deluge of water poured in, its force nearly washing them from the steps.
+But in another moment the passage was clear and they stumbled up through
+the rectangular opening.
+
+Jerry grasped Penny's hand, helping her out of the vault. One of the
+blue-coated policemen aided Atherwald, unfastening the handcuffs which
+held him a prisoner.
+
+"You're all right, Penny?" the reporter asked anxiously.
+
+"I--I feel like a drowned rat," she laughed, shaking water out of her
+hair. Then, with a quick change of mood she asked: "Did you get Aaron
+Dietz and his men?"
+
+"No," Jerry answered in disgust. "When we crossed the river five minutes
+ago, the cruiser was still there. No sign of anyone around. I brought the
+police here, and now I suppose they've made their get-away."
+
+"Oh, Jerry, we can't let them escape! Send the police--"
+
+"Now don't get worked up," the reporter soothed. "A squad started back
+just as soon as we found out what had happened here."
+
+"Dietz and his men must have seen the police crossing the river,"
+speculated Penny. "They may have hidden in the bushes, biding their time.
+By now they've slipped away in their boat."
+
+"I'm afraid of it," Jerry admitted. "I traveled as fast as I could."
+
+As one of the policemen lifted Penny out of the pool, a noise which
+sounded like the back-firing of an automobile, broke the stillness of the
+night. It was followed by a volley of similar sounds.
+
+"Gunfire!" exclaimed Penny.
+
+The policemen started at a run through the woods toward the place where
+the white cruiser had last been seen. Penny hesitated, and then took the
+opposite direction, coming out of the woods at a point directly opposite
+the drawbridge.
+
+Gazing far up the river she could see the white cruiser, flashes of fire
+coming from the cabin window as the desperadoes exchanged shots with the
+police, who were concealed in the woods.
+
+"That boat will try to run for it in another minute," Penny thought. "If
+only the drawbridge were down!"
+
+Kicking off her shoes, she dived into the water, swimming diagonally
+across the river to take advantage of the swift current. Her powerful
+strokes brought her to shallow water and she waded ashore through
+ankle-deep mud. As she scrambled up the slippery bank, her wet clothing
+plastered to her body, she heard the roar of the cruiser's motor.
+
+"They've started the engine!" she thought. "In another minute the boat
+will be at the bridge. Hurry! Hurry!"
+
+Penny could force herself to no greater effort. Breathless, she reached
+the gearhouse and groped frantically under the door. Had Thorny failed to
+hide the key there? No, her fingers seized upon it.
+
+Trembling with excitement, she turned it in the lock. The door of the
+gearhouse swung open. Now could she remember how to lower the bridge? Any
+mistake would be costly, for by this time she could hear the cruiser
+racing down the river at full speed. If only it were light enough so that
+she could see the gears!
+
+She pulled a lever and her heart leaped as the motor responded with a
+pleasant purr. The power was on!
+
+"Now to lower the bridge!" thought Penny. "But which lever is the right
+one? I'm not sure."
+
+With a prayer in her heart she grasped the one closest at hand and eased
+it forward. There was a grinding of gears as the tall cantilevers began
+to move. They were coming down, but oh, so slowly!
+
+"Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!" Penny whispered, as if her words could speed the
+bridge on its journey.
+
+The white cruiser drove onward at full speed. Lower came the bridge.
+Penny held her breath, knowing it would be a matter of inches whether or
+not the boat would clear. The man at the wheel, aware of the danger, did
+not swerve from his course.
+
+The bridge settled into place. As the crash came, Penny closed her eyes.
+
+"_I did it! I've stopped them!_" she thought, and sagged weakly against
+the gear house.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 25
+ _VICTORY FOR PENNY_
+
+
+Minutes later Penny was still leaning limply against the building when a
+car drove up to the bridge. Her father, Salt, and a bevy of policemen and
+government representatives sprang out and ran to her side.
+
+"Penny, what happened?" Mr. Parker clasped his daughter in his arms.
+"You're soaking wet! Didn't we hear gunfire as we turned in here?"
+
+Penny waved her hand weakly toward the river below.
+
+"There's your story, Dad. Pictures galore. Boat smashes into dangerous
+drawbridge. Police pursue and shoot it out with desperadoes, taking
+what's left of 'em into custody. I'm afraid to look."
+
+"And what were you doing while all this was going on?" demanded her
+father.
+
+"Me? I was just waiting for the drawbridge to go down."
+
+Mr. Parker, Salt, and the policemen he had brought to the scene, rushed
+to the edge of the bridge. A police boat had drawn up beside the badly
+listing cruiser, and three men prisoners and a girl were being taken off.
+
+"How bad is it?" Penny called anxiously.
+
+"All captured alive," answered her father. "Salt, get that camera of
+yours into action! Where's Jerry? He would be missing at a time like
+this! What happened anyhow? Can't someone tell me?"
+
+Penny had fully recovered the power of speech, and with a most flattering
+audience, she recounted her adventures.
+
+"Excuse me just a minute," she interrupted herself.
+
+Turning her back, she pulled a sodden photograph from the front of her
+dress and handed it to her father.
+
+"This picture is in pretty bad shape," she said, "but it's clue number
+one. You see, it's a photograph of Miss Kippenberg, and on the back is
+written, 'To Father, with all my love.' I found the picture this
+afternoon in Room 381 at the Colonial Hotel."
+
+"Then you've located Kippenberg?" one of the G men demanded.
+
+"I have. He's been masquerading as the Kippenberg gardener, coming back
+here no doubt to witness the marriage of his daughter."
+
+"We'll arrest him right away," said the government man, turning to leave.
+"Thanks for the tip."
+
+"I am confident Miss Kippenberg and her mother had nothing to do with
+Grant Atherwald's disappearance," Penny went on. "Aaron Dietz plotted the
+whole affair himself. I guess he must have learned about Kippenberg's
+cache of gold while he worked for the man. He believed that Grant
+Atherwald shared the secret and could tell where the money was hidden."
+
+"You've located the gold, too, I suppose," Mr. Parker remarked
+whimsically.
+
+"No, Dad, I slipped up there. I thought the gold was in a secret vault
+under the alligator pool, but I was wrong. I don't know where it is."
+
+"We'll let the G men solve that mystery when they take Kippenberg into
+custody," replied her father. "Our work is cut out for us now. We'll find
+Jerry, talk with young Atherwald, and rout Miss Kippenberg and her mother
+out of bed for an exclusive interview."
+
+"And this time I am sure they'll answer questions," declared Penny.
+
+During the next hour the "story" was taken entirely from her hands.
+Jerry, her father and Salt, knew exactly how to gather every fact of
+interest to the readers of the _Star_. Sylvia Kippenberg, overjoyed to
+find her fiance alive, posed for pictures with him, and answered all
+questions save those which concerned her father.
+
+Not until a telephone call came from the Colonial Hotel, saying that Mr.
+Kippenberg had been taken into custody, would either Sylvia or her mother
+admit that the man had posed as the gardener.
+
+"Very well, it is true," Mrs. Kippenberg acknowledged at last. "James has
+been trying to avoid government men for over a year. Wishing to return
+for Sylvia's wedding, he disguised himself as a gardener. Then after
+Grant's disappearance, he remained here trying to help."
+
+"And it was your husband who managed to get rid of the alligator?" Penny
+interposed.
+
+"Yes, we were afraid police might ask embarrassing questions. James
+disposed of it to a zoo late yesterday afternoon."
+
+"And the cache of gold under the lily pool," said Mr. Parker. "What
+became of that?"
+
+"There is no gold."
+
+"None at all?"
+
+"None."
+
+"And there never was any?" questioned Penny incredulously. "Then why was
+the vault ever built?"
+
+"Tell her the truth, Mother," Sylvia urged. "She deserves to know.
+Anyway, it can do Father no harm now."
+
+"At one time my husband did have a considerable supply of gold," Mrs.
+Kippenberg admitted. "Since he could not trust a bank he constructed his
+own vault under the pool and placed the alligator there as a precaution
+against prying persons."
+
+"My father really did nothing so very wrong," Sylvia broke in. "The gold
+was bought with his own money. If he chose to sell it later at a profit
+it was his own affair."
+
+"Not in the opinion of the government," Mr. Parker said with a smile. "He
+held the gold illegally. So your father disposed of it?"
+
+"Yes, he shipped it out of the country months ago. And no one will ever
+be able to prove anything against him."
+
+"My husband is a very clever man," added Mrs. Kippenberg proudly.
+
+"That remains to be seen," said Mr. Parker. "I know a number of very
+clever government men, too."
+
+Later, in dry clothing loaned to her by Miss Kippenberg, Penny motored
+back to Corbin with her father, Jerry, and Salt. There they learned that
+the three prisoners had been locked up in jail, while James Kippenberg
+was being questioned by government operatives. He readily admitted that
+he had disguised himself as the gardener but defied anyone to prove he
+ever had disposed of illegal gold.
+
+Mr. Parker did not wait to learn the outcome of the interview. Instead he
+telephoned the big story to DeWitt and arranged for complete coverage on
+every new angle of the case. Satisfied that no more could be learned that
+night, the party sped back toward Riverview.
+
+"Aaron Dietz and his confederates ought to get long prison sentences,"
+Penny remarked as they drove through the night. "But what will happen to
+Mr. Kippenberg, Dad? Do you think he will escape punishment as his wife
+believes?"
+
+"He'll get what is coming to him," replied Mr. Parker. "A government man
+told me tonight that Kippenberg's income tax reports have been falsified.
+And Kippenberg knew they had evidence against him or he never would have
+gone into hiding. No, even if it can't be proven that he held gold
+illegally, he'll certainly be fined and given a year or so in prison for
+tax evasion."
+
+"I hope he receives a light sentence for Sylvia's sake," said Penny.
+After a moment she added: "Sylvia and Grant Atherwald are going to be
+married tomorrow. They told me so."
+
+"There's a fact we missed," declared Jerry. "Penny always is showing us
+up."
+
+"Oh, I didn't prove myself so brilliant tonight," responded Penny. "When
+I was down in that vault I decided I was just plain dumb. If you hadn't
+had sense enough to guess where Grant Atherwald and I were being
+held--well, Dad would have had to adopt a new daughter."
+
+"It was easy enough to tell what had happened," said Jerry. "You had told
+me you thought there was a secret vault beneath the pool. Then, too, I
+found your handkerchief floating in the bottom. The water had only been
+running in a few minutes." He fished in his pocket and brought out a pin
+which he handed to Penny. "I also found this."
+
+"Thanks, Jerry," said Penny. "That's Louise's cameo pin. She dropped it
+the day we were on the Kippenberg estate together."
+
+"The police gave you full credit for the capture of those men, Penny,"
+said her father with pride. "You yanked the drawbridge just in time to
+trap them."
+
+"Salt did his share, too," mentioned Penny generously. "He went for the
+police just as soon as he realized Jerry and I had been carried away on
+the cruiser."
+
+"The only trouble was that the cops wasted too much time searching for
+you down river," the photographer drawled. "We finally went back to
+Corbin and ran into Mr. Parker who suggested we come to the estate."
+
+"How did you happen to be in Corbin, Dad?" asked Penny curiously.
+
+"You might know--I was looking for you. Isn't that my usual occupation?"
+
+"You're not provoked at me, Dad?"
+
+"No, of course not," the publisher answered warmly. "You've all done fine
+work tonight. This is the biggest story we've run into in over a year!
+We'll score a beat on the rival papers."
+
+"Then don't you think Jerry and Salt have earned a raise?" suggested
+Penny.
+
+"Yes," agreed her father absently, "I'll take care of it tomorrow."
+
+"And you might tack on another dollar to my allowance, Dad. I'll also
+have a small bill to present. There will be several dollars for gasoline,
+lunches going and coming from Corbin, two ruined dresses, a pair of torn
+silk stockings, and--"
+
+"That's enough," broke in Mr. Parker with a laugh. "If you keep on
+listing your expenses, I'll be broke. You turned out to be an expensive
+reporter."
+
+"It was worth it, wasn't it?" Penny demanded, placing her hands on her
+hips.
+
+Her father agreed heartily. "It certainly was, Penny. The _Riverview
+Star_ obtained a smashing story to scoop all the other newspapers, and
+I've got my elusive daughter back again safe and sound."
+
+Penny moved closer to her father. She grasped the lapels of his coat in
+her slender fingers and tipped her weary but still lovely face toward
+him.
+
+"Dad, will you promise me one thing?"
+
+"That depends on what you are after," Mr. Parker told her gravely.
+
+"Whenever the _Riverview Star_ has a baffling mystery to be run down to
+earth, will you promise to call in your ace sleuth?"
+
+"And who would that be?" demanded Mr. Parker with a puzzled frown. Then
+as Penny laughed gaily, he also started to grin. "So you are the ace
+sleuth? I guess I was a little slow in understanding. But you seem to be
+right. This is the third mystery you've solved. Maybe we will use you on
+the next mystery."
+
+"Thanks, Dad," said Penny. "I just hope I won't have to wait too long for
+the next mystery to come along."
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+
+
+--Replaced the list of books in the series by the complete list, as in
+ the final book, "The Cry at Midnight".
+
+--Silently corrected a handful of palpable typos.
+
+--Conforming to later volumes, standardized on "DeWitt" as the name of
+ the city editor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Danger at the Drawbridge, by Mildred A. Wirt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANGER AT THE DRAWBRIDGE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 34552.txt or 34552.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/5/5/34552/
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Brenda Lewis and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.